Thanks for the additional information. You should take this incident as an opportunity improve the way you do business.
You shouldn't have bought your own ticket at the beginning of the relationship. That is a bad move on your part. DGT should have bought the ticket for you. It would be up to them to buy a refundable ticket. Business always buys refundable airline tickets. Nonrefundable tickets are cheaper but more risky in an uncertain business situation than refundable tickets are. You put yourself at financial risk and now blame DGT for not bailing you out. You should have bought a refundable ticket at a minimum. See: https://faq.orbitz.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/174/~/how-do-refundable-and-non-refundable-fares-differ%3F On Tue, Apr 8, 2014 at 1:31 PM, Jed Rothwell <[email protected]> wrote: > Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote: > > >> How can the subcontractor know if the needs of the contractor are met? In >> detail, how did Jed know that the needs of DGT were met? Did Jed care if >> the needs of DGT were met? Was Jed concerned if DGT was happy with his work? >> > > There was no work. I bought a non-refundable ticket and never went. They > agreed to pay for it. They publicly stated that they agreed to pay for it, > right here and at CMNS. They repeatedly promised to pay for it. But, they > never did. No one disputes this is what happened. It has nothing to do with > the needs of the contractor or anything like that. > > You can review old messages from Hadjichristos and confirm all of this. > Stop speculating about contracts and the needs of contractors. That is > completely irrelevant. > > I have described this many times. If you will not take the trouble read my > messages past and present, please drop the subject. You are only confusing > the issue. > > - Jed > >

