Bazsites.com Lemon Law
Directory Topics
On the Web
- Lemon Laws - Council of Better Business Bureaus - Providing consumer information and a description of available remedies under the vehicular lemon laws of each state, and providing online assistance to consumers who wish to attempt to resolve eligible defective vehicle claims without hiring a lawyer.
- Autopedia - Lemon law information and consumer resources for all fifty states, with links to attorney websites.
- Car Lemon - Informational site, providing lemon law information for each U.S. State.
- Puppy Lemon Law States - Overviews of the laws in several states, with pros and cons of each.
- Automobile Lemon Law Attorneys, PC - Elmhurst firm specializing in lemon law cases.
- Indiana Lemon Law Attorneys - Indianapolis firm specializing in lemon law.
- Lemon Law Office - List of lemon law attorneys by location.
- Law Offices of Ronald S. Weiss - Law firm emphasizing lemon law cases.
- The Consumer Law Group - Richmond law firm specializing in Virginia Lemon Law and other legal concerns of Virginia consumers.
- Trueblood Law Firm - Los Angeles firm emphasizing consumer protection law, including lemon law, auto dealer fraud, unfair debt collection practices, and class actions.
Wikipedia Articles
- Vince Megna - Vince Megna (born August 24, 1944, Iron Mountain, Michigan, USA) is a Wisconsin attorney best known for his work in "Lemon Law" litigation. Lemon Law is the body of law that offers protection to owners of motor vehicles with reoccurring mechanical or other problems that are not resolved within a reasonable time by the dealer or manufacturer.
- Lemon law - Lemon laws are United States state laws that remedies to consumers for cars that repeatedly fail to meet certain standards of quality and performance. These niche market cars are called lemons.
- Whitehouse v. Lemon - Whitehouse v. Lemon was a 1976 court case involving the blasphemy law in the United Kingdom.
- Redhibition - Redhibition is a civil action available under Louisiana law against the seller and/or manufacturer of a defective product, similar to the lemon laws more familiar to common law jurisdictions in other U.S.