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Uniform
Commercial Code Summary
UCC/TARR -The Uniform Commercial
Code or UCC has been enacted in all 50 states and
some of the territories of the United States. It
is the primary source of law in all contracts
dealing with the sale of products. The TARR refers
to Tender, Acceptance, Rejection, Revocation and
applies to different aspects of the consumer's
"relationship" with the purchased goods....TENDER-The tender provisions of
the Uniform Commercial Code contained in
Section2-601 provide that the buyer is entitled to
reject any goods that fail in any respect to
conform to the contract. Unfortunately, new cars
are often technically complex and their innermost
workings are beyond the understanding of the
average new car buyer. The buyer, therefore, does
not know whether the goods are then conforming.
ACCEPTANCE-The new car buyer
accepts the goods believing and expecting that the
manufacturer will repair any problem he has with
the goods under the warranty.
REJECTION-The new car buyer may
discover a problem with the vehicle within the
first few miles of his purchase. This would allow
the new car buyer to reject the goods. If the new
car buyer discovers a defect in the car within a
reasonable time to inspect the vehicle, he may
reject the vehicle. This period is not defined. On
the one hand, the buyer must be given a reasonable
time to inspect and that reasonable time to
inspect will be held as an acceptance of the
vehicle. The Courts will decide this reasonable
time to inspect based on the knowledge and
experience of the buyer, the difficulty in
discovering the defect, and the opportunity to
discover the defect.
The following is an example of a
case of rejection: Mr. Zabriskie purchased a new
1966 Chevrolet Biscayne. After picking up the car
on Friday evening, while en route to his home 2.5
miles away, and within 7/10ths of a mile from the
dealership, the car stalled and stalled again
within 15 feet. Thereafter, the car would only
drive in low gear. The buyer rejected the vehicle
and stopped payment on his check. The dealer
contended that the buyer could not reject the car
because he had driven it around the the block and
that was his reasonable opportunity to inspect.
The New Jersey Court said;
To the layman, the
complicated mechanisms of today's automobile
are a complete mystery. To have the automobile
inspected by someone with sufficient
expertise to disassemble the vehicle in order
the discover latent defects before the
contract is signed, is assuredly impossible
and highly impractical. Consequently, the
first few miles of driving become even more
significant to the excited new car buyer.
This is the buyer's first reasonable
opportunity to enjoy his new vehicle to see
if it conforms to what it was represented to
be and whether he is getting what he
bargained for. How long the buyer may drive
the new car under the guise of inspection of
new goods is not an issue in the present case
because 7/10th of a mile is clearly within
the ambit of a reasonable opportunity to
inspect. Zabriskie Chevrolet, Inc.v. Smith,
240 A. 2d 195(1968)
It is suggested that Courts will
tend to excuse use by consumers if possible.
REVOCATION- What happens when
the consumer has used the new car for a lengthy
period of time? This is the typical lemon car
case. The UCC provides that a buyer may revoke his
acceptance of goods whose non-conformity
substantially impairs the value of the goods to
him when he has accepted the goods without
discovery of a non-conformity because it was
difficult to discover or if he was assured that
non-conformities would be repaired. Of course, the
average new car buyer does not learn of the
nonconformity until hundreds of thousands of miles
later. And because quality is job one, and
manufacturers are competing on the basis of their
warranties, the consumer always is assured that
any noncomformities he does discover will be
remedied.
What is a noncomformity
substantially impairing the value of the vehicle?
1) A noncomformity may include
a number of relatively minor defects whose
cumulative total adds up to a substantial
impairment. This is the "Shake
Faith" Doctrine first stated in the
Zabrisikie case. "For a majority of
people the purchase of a new car is a major
investment, rationalized by the peace of mind
that flows from its dependability and safety.
Once their faith is shaken, the vehicle loses
not only its real value in their eyes, but
becomes an instrument whose integrity is
substantially impaired and whose operation is
fraught with apprehension".
2) A substantial
noncomformity may include a failure or
refusal to repair the goods under the
warranty. In Durfee V. Rod Baxter Imports,
the Minnesota Court held that the Saab owner
that was plagued by a series of of annoying
minor defects and stalling, which were never
repaired after a number of attempts, could
revoke, "if repairs are not successfully
undertaken within a reasonable time",
the consumer may elect to revoke.
Substantial Non Conformity
and Lemon Laws often define what may be
considered a substantial impairment. These
definitions have been successfully used to
flesh out the substantial impairment in the
UCC.
source: Autopedia
http://www.autopedia.com/
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