- The FTC Explains Its Decision
- Consumer Advocates Object
- Dealers Defend Use of 50/50 Warranties
- How NIADA Did It
- Advice Columns Warn Against 50/50
The Federal Trade Commission, seemingly reversing
itself and contradicting a growing amount of
casework at the state level, has told the attorney
for a used auto dealer association that split-cost
warranties are permissible, even when they require
the buyer to bring their car back to the dealer
that originally sold it to them.
At issue is the so-called tie-in prohibition of the
Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, which makes it illegal
for a warrantor to require the buyer to make an
additional purchase in order for the warranty to
remain effective. But also at issue is the nature
of split-cost warranties themselves, which consumer
advocates say are subject to potential abuse
because the warrantor gets to decide the cost, and
therefore the amount to be split.
Exchange of Letters
In April 2002, a letter written by Keith Whann,
counsel for the National Independent Automobile Dealers Association, asked the FTC to clarify its
position on split-cost warranties that require all
warranted service to be performed by the dealer.
The FTC's answer came in the form of a letter of opinion drafted on Dec. 31, 2002, and announced in
the Jan. 3, 2003 weekly wrap-up (File No. P864207). It's not a prohibited tie-in of a service to a warranty because the repair is the very service promised by the warranty, the FTC reasons.
See also: The FTC's Explanation in Detail
Lemuel W. Dowdy, staff attorney at the FTC's Bureau
of Consumer Protection, told Warranty Week that
it would be allowable for a used
car dealer to provide a 100% warranty, but to make
it conditional on all the warranty service and
repair work being done exclusively at his shop. It
also would be allowable to make it a 25/75
split-cost warranty, or an 80/20 split, for that
matter. In other words, the FTC has no problem
with the percentages. There's also no problems
with a deductible, if it's used instead of or in
addition to a percentage split.
Opportunity for Fraud
The FTC is well aware that as the sole provider of
warranty service, the dealer has an
opportunity to inflate total costs so as to
increase the amount paid by the consumer.
In Footnote 8 of the FTC's letter to Whann, "The
Commission recognizes that there is some concern
that dealers may inflate the costs of warranted
repairs and in this way impose all or most of the
repair cost on the purchaser. If such practices
occur, they would likely constitute deceptive
practices and could also constitute breaches of
warranty (as failing to provide the benefit
promised in the warranty)."
The FTC has in the past issued comments that
led some to believe that split-cost warranties were
permissible, and others to believe they were
prohibited. In 1998, an FTC guide book stated that
dealers must always disclose the percentage of
parts and labor that will be covered under a
limited warranty. Those on the dealer's side of
the argument took that as an endorsement of the practice.
The FTC's own publication, "A Dealer's Guide: The Used
Car Rule," Whann wrote, "states that
dealers may disclose the percentage of parts and
labor that will be covered under a limited
warranty, and even discusses dealers offering 50%
coverage for parts and labor. On the same form,
the dealer is required, by statute, to: (i)
identify the name and address of the dealership and
the name of the contact person for warranty related
questions; and (ii) instruct the consumer to see
the contact person for warranty related complaints.
For over twenty-five years, this requirement has
been interpreted to mean that the dealer may
require the consumer to pay a portion of the repair
charge and the dealer is the entity that the
consumer should look to for performance of the
warranty services."
See also: Whann Makes His Case
Then in 1999, the FTC told Congress that split-cost
warranties "likely violate" the Warranty Act. The
key word, which the FTC's own letter mentions in its letter,
is "likely". Upon further review, the FTC
has now changed its previously-tentative mind.
Consumer Advocates Disappointed
Carolyn Carter, an attorney with the National
Consumer Law Center Inc. in Boston, said the
non-profit group believes the opinion stated in the FTC's
latest letter is not in keeping with past
precedent.
"We urged the FTC to stick with the view that
it had published in 1999, that 50/50 warranties
'likely violate' the prohibition against
tie-ins," she said. "I certainly think that
the 1999 opinion was correct and that this one
is incorrect."
Leslie Grey, a deputy
attorney general in Pennsylvania who brought a 50/50
warranty case against a used car dealer in 2001,
said she thinks that while her case agreed with
state and federal precedents, this letter does not.
"We're disappointed in this new
interpretation," Grey told Warranty Week. "Our
contention was that these
[50/50 warranties] are subject to potential
abuse by the dealer, that repair costs are
inflated, leaving the consumer to pay what they
thought was half the stated price but which in
reality reflects the entire cost of the repair."
See also: Consumer Advocates Object
Used vehicle dealers reached by Warranty Week said
the problem with 50/50 warranties isn't so much
with the warranties themselves as it is with dealer
fraud. The cost of any repair job can be inflated
-- even those where the customer is paying 100
percent of the cost. And it's no easier to double
the repair bill when the customer is paying half
than it is when the customer is paying for the
whole thing.
"There's a clearly published price list," noted Jeff Thurston Sr., president of Thurston's Marina
in Weir's Beach NH. "Our work
order lists the part number and the cost of that
part." That goes for
out-of-warranty repairs as well. "Were it done six
months after the warranty expired, he'd still
expect me not to double the price. I think the
concerns being voiced by consumer advocates have
more to do with business practices that are
fraudulent."
See also: Dealers Don't See the Problem
Weldon Sisson, owner of Century Auto Sales in
Irving TX, said the basic 50/50 warranty he
provides with each used car sold is more for peace
of mind than anything. Before he sells a car, he
knows if it will survive for at least 30 days. The
promise of a 50/50 split in repair costs is his
assurance to the customer that he thinks it will.
Sheri Edgecomb, general manager at Edgecomb's
Imported Auto Sales and Service in Charlottesville
VA, said that if she tried to falsely inflate repair costs,
her customers could instead hand her back the keys.
The Volvo dealership features an
unconditional 30-day money back guarantee, which
allows the customer to get all their money back
(minus 20 cents for each mile driven).
"We are not like any other used car lot that you'll
ever see," Edgecomb said. "Our customers know that if we
say it's a $50 repair, it's a $50 repair." These
are her neighbors -- lifelong customers. And
they're buying Volvos, not Yugos. They expect
reliability, safety, and longevity.
Don't Be a Fool
Banks and customers who have lived through encounters with 50/50 warranties nearly unanimously advised against them. The Motley Fool, normally an investment advice magazine, once carried a 13-part column called
Buying a Used Car. In the last part of that comprehensive piece, author Paul Maghielse pulls no punches in his damnation of 50/50 warranties:
"Used car lots are notorious for enticing buyers
with an extended mileage "50/50" warranty, or some
such beast. This warranty makes them a lot of
money. How? Well, they pay half the parts and
half the labor on the work performed, but, here's
the clincher, they perform the work and set the
rates. It's dealer shysterism at its worst, so
don't fall into this money pit even if they are
giving it to you for free."
See also: Credit Unions Warn Against 50/50
Whann tackles that argument head-on in his letter.
"One of the primary concerns being expressed by
plaintiffs� attorneys, consumer advocates and some
regulators is that if limited warranties with less
than 100% coverage continue to be offered, motor
vehicle dealers have an incentive to artificially
inflate the cost of repairs," he wrote. "For
example, if the total cost of a repair would
normally cost $200, the dealer and the consumer
would each pay $100 under a 50/50 limited warranty.
However, if the dealer inflates the cost of the
repairs and charges the consumer $400 for the same
repair, the consumer would pay $200, thus covering
the cost of the entire repair and the dealer
theoretically would not incur any financial
obligation. This argument is without merit,
however, because the average dealership markup is
estimated to be 15% on parts and 30% on labor and
because both Federal and State Laws afford
consumers protection from these types of
practices."
See Also:
- The FTC Explains Its Decision
- Consumer Advocates Object
- Dealers Defend Use of 50/50 Warranties
- How NIADA Did It
- Advice Columns Warn Against 50/50