roaniecowpony
Well-Known Member
What you say is true, only if challenged in a legal forum. The dealership/mfr hold all the cards for accepting or denying warranty work. Once they make a decision and dig their heels in, If you want to excercise your legal rights (Moss-Ferguson, other consumer law), it really is on you to take action. You have to ant'e up to play your hand with your time and money.other way around they have to prove that the mod caused the failure
There's at least a few avenues that I know of to challenge them: Consumer rights orgs like BBB, or local or state AG, or your own attorney. There's probably more. Some states have a Bureau of Automotive Repair. The thing is, nothing is going to happen, even if they are in the wrong, if you don't do something.
As for class actions someone mentioned, I wouldn't be party to initiating one nor participate. I'd get my own suit, if it came to that. The class action was invented by lawyers to benefit lawyers. It's their version of a pyrimid scheme, IMO. Participants (the class) end up with the $19.99 check and the attorney for the class ends up with the $1,990,000 check. Forget about everone else, get your own recovery. Let the state pursue that class action stuff.
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