North
Carolina Lemon Law Statutes
NCGS CHAPTER 20, ARTICLE 15A
back
to map
New Motor Vehicles Warranties Act
§ 20-351. Purpose.
This Article shall
provide State and private remedies
against motor vehicle manufacturers
for persons injured by new motor vehicles
failing to conform to express warranties.
(1987, c. 385.)
§ 20-351.1.
Definitions.
As used in this Article:
(1) "Consumer" means the
purchaser, other than for purposes
of resale, or lessee from a commercial
lender, lessor, or from a manufacturer
or dealer, of a motor vehicle, and
any other person entitled by the terms
of an express warranty to enforce
the obligations of that warranty.
(2) "Manufacturer" means
any person or corporation, resident
or nonresident, who manufactures or
assembles or imports or distributes
new motor vehicles which are sold
in the State of North Carolina.
(3) "Motor vehicle"
includes a motor vehicle as defined
in G.S. 20-4.01 which is sold or leased
in this State, but does not include
"house trailer" as defined
in G.S. 20-4.01 or any motor vehicle
with a gross vehicle weight of 10,000
pounds or more.
(4) "New motor
vehicle" means a motor vehicle
for which a certificate of origin,
as required by G.S. 20-52.1 or a similar
requirement in another state, has
never been supplied to a consumer,
or which a manufacturer, its agent,
or its authorized dealer states in
writing is being sold as a new motor
vehicle.
(1987, c. 385; 1989, c. 43, s. 2,
c. 519, s. 2.)
§ 20-351.2. Require repairs;
when mileage warranty begins to accrue.
(a) Express warranties
for a new motor vehicle shall remain
in effect at least one year or 12,000
miles. If a new motor vehicle does
not conform to all applicable express
warranties for a period of one year,
or the term of the express warranties,
whichever is greater, following the
date of original delivery of the motor
vehicle to the consumer, and the consumer
reports the nonconformity to the manufacturer,
its agent, or its authorized dealer
during such period, the manufacturer
shall make, or arrange to have made,
repairs necessary to conform the vehicle
to the express warranties, whether
or not these repairs are made after
the expiration of the applicable warranty
period.
(b) Any express warranty
for a new motor vehicle expressed
in terms of a certain number of miles
shall begin to accrue from the mileage
on the odometer at the date of original
delivery to the consumer.
(1987, c. 385; 1989,
c. 14.)
§ 20-351.3.
Replacement or refund; disclosure
requirement.
(a) When the consumer
is the purchaser or a person entitled
by the terms of the express warranty
to enforce the obligations of the
warranty, if the manufacturer is unable,
after a reasonable number of attempts,
to conform the motor vehicle to any
express warranty by repairing or correcting,
or arranging for the repair or correction
of, any defect or condition or series
of defects or conditions which substantially
impair the value of the motor vehicle
to the consumer, and which occurred
no later than 24 months or 24,000
miles following original delivery
of the vehicle, the manufacturer shall,
at the option of the consumer, replace
the vehicle with a comparable new
motor vehicle or accept return of
the vehicle from the consumer and
refund to the consumer the following:
(1) The full contract price including,
but not limited to, charges for undercoating,
dealer preparation and transportation,
and installed options, plus the non-refundable
portions of extended warranties and
service contracts;
(2) All collateral charges, including
but not limited to, sales tax, license
and registration fees, and similar
government charges;
(3) All finance charges
incurred by the consumer after he
first reports the nonconformity to
the manufacturer, its agent, or its
authorized dealer; and
(4) Any incidental
damages and monetary consequential
damages.
(b) When consumer is a lessee, if
the manufacturer is unable, after
a reasonable number of attempts, to
conform the motor vehicle to any express
warranty by repairing or correcting,
or arranging for the repair or correction
of, any defect or condition or series
of defects or conditions which substantially
impair the value of the motor vehicle
to the consumer, and which occurred
no later than 24 months or 24,000
miles following original delivery
of the vehicle, the manufacturer shall,
at the option of the consumer, replace
the vehicle with a comparable new
motor vehicle or accept return of
the vehicle from the consumer and
refund the following:
(1) To the consumer:
a. All sums previously
paid by the consumer under the terms
of the lease;
b. All sums previously paid by the
consumer in connection with entering
into the lease agreement, including,
but not limited to, any capitalized
cost reduction, sales tax, license
and registration fees, and similar
government charges; and
c. Any incidental
and monetary consequential damages.
(2) To the lessor, a full refund of
the lease price, plus an additional
amount equal to five percent (5%)
of the lease price, less eighty-five
percent (85%) of the amount actually
paid by the consumer to the lessor
pursuant to the lease. The lease price
means the actual purchase cost of
the vehicle to the lessor.
In the case of a refund, the leased
vehicle shall be returned to the manufacturer
and the consumer's written lease shall
be terminated by the lessor without
any penalty to the consumer. The lessor
shall transfer title of the motor
vehicle to the manufacturer as necessary
to effectuate the consumer's rights
pursuant to this Article, whether
the consumer chooses vehicle replacement
or refund.
(c) Refunds shall be made to the consumer,
lessor and any lienholders as their
interests may appear. The refund to
the consumer shall be reduced by a
reasonable allowance for the consumer's
use of the vehicle. A reasonable allowance
for use is that amount directly attributable
to use by the consumer prior to his
first report of the nonconformity
to the manufacturer, its agent, or
its authorized dealer, and during
any subsequent period when the vehicle
is not out of service because of repair.
"Reasonable allowance" is
presumed to be the cash price or the
lease price, as the case may be, of
the vehicle multiplied by a fraction
having as its denominator 100,000
miles and its numerator the number
of miles attributed to the consumer.
(d) If a manufacturer, its agent,
or its authorized dealer resells a
motor vehicle that was returned pursuant
to this Article or any other State's
applicable law, regardless of whether
there was any judicial determination
that the motor vehicle had any defect
or that it failed to conform to all
express warranties, the manufacturer,
its agent, or its authorized dealer
shall disclose to the subsequent purchaser
prior to the sale:
(1) That the motor vehicle was returned
pursuant to this Article or pursuant
to the applicable law of any other
State; and
(2) The defect or condition or series
of defects or conditions which substantially
impaired the value of the motor vehicle
to the consumer. Any subsequent purchaser
who purchases the motor vehicle for
resale with notice of the return,
shall make the required disclosures
to any person to whom he resells the
motor vehicle.
(1987, c. 385; 1989, c. 43, s. 1,
c. 519, s. 1.)
§ 20-351.4. Affirmative defenses.
It is an affirmative
defense to any claim under this Article
that an alleged nonconformity or series
of nonconformities are the result
of abuse, neglect, odometer tampering
by the consumer or unauthorized modifications
or alterations of a motor vehicle.
(1987, c. 385.)
§ 20-351.5.
Presumption.
(a) It is presumed
that a reasonable number of attempts
have been undertaken to conform a
motor vehicle to the applicable express
warranties if:
(1) The same nonconformity has been
presented for repair to the manufacturer,
its agent, or its authorized dealer
four or more times but the same nonconformity
continues to exist; or
(2) The vehicle was out of service
to the consumer during or while awaiting
repair of the nonconformity or a series
of nonconformities for a cumulative
total of 20 or more business days
during any 12-month period of the
warranty, provided that the consumer
has notified the manufacturer directly
in writing of the existence of the
nonconformity or series of nonconformities
and allowed the manufacturer a reasonable
period, not to exceed 15 calendar
days, in which to correct the nonconformity
or series of nonconformities. The
manufacturer must clearly and conspicuously
disclose to the consumer in the warranty
or owners manual that written notification
of a nonconformity is required before
a consumer may be eligible for a refund
or replacement of the vehicle and
the manufacturer shall include in
the warranty or owners manual the
name and address where the written
notification may be sent. Provided,
further, that notice to the manufacturer
shall not be required if the manufacturer
fails to make the disclosures provided
herein.
(b) The consumer may prove that a
defect or condition substantially
impairs the value of the motor vehicle
to the consumer in a manner other
than that set forth in subsection
(a) of this section.
(c) The term of an express warranty,
the one-year period, and the 20-day
period shall be extended by any period
of time during which repair services
are not available to the consumer
because of war, strike, or natural
disaster.
(1987, c. 385.)
§ 20-351.6.
Civil action by the Attorney General.
Whenever, in his
opinion, the interests of the public
require it, it shall be the duty of
the Attorney General upon his ascertaining
that any of the provisions of this
Article have been violated by the
manufacturer to bring a civil action
in the name of the State, or any officer
or department thereof as provided
by law, or in the name of the State
on relation of the Attorney General.
(1987, c. 385.)
§ 20-351.7.
Civil action by the consumer.
A consumer injured
by reason of any violation of the
provisions of this Article may bring
a civil action against the manufacturer;
provided, however, the consumer has
given the manufacturer written notice
of his intent to bring an action against
the manufacturer at least 10 days
prior to filing such suit. Nothing
in this section shall prevent a manufacturer
from requiring a consumer to utilize
an informal settlement procedure prior
to litigation if that procedure substantially
complies in design and operation with
the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, 15
USC § 2301 et seq., and regulations
promulgated thereunder, and that requirement
is written clearly and conspicuously,
in the written warranty and any warranty
instructions provided to the consumer.
(1987, c. 385.)
§ 20-351.8.
Remedies.
In any action brought
under this Article, the court may
grant as relief:
(1) A permanent or temporary injunction
or other equitable relief as the court
deems just;
(2) Monetary damages to the injured
consumer in the amount fixed by the
verdict. Such damages shall be trebled
upon a finding that the manufacturer
unreasonably refused to comply with
G.S. 20-351.2 or G.S. 20-351.3. The
jury may consider as damages all items
listed for refund under G.S. 20-351.3;
(3) A reasonable
attorney's fee for the attorney of
the prevailing party, payable by the
losing party, upon a finding by the
court that:
a. The manufacturer unreasonably failed
or refused to fully resolve the matter
which constitutes the basis of such
action; or
b. The party instituting the action
knew, or should have known, the action
was frivolous and malicious.
(1987, c. 385.)
§ 20-351.9. Dealership liability.
No authorized dealer
shall be held liable by the manufacturer
for any refunds or vehicle replacements
in the absence of evidence indicating
that dealership repairs have been
carried out in a manner substantially
inconsistent with the manufacturers'
instructions. This Article does not
create any cause of action by a consumer
against an authorized dealer.
(1987, c. 385.)
§ 20-351.10.
Preservation of other remedies.
This Article does
not limit the rights or remedies which
are otherwise available to a consumer
under any other law.
(1987, c.385.)