Angry U-Haul Manager Says You Stole A Truck

Now that it’s summer, many people are doing the moving thing. For some, this might mean renting a truck or trailer from U-Haul, like reader Ryan. He reserved a truck from U-Haul online well in advance of his move, but when he went in for pickup was told none were available. Ryan called corporate, who called the store and convinced the surly manager to give Ryan a truck. Three days after Ryan returned the truck, he got this voicemail from from U-Haul: “This is Alexandria U-Haul Rentals. Your rental truck was due three days ago and you haven’t returned it. If you don’t return our truck today I will call the police.” See how Ryan handled the situation, inside.

Today I read yet another despicable story about the ineptitude of U-Haul and its local representatives. I had a similar experience during my last move.

Like many others, I chose to use a rented truck and perform the move myself. I made an online reservation about 3 weeks in advance, and surprisingly was scheduled for a truck pickup at a store more than 20 miles away (even though there are at least 3 U-Haul reservation centers within 5 miles of my old home). This was annoying right off the bat since I was obviously going to be paying for this imposed mileage. I accepted the possibility that these other centers had no trucks available and decided to move forward.

On the day of the pickup, I arrived at the store with a printout of my reservation and stood in line at the counter. Upon being called forward and presenting my reservation, I was bluntly told that no trucks were available, reservation or no. I made it clear that this was unacceptable, but the “manager” to whom I was speaking simply waved me away and began helping the next customer.

I stepped out into the parking lot and called U-Haul corporate to get this resolved. I spoke to a very helpful woman (whose name I unfortunately can’t recall) and explained the situation. She said that she would call the store and get me a truck.

About five minutes later, I received a call back and told that there was a truck available for me now. I walked back in and immediately received a stare of disdain from the manager with whom I dealt previously. It was obvious that he wasn’t too happy with the situation, but at this point I really couldn’t care less!

He slid the paperwork across the counter for me to complete, and began telling me how much of an inconvenience I was causing. “Corporate called me and is making me give you a one-way truck,” he said. My reservation was local; that is, picking up and returning to the same location. Apparently, he had a separate inventory of trucks intended for renters who pickup up in one location and return to another, and the corporate response to my complaint was to require him to rent me one of those trucks for my local use. What’s the big deal?

So, fast-forward to the day after my move is completed. I drove the truck to the rental center, pulled into the parking lot, and stepped out. I walked into the office, but no employees were inside. Walking back out, I saw — sadly — the same manager from before, standing outside. I call over to him that I am returning a truck, and his response is, “Just leave the keys in the drop box and leave the truck where it is.” Sounds good to me; I drop off the keys wrapped in a copy of my contract, and I head home.

Three days later, I’m at work. During my lunch break, I decide to check my home voicemail and am surprised to hear an angry message from U-Haul: “This is Alexandria U-Haul Rentals. Your rental truck was due three days ago and you haven’t returned it. If you don’t return our truck today I will call the police.” *click*

Imagine my surprise.

I immediately start by calling the rental center and explaining exactly what happened. The gentleman on the other end explains that the manager (humph) personally walked the entire lot and my truck was not there. I explain that the manager personally saw me there on the day of my return and instructed me to place the keys in the dropbox. I am told that there is nothing he can do, and he hangs up.

I then placed a call to U-Haul corporate again, and get escalated to corporate security. I explain the situation again, and the agent I’m working with agrees to call and speak to the store, and get back to me. Remarkably, I receive a call from him about 20 minutes later… but nothing has been resolved. I tell the agent that although I didn’t know the name of the manager I saw that day, I could describe him. “6 feet tall, brownish-blond hair, shoulder-length. Very slight build, and a smoker.” The response: “Huh. Sounds like Tom, the assistant manager. Let me call the store again, and I’ll get back to you.”

Less than 10 minutes later, the agent calls back again. “I spoke with Tom. He walked the lot again and found your truck. Sorry for the inconvenience.”

What a surprise. Suffice it to say that U-Haul won’t be getting any of my business in the future.

It’s a good day when reader complaints can be resolved without police involvement. U-Haul recently settled a class action suit over their broken reservation system, so honoring his original reservation saved them $50. Unfortunately, the manager’s malice or incompetence cost them more in the long run. If you get stuck with a U-Haul problem and the normal channels aren’t working, don’t forget CEO Joe Shoen gave out his number on Inside Edition, and says he wants to help.

(photo:elisharene)

Comments

  1. Farquar says:

    @aaron8301:

    Wow.. we are all very proud of you. Really. Really Proud.

    Next time you are driving please let us know and we will come watch you. It will be mesmerizing. I may even swoon. Swoon I say.

  2. This is what I was afraid of happening last time I rented (Penske, not U-Haul) that is why I taped myself on camera getting out of the truck, walking to the box and dropping the keys in the box as well as photographing the the gas and mileage at the beginning and end of the rental.

  3. jrobie says:

    I never use these truck rental places just because of the prices. Unless you’re moving something really huge, just do a one-day rental of a big vehicle (van or SUV) from a regular car rental place.

  4. snoop-blog says:

    any idiot with a shed in his yard can start up a Uhaul, that is the reason good service is so hit or miss. In my town, I’ve rented U haul and had a great experience.

    @Propaniac: The flaw in your comment about stores you read on here and why do you shop there is you forget that Consumerist favors bad service stories, as opposed to the great experience stories. Even Consumerist admits it, they don’t try to hide that fact. So how do I know that for every bad story on here there wasn’t 15 stories about how wonderful the place was. Consumerist admits that out of those 16 example stories, the one bad one would be the one they’d use. Put that in your pipe and smoke it!

    I’m here to say that for every story on here about how somebody got screwed, there are at least 10-15 stories from someone somewhere about how that same place went out of there way and bent over backwards for them.

  5. snoop-blog says:

    @snoop-blog: I love my sprint service I’ve had for 8 years! a manager at the store in my town completely wiped out a $350 bill because I calmly explained to her that even though it was MY FAULT, there’s no way I could afford that and that I was confused on the amount of minutes I used. She wiped the whole slate clean.

    So there a story about how I got excellent service from a well known peice of shit company according to this site.

  6. TechnoDestructo says:

    @Propaniac:

    Last I checked, none of the other major companies existed anywhere in the state of Alaska. U-haul does. So some people don’t even have the option of driving an extra 100 miles out of their way to get a truck. (it’d be more like an extra 1500 miles)

    There’s one reason.

    And last time I drove a U-haul in AK, it was in winter, on fresh snow over ice, with bald summer tires. (And Oregon plates.)

    I got it stuck twice. I was doing alright overall, with it, until I lost control going down a hill and slid into a dumpster. Then U-haul tried to claim some damage on the truck that could not have been from that impact (too high on the fender for the dumpster to have hit, no blue paint on that part of the truck, while it had left paint all over the bumper where it hit) was from that accident, and charged the university (I was moving people from one dorm to another) 800 bucks for it. If I hadn’t had passengers (who backed up my story…that I tried everything to avoid that collision), they would have tried to stick me with it.

  7. barco says:

    Always rent from Penske.. and make a note, you can HAGGLE THEM DOWN. If there is no demand for trucks (e.g. mid-month in Feb) a 24′ that is $.49/mi can be had for $.20, or maybe even $.12. I’ve gotten $.10 a few times, but you have to rent from the commercial locations for this, which have better trucks with liftgates anyway. If you’re renting a local truck and have to drive over 500 miles, they’ll rent really cheap.

    One other thing to note, insurance does not cover glass. If you get a tiny rock chip in the windshield, they’ll make you pay the $450-550 for it. There is no way around it–they probably make some money off this.

    I learned about 10 years ago to never rent from uhaul.. however my brother rented a one-way about a month ago and I helped move. They actually screwed up and gave him a local truck for a one-way rental, and instead of the $330 it was supposed to cost, they had to just charge the min milage charge and the total was $159. They certainly don’t have their act together, but occasionally it works out favorably.

  8. M3wThr33 says:

    I had good luck with Budget.

  9. Bog says:

    The worst rental truck I’ve rented from was of all things U-Haul. I still shudder.

    The best for me ever was Ryder. – It even had a power lift instead of a ramp. (Mind you this was 10 years ago) but the local office sent someone to pick me up and take me to the rental back to the office to get the truck.