|
Wednesday 25th May 2016 |
Text too small? |
The Commerce Commission has filed court proceedings against Vodafone New Zealand, claiming the country's biggest mobile phone operator misled customers on its 'Red Essentials' mobile plan in 2014 to the tune of $90,000.
The regulator says Vodafone didn't accurately apply a $10 discount to customers who signed up to the plan from its introduction through until December 2014, meaning misleading invoices were sent to about 15,000 customers, who were overcharged by about $90,000. Following the commission's investigation, Vodafone refunded about 98 percent of affected customers, the regulator said.
Businesses face fines of up to $200,000 per charge for breaching the Fair Trade Act and the courts can impose bigger penalties where more than one charge is laid.
In a separate statement, Vodafone said it made a mistake with that plan and apologised to affected customers. The mobile carrier said it had cooperated with the regulator throughout, but didn't address the court proceedings directly.
Customer operations director Kelly Moore said the company had identified what caused the error and fixed it.
In 2014, Vodafone paid $268,000 to customers to settle a breach of the Fair Trading Act for a broadband promotion between 2009 and 2011. Two years earlier, the company was fined $960,000 for misleading advertising of its wireless broadband coverage and a free airtime deal, and in 2011 it was fined $400,000 over promotions it ran between 2006 and 2009.
BusinessDesk.co.nz
No comments yet
May 19th Morning Report
PYS - PaySauce to announce F26 full year results on 27 May 2026
PEB - Draft LCD Proposes Medicare Coverage for Triage and Triage
MEL - Meridian Energy monthly operating report for April 2026
FBU - Sale of South Australian property
AIR - Air New Zealand market update
May 14th Morning Report
PEB - Pacific Edge Placement Increased to NZ$25.4 Million
Radius Care Reports Earnings Growth and 50% Higher Dividend
May 13th Morning Report