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Related Articles from Lemon Law Attorney
Into the Red With Luxury
The sticker on the window of a 2006 Range Rover Sport HSE parked inside Rosenthal Jaguar at Tysons Corner lists a few choice selling points: a child seat sensor, voice-activated controls and heated windshield washer jets -- all for an asking price of $59,350. A more comprehensive list for buyers to consider might read something like this: $1,741 for a new headlight, $600 to replace a cracked windshield -- and the instant respect of valets and your little brother's friends. Call it the unconscious cost-benefit analysis of the luxury car buyer. It's a calculus more of us find ourselves making. Luxury vehicle sales
One Stop Car Shopping Online
Car buying can be a chore regardless of whether you're buying a new or used vehicle. But now the Better Business Bureau is trying to make the whole experience a lot easier. They're teaming up with J.D. Power and Associates on their website to create a one-stop shopping center for car buying. You can use the J.D. Power information to view their ratings for a vehicle. Then you can check up on a local dealership with the BBB's ratings. Once you've decided on the kind of vehicle you want from the Power ratings, you type in your zipcode and indicate how far
Lexus requires all certified cars to include histories.
Starting Monday, May 1, Lexus Division will require sales of its certified used cars and trucks to include vehicle history reports from Carfax Inc. Executives of the luxury brand say the policy will help its dealers comply with a new California law called the Car Buyer's Bill of Rights. Other states are considering similar measures. The California law takes effect July 1. Among other things, it seeks to...
Roadside Distraction: The Trouble With RVs
Mary Lou and Herb Humphries sold their home in Massachusetts last July to travel the country full time in a new, nearly $500,000 motor home. But so far, they haven't gone much farther than the dealership lot. Since they bought the luxury Beaver Patriot Thunder, made by Monaco Coach Corp., they have faced problem after problem, including burned-out fuses, mold, misaligned doors, and a broken alternator that caused a breakdown on the highway last fall. Since buying the motor home last August, the Humphries, who live in the coach, have split most of their time between the dealership and the manufacturer's
More bends in legal road for Benz case.
The price of your typical Mercedes-Benz CL55 ran about $120,000 just five years ago. And it was the price Akron resident Tom Ulrich paid for his new ride in 2002. Today, Ulrich's car is worth about $500,000, although most of that could go to Ulrich's attorneys. For nearly five years, Ulrich has battled Mercedes-Benz in court, contending his luxury sedan is really a lemon dressed in high-gloss paint and a rich interior. This week, the...
Revolution or Evolution for Law Libraries?
We have read and been told that the old days of beautiful, comfortable, completely stocked law firm libraries are gone and are being replaced by electronic, streamlined "convenience store" special libraries where attorneys go just to look something up quickly. The conventional wisdom is that online, compact libraries are much more cost-effective for the firm. That may be true, but there is one big problem with this scenario: Attorneys and administrators don't always share the same opinion about how a law firm library is used and what types of resources make up the tools of the trade today. How does
A new car shouldn’t need repainting before it’s sold
QUESTION: About a month after I purchased a new luxury sedan, it got dinged in a parking lot, resulting in a small dent and chipped paint in the left rear quarter panel. I took the car to a body shop for repairs and learned there that the left rear door and quarter panel had been repaired previously. I contacted the dealership and was told the car had arrived with defective factory paint. The dealer had the left rear door and quarter panel repainted at a collision and paint center at a cost of $551.65. I was not told about that
Buying and Selling a Car
Mary Butler is managing editor at cars.com. She has more than a decade of automotive and personal finance experience and looks to empower auto shoppers so that they can make smart financial decisions. Very much a consumer advocate, Mary was part of the site development team that launched cars.com in June 1998. This discussion was about buying and selling a car. The transcript follows below. Editor's Note: Washingtonpost.com moderators retain editorial control over Live Online discussions and choose the most relevant questions for guests and hosts; guests and hosts can decline to answer questions. _____________ washingtonpost.com: Good afternoon! Welcome to this
U.S. District Court of Eastern Virginia case summaries
A Virginia plaintiff who is suing a Subaru dealership over a vehicle allegedly purchased in Virginia but inadequately serviced in Kensington, Md., has his consumer protection suit transferred from federal court in Virginia to federal court in Maryland. Plaintiff sues under the Virginia lemon law, the Magnuson-Moss Federal Trade Commission Act, the Virginia Uniform Commercial Code and the Virginia Consumer Protection Act. He seeks damages in the amount of the "full purchase price" of the vehicle, plus collateral charges and finance charges; incidental and consequential damages; treble damages under the Virginia Consumer Protection Act and costs and attorney's fees. It
The Orange County Register, Calif., What’s Your Problem column.
It's no fun getting a lemon for a car. Just ask Marci Shumaker. A few months after buying a Ford Explorer in early 2004, the SUV's engine would rumble and lurch forward seconds after acceleration, she said. Honoring the new-car warranty, the dealer tried to fix it. But a few weeks after getting her car back, the SUV hiccupped, again. The "hesitation and surging" of the vehicle almost caused an...
NY auto Lemon Law upheld
A claim by automakers that US Attorney General Eliot Spitzer's office misinterpreted New York's Lemon Law in a way that favoured consumers has been rejected by the state's highest court. According to a report on the hemscott site, at issue was an arbitration programme created by the state Legislature in
DRIVING SMART;Seeking Satisfaction if There's No Quick Fix
THE first state "lemon laws" were passed a dozen years ago, to provide legal remedies for consumers with relatively new, problem-plagued cars that are not fixed after repeated repair attempts by a dealer or manufacturer. All 50 states, plus the District of Columbia, now have such laws. Most states currently
State's equine lemon law is a nag
The rules she writes will affect folks from Bruce Springsteen - who was involved in a Wellington dispute over an $850,000 horse (A Boss Hoss?) - to Palm Beachers who buy thoroughbreds, to the dad who spends a few thousand on a horse for his daughter to ride in Jupiter
Pennsylvania dealership, lawyer trade suits.(odometer fraud lawsuit)(Brief Article)
A conflict is heating up in Pennsylvania, where a high-profile lawyer who specializes in lemon law cases has filed an odometer fraud suit against an Ephrata dealership that sued him earlier for alleged racketeering and misrepresentation. The latest move is a suit in U.S. District Court in Philadelphia filed by
Arbitration for automobile disputes.
Section: Business News - The Thai government plans to establish a quality-control panel and draft a new consumer protection law to regulate car sales, according to Industry Minister Pongsak Ruktapongpisal. The government move comes after a high-profile dispute between Honda and a client.
California on leading edge of new form of political warfare.
People out here love to try new things. They put an actor on the road to the White House, launched Trader Joe's and the hula hoop, triggered a national tax-cut movement, and gave us the Grateful Dead. And now they are at it again. They seem poised to treat their
Consumer's World; Car Makers Fight Back On Lemon Laws
To improve the Federal lemon law, states passed their own, but many have now found the new laws inadequate and in need of amendments. In the first wave, states adopted the Federal law and filled in its gaps by including regulatory criteria and procedures. The laws generally require a refund
Perry Bullard: liberal lawmaker, 1972-1992.
I'm not sure that history will pay that much attention to him.... The fact is that many of the laws that he sponsored--Open Meetings Act, Auto Lemon Law, the Freedom of Information Act, many, many others--roll off the tongues of thousands of Michiganians every day, but precious few have any
Pittsburgh Consumer Sues State Farm Insurance for Selling Salvage Cars Without Disclosure
More than two years after purchasing a pre-certified Honda Civic for his stepson, Robert Beaves received a letter from the Pennsylvania Attorney General informing him the car was previously declared a "total loss" by State Farm Insurance. The carrier omitted the salvage history of the Civic, along with the histories
Car questions answered.
Q. I am considering replacing my Infiniti I30t with the new Jaguar S-Type. My only concern is how the new car will handle in winter weather. The Jag is rear-wheel-drive, while my cars have been front-drive. Can you provide any information? A. It is true that front-drive cars generally have