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IS MY VEHICLE COVERED BY CALIFORNIA'S LEMON LAWS? |
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The lemon laws provide remedies if a consumer has
repeated substantial problems relating to the
safety, value, or use of her or his vehicle.
Minor defects alone, however, are not sufficient
for consumers to take advantage of these laws.
California lemon laws apply to all new vehicles
purchased or leased for family or personal use,
and for most small business uses. Included are
automobiles, trucks, motorcycles, and the chassis
portions of RV's and motor homes. Demonstrators
are considered as new vehicles. A used vehicle,
if it was purchased or leased with a remaining
portion of the new car warranty, may also qualify
under the lemon laws.
California law only states that a consumer must
allow the manufacturer a reasonable number of
attempts to repair the vehicle's defects. The
lemon law "presumption” which helps
to define whether a “reasonable”
number of attempts to repair the vehicle's defects
have been made, is merely a legal device which
is only meaningful if negotiations with the
manufacturer fail, and you must resort to suing
the manufacturer in court. It then allows the
consumer/plaintiff to establish at trial that
she or he has met the normal, plaintiff's burden
of proof that the vehicle is a lemon, and shifts
the legal burden to the manufacturer to prove
otherwise. That is all that meeting the “presumption,”
as further described below, does. You do not
have to meet the lemon law “presumption,”
however, for the Law Offices of Delsack &
Associates to file a lemon law claim on your
behalf!
The California lemon law “presumption”
is met if you:
1. purchased or leased a new car, truck,
motorcycle, or motorhome, and
2. it is for 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 related
to safety, value, or use:
a. four or
more times; or
b. two or more
times for a problem that is likely to
cause death or serious bodily injury; or
c. it was out
of service for a total of more than 30 days,
and
4. the problem is still not fixed.
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CONTACT US TO FIND OUT IF YOUR VEHICLE QUALIFIES |
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Note that the lemon law “presumption”
is neither a requirement nor a prerequisite
for the Law Offices of Delsack & Associates
to file a lemon law claim on your behalf. There
are many situations which do not meet the lemon
law "presumption,” but which may
still entitle you to the lemon law protections.
So long as the defect affects safety, value,
or use, initially occurred within the new car
warranty period, and cannot be repaired after
a reasonable number of repair attempts, the
vehicle may be entitled to these legal protections.
One of our attorneys will be glad to review
your individual situation to see whether it
is covered under the California lemon laws.
Note too, that a consumer does not first need
to go through arbitration to pursue a
California lemon
law claim. In fact, an arbitrator’s decision
against you may later be used as evidence in
any subsequent court action you may bring against
the manufacturer.
The above paragraphs only describe guidelines.
But, so long as your vehicle has substantial
manufacturing defects which relate to safety,
value, or use, and so long as they initially
occurred within the new car warranty period
(typically 36 months or 36,000 miles, whichever
occurs first) your vehicle may qualify as a
meritorious lemon law claim.
If you have had repeated substantial problems,
and if your vehicle is still not repaired, you
should call 1-888-EX-LEMON to obtain a free
consultation from one of our experts to learn
whether your vehicle qualifies, or whether there
are other legal alternatives.
• FREE California Lemon Law Case Review Form
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Call
or
contact us
today to get started!
1.888.EXLEMON
(1.888.395.3666)
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