The
California "Lemon Law"
The
California Lemon Law (officially
known as the Song-Beverly Consumer
Warranty act, found in California
Civil Code sections 1790 et seq.)
is a law designed to protect
consumers who purchase or lease
warranted motor vehicles. If it is
determined that a motor vehicle is
a "lemon," the motor
vehicle's warrantor must
repurchase or replace the motor
vehicle from the buyer.
In
order to have a valid Lemon Law
claim, the following elements must
be met:
1.)
The vehicle must be used some of
the time for personal, family or
household purposes. If a vehicle
is used exclusively for business
purposes, the Lemon Law will not
apply, but other laws may provide
certain remedies.
2.)
The vehicle must have defects
covered by a warranty. There is a
simple rule: no warranty means no
Lemon Law case.
3.)
The warrantor must be unable to repair the vehicle's warranty problems after a reasonable number of repair attempts. What constitutes a reasonable number of repair attempts will vary depending on the problem. For example, if a vehicle's brakes fail, two repair attempts may be enough to establish a reasonable number. Generally, safety-related or drivability concerns will require fewer repair attempts than those which are not safety-related or affect drivability. However, only one unsuccessful repair attempt is never sufficient to establish a lemon law claim.
Also
relevant to determining whether
there has been a reasonable number
of repair attempts is the number
of days the vehicle is
out-of-service due to warranty
repairs. The more days
out-of-service, the better the
chance of establishing a
reasonable number of repair
attempts.
There
is a common misconception
concerning the Lemon Law, that it
only applies to vehicles that are
less than 18 months old and have
less than 18,000 miles. This
belief is not true! The Lemon Law
will apply to a vehicle regardless
of how old it is or how many miles
is has, so long as the vehicle is
having defects that are under
warranty.
Even
if the warranty has expired, the
Lemon Law may apply. If the
vehicle is still having defects
that were complained about and
never properly repaired during the
warranty period, a valid Lemon Law
claim may exist.
4.)
The vehicle must contain a problem
covered by the warranty that
substantially impairs the
vehicle's use, value or safety to
the buyer/lessee. The Lemon Law,
generally, will not apply to
vehicles with trivial or minor
defects. Nevertheless, each case
must be judged independently
taking into account the particular
needs and expectations of the
particular vehicle's owner/lessee.
If
the above mentioned elements are
met, the vehicle is a lemon. The
vehicle's owner/lessee will be
entitled to a replacement vehicle
or a refund of the vehicle's
purchase/lease price.
Call anywhere from California:
1-800-CA-LEMON
(1-800-225-3666)
Email
Us @ experts4u@aol.com
Do you live in a state other than California? www.AutoLemonLawsUSA.com |