Well, if you look at the Florida Lemon Laws on line, one of the first things on th web page is "Does the lemon law apply to my vehicle" and the first question is "Did you purchase or lease your vehicle NEW in the State of Florida?"
If you answer no, the lemon law doesn't apply. Only new cars. See http://www.800helpfla.com/lemonlaw.html#doesitapply for more.
Did you take the used car you were interested in to your mechanic to have it inspected? If you had, you would have know the problems and could have paid less, or passed on the vehicle.
Did you get a written warranty? If not, you bought AS IS, which means exactly what it says. No, there is nothing you can do to get your money back of make them pay for the repairs.
check with your local dept.of motor vehicle they will tell you
Ok....for the bazillionth time....the lemon law does not apply to used cars. It is the responsibility of the buyer to make sure the car is suitable for their needs and is in the condition they believe it to be. Never take a sellers word about condition. Have a shop check it out and run a vehicle report (unless it's REALLY cheap). It is your car, broken parts and all.
What they said.
Enjoy your new (to you) car purchase. You have no legal leg to stand on, even with your made up fantasy law.
A new Northstar engine will be $4000 plus install as these all aluminum engine is non-rebuildable and I wouldn't chance one sitting in a junkyard.
That will be cash only, please.
Welcome to the world of used Caddys. You buy a cheap POS used Caddy and the parts are still hard to get and still expensive.
But, it still might look good with 24" dubs on it, even if it can not be driven!
You only have recourse if the vehicle has a factory warranty. If it was sold AS IS you have no recourse in the Lemon Law. Some vehicles still may have some factory warranty on it.
Check the manual. Check your purchase agreement and warranty information.
There is no such thing as a lemon law for used cars or a remorse law, period.
Your friend should have looked at it before you bought the vehicle. That is what 'as-is' means. No warranty. Once you sign the title, it is your car and your problem.
The only hope you have is if you can prove that the person purposely frauded you by misrepresenting what he sold you.
It is very hard to do since it is likely impossible for you to prove that these things were wrong with the car before you bought it.
wel that tells me two things first you didnt check it very well before you started it and you didnt do a 30 minute test drive and you didnt recheck everything a second time before buying it so im guessing you just didnt check it very well cause second thing after walking a round it looking would have been open hood and look and check fluids and you woul dhave seen problem sorry you should have check better
I dont know about FL but I am pretty sure that most private sell are "as is" and therefore, the lemon laws dont apply.
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