Mar 01 2009
Lemon Law Fictions
1. I cannot afford to pay an attorney to represent me.
In fact it doesn’t matter what you can afford to pay. Most states have provisions in the Lemon Law that allow for recovery of your attorney fees in the event that you have a lemon. Most reputable lemon law attorneys do not charge an up-front retainer of any sort. They rely on the merits of your claim and the applicable laws that we proceed under to account for collection of our attorney fees. While you have hired an attorney to represent you, you typically will not pay him anything out of your pocket.
2. The dealer cannot find a problem with my vehicle, so there is no case.
This is not true. Many problems that we encounter in our lemon law cases involve “intermittent” problems, that occur at random. Your duty as a car owner is to notify the manufacturer/dealership whenever these problems occur, and then to give them the opportunity to make a repair. If they cannot properly diagnose the problem, that is their concern, not yours.
3. The dealer has fixed the defect, so I do not have a case.
Lemon Law states that the manufacturer must fix the defect within a reasonable number of attempts. Established case law has held that the number of attempts that are “reasonable” are three (3). If the dealer/manufacturer cannot repair the defect after three tries, then you have a lemon law claim no matter what. If the dealer fixes the defect on the fourth or later attempt, you still have the ability to proceed with your lemon law claim.
4. I have a used vehicle, so I do not have a case.
Lemon Law only applies to “new” vehicles, including dealership demonstrators. There are other state and federal laws that allow you to bring a claim where the defective vehicle has a warranty on it. If the dealership does not make the repair after a reasonable number of attempts, an attorney can bring a breach of warranty claim under the other state and federal laws.