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The Lemon Law North Carolina
by Mark Kessler


Are you looking for some inside information on The Lemon Law of North Carolina? Here's an up-to-date report from The Lemon Law of North Carolina experts who should know.

The lemon law of North Carolina declares that a warranty accompanying a purchased automobile is in effect for at least one year or twelve thousand miles (whichever occurs first). If an automobile does not stand up to its warranty, and the purchaser reports its failures to the manufacturer, the manufacturer is required by the lemon law of North Carolina to restore the automobile to its warranty claims.

If the manufacturer is unable, after a reasonable number of attempts (four or more times), to restore the automobile to the conditions outlined in its warranty, the manufacturer is required by the lemon law of North Carolina to either replace the automobile with a comparable vehicle, or refund the purchaser (provided that the purchaser has complained about the car's defects in writing). According to the lemon law of North Carolina, purchaser refunds include the full contract price, charges for undercoating, dealer preparation, transportation, installed options, sales tax, license and registration fees, government charges, finance charges, incidental damages and consequential damages. The manufacture must also replace the automobile with a comparable vehicle, or refund the purchaser if the automobile was out of service for repairs for a cumulative total of twenty or more business days. War, strike, or natural disasters extend the period of time during which repair services are required.

Customers who have purchased a car with a lease agreement must return the automobile to the manufacturer. The lemon law of North Carolina then forces the termination of the purchaser's written lease without penalty. The title of the car is transferred to the automobile manufacturer whether the purchaser chooses an automobile replacement or a refund.

If a manufacturer resells an automobile that was returned under faulty conditions, by the lemon law in North Carolina dictates that the manufacturer must disclose the defect which impaired the value of the automobile to the next purchaser. Any purchaser who resells the automobile must subsequently make the required disclosures.

Lemon laws of North Carolina will accept as a defense from car manufacturers, that warranty defects are the result of abuse, neglect, odometer tampering, or unauthorized modifications.

A purchaser injured due to an automobile's warranty defects may bring civil action against the manufacturer, provided that the purchaser has given the manufacturer written notice of his or her intent to sue at least ten days prior to filing suit. Nothing however, can prevent a manufacturer from requiring a purchaser to utilize its own informal settlement procedure - if that procedure complies with the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act and regulations. If this is indeed a manufacturer's requirement, it must be clearly written in the automobile's warranty (as stated in the lemon law of North Carolina).

Hopefully the sections above have contributed to your understanding of The Lemon Law of North Carolina. Share your new understanding about The Lemon Law of North Carolina with others. They'll thank you for it.

Should a court find a car manufacturer neglectful and non-compliant toward the lemon law of North Carolina, the court may grant monetary damages to the injured purchaser in addition to attorney fees.




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