|
The Act improves consumers' access
to warranty information.
The Act enables consumers to
comparison shop for warranties.
The Act encourages warranty
competition.
The Act promotes timely and
complete performance of warranty obligations.
The Act does not compel you to give
a written warranty.
There are three FTC Rules under the
Act.
Section 102 of the Act directs how
to title your warranty.
The Disclosure Rule {16 C.F.R. Part
701} directs what you must include in your warranty.
The Pre-Sale Availability Rule {16
C.F. R. Part 702} directs how to make your warranty available before sale.
If you give a written warranty on a
consumer product, Section 108 of the Act prevents you from eliminating or restricting
implied warranties.
With some exceptions, Section 102
(c) of the Act prohibits you from including a tie-in sales provision in your warranty.
These are examples of prohibited
tie-in sales provisions.
This is an example of a permissible
warranty provision to use instead of a tie-in.
Section 110(c) (2) of the Act
prohibits deceptive warranties.
Section 110(d) of the Act makes
breach of warranty a violation of federal law, and enables consumers to recover attorneys'
fees.
Dispute Settlement Mechanisms use
conciliation, mediation, or arbitration to resolve disputes. For more information, an FTC
publication Handling Customer Complaints, is available from the Government Printing
Office.
If you require your customers to use a dispute
settlement mechanism before suing under the Act, your mechanism must comply with the FTC's
Dispute Resolution Rule {16
C.F.R. Part 703}.
A mechanism that does not meet the
standards of the Dispute Resolution Rule may still be a valuable tool for you. |
|
Understanding
the Magnuson-Moss
Warranty Act
The
Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act is the federal law that governs consumer product warranties.
Passed by Congress in 1975, the Act requires manufacturers and sellers of consumer
products to provide consumers with detailed information about warranty coverage. In
addition, it affects both the rights of consumers and the obligations of warrantors under
written warranties.
To understand the Act, it is useful to be aware of
Congress' intentions in passing it. First, Congress wanted to ensure that consumers could
get complete information about warranty terms and conditions. By providing consumers with
a way of learning what warranty coverage is offered on a product before they buy, the Act
gives consumers a way to know what to expect if something goes wrong, and thus helps to
increase customer satisfaction.
Second, Congress wanted to ensure that consumers could
compare warranty coverage before buying. By comparing, consumers can choose a product with
the best combination of price, features, and warranty coverage to meet their individual
needs.
Third, Congress intended to promote competition on the
basis of warranty coverage. By assuring that consumers can get warranty information, the
Act encourages sales promotion on the basis of warranty coverage and competition among
companies to meet consumer preferences through various levels of warranty coverage.
Finally, Congress wanted to strengthen existing incentives
for companies to perform their warranty obligations in a timely and thorough manner and to
resolve any disputes with a minimum of delay and expense to consumers. Thus, the Act makes
it easier for consumers to pursue a remedy for breach of warranty in the courts, but it
also creates a framework for companies to set up procedures for resolving disputes
inexpensively and informally, without litigation.
What the Magnuson-Moss Act
Does Not Require
In order to understand how the Act affects you as a
businessperson, it is important first to understand what the Act does not require.
First, the Act does not require any business to provide a
written warranty. The Act allows businesses to determine whether to warrant their products
in writing. However, once a business decides to offer a written warranty on a consumer
product, it must comply with the Act.
Second, the Act does not apply to oral warranties. Only
written warranties are covered.
Third, the Act does not apply to warranties on services.
Only warranties on goods are covered. However, if your warranty covers both the parts
provided for a repair and the workmanship in making that repair, the Act does apply to
you.
Finally, the Act does not apply to warranties on products
sold for resale or for commercial purposes. The Act covers only warranties on consumer
products. This means that only warranties on tangible property normally used for personal,
family, or household purposes are covered. (This includes property attached to or
installed on real property.) Note that applicability of the Act to a particular product
does not, however, depend upon how an individual buyer will use it.
The following section of this manual summarizes what the
Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act requires warrantors to do, what it prohibits them from doing,
and how it affects warranty disputes.
What the
Magnuson-Moss Act Requires
In passing the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, Congress specified a number of requirements
that warrantors must meet. Congress also directed the FTC to adopt rules to cover other
requirements. The FTC adopted three Rules under the Act, the Rule on Disclosure of
Written Consumer Product Warranty Terms and Conditions (the Disclosure Rule), the Rule
on Pre-Sale Availability of Written Warranty Terms (the Pre-Sale Availability Rule),
and the Rule on Informal Dispute Settlement Procedures (the Dispute Resolution
Rule). In addition, the FTC has issued an interpretive rule that clarifies certain terms
and explains some of the provisions of the Act. This section summarizes all the
requirements under the Act and the Rules.
The Act and the Rules establish three basic requirements
that may apply to you, either as a warrantor or a seller.
- As a warrantor, you must designate, or title, your written
warranty as either "full" or "limited"
- As a warrantor, you must state certain specified
information about the coverage of your warranty in a single, clear, and easy-to read
document.
- As a warrantor or a seller, you must ensure that warranties
are available where your warranted consumer products are sold so that consumers can read
them before buying.
The titling requirement, established by the Act, applies
to all written warranties on consumer products costing more than $10. However, the
disclosure and pre-sale availability requirements, established by FTC Rules, apply to all
written warranties on consumer products costing more than $15. Each of these three general
requirements is explained in greater detail in the following chapters.
What the Magnuson-Moss Act
Does Not Allow
There are three prohibitions under the Magnuson-Moss Act.
They involve implied warranties, so-called "tie-in sales" provisions, and
deceptive or misleading warranty terms.
Disclaimer or Modification of Implied Warranties
The Act prohibits anyone who offers a written warranty from disclaiming or modifying
implied warranties. This means that no matter how broad or narrow your written warranty
is, your customers always will receive the basic protection of the implied warranty of
merchantability. This is explained in Understanding Warranties.
There is one permissible modification of implied
warranties, however. If you offer a "limited" written warranty, the law allows
you to include a provision that restricts the duration of implied warranties to the
duration of your limited warranty. For example, if you offer a two-year limited warranty,
you can limit implied warranties to two years. However, if you offer a "full"
written warranty, you cannot limit the duration of implied warranties. This matter is
explained in Titling Written Warranties as "Full" or
"Limited".
If you sell a consumer product with a written warranty
from the product manufacturer, but you do not warrant the product in writing, you can
disclaim your implied warranties. (These are the implied warranties under which the
seller, not the manufacturer, would otherwise be responsible.) But, regardless of whether
you warrant the products you sell, as a seller, you must give your customers copies of any
written warranties from product manufacturers.
"Tie-In Sales" Provisions
Generally, tie-in sales provisions are not allowed. Such a provision would require a
purchaser of the warranted product to buy an item or service from a particular company to
use with the warranted product in order to be eligible to receive a remedy under the
warranty. The following are examples of prohibited tie-in sales provisions.
In order to keep your new Plenum Brand Vacuum Cleaner
warranty in effect, you must use genuine Plenum Brand Filter Bags. Failure to have
scheduled maintenance performed, at your expense, by the Great American Maintenance
Company, Inc., voids this warranty.
While you cannot use a tie-in sales provision, your
warranty need not cover use of replacement parts, repairs, or maintenance that is
inappropriate for your product. The following is an example of a permissible provision
that excludes coverage of such things.
While necessary maintenance or repairs on your AudioMundo
Stereo System can be performed by any company, we recommend that you use only authorized
AudioMundo dealers. Improper or incorrectly performed maintenance or repair voids this
warranty.
Although tie-in sales provisions generally are not
allowed, you can include such a provision in your warranty if you can demonstrate to the
satisfaction of the FTC that your product will not work properly without a specified item
or service. If you believe that this is the case, you should contact the warranty staff of
the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection for information on how to apply for a waiver of
the tie-in sales prohibition.
Deceptive Warranty Terms
Obviously, warranties must not contain deceptive or misleading terms. You cannot offer a
warranty that appears to provide coverage but, in fact, provides none. For example, a
warranty covering only "moving parts" on an electronic product that has no
moving parts would be deceptive and unlawful. Similarly, a warranty that promised service
that the warrantor had no intention of providing or could not provide would be deceptive
and unlawful.
How the Magnuson Moss Act May Affect Warranty Disputes
Two other features of the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act are also important to warrantors.
First, the Act makes it easier for consumers to take an unresolved warranty problem to
court. Second, it encourages companies to use a less formal, and therefore less costly,
alternative to legal proceedings. Such alternatives, known as dispute resolution
mechanisms, often can be used to settle warranty complaints before they reach litigation.
Consumer Lawsuits
The Act makes it easier for purchasers to sue for breach of warranty by making breach of warranty a violation of federal law, and by
allowing consumers to recover court costs and reasonable attorneys' fees. This means that
if you lose a lawsuit for breach of either a written
or an implied warranty, you may have to pay the customer's costs for bringing the suit,
including lawyer's fees.
Because of the stringent federal jurisdictional
requirements under the Act, most Magnuson-Moss lawsuits are brought in state court.
However, major cases involving many consumers can be brought in federal court as class
action suits under the Act.
Although the consumer lawsuit provisions may have little
effect on your warranty or your business, they are important to remember if you are
involved in warranty disputes.
Alternatives to Consumer Lawsuits
Although the Act makes consumer lawsuits for breach of warranty easier to bring, its goal
is not to promote more warranty litigation. On the contrary, the Act encourages companies
to use informal dispute resolution mechanisms to settle warranty disputes with their
customers. Basically, an informal dispute resolution mechanism is a system that works to
resolve warranty problems that are at a stalemate. Such a mechanism may be run by an
impartial third party, such as the Better Business Bureau, or by company employees whose
only job is to administer the informal dispute resolution system. The impartial third
party uses conciliation, mediation, or arbitration to settle warranty disputes.
The Act allows warranties to include a provision that
requires customers to try to resolve warranty disputes by means of the informal dispute
resolution mechanism before going to court. (This provision applies only to cases based
upon the Magnuson-Moss Act.) If you include such a requirement in your warranty, your
dispute resolution mechanism must meet the requirements stated in the FTC's Rule
on Informal Dispute Settlement Procedures (the Dispute Resolution Rule). Briefly, the
Rule requires that a mechanism must:
- Be adequately funded and staffed to resolve all disputes
quickly;
- Be available free of charge to consumers;
- Be able to settle disputes independently, without influence
from the parties involved;
- Follow written procedures;
- Inform both parties when it receives notice of a dispute;
- Gather, investigate, and organize all information necessary
to decide each dispute fairly and quickly;
- Provide each party an opportunity to present its side, to
submit supporting materials, and to rebut points made by the other party; (the mechanism
may allow oral presentations, but only if both parties agree);
- Inform both parties of the decision and the reasons
supporting it within 40 days of receiving notice of a dispute;
- Issue decisions that are not binding; either party must be
free to take the dispute to court if dissatisfied with the decision (however, companies
may, and often do, agree to be bound by the decision);
- Keep complete records on all disputes; and
- Be audited annually for compliance with the Rule.
It is clear from these standards that informal dispute
resolution mechanisms under the Dispute Resolution Rule are not "informal" in
the sense of being unstructured. Rather, they are informal because they do not involve the
technical rules of evidence, procedure, and precedents that a court of law must use.
Currently, the FTC's staff is evaluating the Dispute
Resolution Rule to determine if informal dispute resolution mechanisms can be made simpler
and easier to use. To obtain more information about this review, contact the FTC's
warranty staff.
As stated previously, you do not have to comply with the
Dispute Resolution Rule if you do not require consumers to use a mechanism before bringing
suit under the Magnuson-Moss Act. You may want to consider establishing a mechanism that
will make settling warranty disputes easier, even though it may not meet the standards of
the Dispute Resolution Rule.
Back Contents Next |