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Florida
Lemon Law
Florida
Statutes Annotated, Chapter 681
681.10
Short title.
This
chapter shall be known and may be cited as
the "Motor Vehicle Warranty Enforcement
Act."
681.101
Legislative intent.
The
Legislature recognizes that a motor vehicle
is a major consumer purchase and that a
defective motor vehicle undoubtedly creates a
hardship for the consumer. The Legislature
further recognizes that a duly franchised
motor vehicle dealer is an authorized service
agent of the manufacturer. It is the intent
of the Legislature that a good faith motor
vehicle warranty complaint by a consumer be
resolved by the manufacturer within a
specified period of time; however, it is not
the intent of the Legislature that a consumer
establish the presumption of a reasonable
number of attempts as to each manufacturer
that provides a warranty directly to the
consumer. It is further the intent of the
Legislature to provide the statutory
procedures whereby a consumer may receive a
replacement motor vehicle, or a full refund,
for a motor vehicle which cannot be brought
into conformity with the warranty provided
for in this chapter. However, nothing in this
chapter shall in any way limit or expand the
rights or remedies which are otherwise
available to a consumer under any other law.
681.102
Definitions.
As
used in this chapter, the term:
(1)
"Authorized service agent" means
any person, including a franchised motor
vehicle dealer, who is authorized by the
manufacturer to service motor vehicles. In
the case of a recreational vehicle when there
are two or more manufacturers, an authorized
service agent for any individual manufacturer
is any person, including a franchised motor
vehicle dealer, who is authorized to service
the items warranted by that manufacturer. The
term does not include a rental car company
authorized to repair rental vehicles.
(2)
"Board" means the Florida New Motor
Vehicle Arbitration Board.
(3)
"Collateral charges" means those
additional charges to a consumer wholly
incurred as a result of the acquisition of
the motor vehicle. For the purposes of this
chapter, collateral charges include, but are
not limited to, manufacturer-installed or
agent-installed items or service charges,
earned finance charges, sales taxes, and
title charges.
(4)
"Consumer" means the purchaser,
other than for purposes of resale, or the
lessee, of a motor vehicle primarily used for
personal, family, or household purposes; any
person to whom such motor vehicle is
transferred for the same purposes during the
duration of the Lemon Law rights period; and
any other person entitled by the terms of the
warranty to enforce the obligations of the
warranty.
(5)
"Days" means calendar days.
(6)
"Department" means the Department
of Legal Affairs.
(7)
"Division" means the Division of
Consumer Services of the Department of
Agriculture and Consumer Services.
(8)
"Incidental charges" means those
reasonable costs to the consumer which are
directly caused by the nonconformity of the
motor vehicle.
(9)
"Lease price" means the aggregate
of the capitalized cost, as defined in s.
521.003(2), and each of the following items
to the extent not included in the capitalized
cost:
(a)
Lessor's earned rent charges through the date
of repurchase.
(b)
Collateral charges, if applicable.
(c)
Any fee paid to another to obtain the lease.
(d)
Any insurance or other costs expended by the
lessor for the benefit of the lessee.
(e)
An amount equal to state and local sales
taxes, not otherwise included as collateral
charges, paid by the lessor when the vehicle
was initially purchased.
(10)
"Lemon Law rights period" means the
period ending 24 months after the date of the
original delivery of a motor vehicle to a
consumer.
(11)
"Lessee" means any consumer who
leases a motor vehicle for 1 year or more
pursuant to a written lease agreement which
provides that the lessee is responsible for
repairs to such motor vehicle or any consumer
who leases a motor vehicle pursuant to a
lease-purchase agreement.
(12)
"Lessee cost" means the aggregate
deposit and rental payments previously paid
to the lessor for the leased vehicle but
excludes debt from any other transaction.
(13)
"Lessor" means a person who holds
title to a motor vehicle that is leased to a
lessee under a written lease agreement or who
holds the lessor's rights under such
agreement.
(14)
"Manufacturer" means any person,
whether a resident or nonresident of this
state, who manufactures or assembles motor
vehicles, or who manufactures or assembles
chassis for recreational vehicles, or who
manufactures or installs on previously
assembled truck or recreational vehicle
chassis special bodies or equipment which,
when installed, forms an integral part of the
motor vehicle, a distributor as defined in s.
320.60(5), or an importer as defined in s.
320.60(7). A dealer as defined in s.
320.60(11)(a) shall not be deemed to be a
manufacturer, distributor, or importer as
provided in this section.
(15)
"Motor vehicle" means a new
vehicle, propelled by power other than
muscular power, which is sold in this state
to transport persons or property, and
includes a recreational vehicle or a vehicle
used as a demonstrator or leased vehicle if a
manufacturer's warranty was issued as a
condition of sale, or the lessee is
responsible for repairs, but does not include
vehicles run only upon tracks, off-road
vehicles, trucks over 10,000 pounds gross
vehicle weight, motorcycles, mopeds, or the
living facilities of recreational vehicles.
"Living facilities of recreational
vehicles" are those portions designed,
used, or maintained primarily as living
quarters and include, but are not limited to,
the flooring, plumbing system and fixtures,
roof air conditioner, furnace, generator,
electrical systems other than automotive
circuits, the side entrance door, exterior
compartments, and windows other than the
windshield and driver and front passenger
windows.
(16)
"Nonconformity" means a defect or
condition that substantially impairs the use,
value, or safety of a motor vehicle, but does
not include a defect or condition that
results from an accident, abuse, neglect,
modification, or alteration of the motor
vehicle by persons other than the
manufacturer or its authorized service agent.
(17)
"Procedure" means an informal
dispute-settlement procedure established by a
manufacturer to mediate and arbitrate motor
vehicle warranty disputes.
(18)
"Program" means the mediation and
arbitration pilot program for recreational
vehicles established in this chapter.
(19)
"Purchase price" means the cash
price as defined in s. 520.31(1), inclusive
of any allowance for a trade-in vehicle, but
excludes debt from any other transaction.
"Any allowance for a trade-in
vehicle" means the net trade-in
allowance as reflected in the purchase
contract or lease agreement if acceptable to
the consumer and manufacturer. If such amount
is not acceptable to the consumer and
manufacturer, then the trade-in allowance
shall be an amount equal to 100 percent of
the retail price of the trade-in vehicle as
reflected in the NADA Official Used Car Guide
(Southeastern Edition) or NADA Recreation
Vehicle Appraisal Guide, whichever is
applicable, in effect at the time of the
trade-in. The manufacturer shall be
responsible for providing the applicable NADA
book.
(20)
"Reasonable offset for use" means
the number of miles attributable to a
consumer up to the date of a settlement
agreement or arbitration hearing, whichever
occurs first, multiplied by the purchase
price of the vehicle and divided by 120,000,
except in the case of a recreational vehicle,
in which event it shall be divided by 60,000.
(21)
"Recreational vehicle" means a
motor vehicle primarily designed to provide
temporary living quarters for recreational,
camping, or travel use, but does not include
a van conversion.
(22)
"Replacement motor vehicle" means a
motor vehicle which is identical or
reasonably equivalent to the motor vehicle to
be replaced, as the motor vehicle to be
replaced existed at the time of acquisition.
"Reasonably equivalent to the motor
vehicle to be replaced" means the
manufacturer's suggested retail price of the
replacement vehicle shall not exceed 105
percent of the manufacturer's suggested
retail price of the motor vehicle to be
replaced. In the case of a recreational
vehicle, "reasonably equivalent to the
motor vehicle to be replaced" means the
retail price of the replacement vehicle shall
not exceed 105 percent of the purchase price
of the recreational vehicle to be replaced.
(23)
"Warranty" means any written
warranty issued by the manufacturer, or any
affirmation of fact or promise made by the
manufacturer, excluding statements made by
the dealer, in connection with the sale of a
motor vehicle to a consumer which relates to
the nature of the material or workmanship and
affirms or promises that such material or
workmanship is free of defects or will meet a
specified level of performance.
681.103
Duty of manufacturer to conform a motor
vehicle to the warranty.
(1)
If a motor vehicle does not conform to the
warranty and the consumer first reports the
problem to the manufacturer or its authorized
service agent during the Lemon Law rights
period, the manufacturer or its authorized
service agent shall make such repairs as are
necessary to conform the vehicle to the
warranty, irrespective of whether such
repairs are made after the expiration of the
Lemon Law rights period. Such repairs shall
be at no cost to the consumer if made during
the term of the manufacturer's written
express warranty. Nothing in this paragraph
shall be construed to grant an extension of
the Lemon Law rights period or to expand the
time within which a consumer must file a
claim under this chapter.
(2)
Each manufacturer shall provide to its
consumers conspicuous notice of the address
and phone number for its zone, district, or
regional office for this state in the written
warranty or owner's manual. By January 1 of
each year, each manufacturer shall forward to
the Department of Legal Affairs a copy of the
owner's manual and any written warranty for
each make and model of motor vehicle that it
sells in this state.
(3)
At the time of acquisition, the manufacturer
shall inform the consumer clearly and
conspicuously in writing how and where to
file a claim with a certified procedure if
such procedure has been established by the
manufacturer pursuant to s. 681.108. The
manufacturer shall provide to the dealer and,
at the time of acquisition, the dealer shall
provide to the consumer a written statement
that explains the consumer's rights under
this chapter. The written statement shall be
prepared by the Department of Legal Affairs
and shall contain a toll-free number for the
division that the consumer can contact to
obtain information regarding the consumer's
rights and obligations under this chapter or
to commence arbitration. If the manufacturer
obtains a signed receipt for timely delivery
of sufficient quantities of this written
statement to meet the dealer's vehicle sales
requirements, it shall constitute prima facie
evidence of compliance with this subsection
by the manufacturer. The consumer's signed
acknowledgment of receipt of materials
required under this subsection shall
constitute prima facie evidence of compliance
by the manufacturer and dealer. The form of
the acknowledgments shall be approved by the
Department of Legal Affairs, and the dealer
shall maintain the consumer's signed
acknowledgment for 3 years.
(4)
A manufacturer, through its authorized
service agent, shall provide to the consumer,
each time the consumer's motor vehicle is
returned after being examined or repaired
under the warranty, a fully itemized, legible
statement or repair order indicating any test
drive performed and the approximate length of
the test drive, any diagnosis made, and all
work performed on the motor vehicle
including, but not limited to, a general
description of the problem reported by the
consumer or an identification of the defect
or condition, parts and labor, the date and
the odometer reading when the motor vehicle
was submitted for examination or repair, and
the date when the repair or examination was
completed.
681.104
Nonconformity of motor vehicles.
(1)
(a)
After three attempts have been made to repair
the same nonconformity, the consumer shall
give written notification, by registered or
express mail to the manufacturer, of the need
to repair the nonconformity to allow the
manufacturer a final attempt to cure the
nonconformity. The manufacturer shall have 10
days, commencing upon receipt of such
notification, to respond and give the
consumer the opportunity to have the motor
vehicle repaired at a reasonably accessible
repair facility within a reasonable time
after the consumer's receipt of the response.
The manufacturer shall have 10 days, except
in the case of a recreational vehicle, in
which event the manufacturer shall have 45
days, commencing upon the delivery of the
motor vehicle to the designated repair
facility by the consumer, to conform the
motor vehicle to the warranty. If the
manufacturer fails to respond to the consumer
and give the consumer the opportunity to have
the motor vehicle repaired at a reasonably
accessible repair facility or perform the
repairs within the time periods prescribed in
this subsection, the requirement that the
manufacturer be given a final attempt to cure
the nonconformity does not apply.
(b)
If the motor vehicle is out of service by
reason of repair of one or more
nonconformities by the manufacturer or its
authorized service agent for a cumulative
total of 15 or more days, exclusive of
downtime for routine maintenance prescribed
by the owner's manual, the consumer shall so
notify the manufacturer in writing by
registered or express mail to give the
manufacturer or its authorized service agent
an opportunity to inspect or repair the
vehicle.
(2)
(a)
If the manufacturer, or its authorized
service agent, cannot conform the motor
vehicle to the warranty by repairing or
correcting any nonconformity after a
reasonable number of attempts, the
manufacturer, within 40 days, shall
repurchase the motor vehicle and refund the
full purchase price to the consumer, less a
reasonable offset for use, or, in
consideration of its receipt of payment from
the consumer of a reasonable offset for use,
replace the motor vehicle with a replacement
motor vehicle acceptable to the consumer. The
refund or replacement must include all
reasonably incurred collateral and incidental
charges. However, the consumer has an
unconditional right to choose a refund rather
than a replacement motor vehicle. Upon
receipt of such refund or replacement, the
consumer, lien holder, or lessor shall
furnish to the manufacturer clear title to
and possession of the motor vehicle.
(b)
Refunds shall be made to the consumer and
lien holder of record, if any, as their
interests may appear. If applicable, refunds
shall be made to the lessor and lessee as
follows: The lessee shall receive the lessee
cost and the lessor shall receive the lease
price less the lessee cost. A penalty for
early lease termination may not be assessed
against a lessee who receives a replacement
motor vehicle or refund under this chapter.
The Department of Revenue shall refund to the
manufacturer any sales tax which the
manufacturer refunded to the consumer, lien
holder, or lessor under this section, if the
manufacturer provides to the department a
written request for a refund and evidence
that the sales tax was paid when the vehicle
was purchased and that the manufacturer
refunded the sales tax to the consumer, lien
holder, or lessor.
(3)
It is presumed that a reasonable number of
attempts have been undertaken to conform a
motor vehicle to the warranty if, during the
Lemon Law rights period, either:
(a)
The same nonconformity has been subject to
repair at least three times by the
manufacturer or its authorized service agent,
plus a final attempt by the manufacturer to
repair the motor vehicle if undertaken as
provided for in paragraph (1)(a), and such
nonconformity continues to exist; or
(b)
The motor vehicle has been out of service by
reason of repair of one or more
nonconformities by the manufacturer, or its
authorized service agent, for a cumulative
total of 30 or more days, 60 or more days in
the case of a recreational vehicle, exclusive
of downtime for routine maintenance
prescribed by the owner's manual. The
manufacturer or its authorized service agent
must have had at least one opportunity to
inspect or repair the vehicle following
receipt of the notification as provided in
paragraph (1)(b). The 30-day period, or
60-day period in the case of a recreational
vehicle, may be extended by any period of
time during which repair services are not
available to the consumer because of war,
invasion, strike, fire, flood, or natural
disaster.
(4)
It is an affirmative defense to any claim
under this chapter that:
(a)
The alleged nonconformity does not
substantially impair the use, value, or
safety of the motor vehicle;
(b)
The nonconformity is the result of an
accident, abuse, neglect, or unauthorized
modifications or alterations of the motor
vehicle by persons other than the
manufacturer or its authorized service agent;
or
(c)
The claim by the consumer was not filed in
good faith.
Any other affirmative defense allowed by law
may be raised against the claim.
681.106
Bad faith claims.
Any
claim by a consumer which is found by the
court to have been filed in bad faith or
solely for the purpose of harassment, or in
complete absence of a justiciable issue of
either law or fact raised by the consumer,
shall result in the consumer being liable for
all costs and reasonable attorney's fees
incurred by the manufacturer, or its agent,
as a direct result of the bad faith claim.
681.108
Dispute-settlement procedures.
(1)
If a manufacturer has established a
procedure, which the division has certified
as substantially complying with the
provisions of 16 C.F.R. part 703, in effect
October 1, 1983, and with the provisions of
this chapter and the rules adopted under this
chapter, and has informed the consumer how
and where to file a claim with such procedure
pursuant to s. 681.103(3), the provisions of
s. 681.104(2) apply to the consumer only if
the consumer has first resorted to such
procedure. The decision makers for a
certified procedure shall, in rendering
decisions, take into account all legal and
equitable factors germane to a fair and just
decision, including, but not limited to, the
warranty; the rights and remedies conferred
under 16 C.F.R. part 703, in effect October
1, 1983; the provisions of this chapter; and
any other equitable considerations
appropriate under the circumstances. Decision
makers and staff of a procedure shall be
trained in the provisions of this chapter and
in 16 C.F.R. part 703, in effect October 1,
1983. In an action brought by a consumer
concerning an alleged nonconformity, the
decision that results from a certified
procedure is admissible in evidence.
(2)
A manufacturer may apply to the division for
certification of its procedure. After receipt
and evaluation of the application, the
division shall certify the procedure or
notify the manufacturer of any deficiencies
in the application or the procedure.
(3)
A certified procedure or a procedure of an
applicant seeking certification shall submit
to the division a copy of each settlement
approved by the procedure or decision made by
a decision maker within 30 days after the
settlement is reached or the decision is
rendered. The decision or settlement must
contain at a minimum the:
1.
Name and address of the consumer;
2.
Name of the manufacturer and address
of the dealership from which the motor
vehicle was purchased;
3.
Date the claim was received and the
location of the procedure office that handled
the claim;
4.
Relief requested by the consumer;
5.
Name of each decision maker rendering
the decision or person approving the
settlement;
6.
Statement of the terms of the
settlement or decision;
7.
Date of the settlement or decision;
and
8.
Statement of whether the decision was
accepted or rejected by the consumer.
(4)
Any manufacturer establishing or applying to
establish a certified procedure must file
with the division a copy of the annual audit
required under the provisions of 16 C.F.R.
part 703, in effect October 1, 1983, together
with any additional information required for
purposes of certification, including the
number of refunds and replacements made in
this state pursuant to the provisions of this
chapter by the manufacturer during the period
audited.
(5)
The division shall review each certified
procedure at least annually, prepare an
annual report evaluating the operation of
certified procedures established by motor
vehicle manufacturers and procedures of
applicants seeking certification, and, for a
period not to exceed 1 year, shall grant
certification to, or renew certification for,
those manufacturers whose procedures
substantially comply with the provisions of
16 C.F.R. part 703, in effect October 1,
1983, and with the provisions of this chapter
and rules adopted under this chapter. If
certification is revoked or denied, the
division shall state the reasons for such
action. The reports and records of actions
taken with respect to certification shall be
public records.
(6)
A manufacturer whos
source:
Center for Auto Safety http://www.autosafety.org/
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