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Roseman Law Firm
If your car is constantly in the shop for repairs, you may have a lemon. You could receive a new car, refund of all your money paid, or cash and keep your car. There is no cost to you for legal representation, so there is no reason to put up with your bad car. Driving a lemon car can be frustrating, time-consuming and dangerous. State lemon laws and federal warranty laws give you rights if your new or used car has had three or more repairs for the same problem or been in the shop for thirty days or more under warranty.

Get free help for your lemon vehicle from Roseman Law Firm, where we have fought for thousands of consumers. Lemon and breach of warranty laws can apply to new or used vehicles, including cars, trucks, SUVs, motorcycles, ATVs and RVs. Warranty laws provide protection even if the problem with your vehicle started after the first year. You may be entitled to a new vehicle, a full refund or cash.

Legal fees and costs are paid by the manufacturer, not you. Under the various Lemon Laws and other warranty laws, the manufacturer pays your attorneys' fees and costs.
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Attorney Christina Gill Roseman is founder of Roseman Law Firm, PLLC, and is admitted to practice law in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio, Michigan and Wisconsin.
She is a trial lawyer who uses her substantial skills and experience in consumer law to fight for her clients' rights against car manufacturers and dealerships in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio and Michigan.
Attorney Roseman's trial wins include jury verdicts against Mercedes in 2021, Winnebago in 2019, Hyundai and Chrysler in 2013, and GM and Chrysler in 2010, as well as nonjury verdicts against Kia in 2019 and 2012.
For a claim under the Pennsylvania Lemon Law, you must have a new vehicle registered in PA or new vehicle purchased in another state and registered for the first time in Pennsylvania.
Your car must be used primarily for personal, family or household purposes.
The problem with your car must have started during the first 12 months of ownership or first 12,000 miles - whichever occurs first.
The problem must also substantially impair the use, safety or value of the vehicle.
You are required under the Pennsylvania Lemon Law to give the dealer or manufacturer a reasonable number of attempts to repair the vehicle.
In West Virginia, the lemon law protects owners of new or used passenger vehicles that have problems during the manufacturer's warranty.
If a manufacturer or its dealership doesn't repair a problem with your vehicle under warranty in a reasonable number of repair attempts, the manufacturer has violated the lemon law.
The vehicle must have been purchased in West Virginia OR purchased in another state but registered and titled in West Virginia.
Covered vehicles include cars, trucks and SUVs that are used primarily for personal, family or household purposes.
The legislature further finds as a matter of public policy that the manufacturer shall bear the total cost of performing any duty or responsibility imposed by their warranties and the provisions of this article.
This section does not create any cause of action by a consumer against an authorized dealer.
All authorized dealers of new motor vehicles shall provide to any consumer a written disclosure of any repairs to a new motor vehicle that have a retail value of 5 percent of the manufacturer's suggested retail price and were performed after shipment from the manufacturer to the dealer, including damage to the new motor vehicle while in transit.
Is your car a lemon?
To qualify as a "lemon" under Ohio's Lemon Law, you must have a motor vehicle, motorcycle, farm truck not used for profit or a motor home that started having problems within the first 12 months or 18,000 miles - whichever comes first.
The problem must substantially impair the use, safety or value of the vehicle, and the manufacturer or its dealership must have been provided a reasonable number of attempts to repair the issue.
A reasonable amount of attempts during the first year or 18,000 miles is normally three repair visits OR 30 days out of service OR eight attempts to repair any nonconformity OR one or more attempts to repair a problem that recurs or still exists that is likely to cause death or bodily injury.
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