NEW CUMBERLAND, Pa. -- Gov. Mark Schweiker signed a bill
that will give people who lease new cars the same protection as
those who buy them.
The new lemon law for leased cars will
take effect in two months.
Brian Fincher told News 8 that the
transmission on his leased 1999 Ford Taurus has given him
problems ever since the car was new.
"You hit the gas, the RPMs come up, and
the transmission just does not go into gear and then all of a
sudden it'll slam in with a big jerk and you'll just take off,"
Fincher said.
With the new law, people like Fincher, who
lease a new car, will have some clout if the car turns out to be
a lemon.
"We've been seeing more and more people,
more and more consumers have been choosing the option of leasing
rather than outright purchase of a vehicle or light truck," said
state Rep. John Evans.
That's why Evans said he sponsored the
bill that gives people with leased cars the same rights as
people who buy a new car.
The state's lemon law now applies to new
and leased cars in the first year after delivery and up to
12,000 miles or the term of the manufacturer's expressed
warranty, whichever comes first. During that time, a
manufacturer has to buy back the car or light truck if a defect
cannot be corrected after three attempts, or if it's out of
service for a total of 30 calendar days.
Montgomery County attorney Craig Thor
Kimmel specializes in product defect cases. He said one of most
important parts of the lemon law for leased and new cars is that
the car dealer has to tell you about it.
"What this really does is it gives people
the information they have at the time of sale or lease so they
know what their rights are in the event that problems arise with
their car," Kimmel said.
Click
here to read the new law.
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