What Is The Lemon Law - A Concise Definition
Lemon law refers to the statement from the government that was
created to protect consumers from defective piece of automobile.
An automobile that has manufacturing defect or if it asks for
repeated repairs after purchase and if the automobile is under
warranty period, such a vehicle is termed as a lemon.
A law was placed for the benefit of consumers to prevent them
from a lemon vehicle. In a nut shell if any vehicle such as a
car is under warranty period and is suffering from various
defects that prevent a consumer to use the vehicle effectively
then Lemon law act or the Magnuson Moss Act comes into force.
Lemon law can be enforced on any sort of vehicle like a car,
truck, van, SUV, motorcycle, boat or computer, etc. If any of
these consumer durables is found to be defective then the
consumer is entitled for either money back, replacement or a
cash settlement. The law can be consulted with a Lemon law
attorney as various states have different lemon laws. Some
states have a lemon law for only the automobiles but some also
include other consumer durables like computers, etc.
A dealer or manufacturer should have made number of attempts to
repair the vehicle before being declared as lemon. Usually three
or more attempts in row over a short period of time are required
for any vehicle to be termed as lemon. Lemon law is also
applicable to vehicles which have been resold but are still
under warranty and meet the mileage and time criteria. More
often it is very difficult to persuade a manufacturer to accept
a lemon vehicle. In such cases a lemon suit is often called for.
To ensure whether a vehicle is a lemon or not one should observe
certain conditions of the vehicle before pursuing a lemon law
suit. A vehicle should exhibit some serious defect or some
abnormal condition. Such a condition should be covered by
manufacturer's warranty. Number of attempts for repair should
also be taken into account before preparing a lemon law suit. A
written notice should have also been issued to the manufacturer
prior to a lemon law suit.
A vehicle that has been bought back by the manufacturer from the
customer is known as a Lemon Buy Back. Such lemon buy backs are
often sold in auctions as used cars by the manufacturers.
The Lemon law enforced for protecting consumers from the lemon
vehicles is Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act. This lemon law states
that any advertised guarantee should explicitly state relevant
information about a warranty. This law ensures that any warranty
for goods above $15 should be clearly expressed on the goods and
should be clear and easy to understand. The Magnuson-Moss
Warranty act enables a consumer to bring suit to any
manufacturer, supplier, warrantor, or service contractor for any
defective piece of good or services.
A lemon vehicle explicitly loses market value due to its
manufacturing defect. Moreover, manufacturing defects may lead
to several life threatening circumstances. It also substantially
impedes a person's ability to control or operate a motor vehicle
for ordinary use or intended purposes. Any manufacturing defect
can also create a substantial risk of fire or explosion. All
these risk elements call for enforcement of Lemon law in the
states of United States. This law helps consumer from all such
threats and hazardous circumstances.