If the dealership does not honor the warranty, there is usually a reason. Did the dealership give you a reason? If it was a new car such as one from General Motors or Chrysler, they may have closed the dealership. However, on new cars, the warranty is not from the dealer, but from the manufacturer. Another dealer that still has a contract with the manufacturer should be able to take care of it. If you damaged the car, that is not covered by warranty. The dealer does not need to take care of that. Otherwise, there should be someone at the local or state level who takes care of such problems. These people are paid to solve these kind of problems. There may be an information number for your local government that would tell you where to call, or you could start at your local library.
If it is a factory warranty, any Saturn dealer is required to honor it.
He can claim anything. But he is bound by what is written down. You may have to sue.
If there was an extended warranty then you can look through your agreement for what Honda dealership will honor. If it was purchased "as is" then it is your responsibility to purchase a new battery. If it was expressed that the battery was good for a certain amout of time then the seller is responsible.
Only Dodge will honor the warranty.
The State Attorney General's office for the state of the dealership is in charge of lemon laws. You can locate their office and call them for help enforcing the lemon law of a particular dealership. The U.S. government ensures that car dealerships honor lemon laws through legislature such as the Motor Vehicle Quality Assurance Act. Also, social pressure by customers ensures that dealerships honor lemon laws. A dealership will lose all its business if it is known to dishonor lemon laws.
Most dealers warranty their used for cars for a minimum of thirty days. In some cases though cars are sold "as is" with no express or implied warranty. If you purchased a car that has major mechanical problems, most dealers want to keep you happy for potential future business and should honor a repair request. However, depending on what state you're in and the local laws, they may not be required to do so legally.
Huttig will honor the manufacturers warranty. All depends on the product you purchase.
auto insurance will not cover electrical problems, they cover for collsion and comprehensive coverage which is fire, theft, vandalism. I had an insured once who parked his vehicle in the garage and the car started on fire, the vehicle was brand new less then 100, not covered under auto insurance, recommended insured to bring back to dealership they will not honor claim, told insured to go with picket sign to dealership and contact company directly about his problem the Ford motor company not only gave him a new vehicle they upgraded it at no additonal fee. they didn t want anyone picketicy their dealership
I don't know about Tamko, but if the installation methods and required venting methods were not employed at the time of installation, they have a right to refute the warranty. If the shingles were defective, however, they have every obligation to honor the warranty.
You will have to call them to find out.
`no they just smell like poop
It's only illegal for a retailer to remove the tag, as the tag's purpose is to inform the consumer of the mattress's materials. Once you buy the mattress, you're free to rip it off.If you remove the tag, the company will not honor the warranty. The code on the tag tells them where it was made, when it was made and then and only then can they honor the warranty. no tag, no warranty!!!