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LEMON LAW BASICS: Standards of
Hawaii Lemon Law
STANDARDS OF THE HAWAII
LEMON LAW
The following is an brief explanation of most relevant
provisions of the Hawaii lemon law. The complete text of the
lemon law can be found at Hawaii Rev. Stat. section 481I-1 et
seq.
VEHICLES COVERED BY THE
HAWAII LEMON LAW
The Hawaii lemon law covers
motor vehicles, defined as self-propelled vehicles primarily
designed for the transportation of persons or property over
public streets and highways and used primarily for personal,
family, or household purposes. This includes demonstrator
vehicles; individually registered vehicles used for an
individuals business purposes and for personal, family, or
household purposes; and vehicles owned or leased by a sole
proprietorship, corporation or partnership that has purchased
or leased no more than one vehicle per year, and used for
household, individual, or personal use in addition to business
use. The lemon law appears to cover used vehicles, but does
not cover mopeds, motorcycles, motor
scooters, or vehicles with a gross vehicle weight rating over
10,000 pounds.
CONSUMERS COVERED BY THE
HAWAII LEMON LAW
The Hawaii lemon law covers the
following consumers:
1. The purchaser, for purposes other than resale, or lessee of
a motor vehicle;
2. Any person to whom the motor vehicle is transferred during
the duration of the express warranty applicable to the motor
vehicle; and
3. Any other person entitled to enforce the terms of the
express warranty.
PROBLEMS COVERED BY THE
HAWAII LEMON LAW
The Hawaii lemon law covers any
nonconformity, which it defines as a defect, malfunction or
condition that:
1. fails to conform to the motor vehicles applicable express
warranty and
2. substantially impairs the use, market value, or safety of a
motor vehicle. Substantially impairs is defined to mean
rendering the motor vehicle unfit, unreliable, or unsafe for
warranted or normal use, or significantly diminishing the
value of the motor vehicle. The Hawaii lemon law does not
cover a defect, malfunction, or condition that results from an
accident, abuse, neglect, modification or alteration of the
motor vehicle by anyone other than the manufacturer, its
agent, distributor, or authorized dealer.
LEMON LAW RIGHTS PERIOD
The Hawaii lemon law establishes
a lemon law rights period, which it defines as the term of the
manufacturers express warranty, the period ending two years
after the date of the motor vehicles original deliver to a
consumer, or the first 24,000 miles of operation, whichever
occurs first.
MANUFACTURERS DUTY TO REPAIR
If a motor vehicle does not
conform to all applicable express warranties, and the consumer
reports the nonconformity to the manufacturer, its agent,
distributor, or authorized dealer during the lemon law rights
period, then the manufacturer, its agent, distributor, or
authorized dealer must make the necessary repairs to conform
the motor vehicle to the express warranty. The necessary
repairs must be made even if the lemon law rights period has
expired.
MANUFACTURERS DUTY TO
REPURCHASE OR REPLACE A VEHICLE
If the manufacturer, its agent,
distributor, or authorized dealer is unable to conform the
motor vehicle to any applicable express warranty by repairing
or correcting a nonconformity after a reasonable number of
documented attempts, the manufacturer must either replace or
repurchase the motor vehicle.
REASONABLE NUMBER OF REPAIR
ATTEMPTS
The Hawaii lemon law establishes
a presumption that a reasonable number of attempts have been
undertaken to conform a motor vehicle to the applicable
express warranties if, during the lemon law rights period, any
of the following occurs:
1. The same nonconformity has been subject to examination or
repair at least three times by the manufacturer, its agents,
distributors, or authorized dealers but the nonconformity
continues to exist;
2. A nonconformity that is likely to cause death or serious
bodily injury if the vehicle is driven has been subject to
examination or repair at least once by the manufacturer, its
agents, distributors, or authorized dealers but the
nonconformity continues to exist; or
3. The motor vehicle is out of service for repair of one or
more nonconformities by the
manufacturer, its agents, distributors, or authorized dealers
for a cumulative total of 30 or more business days.
The lemon law defines business day to mean any day during
which the service departments of the manufacturers authorized
dealers are normally open for business. The term of the lemon
law rights period and the 30 day period are extended by any
period of time during which repair services are not available
to the consumer because of war, invasion, strike, fire, flood,
or other natural disaster.
NOTICE AND OPPORTUNITY TO
REPAIR
The presumption that a
reasonable number of repair attempts has occurred does not
apply against a manufacturer unless the manufacturer has
received a written report of the nonconformity from the
consumer and has had a reasonable opportunity to repair the
alleged defect. The consumer is required to notify the
manufacturer only if the consumer was provided, at the time of
purchase, with a written notice of the consumers rights under
the lemon law and the terms of any state certified arbitration
program.
TIME PERIOD FOR FILING CLAIMS
An action must be initiated
within one year following expiration of the lemon law rights
period (the term of the manufacturers express warranty, the
period ending two years after the date of the motor vehicles
original deliver to a consumer, or the first 24,000 miles of
operation, whichever occurs first).
REMEDIES UNDER THE HAWAII
LEMON LAW REPURCHASE OF OWNED OR LEASED VEHICLE
The Hawaii lemon law sets out
the following amounts that a manufacturer must pay when it
repurchases a motor vehicle under the lemon law:
1. Full purchase price, meaning the cash price appearing in
the sales agreement or contract and paid for the motor
vehicle, including any net allowance for any trade-in vehicle.
This will include but is not limited to charges for
undercoating, dealer preparation, transportation and installed
options;
2. Collateral charges, defined as those additional charges to
a consumer wholly incurred as a result of the acquisition of
the motor vehicle, including but not limited to finance and
interest charges, manufacturer-installed or agent-installed
items, general excise tax, license and registration fees,
title charges, and similar government charges; and
3. Incidental charges, defined as those reasonable costs
incurred by the consumer and directly caused by the
nonconformity or nonconformities that are the subject of the
claim, including but not limited to towing charges and the
costs of obtaining alternative transportation, but excluding
loss of use, loss of income, or personal injury claims;
4. Less a reasonable offset for the consumers use of the motor
vehicle.
Refunds must be made to the consumer and lienholder, if any,
as their interests may appear on the records of ownership.
The reasonable offset for use is one percent of the purchase
price for every thousand miles of use attributable to a
consumer up to (1) the date of the third repair attempt of the
same nonconformity which is the subject of the claim, (2) the
date of the first repair attempt of a nonconformity that is
likely to cause death or serious bodily injury, or (3) the
date of the 30th cumulative business day when the vehicle is
out of service by reason of repair of one or more
nonconformities, whichever occurs first.
An offset may also be made for damage to the vehicle not
attributable to normal wear and tear, if unrelated to the
nonconformity.
REPLACEMENT VEHICLE
The Hawaii lemon law defines a
replacement vehicle as a motor vehicle that is identical or
reasonably equivalent to the motor vehicle to be replaced as
it existed at the time of original acquisition, including any
service contract, undercoating, rust proofing, and factory- or
dealer installed options. The manufacturer is responsible for
any general excise tax and license and registration fees for
the replacement vehicle.
The Hawaii lemon law provides that a reasonable offset for the
consumers use of the motor vehicle be made. The reasonable
offset for use is one percent of the purchase price for every
thousand miles of use attributable to a consumer up to (1) the
date of the third repair attempt of the same nonconformity
which is the subject of the claim, (2) the date of the first
repair attempt of a nonconformity that is likely to cause
death or serious bodily injury, or (3) the date of the 30th
cumulative business day when the vehicle is out of service by
reason of repair of one or more nonconformities, whichever
occurs first. An offset may also be made for loss to the fair
market value of the vehicle resulting from damage beyond
normal wear and tear, unless the damage resulted from the
nonconformity.
Hawaii Lemon Law Quick
Links:
Hawaii Lemon Law Standards
Hawaii Lemon Law Summary
Hawaii Lemon Law Attorneys
Hawaii Lemon Law Statutes
Hawaii State Attorney
Generals Office
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