Brendan, I have no problem telling you the terms and conditions of payment, (now irrelevant) give me a chance, I've been very busy lately.
“A booking deposit of 45% must be made to secure a fitting date. A further 45% must be made on morning of delivery, and the final 10% to be paid on signing off kitchen. ...
Hi Noilheart
Thanks for the update.
So it is confirmed that they were simply asking you to pay them in line with the contract? No more, no less. Not ealier, not later.
I consider "paid about half quoted price for kitchen. NOw they want more before they fit it" to be misleading.
Have you paid in full yet? Or are you still holding back the 10%?
Turns out that had I known the problem and not already paid kitchen co. for the cooker ...
So, am I right in saying that you had paid in full for the cooker and you had paid 45% of the fitting cost?
My cooker was not available at the fitting date and will not be available for 3 weeks approx. Waited in on the day with no update from kitchen co. but the supplier rang me directly late in the evening and offered a loan of a cooker a step down from the one ordered and threw in a small coffee machine to make up for delay.
That is a pain. Which would seem to justify your suspicions at the start. When were you told that it was not available before fitting? I would have cancelled the fitting and told them to wait until they had everything on site.
It is not acceptable if they started fitting on the Tuesday without all the appliances being in place. I would be very annoyed with this. If it was an unusual appliance and I knew that there might be delays, I would not let them go ahead without everything being in place. But it's easy to be wise after the event.
the loaned cooker was installed the next day (same dimensions as ordered one) and is quite lower than the worktop. The worktop is higher than I expected and not a terribly comfortable height
I presume that they gave you drawings in advance of the fitting? Is it in compliance with the specifications?
I presume you discussed the height of the worktops in advance? I know very little about kitchens. But are the worktops not a standard height? I am sure you can specify them to be higher or lower, but I would have thought that this would be discussed in advance. If I was changing my kitchen, I would expect either the workstops to be the standard height, or I would expect the kitchen designer to say something like the following:
"Your current worktops are higher than average - do you want to keep that height?"
You have good grounds for complaint, if the worktops are not the standard height or if they are different from the spec.
I am taken aback by the amount of comments on the thread and feel I must make a reply, not least to defend myself against the goading hard line taken by Brendan, who has tried to discredit me on the site. I also understand “defamation” can only occur if untruths are broadcast, and that has definitely not happened in this case.
I was certainly not "goading" you.
You named a specific company in a highly critical, but vague, manner.
We have now verfied, three weeks later, that the title was misleading.
Taking this together with the cancellation comment, I felt you were being extremely unfair to a named company. There was absolutely no basis for you to cancel your kitchen. It may have been an over-reaction or it may have been a throwaway comment, but your comments would be coming up on Google for years to come when they search by that company name. If you make those comments, you will be asked to justify them - that is not goading.
The customer is not always wrong Brendan.
Noilheart - I belive in balanced and fair comment. I don't believe that the customer is always wrong. Nor do I believe that they are never wrong.
If a new poster makes vague, but serious allegations about a named company, I delete them.
As you were a long time poster, I took your comments at face value, left the comments there, and asked you to justify them. That is not goading.