Is Your Car a Lemon?

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There are very few things more satisfying than buying a new car. There is great

pride of ownership and a feeling of accomplishment and pride as you drive around

town in your new vehicle. For most of us, that new car excitement lasts until

we must make our first payment or until we get our first parking lot ding. For

an unlucky few, they wish these were the only negatives that they had to worry

about.

These unlucky few are the people who find themselves with an automobile that

will, after much frustration and exhaustion on the part of the owner, be classified

on a lemon.

So just what is a lemon car? After all, we've all had the occasional breakdown

of some part of our car. And no matter when it happens, it is extremely inconvenient

(and often quite expensive.) When does "regular wear and tear" flow

into the realm of having a true lemon.

Typically a lemon is a new vehicle (or in some states a used vehicle under

certain circumstances) that has had a large number of repair attempts on a single

defect or an overall large number of repair attempts overall. It can also include

just a single repair attempt on a portion of the car where failure could be

a life threatening situation. Each state has their own lemon law warranty act

and each of them defines what will make a vehicle a lemon. For instance, in

California, a lemon automobile can be summarized as follows:

Vehicles Covered by California Lemon Law - California lemon law covers any

new motor vehicle used primarily for family, personal or household purposes.

It also includes the chassis portion of motor homes.

Repair Interval / Coverage Period Details - To be considered a lemon law vehicle

in California , the vehicle must either be out of service for 30 calendar days

or have 2 repair attempt for a defect that could cause death or a serious injury

or have 4 repairs for the same defect. The coverage period is for 18 months

or 18,000 miles, whichever occurs first.

(Lemon law summaries and the statutes for all 50 states and Washington DC can

be found at the Lemon Law Resources

website at http://www.lemonlawresources.com.)

If you believe your car is a lemon, it is very important that you have proper

records to show this. That means that each time you go to your service center,

it is very important that they record exactly what you believe the problem is

in the car and specify what they did to try to solve the problem. You need to

do this for two reasons. First, you will need these records when making a claim

for restitution. Second, for these "mystery" problems, dealers will

try many different things and it may not be clear to an adjuster that they were

all related unless you ensure this is the case on the receipts.

Once your car has passed the state hurdle to be classified to become a lemon,

you must take actions to get restitution. Each state has a different procedure

you must follow. Some states requre that you send a letter to the manufacturer

to give them one last chance to repair the defect. Other states have arbitration

panels you must deal with to get restitution.

No matter what method the state has in place for you to seek restitution, you

always have the option of working with an attorney if you do not feel the issue

was solved to your satisfaction. You should consider an attorney as a last resort

as not all states allow you to be reimbursed for your legal fees if you win.

(And of course if you lose, you would not get reimbursed.) So as frustrating

as this situation may be, it is best to persue all state sponsored remedies

before seeking legal help.

What happens if you win?

If your vehicle is determined to be a lemon under your state's law, you are

entitled to a refund or a comparable replacement vehicle. A comparable vehicle

most be indentical or a reasonable equivalent of your current vehicle. A refund

will include your purchase price, taxes and any other options installed in the

vehicle minus a usage fee based on how much you used the car. The terms will

very a bit from state to state but this is generally what you can expect.

What happens to the car after the manufactuer takes it back?

The manufacturer will generally recondition it and put it back for sale within

its network. Depending on the state where the problem occurred, the title may

or may not be stamped with a phrase like "Lemon Law Buyback" when

it is returned to that state for resale. However, not all states require this

and if the car was transferred from one state to another, the information may

not follow on the title issued from the new state.

Used car buyer beware!

While lemon cars are only a very small percentage of the used cars that are

sold, this issue with titles not always conveying the true history of the car,

it shows the importance of doing research on any used car purchase. If you are

buying a used car from a dealer, you should insist on a Carfax

lemon check report and if you are buying from an individual, you should

do one yourself at carfax.com.

It is a very reasonable price to pay to be sure your car has no hidden defects.

Author Info:

-Steven Chabotte is a freelance writer that writes for Lemon Law Resources http://www.lemonlawresources.com and My Attorney Finder http://www.myattorneyfinder.com.

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