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Quick question, we have 04 Infiniti FX35, being serviced during the moment, i have been watchful 2 weeks for my automobile to be fixed. My car’s front newcomer lay is defective, they have been watchful for an sequence to arrive. My automobile is during the use as well as im with the loan. If thirty days pass as well as my automobile is still there does the Lemon Law apply:?
my automobile has 45.000 miles upon it, when i purchased i got the lengthened guaranty for 80.000 or 6 years.
i still have the year left as well as 35.000 miles.
i have had most things serviced zero automatic though
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No.
The Lemon Law comes into play when a vehicle is serviced more than 3-4 times for the same issue with no resolution. This only applies to new vehicles (used vehicles in rare circumstances, in some states).
The vehicle must be under the original manufacturer’s warranty to even be considered.
**EDIT — is it still under the ORIGINAL "bumper-to-bumper" warranty? If not, it will probably not even be considered for the Lemon Law. Plus, this issue must occur 3-4 times within a 12-month time period. Having the vehicle for 30 days will not invoke the Lemon Law.
**EDIT — Lemon Laws are very strict when it comes to consideration. There’s not a ton of grey area involved with them. Plus, it takes months, sometimes a year or more, for a Lemon Law case to even see arbitration. And, yes, Alfred below is correct… your seat issue isn’t even close to being a Lemon Law case.
**EDIT — "I’ve had many things serviced" — doesn’t matter… it must be the SAME issue occuring 3-4 times within a 12-month period, without resolution.
One fix for a seat and you get pushy?
Lemon Law wouldn’t cover that even if you were under original factory warranty still.
Uh, no.
A broken seat does not make it a lemon. Don’t be silly.
Did they give you a loaner or a rental? If not, you should request they give you back the car so you can use it until the part arrives.
I had a Chevy that required a rebuilt tranny and waited over a month. And no, it still wasn’t a lemon law issue.
Nope. a 5 year old car with 45,000 miles is excluded from lemon law protection.
Lemon laws protect the buyers of NEW cars from serious and recurring defects. If it takes 30 days to receive a part, then that’s how long it takes.