Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.
I did not take a rental, would rather drive my spare, '05 Sequoia, than a little car or bare bones F-150.
Damn lol.Typical non Raptor owner post....
False, they have to refund you every penny minus the useage miles (there's a calculator online). OP was probably smart in not taking a loaner car, although they'd likely have to give you a Raptor since the law requires a comparable vehicle. If they tried to argue a base F-150 is comparable, then point to the ADM you paid.ADM is not part of either a Ford buy back or a Lemon Law suit which is against a manufacturer, so as previously mentioned: Money pay over MSRP is gone.
Plus, vehicle history will typically reveal a buy back. Lemon law buy backs in some states will “scarlet letter” the truck title.
Here's the law directly from the TX DMV website: https://www.txdmv.gov/motorists/consumer-protection/lemon-law
30-day test
You pass the 30-day test if your vehicle has been out of service for repair because of a defect covered by the original factory warranty:
- For a total of 30 days or more - not necessarily all at one time - during the first 24 months or 24,000 miles (if a comparable loaner vehicle was provided while the vehicle was being repaired, that time does not count toward the 30 days) a substantial defect still exists.
OP--I'd send an email to the GM/Service manager etc. at the dealership letting them know that as of (whatever date) your 30 day clock has started. They'll have to refund you their ADM, which I'm sure they don't want to do. I'm willing to bet the GM gets someone from Ford on the line stat to get the parts to repair the truck.
Refund
The manufacturer must buy back the vehicle for the purchase price (including taxes, title and license fee) minus an amount charged for vehicle use. The amount deducted is decided according to a formula, (see spreadsheet links below) that takes into account the number of miles on the vehicle at the time of the hearing and other factors. This does not include any interest paid on the vehicle.
When I had to lemon a GMC duramax when they first came out with all the new DPF crap, I bought a special edition one the dealer had added a lift/tires/wheels/grill etc. to. It was all done at a local 4WD performance/truck shop. They had to refund me every penny for all of that, and even had to refund me for the floor mats I bought for it, the tint I had installed etc. Provided receipts and they had to include it all. The entire deal is essentially unwound, and all I had to eat was mileage at 25cents/mile. Truck had about 15k on it when I finally threw in the towel, but the attorney was able to get them to waive that since my first issue started at like 300 miles. In this case OP would maybe have to eat the $25 or whatever (I think he said it has like 98 miles on it) but that's a rounding error. They also had to cover the registration fees. All in I was made totally whole like I'd never bought the truck.interesting stuff. TX is definitely a little different than your normal ‘model’ LL statutes, particularly since .gov is involved from the jump. You only have 24 months / 24k miles. They do say they cover the purchase price if DMV orders it. To me that includes add ons, I’ll defer to anyone who’s prevailed in a _TX_ LL suit. Mine was not in TX.
You should never tip your hand about filing suit ahead of time. If you do, your service record could be flagged. Every dealer where you bring the vehicle, expect it to be gone over with a fine toothed comb, possibly requiring regional rep to inspect before anyone even touches the vehicle. They’re looking for any possible reason to deny coverage, particularly abuse. It’s always best to keep this information to yourself so as to preserve the relationship with the service staff. Although in this case there isn’t much of a relationship to speak of.
Here’s an interesting thing I noticed:
Note that you sue the manufacturer, not the stealership as in other states. You win, Ford or whomever manufactured the vehicle pays, not the stealership. That does leave me wondering what becomes of add ons and ADM money. Surely Ford isn’t going to eat that cost.