Your Basic Lemon Law Rights Explained
Whereas at one time you had no alternative but to allow the manufacturer or
seller of a defective product an endless amount of repair attempts, State and
federal statutes informally known as "Lemon Laws" provide for
compensation to you where you have a defective product that cannot be fixed
within a reasonable opportunity. The federal Lemon Law, officially known as the
Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, provides for the payment of your attorney fees and
court costs if successful, as do most State Lemon laws.
To qualify for protection under a Lemon Law, you must generally have a
defective consumer product that has not been fixed within a reasonable amount
of repair attempts. Most State Lemon Laws specifically apply to motor vehicles
and require the manufacturer to refund your money or replace your vehicle if,
during the first twelve to twenty-four months of ownership, your vehicle has
suffered three to four repairs for the same problem or has been out of service
by reason of repair more than thirty days. Although State Lemon Laws are
generally limited to new vehicles, many states have enacted specific lemon
statutes that protect purchasers of used vehicles and/or other consumer
products such as Motor Homes and computers.
The federal Lemon Law often extends protection far past State law, making
warrantors responsible for irreparable defects for up to four years after the
factory warranty has expired. This federal statute generally provides cash
compensation where the warrantor cannot make your product free from defects
within a reasonable opportunity. Unlike State Lemon Laws, the Magnuson-Moss
Warranty Act applies not just to vehicles but instead to all consumer products
- including boats and appliances. Magnuson-Moss also creates strict requirement
for warrantors when drafting warranties and disclosing warranty terms, thereby
eliminating much of the confusing "doubletalk" inherent in consumer
warranties.
To read your State’s Lemon Law, or the Federal Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act,
click here
Steps You Can Take to Protect Your Rights and Investment
Lemon Laws often, but not always, require you to provide written notice of
the defect to the warrantor and a final opportunity to fix the defects. These
statutes also authorize warrantors to establish programs to resolve consumer
complaints out of court. However, these programs are often wholly funded by the
warrantors themselves, calling into serious question the credibility and
impartiality of these mechanisms. You are generally only obligated to
participate in such programs where the warrantor establishes the program in
strict compliance with State and federal law. Before participating in any such
program, you should consult an attorney as although such programs may be
helpful, they may be harmful as well due to the bias towards the warrantor
inherent in most of these mechanisms.
Because of the expansive legal rights these statutes provide you, sellers and
manufacturers will often create obstacles to your enforcement of these rights
and at times, will discourage you from enforcing your time-sensitive rights by
providing false and misleading information. For example, a warrantor may tell
you the time to enforce your State Lemon Law rights has expired without
informing you of the rights you have under the federal Lemon Law. Likewise, in
an effort to make you accept your lemon, warrantors will often tell you there
is no problem with your product and that what you are experiencing is a
"normal operating condition." Always get a second - or third -
opinion before believing that problem you know is there really isn't. Further,
always ask for all Technical Service Bulletins ("TSB's") on your vehicle
as these internal documents often prove your problem exists. Finally, and
perhaps most important of all, always make sure to get documentation from the
warrantor of each and every repair attempt whenever you retrieve your product
back from the repair shop. Withholding these records from you is often the
warrantor's best way to prevent you from building your lemon case, so always
insist on receiving a repair order. If the warrantor refuses to give you one,
make your own by faxing or mailing the repair shop a letter memorializing the
defect and date of the repair, and the warrantor's refusal to provide you a
repair order.
To download our copyrighted Lemon repair log, click here.
What to do Now
You have an expensive investment, its time to protect your rights and
interests. Apathy and inaction is the exact situation that all manufacturers
seek from consumers, and this Website believes pursuing the damages applicable
laws make available helps not only yourself, but other consumers as well by
showing big corporations they will be held responsible for making less than
satisfactory products. If you think you have a Lemon, click here for a free
lemon law case review, or simply fax or email your repair
records to 866-773-6152 or help@CarLemon.com. Your
inquiry will be promptly responded to.
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