Certainy I neither have seen sawed joints in elevated floors in my 26 years long career. Buildings have control joints, you plan and place them.
What the asking party is demanding is to say the least weird, if the interpretation above is the correct one. Crack control in the reinforced structures that are elevated floors or slabs is gained by different means, and it is quite likely that any unsightly shrinkage cracks there are the product of the classicals in the game: heat, wind, bad cure, high diameter rebar, irregular layout of the rebar, concreting against too stiff hardened parts without consideration of shrinkage etc
Other question if you have followed some specified layout in the concreting process. To diminish shrinkage effects, closing bands or checkered concreting and akin procedures are established, and not proceeding in accord with the instructions of the director of the works or specifications, in more than being criticable and cause of liability may lead to some bad results, this could be the case.