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.
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Our
Office Locations...
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San
Diego County Office
(Main Offices)
16855
W. Bernardo Drive.
Suite 380
San Diego, CA. 92127
1-800-CA-LEMON
1-800-225-3666
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Orange
County (Irvine)
Office
One Park Plaza.
Suite 600
Irvine, CA. 92614
1-800-CA-LEMON
1-800-225-3666
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San
Francisco (Bay Area)
Office
225 Bush Street.
16th.
Floor
San Francisco, CA.
94104
1-800-CA-LEMON
1-800-225-3666 |
Los
Angeles County
(Glendale) Office
411
N. Central Avenue.
Suite 230
Glendale, CA.
91203
1-800-CA-LEMON
1-818-548-6067
English and
Spanish languages
spoken
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Law
Offices of William
R. McGee
California Lemon Law
Attorneys
Serving
all California
Residents - 22 Years
Experience
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