Discuss Scratched a customers floor while working in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

A

Andystraughan

Hi guys in a bit of a dilemma here

done loads of work for a kitchen fitter at a women's house. Kitchen rewire new cooker circuit. 14 spots etc. she decided she wanted all the sockets & switches changed to chrome. No problem. Until I get a call off the joiner saying I have scratched the wood flooring upstairs and she wants it sorting. As I would too. She's with holding the full amount just shy of 1k. I got a French polisher to have a look but she wasn't happy that approach. Then went to a floor layer who says he will sand it down and re-varnish etc. she doesn't want that. Now the kitchen fitter says she wants £500 knocking off the bill and she will call it quits. Any advice? Should I bite the bullet? I'm still a newish company so don't want to see my insurance premiums go up etc

Andy
 
its obvious she wont be happy with any repair you try and organize cos she just wants the £500 basically.
have you seen the scratch ?
if not take pics to support your own defence.
then give it to your liability insures to sort out , thats what its there for.
dont agree to knock a single penny off and dont give them any certs till youve been paid.
once they realise youd rather let the insurers sort it out they will change their tune.
and tell the kitchen fitter to pi$$ off cos hes clearly in on the scam , which is what it is.
 
9/10 the floor was already scratched. this is why it's so important to point out any damage before starting work.
 
As it was the joiner who made you aware of this scratch i can only assume you were unaware the floor was scratched or whether you were to blame...

Were any other trades working in the room?
Why does she think you're to blame?
Have you inspected the scratch and taken photo's?
If you offer a service to repair the scratch to bring it back to its original quality then she cannot refuse the option without a solid valid reason and demand a reduction she has been given a solution and feels she wants to play this scam.

Email her (Email saved as evidence) - express that you were unaware of the scratch and don't admit responsibility but as a good will gesture you will have the floor repaired as good as it originally was by a professional. Express the quote and bill for your works is not negotiable as it was agreed and as you have organised to have the scratch repaired then you will be forced to hand it over to your legal team to ensure full payment of the bill. Express the good will gesture to have it repaired is only on offer for a short period before you withdraw it. Say the work done has been done as requested to a professional standard and thus still stands as the quoted cost of the job.

Explain she has 2 week to reply and make her decision before you hand this over to your legal team to sort out, also explain if she refuses the repair of the floor she is required to submit a valid reason for refusing the option as your legal team will need to know why.

The above should scare her enough as i can't see here wanting to hire a lawyer to defend her side ... this reeks of scam (but don't accuse her of this as this could be used against you) and don't get scared because of your inexperience ... confidence is the winner it can be seen and can be used to change peoples view on the situation.

Explain also if she is still been stubborn that if your legal team wins their case then she will be submitted with a bill to cover their costs.
 
Last edited:
Email her (Email saved as evidence) - express that you were unaware of the scratch and don't admit responsibility but as a good will gesture you will have the floor repaired as good as it originally was by a professional.
I suspect how ever good the repair she will still be back wanting cash in her pocket. She is a chancer call her bluff as suggested above.
 

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