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Miami-Dade County

Country Club Lemon Law

Drivers in Country Club are covered by the Florida Motor Vehicle Warranty Enforcement Act (Fla. Stat. §§ 681.10-681.118). 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 Country Club cases are filed

Miami-Dade County Circuit Court - 11th Judicial Circuit

73 W Flagler Street, Miami, FL 33130

https://www.jud11.flcourts.org/ →

Why local conditions matter

How Country Club's driving environment affects vehicle reliability

Country Club sits in Miami-Dade's hot, humid tropical climate with year-round heat, daily June-October afternoon thunderstorms, and direct hurricane exposure that produces wind-driven rain and recurring street flooding in low-lying neighborhoods.

Major routes:  Florida's Turnpike · Palmetto Expressway (SR 826) · NW 186th Street · NW 87th Avenue

HVAC compressor and condenser failures

Year-round AC operation under Miami tropical heat and humidity accelerates compressor clutch wear and condenser leaks, producing recurring no-cool complaints within the 24-month rights period despite multiple dealer refrigerant service and component replacement attempts.

Infotainment and ADAS software failures

Intense Miami sun pushes dashboard touchscreens past 160 degrees, accelerating processor throttling and display delamination that produce recurring freezes, reboots, and ADAS sensor faults that dealer software flashes cannot permanently fix.

Battery and electrical drain

Tropical heat halves 12-volt battery lifespan and exposes parasitic drain bugs in body control modules and infotainment units, leaving Country Club owners stranded multiple times despite dealer battery replacements that fail to address the root cause electrical defect.

Flood-related electrical intrusion

Heavy summer downpours and king-tide flooding in low-lying Hialeah-adjacent streets drive water into door harnesses and underbody connectors, producing intermittent module communication errors that persist after dealer drying and reseal attempts.

Dealership clusters

Country Club residents typically shop the dense auto retail corridor along the Palmetto Expressway frontage and West 49th Street through Hialeah, plus franchised stores along NW 167th Street and the Turnpike interchanges toward Miami Lakes. Most warranty service work is routed to those regional service centers since Country Club itself has limited in-area franchised dealer presence.

Brands we see most

Country Club registrations skew toward Toyota, Honda, Hyundai-Kia, and Nissan mainstream brands reflecting Hispanic-majority family demographics, with strong premium representation from BMW and Mercedes-Benz. Tesla has gained share in newer developments, and three-row SUVs and full-size pickups are heavily represented.

Areas served around Country Club

  • Country Club Estates
  • Miami Lakes border
  • Hialeah border
  • Palm Springs North
  • Carol City border
  • West Miami-Dade

Your rights under Florida law

Florida Motor Vehicle Warranty Enforcement Act

Florida Motor Vehicle Warranty Enforcement Act (Fla. Stat. §§ 681.10-681.118) gives Florida drivers the right to a refund, replacement, or cash settlement when the manufacturer can't fix a substantial defect. The threshold is 3 repair attempts or 30 cumulative days out of service, within 24 months of delivery.

Full Florida lemon law guide →

Common questions

Lemon law in Country Club, FL

Does Florida lemon law cover families in Country Club?

Yes. Florida Statutes Chapter 681 covers any new motor vehicle sold or leased in Florida for personal, family, or household use. Country Club families buying minivans, three-row SUVs, or sedans for daily school and commute use fall squarely within the statute. The 24-month Lemon Law Rights Period runs from original delivery, and the same three-attempt or 30-day-out-of-service presumption applies regardless of neighborhood. Keep every Repair Order from each Hialeah-area or Miami Lakes dealer visit, including those where the dealer reports no defect found.

What is the Florida arbitration process for Country Club claims?

After three repair attempts and a final written notice to the manufacturer by certified mail, you can apply to the Florida New Motor Vehicle Arbitration Board administered by the Attorney General. If your manufacturer uses a state-certified program like BBB AUTO LINE, you must complete that first. The Board must hold a hearing within 40 days and issue a decision within 60 days, with Country Club hearings typically held regionally in Miami-Dade or by video. Either party can appeal to Miami-Dade Circuit Court within 30 days for trial de novo.

Are heat-related AC failures covered as lemon law defects in Country Club?

Yes, if they substantially impair use, value, or safety. Miami summer heat indexes regularly exceed 105 degrees, making AC effectively a safety system for elderly drivers and young children. If your AC has been in for the same complaint three times within the 24-month rights period and still cannot hold a charge or cool properly, you likely qualify under Chapter 681. Document each dealer visit with the diagnosis, any refrigerant recharge performed, and cabin temperature symptoms. Repeat compressor or evaporator replacements within the rights period strengthen the claim significantly.

What if my Country Club vehicle was flooded during a storm?

Actual flood damage from storm surge or street flooding is an insurance claim, not a lemon law claim. However, if your vehicle's door seals, sunroof drains, or body construction repeatedly let water in during routine summer rains and the dealer cannot fix the source after three attempts, that qualifies under Chapter 681. The distinction matters: act-of-God flood loss falls under your comprehensive auto policy, while persistent manufacturer-defect water intrusion falls under the lemon law. Document each water intrusion incident with photos and dealer Repair Orders.

How long do Country Club owners have to file a lemon law claim?

You have one year after the 24-month Lemon Law Rights Period ends to apply to the Arbitration Board, giving you up to three years from delivery. If you went through BBB AUTO LINE or another state-certified manufacturer program, the one-year clock runs from that program's final action. Any appeal of a Board decision to Miami-Dade Circuit Court must be filed within 30 days. The Florida statute of limitations is one of the shortest nationally, so Country Club owners should act quickly when recurring defects emerge.

What refund can I expect under Florida lemon law in Country Club?

You can recover the full base sale price plus collateral charges (sales tax, registration, title, finance charges, certain insurance refunds), minus a mileage offset equal to miles driven multiplied by the base price divided by 120,000. A Country Club commuter with 14,000 miles on a $38,000 SUV would see an offset around $4,400, leaving a refund near $33,600 plus collateral charges. Lease cases recover down payment, monthly payments, and lease payoff to the captive finance company. Florida Statute 681.112 entitles prevailing consumers to attorney's fees.

Do I need a lawyer for a Country Club lemon law case?

No, the Arbitration Board permits self-representation, but most consumers benefit from counsel. Florida Statute 681.112 shifts attorney's fees to the manufacturer when consumers prevail, so qualifying cases are typically handled on contingency at no out-of-pocket cost. Attorneys handle the certified mail final-repair notice, the BBB AUTO LINE or Florida Arbitration Board filing, evidence package preparation, and any 30-day appeal to Miami-Dade Circuit Court. Bilingual representation in English and Spanish is widely available across South Florida.

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