How a Construction Business Hired a Lawyer to Review a Warranty Agreement in North Carolina
See real project results from ContractsCounsel's legal marketplace — this project was posted by a Construction business in North Carolina seeking help to review a Warranty Agreement. The client received 6 lawyer proposals with flat fee bids ranging from $350 to $500.
Review
Warranty Agreement
North Carolina
Business
Construction
A week
$350 - $500 (Flat fee)
6 bids
4 pages
How much does it cost to Review a Warranty Agreement in North Carolina?
For this project, the client received 6 proposals from lawyers to review a Warranty Agreement in North Carolina, with flat fee bids ranging from $350 to $500 on a flat fee. Pricing may vary based on the complexity of the legal terms, the type of service requested, and the required turnaround time.Project Description
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Lawyers that Bid on this Warranty Agreement Project
Managing Partner
7 years practicing
Free consultation
Managing Partner
2 years practicing
Free consultation
Principal Attorney
16 years practicing
Free consultation
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M&A / Commercial Attorney / Managing Partner
34 years practicing
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Other Warranty Agreement Postings
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Can a company void a warranty agreement if the product was used in a way that was not explicitly stated in the agreement?
I recently purchased a product that came with a warranty agreement, which stated that the warranty would be void if the product was used in any way that was not explicitly specified in the agreement. However, after experiencing a malfunction with the product, the company is now refusing to honor the warranty, claiming that I used the product in a manner that was not specified in the agreement. I believe that I used the product in a reasonable manner and that the company is unfairly trying to avoid their warranty obligations. Can they legally void the warranty in this situation?
Diane D.
Without seeing the warranty or a having a full explanation of how and why the product malfunctioned, it is hard to answer this question. Generally, however, if you use the product in a way it wasn't intended to be used or tried to fix the product yourself and only made it worse, then they can waive the warranty.