Palmdale Lemon Law Attorney
Lemon Law Attorneys
If you live in Palmdale and are employed, you drive to work. You drive a long way to work. The average Palmdale commuterâs drive is almost twice the national average. Almost 14% of the workforce are considered âsuper commutersâ and have at least a 90-minute drive.
Car problems are much more than an inconvenience. A reliable vehicle is a necessity. No one should have to deal with the stress and frustration of a vehicle that doesnât do what the manufacturer promised it would. Californiaâs Lemon Law can bring relief.
The Gayle Law Group PC has over twenty years of success resolving Lemon Law cases on behalf of Palmdale consumers.
We have dealt with every brand, make, model of gas, electric, and hybrid vehicles; motorcycles; trucks, and RVs.

Our founding attorney, Liz Gayle, has worked on both sides of the consumer products fence. Her first twelve years as a practicing attorney were spent âon the other side of the fenceâ - she represented product manufacturers (including an automobile maker) before devoting herself to consumer law. That experience makes a difference.
The California Lemon Law
Lemons have been around for as long as cars have been mass produced. Faulty designs, a bad part, a robot that is just slightly off, a car plant with systemic problems. They all add up to vehicles that are sold but donât deliver what the consumer thinks they are paying for. For far too long, there was no recourse for car buyers and lessees. Then, in 1970, California became one of the first states in the nation to rectify that. The California Lemon Law was enacted to provide drivers with relief from persistent problems with their vehicles.
What exactly does the Lemon Law do?
If you leased or purchased a new or used vehicle in California that is under a warranty and has a problem(s) that a dealer has repeatedly failed to repair, you may qualify for compensation.
The California Lemon Law applies to cars, trucks, vans, SUVs, RVs, motorcycles, some business-owned vehicles, and boats. Both purchased or leased new vehicles. It also protects used vehicles that are certified pre-owned and/or still under a manufacturerâs warranty.
Warranties
The Lemon Law only applies if the vehicle is under a manufacturerâs warranty. There is always some confusion over this requirement. Simply, cars, trucks, and the powertrain portions of motorhomes are covered by the Lemon Law if:
- The vehicle is new, used, pre-owned or certified.
- You bought or leased it.
- When you bought or leased the vehicle it was covered by the manufacturerâs warranty (or portion of), or a manufacturerâs extended warranty.
- The vehicle might qualify out of warranty, if it had an ongoing problem that required it to be in the shop several times before the warranty expired.
- The manufacturer has had a reasonable number of opportunities to repair the defect.
- Or the vehicle has been in âthe shopâ for more than thirty days, cumulative.
Motorcycles, the coach portion of a mobile home and towables (fifth-wheel trailers, toy haulers, travel trailers and pop-up campers) are covered as consumer goods. They enjoy the same protections as all consumer goods sold with a manufacturerâs warranty.
What is a Lemon?
There is no single or easy answer. The Lemon Law requires both a substantial defect and either that the vehicle is not repaired after multiple attempts to get it fixed or it has been at the dealership for many days cumulatively.
Substantial defects impair the vehicleâs âuse, value, or safety.â
- A defect that affects a vehicleâs use is one that prevents you from driving the vehicle as it was intended to be driven.
- A vehicleâs value is diminished when the defect means the vehicle wonât sell for the price it normally would bring - if the defect werenât there.
- Safety defects are defects that put the driver, passengers, and other drivers in danger.
Your problem does not have to be safety related to qualify. Most safety issues are obvious â at least to the driver. Stalling on the highway, vibrations from the brake pedal, a transmission that âcatchesâ or âlags,â and an engine that keeps running hot are safety related issues.

A heater that never works, an air conditioner that intermittently blows hot, or a door handle that doesnât function despite repair after repair all qualify as substantial.
The vehicle is not repaired after multiple attempts. You bring your vehicle to the dealership repeatedly and you leave the shop with the same problem. There is no need for you to put up with this seemingly endless cycle for long.
A common myth states âif you bring it in four times, itâs automatically a lemon.â Itâs not necessarily true. The law only specifies that a âreasonable number of repair attemptsâ are made. If a defect involves a safety issue, such as faulty airbags, it may only require two repair attempts. If the vehicle has been in âthe shopâ for more than thirty days, cumulative, regardless of the defect(s), it may also qualify as a lemon.
Vehicle Defects
Motor Vehicles today are better built, safer, and more integrated than ever. In 2020 8.8 million vehicles were manufactured in the United States alone. It's inevitable that something will go wrong somewhere along the way. Design flaws, factory mistakes, faulty computers, a supplierâs error.
The average 21st century gas powered car and truck has over 30,000 parts. From nuts and bolts to brake pads to computer motherboards and Wi-Fi routers. There are at least 2,000 moving parts.
The Gayle Law Group, PC has watched vehicles become ever more sophisticated and complex. Weâve kept pace with every change, and weâve had lemon law experience with all of them.
Common Vehicle Defects in the 2020s (so far)
- Air bag defects
- Air conditioning
- Antilock braking system (ABS)
- Automatic transmission
- Computer defects
- Electrical problems
- Engine fire
- Odors
- Paint
- Power steering
- Seat belts
- Stalling
- Sudden acceleration and surge
Electric and Hybrid Vehicle Defects
Where gas powered vehicles have over 2,000 moving parts, electric vehicles have less than 20. That, however, does not mean that electric and hybrid vehicles have fewer problems. In fact, because the systems in these vehicles are so integrated, even a âminorâ problem can have widespread and lasting implications.
- Automatic backup automation
- Battery failure
- Braking system
- Computer issues
- Electrical system malfunctions
- Failure to hold a charge
Motorcycles
Motorcycles are âconsumer goodsâ and have the same protections as all consumer goods sold with a manufacturerâs warranty.
Every rider knows that what might be considered a minor defect in a car could be a serious safety hazard in a bike. Protections are there for motorcycle owners. No one must put up with a lemon.
What Makes a Motorcycle a Lemon?
Your motorcycle may be considered a lemon if:
- The motorcycle youâre riding isnât the bike as described in the warranty.
- There is a âsubstantial defectâ that is a safety issue. Or affects your use of the bike or its value.
- The motorcycle has gone to the repair shop multiple times and the problem persists.
- You have not been able to operate the bike for at least thirty days. Note that motorcycle repairs take substantially longer than car repairs. Not being able to use a bike for thirty days or more is not uncommon.
- You havenât done anything to cause or contribute to the problem. Modifications, an accident, or neglecting regular maintenance void the warranty.
Common Motorcycle Defects
Common motorcycle defects that have led to Lemon Law claims:
- Loss of power
- Defective head gaskets
- Defective fuel pump
- Stalling
- Cutting out
- Will not start
- Oil leaks or sprays
- Lack of power
- Electrical system malfunctions
- Sway
- No crank conditions
Trucks
There are many myths and misconceptions about trucks and our Lemon Law. Because trucks have high safety ratings, are built to be rugged, are bought to be heavily used (sometimes for business use) many truck owners think the lemon law doesnât apply to their vehicle.
Itâs a misconception that leads truck owners and lessees to assume they have no recourse. Thankfully, the Lemon Law protects trucks that do not meet safety or other performance standards.
What Makes a Truck a Lemon?
If you bought or leased a truck with a warranty and for personal use, that truck falls under the California Lemon Law. If you bought or leased it for business, it is still covered provided:
- The gross weight of the truck is less than 10,000 pounds.
- The business has five or fewer vehicles registered in its name in California.
Like cars, trucks that fall under the Lemon Law are considered âlemonsâ if they have a substantial defect that impairs their âuse, value, or safetyâ and multiple attempts to fix it have failed.
RVs and Motorhomes
Recreational Vehicles and motorhomes represent a wide variety of motorized vehicles and âtowables.â Motorized RVs are Class A, B, and C vehicles. Some towables include fifth-wheel trailers, toy haulers, travel trailers and pop-up campers.
RVs, motorhomes, or trailers are major investments. Owners rely on them when they travel. Sometimes far off the beaten path.
A lot of things can go wrong. Families stranded in the wilderness, stuck in the desert, suddenly without water or plumbing, exposed to the elements, or, at the very least, forced to cancel vacations. Itâs infuriating when your investment is in the repair shop more than it is on vacation.
RVs and motorhomes are covered under the California Lemon Law . . . but itâs a bit complicated. Towables are covered as consumer goods and have the same protections as motorcycles.
A heater that never works, an air conditioner that intermittently blows hot, or a door handle that doesnât function despite repair after repair all qualify as substantial.
The vehicle is not repaired after multiple attempts. You bring your vehicle to the dealership repeatedly and you leave the shop with the same problem. There is no need for you to put up with this seemingly endless cycle for long.
A common myth states âif you bring it in four times, itâs automatically a lemon.â Itâs not necessarily true. The law only specifies that a âreasonable number of repair attemptsâ are made. If a defect involves a safety issue, such as faulty airbags, it may only require two repair attempts. If the vehicle has been in âthe shopâ for more than thirty days, cumulative, regardless of the defect(s), it may also qualify as a lemon.
What Makes My RV/Motorhome/Towable a Lemon?
The chassis of a Class A, B, and C RVs fall under the Lemon Law. The coach is covered much like motorcycles â they are considered âconsumer goods.â
The chassis â engine, drive train, everything that makes the RV mobile - is a âlemonâ if it has a substantial defect that impairs its âuse, value, or safetyâ and multiple attempts to fix it have failed.
Few attempts suffice when the defect is a serious safety issue: anything that puts the driver and passengers in danger. The RV may also be a lemon if it has been in the shop for an excessive number of days â even if the repairs were for different issues.
In fact, in the first 18 months or 18,000 miles (whichever comes first), if the defect remains despite your best efforts or thereâs been a series of unending problems, the RV is presumed to be a lemon. Then, it's up to the manufacturers to prove it's not.

The coach and towables â Simply, if you bought the RV or towable new, itâs under warranty, doesnât perform like it is supposed to due to defects, youâve tried to have it repaired and have been unsuccessful, the RV can qualify as a lemon.
Electrical and plumbing issues, tank leaks, hookups that consistently fail, slide-outs that wonât work, heating and air conditioning failures are all covered.
What to Do If You Think You Have a Lemon
Call Gayle Law Group PC and keep every document no matter how innocuous you may think it is.
You know whatâs happening with your vehicle better than anyone else. Youâre the only one who can document every aspect of what you are going through. You wonât get help from the dealership or manufacturer. You must be proactive; youâll need to ask the dealership for the documentation you are entitled to at every visit.
Get the repair order and invoice every time you take your vehicle in and pick it up. Even if they have not or cannot fix the problem âthat day,â ask for the invoice.
Never allow them to leave your ticket âopenâ while a part is being ordered. Get an invoice then and when the part comes in and the work is done. Remember, every visit counts as a âreasonable attempt.â Again, itâs up to you to get and keep accurate documents.
Make sure, even if you must step around to view their computer screen, that the service representative enters a âcomplete and accurate description of your vehicleâs problemâ as youâve described it. If itâs not, correct them.
Donât keep your service repair records in your glove compartment or center console.
Document all calls with the dealer and manufacturer; get the name and title of everyone you talk to.
When a dealer, salesperson, manager, or manufacturerâs rep explain any aspect of the California Lemon Law, pay them no mind. Even if youâve been buying cars in Palmdale from the same dealer for years. They are your potential defendants.
Remedies
The manufacturer pays all your legal fees and expenses when we bring a successful Lemon Law action. Some Palmdale lawyers ask for retainer fees or have you sign a contingency fee agreement. The Gayle Law Group PC is paid by the manufacturer when your case is resolved. You are never responsible for any legal fees for our representation.
California Lemon Law remedies may include:
- Purchase refund (including registration fees, the down payment, and financing costs) AND having the full balance of your loan/lease paid off in full.
- OR a replacement vehicle.
Again, in addition, regardless of the solution, the manufacturer is responsible for attorneyâs fees, costs, and expenses.

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The Gayle Law Group has represented a great many Palmdale residents over the years. Weâve represented purchasers and lessees of cars, electric and hybrid vehicles, trucks, SUVs, motorcycles, RVs, and more throughout Palmdale.