John Lewis - How to escalate shocking customer service? Advice needed.

I had a washing machine and drier delivered yesterday (17.05.23) from John Lewis and paid for my old ones to be taken away. The old washing machine clearly had a large pool of soot coming out of the bottom of it, which I made the delivery men aware of as soon as they came in. There was clearly something very wrong with the insides of the machine. I trusted them and left them to take the old machine away. I was later called into the room and told a large weight had fallen out of the machine onto my new tiles and smashed a big hole in one of them. They then proceeded to tell me it wasn't their fault it was 'the fault of my existing machine'. I instantly called John Lewis customer services and told them what had happened. I was later emailed and they requested photographic evidence and my chain of events. I said I questioned why the guys had lifted the machine into the air to remove it, (given they were aware there was something internally wrong) rather than using a small trolley to lift it up and remove it. I was told it was 'policy' for two men to lift a machine rather than using a trolley. I questioned why common sense didn't come into it and they reiterated it 'wasn't their policy' to use a trolley.
I then said I wanted to take it further and was told there was no further I could take it. John Lewis would not accept responsibility and that was the end of the matter.

I am furious! I've been a customer of John Lewis for over 35 years and they have always been amazing at customer service. I'd like to email the CEO or other top members of the company to let them know how loyal customers are being treated as well as getting compensation for my smashed tile. I've looked at reviews on their site and there are quite a few customers with similar experiences.
I trusted and paid John Lewis for a service and they came in, smashed up my house and effectively said it was my fault.

John Lewis have a tag line - Our Purpose promise “Working in Partnership for a Happier World” is not just a slogan. It is a deeply rooted and unshakable commitment that acts as our guide, inspires all our principles and influences every decision we make. Through it, we not only do things differently, but better. Always striving to make the world a better and happier place for everyone and everything our business touches."

They certainly haven't made my World a better, happier place. Any advice on what to do next would be gratefully received.

Comments

eskbanker

eskbanker Posts: 32,503 Forumite

First Post

Sounds like an unfortunate accident, but whether JL can be held liable, either legally or morally, is another story - no harm in trying escalation but probably best to tone down all the emotive " they [. ] smashed up my house" stuff if you do.

Most appliances being deinstalled are probably faulty in one way or another but that doesn't mean it's reasonable to expect large weights to drop out of them!

Aylesbury_Duck Posts: 14,526 Forumite

First Post

I had a washing machine and drier delivered yesterday (17.05.23) from John Lewis and paid for my old ones to be taken away. The old washing machine clearly had a large pool of soot coming out of the bottom of it, which I made the delivery men aware of as soon as they came in. There was clearly something very wrong with the insides of the machine. I trusted them and left them to take the old machine away. I was later called into the room and told a large weight had fallen out of the machine onto my new tiles and smashed a big hole in one of them. They then proceeded to tell me it wasn't their fault it was 'the fault of my existing machine'. I instantly called John Lewis customer services and told them what had happened. I was later emailed and they requested photographic evidence and my chain of events. I said I questioned why the guys had lifted the machine into the air to remove it, (given they were aware there was something internally wrong) rather than using a small trolley to lift it up and remove it. I was told it was 'policy' for two men to lift a machine rather than using a trolley. I questioned why common sense didn't come into it and they reiterated it 'wasn't their policy' to use a trolley.
I then said I wanted to take it further and was told there was no further I could take it. John Lewis would not accept responsibility and that was the end of the matter.

I am furious! I've been a customer of John Lewis for over 35 years and they have always been amazing at customer service. I'd like to email the CEO or other top members of the company to let them know how loyal customers are being treated as well as getting compensation for my smashed tile. I've looked at reviews on their site and there are quite a few customers with similar experiences.
I trusted and paid John Lewis for a service and they came in, smashed up my house and effectively said it was my fault.

John Lewis have a tag line - Our Purpose promise “Working in Partnership for a Happier World” is not just a slogan. It is a deeply rooted and unshakable commitment that acts as our guide, inspires all our principles and influences every decision we make. Through it, we not only do things differently, but better. Always striving to make the world a better and happier place for everyone and everything our business touches."

They certainly haven't made my World a better, happier place. Any advice on what to do next would be gratefully received.

They haven't smashed your house up, they've broken one tile, and they haven't said it's your fault. It's no one's fault, it's just an unfortunate set of events.

If you can prove negligence, they owe you the cost of replacing the broken tile. Proving negligence sounds like it will be tricky, though. You paid for removal, not for them to take the machine apart and assess its suitability for lifting. It's not their fault that the inside of your broken machine fell out. I'd say it's reasonable to assume it could be removed without incident, and that's what you're up against. If they'd dropped the machine, it's a different story, but how were they to know it would fall apart?

Might be one for your home insurance as JL aren't budging, but I don't really see what they've done wrong here.