Are You Protected by the Lemon Law?

发贴者 shammy | 4:16:00 PM


As you might remember, up until about 30 years ago, there were many well-publicized cases in which consumers tried in vain to get the dealer to make their new car "whole" again, the way it should have been when they drove it off the lot in the first place. Before the North Carolina lemon law, or any state's lemon law for that matter, was written, people who had repeat problems with newly purchased vehicles had to count on the mercy of the automaker or dealership to make the situation right.

In the days before the passing of the lemon law, North Carolina to California, people were having to absorb the financial shock of brand new "defective" vehicles. One woman in California picketed her car dealer for months until she finally got some relief. Her efforts brought about the passing of California's lemon law. Auto lemon laws finally began to be written in the early 1980s and today, every state has a lemon law on the books. The effectiveness of this legislation varies from state to state; some lemon laws are written in such a way that they can't help everyone - leaving some people stuck with lemons in spite of the measures designed to help them. Each of these laws were passed with the intention of helping people get their problem vehicles replaced or repaired within a reasonable number of repair attempts.

The vehicle owner, in this case, was the McSherrystown Police Department, who had purchased a 2005 Ford Crown Victoria that had a number of problems with defective brakes. One specific example of a car owner getting stuck with a sour deal due to holes in the lemon law occurred in McSherrystown, Pennsylvania. Everything functioned well with the new car at first. In fact, there were 4,000 miles on the odometer when the problem began making itself known. But 20,000 miles later, the vehicle had already been in the shop for repairs a total of seven unsuccessful times.

The PA lemon law, which is really not much different from the North Carolina lemon law, was written to protect consumers with defective vehicles, not vehicles belonging to small and large businesses, municipalities, churches, non-profit organizations, and yes, you guessed it- police departments. The McSherrystown ordeal looks to be a poster child lemon law case, and one would think that if any vehicle should be running properly, it would be that of a police department! Furthermore, the fact that the problem was with the brakes makes it a fundamental safety issue - surely the PA lemon law would apply under such circumstances? Not so. Most lemon laws were written with the understanding that these non-consumer entities would be able to take these financial hits. While that might be the case for the NYPD, small town departments like the McSherrystown Police, simply aren't able to weather such storms.

Your best bet in determining whether the lemon law applies to your situation is to contact a local consumer advocate attorney who specializes in your state's lemon law to make that determination for you. Lemon laws are extremely helpful in most cases, but as with any law, there are gaps in who they protect.


By Sean Soboleski. Find out if you're protected by the NC lemon law. Consumer attorney Soboleski Law, PC, represents YOU in your North Carolina lemon law case. If you need the lemon law, North Carolina lawyers can help you.



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