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Riverside County

San Jacinto Lemon Law

Drivers in San Jacinto are covered by the Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act (with Tanner Consumer Protection Act presumption) (Cal. Civ. Code §§ 1790-1795.8 (Song-Beverly); § 1793.22 (Tanner Act)). If your new or used vehicle has a substantial defect the dealer can't fix, you may be entitled to a refund, replacement, or cash settlement. The manufacturer pays the legal fees — you pay nothing out of pocket.

Where San Jacinto cases are filed

Riverside Superior Court – Hemet Justice Center

880 N. State Street, Hemet, CA 92543

https://riverside.courts.ca.gov/locations/hemet →

Why local conditions matter

How San Jacinto's driving environment affects vehicle reliability

San Jacinto sits in the San Jacinto Valley at the foot of the San Jacinto Mountains, with extreme summer heat regularly above 100 degrees, dry desert-influenced air, and mild winters. The combination of extreme UV, blowing dust from surrounding valley and desert flats, and long commutes to Inland Empire and Coachella Valley job centers accelerates wear on cooling systems, intake systems, and HVAC components.

Major routes:  CA-79 · I-215 · CA-74 · I-10

Engine cooling and overheating issues

Triple-digit San Jacinto Valley summer afternoons combined with long uphill grades on CA-74 and CA-79 stress radiators, water pumps, and electric cooling fans on vehicles operated under sustained high load, producing repeated overheating warnings and coolant-leak repairs that recur after dealer service under warranty.

HVAC and A/C compressor failures

Sustained extreme heat combined with long I-215 commutes to Riverside, Moreno Valley, and Hemet job centers overworks A/C compressors and condenser fans, producing premature refrigerant leaks, blower motor failures, and HVAC actuator faults well within the manufacturer's express warranty period.

Dust ingestion and intake-system faults

Persistent blowing dust from surrounding agricultural fields and undeveloped valley flats clogs air filters and stresses mass-airflow sensors, surfacing intake-related faults, rough-running conditions, and check-engine codes that dealers often misdiagnose across multiple warranty visits.

Diesel emissions and DPF/DEF system faults

Heavy-duty diesel pickups operated by Inland Empire trades, construction, and agricultural workers on short urban and dusty duty cycles produce frequent DPF regeneration failures, DEF injector faults, and limp-mode events covered by federal and California emissions warranty obligations.

Dealership clusters

San Jacinto's franchised new-car dealer presence is limited within city limits, with most residents shopping the adjacent Hemet auto-row along Florida Avenue and the larger Auto Mall corridors in Temecula, Murrieta, Moreno Valley, and Riverside. The CA-79 corridor between San Jacinto and Hemet hosts several independent used-car lots serving the Inland Empire and Coachella Valley.

Brands we see most

San Jacinto's working-class and retiree buyer base skews toward Toyota, Honda, Ford, Chevrolet, Ram, and Nissan SUVs and full-size pickups serving multi-generational and trades households. Diesel-pickup demand is meaningful given the trades and agricultural economy along CA-74 and CA-79, with growing Tesla and Hyundai/Kia EV adoption in newer subdivisions.

Areas served around San Jacinto

  • Downtown San Jacinto
  • Soboba Springs
  • Park Hill
  • Valle Vista border
  • Hewitt area
  • Esplanade corridor

Your rights under California law

Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act (with Tanner Consumer Protection Act presumption)

Song-Beverly Consumer Warranty Act (with Tanner Consumer Protection Act presumption) (Cal. Civ. Code §§ 1790-1795.8 (Song-Beverly); § 1793.22 (Tanner Act)) gives California drivers the right to a refund, replacement, or cash settlement when the manufacturer can't fix a substantial defect. The threshold is 4 repair attempts or 30 cumulative days out of service, within 18 months of delivery.

Full California lemon law guide →

Common questions

Lemon law in San Jacinto, CA

Where do San Jacinto lemon-law cases get filed?

Most Song-Beverly cases brought by San Jacinto residents are filed in the Riverside County Superior Court — typically the Hemet Justice Center at 880 N. State Street in Hemet for local civil cases, or the Historic Courthouse and Riverside Hall of Justice in downtown Riverside for unlimited civil cases over $35,000 (depending on judicial assignment). Federal Magnuson-Moss claims may be filed in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California in Riverside. Your attorney will pick venue based on the manufacturer's residency and tactical considerations.

I bought my car at a dealership in Hemet or Temecula — does that matter?

Not for your Song-Beverly claim. Under California law, the lemon-law action runs against the vehicle's manufacturer, not the selling dealer. Whether you bought in Hemet, Temecula, Murrieta, Moreno Valley, or anywhere in Riverside County, the same repair-or-replace obligations apply to the OEM. The selling dealer is only a defendant if you're also pleading fraud, misrepresentation, or implied-warranty claims. Keep your purchase contract and every repair order from any dealership that worked on the vehicle.

My truck overheats on CA-74 grades — is that a warranty defect?

It can be. Repeated overheating events, coolant leaks, electric cooling-fan failures, and water-pump faults are standard warranty defects, even on vehicles operated under sustained high-grade loads. The manufacturer's express warranty doesn't exclude mountain-grade driving — vehicles are designed to handle their advertised payload and towing ratings. Under the Tanner Act presumption (Cal. Civ. Code 1793.22), four or more repair attempts for the same nonconformity within 18 months or 18,000 miles — or 30+ cumulative out-of-service days — establishes the presumption. Save every repair order.

My diesel pickup keeps going into limp mode after dusty job-site driving — is that covered?

Yes, persistent DPF (diesel particulate filter) regeneration failures, DEF injector faults, EGR cooler failures, and check-engine limp-mode events on heavy-duty diesel pickups are classic lemon-law defects. These are typically covered under the federal emissions warranty (8 years/80,000 miles for many components) and the manufacturer's bumper-to-bumper warranty. Under Cal. Civ. Code 1793.22, four or more repair attempts — or 30+ cumulative out-of-service days — within 18 months/18,000 miles triggers the Tanner Act presumption. Save every repair order.

Does Song-Beverly cover my leased pickup truck?

Yes, in many cases. Cal. Civ. Code 1791(g) expressly defines 'buyer' to include lessees under retail leases of consumer goods, and Tanner Act remedies apply to leases of new motor vehicles, including light-duty pickups. Leased commercial trucks under 10,000 pounds GVWR may also qualify if the lessee has five or fewer vehicles registered in the state. If you qualify for a repurchase, the manufacturer must terminate the lease, refund your capitalized cost reduction, monthly payments, registration and license fees, and pay off the residual.

How much does it cost to hire a lemon-law lawyer in the Inland Empire?

Most California lemon-law attorneys take Song-Beverly cases on a contingency or fee-shifting basis at no out-of-pocket cost to the client. Cal. Civ. Code 1794(d) requires the manufacturer to pay the prevailing consumer's reasonable attorneys' fees and costs in addition to the consumer's recovery, so your refund or replacement isn't reduced by legal fees. Most attorneys decline cases unless they believe a repurchase, replacement, or cash settlement is likely. Get a written engagement letter that spells out fees, costs, and what happens if the case settles short of expectations.

How long do I have to file a San Jacinto lemon-law claim?

California's Song-Beverly breach-of-warranty action runs four years from the date of breach under Cal. Com. Code 2725, with the clock typically starting when the manufacturer fails to repair within a reasonable number of attempts. AB 1755 (effective 2025) added an outer-limit deadline: new claims must be filed within one year after express warranty expiration and no later than six years from original delivery. Don't wait — once your warranty expires you have a hard one-year window. Talk to a lemon-law attorney as soon as your dealer has failed to fix the same problem multiple times.

Stuck with a lemon in San Jacinto?

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