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The
California "lemon laws" protect consumers
of motor vehicles, and provide remedies if they
have repeated problems with their vehicle relating
to safety, value, or use. Minor defects alone,
however, are likely not sufficient.
The
California "lemon laws" apply to all
new vehicles,
purchased or leased, for family or personal use
and for most small business uses. They include
automobiles, trucks, RVs, motor homes, motorcycles,
and boats.
A
used vehicle, if
it was purchased or leased with a remaining portion
of a new car warranty, may also qualify under
the lemon laws. Likewise, a demonstrator may also
be considered as a "new" vehicle.
A
consumer must allow the manufacturer a reasonable
number of attempts to repair the vehicle's defects.
There is a so-called
"lemon law" presumption
which is merely a legal device which is only meaningful
if negotiations with the manufacturer fail, and
you must resort to litigation. It
then allows the consumer/plaintiff to establish
at trial that she or he has met the plaintiff's
normal burden of proof that the vehicle is a lemon
and shifts the legal burden to the manufacturer
to prove otherwise. That's all it does. It is
not, however, a prerequisite to filing a lemon
law claim!
This
presumption states
that if you have 1. purchased or leased
a new car, truck, motorcycle, motorhome, or boat,
for 2. personal or small business use,
and 3. if during the first 18 months or
18,000 miles you brought the vehicle to a dealer
for repair of the same or similar problem four
or more times, or only two or more times if the
manufacturing defect results in a condition that
is likely to cause death or serious bodily injury,
or if it was out of service for a total of more
than 30 days within that time, and 4. if
the problem is still not fixed, then 5.
the legal presumption is established.
Note
that the "lemon law" presumption is
neither a requirement nor a prerequisite. There
are many situations which do not exactly meet
the "lemon law" presumption, but which
may still entitle you to "lemon law"
protection.
So
long as the defect affects safety, value, or use,
and occurred within the warranty period, and cannot
be repaired after a reasonable number of repair
attempts, the vehicle is entitled to these legal
protections. One of our attorneys will be glad
to review your situation to see whether it is
covered.
Note
too,
that a consumer does not first need to go through
arbitration to pursue a lemon law claim. In fact,
an arbitration decision against the consumer may
later be used as evidence against the consumer
in any subsequent court action brought against
the manufacturer.

Note
that the above paragraphs only describe guidelines.
But, if the defect(s) affect safety, for example,
even one repair attempt may be enough. So long
as the defects are substantial manufacturing non-conformities
that relate to safety, value, or use, and occur
within the warranty period (typically 36 months
or 36,000 miles, whichever occurs first) your
vehicle may qualify as a valid "lemon law"
claim.
Therefore,
if you have had repeated problems, and if your
vehicle is still not repaired, you should call
to obtain a free consultation to learn whether
your vehicle qualifies, or whether there are other
legal alternatives.
(CA
Lemon Law)
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