99-9841. Final Action Concerning Review of Interpretations of Magnuson- Moss Warranty Act; Rule Governing Disclosure of Written Consumer Product Warranty Terms and Conditions; Rule Governing Pre-Sale Availability of Written Warranty Terms; Rule ...  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 77 (Thursday, April 22, 1999)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 19700-19711]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-9841]
    
    
    =======================================================================
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
    
    16 CFR Parts 239, 700, 701, 702, and 703
    
    
    Final Action Concerning Review of Interpretations of Magnuson-
    Moss Warranty Act; Rule Governing Disclosure of Written Consumer 
    Product Warranty Terms and Conditions; Rule Governing Pre-Sale 
    Availability of Written Warranty Terms; Rule Governing Informal Dispute 
    Settlement Procedures; and Guides For the Advertising of Warranties and 
    Guarantees
    
    AGENCY: Federal Trade Commission.
    
    ACTION: Notice of final action.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: The Federal Trade Commission (``the Commission'') is 
    announcing its final action in connection with the review of a set of 
    warranty-related rules and guides: the Interpretations of the Magnuson-
    Moss Warranty Act, (``Interpretations''); the Rule Governing Disclosure 
    of Written Consumer Product Warranty Terms and Conditions, (``Rule 
    701''); the Rule Governing Pre-Sale Availability of Written Warranty 
    Terms, (``Rule 702''); the Rule Governing Informal Dispute Settlement 
    Procedures, (``Rule 703''); and the Guides for the Advertising of 
    Warranties and Guarantees, (``Guides'').
        The Interpretations represent the Commission's views on various 
    aspects of the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act (``the Act''), 15 U.S.C. 2301 
    et seq., and are intended to clarify the Act's requirements. They are 
    similar to industry guides in that they are advisory in nature, 
    although failure to comply with the Act and the Rules under the Act as 
    elucidated by the Interpretations may result in corrective action by 
    the Commission. Rule 701 specifies the information that must appear in 
    a written warranty on a consumer product. Rule 702 details the 
    obligations of sellers and warrantors to make warranty information 
    available to consumers prior to purchase. Rule 703 specifies the 
    minimum standards which must be met by any informal dispute settlement 
    mechanism that is incorporated into a written consumer product warranty 
    and which the consumer must use prior to pursuing any legal remedies in 
    court. The Guides are intended to help advertisers avoid unfair or 
    deceptive practices in the advertising of warranties or guarantees.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: April 22, 1999.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Carole I. Danielson, Investigator, 
    Division of Marketing Practices, Federal Trade Commission, Washington, 
    DC 20580, (202) 326-3115.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On April 3, 1996, the Commission published a 
    Federal Register notice \1\, soliciting written public comments 
    concerning four warranty rules and guides: (1) The Commission's 
    Interpretations of the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, 16 CFR part 700; (2) 
    the Rule Governing Disclosure of Written Consumer Product Warranty 
    Terms and Conditions, 16 CFR part 701; (3) the Rule Governing Pre-Sale 
    Availability of Written Warranty Terms, 16 CFR part 702; and (4) the 
    Guides for the Advertising of Warranties and Guarantees, 16 CFR part 
    239. On April 2, 1997, the Commission published a second Federal 
    Register notice, this time soliciting written public comments 
    concerning Rule 703.2 On June 13, 1997, the Commission 
    extended the comment period on Rule 703 until August 1, 
    1997.3 The Commission requested comments on these rules and 
    guides as part of its regulatory review program, under which it reviews 
    rules and guides periodically in order to obtain information about the 
    costs and benefits of the rules and guides under review, as well as 
    their regulatory and economic impact. The information obtained assists 
    the Commission in identifying rules and guides that warrant 
    modification or rescission. After careful review of the comments 
    received in response to both requests, the Commission has determined to 
    retain the Interpretations, Rules 701, 702, and 703, and the Guides 
    without change.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \1\ 61 FR 14688 (April 3, 1996).
        \2\ 62 FR 15636 (April 2, 1997).
        \3\ 62 FR 32338 (June 13, 1997).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    A. Background
    
    1. 16 CFR Part 700: Interpretations of the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act 
    (``Interpretations'')
    
        The Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, 15 U.S.C. 2301 et seq., which 
    governs written warranties on consumer products, was signed into law on 
    January 4, 1975. Soon thereafter, the Commission received many 
    questions concerning the Act's requirements. In response to these 
    inquiries, the Commission decided to provide guidance in order to 
    facilitate compliance with the requirements of the Act. The Commission 
    published a policy statement in the Federal Register (40 FR 25721) on 
    June 18, 1975, to provide interim guidance during the initial 
    implementation of the Act. As the Commission continued to receive 
    questions and requests for advisory opinions, however, it determined 
    that guidance of a more permanent nature was appropriate. Therefore, on 
    July 13, 1977, the Commission published in the Federal Register (42 FR 
    36112) its Interpretations of the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act.
        The Interpretations apply to written warranties on consumer 
    products. They set forth the Commission's views on various terms and 
    provisions of the Act that are not entirely clear on the face of the 
    statute. Thus, the Interpretations clarify the Act's requirements for 
    all who are affected by them--consumers, manufacturers, importers, 
    distributors, and retailers. The Interpretations are not substantive 
    rules, and do not have the force or effect of such rules; like industry 
    guides, they are advisory in nature. Nonetheless, failure to comply 
    with the requirements of the Act and the substantive Rules adopted 
    under the Act as elucidated by the Interpretations could result in 
    enforcement action by the Commission.
        The Interpretations cover a wide range of subjects covered by the 
    Act and terms used in the Act, including what types of products are 
    considered ``consumer products'' under the Act; what constitutes an 
    ``expression of general policy'' under section 103(b) of the Act 
    4 and what the Act requires with respect to such expressions 
    of general policy; how warranty registration cards may be used in 
    connection with full and limited warranties; what constitutes an 
    illegal tying arrangement under section 102(c) of the Act;\5\ and how 
    to distinguish between ``written warranty,'' ``service contract,'' and 
    ``insurance.''
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \4\ 15 U.S.C. 2303(b).
        \5\ 15 U.S.C. 2302(c).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    2. 16 CFR Part 701: Disclosure of Written Consumer Product Warranty 
    Terms and Conditions (``Rule 701'')
    
        The language of the Act and its legislative history make it amply 
    clear that Congress intended that the Commission promulgate rules 
    regarding the disclosure of written warranty terms and conditions. 
    Accordingly, on December 31, 1975, the Commission published Rule 701 in 
    the Federal Register.6 Rule 701 sets forth what warrantors 
    must disclose about the terms and conditions of the written warranties 
    they offer on consumer products that actually cost the consumer more 
    than $15.00. Rule 701 tracks the disclosure requirements suggested in
    
    [[Page 19701]]
    
    section 102(a) of the Act, 7 specifying information that 
    must appear in the written warranty, and, for certain disclosures, 
    mandates the exact language that must be used. Rule 701 requires that 
    the information be disclosed in a single document in simple, easily 
    understood, and concise language. In promulgating Rule 701, the 
    Commission determined that the items required to be disclosed are 
    material facts about product warranties, the non-disclosure of which 
    would be deceptive or misleading.8
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \6\ 40 FR 60168, 60188.
        \7\ 15 U.S.C. 2302(a).
        \8\ 40 FR 60168, 60169-60170.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In addition to specifying the information that must appear in a 
    written warranty, Rule 701 also requires that, if the warrantor uses a 
    warranty registration or owner registration card, the warranty must 
    disclose whether return of the registration card is a condition 
    precedent to warranty coverage. (16 CFR 701.4) Finally, it clarifies 
    that, in connection with some ``seal of approval'' programs, the 
    disclosures required by the Rule need not be given in the actual seal 
    itself, if they are made in a publication. (16 CFR 701.3(b))
    
    3. 16 CFR Part 702: Pre-Sale Availability of Written Warranty Terms 
    (``Rule 702'')
    
        Section 102(b)(1)(A) of the Act directs the Commission to prescribe 
    rules requiring that the terms of any written warranty on a consumer 
    product be made available to the prospective purchaser prior to the 
    sale of the product. Accordingly, on December 31, 1975, the Commission 
    published Rule 702 in the Federal Register. 9 Subsequently, 
    the Commission amended the Rule on March 12, 1987, to provide sellers 
    with greater flexibility in how to make warranty information 
    available.\10\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \9\ 40 FR 60168, 60189.
        \10\ 52 FR 7569.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Rule 702 establishes requirements for sellers and warrantors to 
    make the text of any written warranty on a consumer product available 
    to the consumer prior to sale. Among other things, the Rule (as 
    amended) requires sellers to make the text of the warranty readily 
    available either by (1) displaying it in close proximity to the product 
    or (2) furnishing it on request and posting signs in prominent 
    locations advising consumers that the warranty is available. The Rule 
    requires warrantors to provide materials to enable sellers to comply 
    with the Rule's requirements, and also sets out the methods by which 
    warranty information can be made available prior to the sale if the 
    product is sold through catalogs, mail order or door-to-door sales.
    
    4. 16 CFR Part 703: Informal Dispute Settlement Procedures (``Rule 
    703'')
    
        In enacting the Warranty Act, Congress recognized the potential 
    benefits of consumer dispute mechanisms as an alternative to the 
    judicial process. Section 110(a) of the Act sets out the Congressional 
    policy to ``encourage warrantors to establish procedures whereby 
    consumer disputes are fairly and expeditiously settled through informal 
    dispute settlement mechanisms'' and erected a framework for their 
    establishment. As an incentive to warrantors to establish such informal 
    dispute settlement mechanisms (``IDSMs''), Congress provided in section 
    110(a)(3), 15 U.S.C. 2310(a)(3), that warrantors may incorporate into 
    their written consumer product warranties a requirement that a consumer 
    must resort to an IDSM before pursuing a legal remedy under the Act for 
    breach of warranty. To ensure fairness to consumers, however, Congress 
    also directed that, if a warrantor were to incorporate such a ``prior 
    resort requirement'' into its written warranty, the warrantor must 
    comply with the minimum standards set by the Commission for such IDSMs; 
    section 110(a)(2) directed the Commission to establish those minimum 
    standards. Accordingly, on December 31, 1975, the Commission published 
    Rule 703, 16 CFR part 703.11
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \11\ 40 FR 60190.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Rule 703 contains extensive procedural standards for IDSMs, which 
    must be followed by any warrantor who wishes to incorporate an IDSM, 
    through a prior resort requirement, into the terms of a written 
    consumer product warranty. These standards include requirements 
    concerning the mechanism's structure (e.g., funding, staffing, and 
    neutrality), the qualifications of staff or decision makers, the 
    mechanism's procedures for resolving disputes (e.g., notification, 
    investigation, time limits for decisions, and follow-up), 
    recordkeeping, and annual audits. The Rule applies only to those firms 
    that choose to be bound by it by placing a prior resort requirement in 
    their written consumer product warranties. Neither Rule 703 nor the Act 
    requires warrantors to set up IDSMs. Furthermore, a warrantor is free 
    to set up an IDSM that does not comply with Rule 703 as long as the 
    warranty does not contain a prior resort requirement.
        In the twenty years since Rule 703 was promulgated, most 
    developments in mediation and arbitration programs for the resolution 
    of consumer warranty disputes has taken place in the automobile 
    industry. It is unclear how many companies, if any, continue to utilize 
    a Rule 703 mechanism.12 Most vehicle manufacturers no longer 
    include a prior resort requirement in their warranties; thus, they and 
    any dispute resolution programs in which they participate are not 
    required to comply with Rule 703.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \12\ General Motors ceased incorporating an IDSM in its warranty 
    beginning with its 1986 models and no longer operates a 703 program. 
    Ford discontinued operation under Rule 703 with its 1988 model year 
    cars. Chrysler discontinued its Rule 703 program with its 1991 
    models. Similarly, American Honda, Nissan, Volvo, and other auto 
    manufacturers have all discontinued operating Rule 703 programs. The 
    Commission has not been notified that any of these manufacturers has 
    reinstituted a prior resort requirement in their warranties. 
    Although they are not required to do so, the IDSMs for the major 
    auto manufacturers continue to file annual audits with the 
    Commission. These audits are placed on the public record and can be 
    obtained from the FTC's Public Reference Branch, Room 130, 6th St. 
    and Pennsylvania Ave., NW., Washington, DC 20580; 202-326-2222. (FTC 
    File No. R711002)
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The fact that most warrantors do not include prior resort 
    requirements in their warranties does not mean, however, that 
    warrantors have abandoned informal dispute resolution programs. On the 
    contrary, due to the terms of state lemon laws 13 (as 
    explained more fully below), all major automakers participate in either 
    manufacturer-sponsored or state-run dispute resolution programs that 
    frequently are modeled on the minimum standards set out in Rule 703 
    even though they are not required to do so under any provision of 
    federal law.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \13\ State lemon laws give consumers the right to a replacement 
    or a refund if their new cars cannot be repaired under warranty. 
    Under these lemon laws, if a reasonable number of repair attempts 
    fails to correct a major problem, the manufacturer must either 
    replace the car or refund the full purchase price, less a reasonable 
    allowance for the consumer's use of the car prior to reporting the 
    defect. Most of these laws define a ``reasonable number of repair 
    attempts'' to be four or more times during the first year of 
    ownership. Consumers may also be entitled to a refund or replacement 
    remedy when a new car has been out of service for repair for the 
    same problem for a cumulative period of thirty days or more within 
    one year following delivery of the vehicle.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    5. 16 CFR Part 239: Guides for the Advertising of Warranties and 
    Guarantees (``Guides'')
    
        In May, 1985, the Commission published the Guides in the Federal 
    Register.14 The Guides were intended to help advertisers 
    avoid unfair or deceptive practices when advertising warranties or 
    guarantees. They took the place of the Commission's ``Guides Against 
    Deceptive Advertising of
    
    [[Page 19702]]
    
    Guarantees,'' 16 CFR part 239, adopted April 26, 1960, which had become 
    outdated due to developments in Commission case law and, more 
    importantly, changes in circumstances brought about by the Magnuson-
    Moss Warranty Act and by Rules 701 and 702 under that Act. The 1985 
    Guides advise that advertisements mentioning warranties or guarantees 
    should contain a disclosure that the actual warranty document is 
    available for consumers to read before they buy the advertised product. 
    In addition, the Guides set forth advice for using the terms 
    ``satisfaction guarantees,'' ``lifetime,'' and similar representations. 
    Finally, the Guides advise that sellers or manufacturers should not 
    advertise that a product is warranted or guaranteed unless they 
    promptly and fully perform their warranty obligations.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \14\ 50 FR 18470 (May 1, 1985); 50 FR 20899 (May 21, 1985).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    B. Analysis of the Comments on the Interpretations, Rule 701, Rule 
    702, and the Guides
    
        Seven (7) organizations submitted comments in response to the April 
    3, 1996, Federal Register notice.15 The small number of 
    comments likely reflects that compliance with these Rules and Guides is 
    not burdensome and that seeking rescission or modification of them is 
    therefore not a high priority for industry members most closely 
    affected by them. In fact, the comments generally reflect a strong 
    level of support for the view that the Warranty Rules and Guides are 
    achieving the objectives they were fashioned to achieve--i.e., to 
    facilitate the consumer's ability to obtain clear, accurate warranty 
    information, as well as the consumer's ability to enforce a warrantor's 
    contractual obligations under any written warranty. Some commenters 
    enthusiastically supported the current regulatory regime. For example, 
    AAMA stated that the current system is working well and is not 
    unreasonably costly to warrantors. AAMA stated that the Rules are 
    workable and understood by industry and that there is no evidence that 
    either the adequacy of warranty disclosure or that the legal 
    sufficiency of the warranties given is a major source of complaints; 
    nor is there evidence that customers are unaware of their warranty 
    rights. AAMA cautioned:
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \15\ The seven commenters are: (1) American Automobile 
    Manufacturers Association (``AAMA''); (2) Association of 
    International Automobile Manufacturers, Inc. (``AIAM''); (3) Cohen, 
    Milstein, Hausfeld & Toll (``Cohen'') by Gary Mason, Esq.; (4) 
    National Consumer Law Center (``NCLC''); (5) National Retail 
    Federation (``NRF''); (6) North American Insulation Manufacturers 
    Association (``NAIMA''); and (7) North American Retail Dealers 
    Association (``NARDA'') by James M. Goldberg, Esq., Goldberg & 
    Associates.
    
        In view of the effectiveness of the current system, AAMA and its 
    members * * * urge the Commission to proceed cautiously in 
    considering a major overhaul to the Rules. Any comprehensive changes 
    will unavoidably involve substantial compliance costs as warrantors 
    and their staffs will have both to unlearn the current system and to 
    assimilate the new provisions. * * * The Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act 
    and the Rules promulgated under it provide an important avenue for 
    consumer protection and establishing consumer confidence in the 
    marketplace and the products they buy. As presently structured, 
    these Rules are workable and effective, and permit warrantor 
    compliance without unreasonable expense. * * * (A) major overhaul of 
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    the system is neither necessary or appropriate.
    
        AAMA recommended that, before making any significant changes to the 
    system, the Commission should first conduct a formal study of the 
    marketplace to ensure that changes are needed, the specific proposed 
    revisions would help, and the benefits achieved would outweigh the 
    costs of the changes to industry and to consumers.16
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \16\ AAMA at 2.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        NAIMA echoed AAMA's positive appraisal of the benefits derived from 
    the Warranty Rules and Guides. NAIMA cautioned that, in the absence of 
    such guides, there would be an increase in unfair and deceptive uses of 
    warranties to promote products.17 NAIMA believes that the 
    warranty regulations benefit both consumers and warrantors: the 
    requirements ``increase the consumer's confidence in a warranty and 
    increase the likelihood that a consumer will rely on the warranty * * * 
    (T)he honest warrantor also benefits because of increased consumer 
    confidence in warranties.'' 18 NAIMA noted that the costs of 
    the warranty regulations are not imposed upon businesses by government, 
    but rather are voluntarily assumed by companies that choose to offer 
    written warranties. As such, NAIMA states that ``any cost incurred by a 
    firm would be calculated into a business decision to offer a warranty 
    or guarantee and should not be weighed as a factor to eliminate or 
    diminish the requirement.'' 19
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \17\ NAIMA at 2.
        \18\ NAIMA at 4.
        \19\ NAIMA at 3.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Four other commenters, although not expressly endorsing retention 
    of the present regulatory regime, supported such retention by 
    implication in suggesting modifications to the rules and guides which 
    they believed would provide greater consumer protections and/or 
    minimize burdens on firms subject to the regulations. One commenter 
    (NRF) recommended that the Commission report to Congress that the Rule 
    702 was no longer necessary and recommend that Congress amend that 
    portion of Magnuson-Moss requiring a pre-sale availability rule so that 
    Rule 702 could be repealed.20 However, for the reasons 
    discussed herein, the Commission has decided that both Rule 702 and the 
    other Rules and Guides should be retained. In the following, we discuss 
    in more depth each of the suggestions and the basis for the 
    Commission's decision.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \20\ NRF at 2.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    1. 16 CFR Part 700: Interpretations.
    
        a. ``Building materials'' exemption. Under Secs. 700.1(c)-(f) of 
    the Commission's Interpretations, building materials are not ``consumer 
    products'' covered by the Act when they are already incorporated into 
    the structure of a dwelling at the time the consumer buys the home. 
    These same building products are ``consumer products'' covered by the 
    Act when they are sold over-the-counter directly to the consumer by a 
    retailer. Two commenters (Cohen and NAIMA) argued that the dichotomy 
    created by this interpretation is confusing and irrational. They 
    asserted that the current interpretation deprives consumers of the 
    benefits and protections of the Act and its Rules when they purchase a 
    home.
        Cohen argued that the current interpretation is counter to the 
    legislative history, intent, and language of the Act. The Act defines 
    ``consumer product'' as ``any personal property * * * which is normally 
    used for personal, family, or household purposes (including any such 
    property intended to be attached to or installed in any real property 
    without regard to whether it is so attached or installed). (15 U.S.C. 
    2301(1)) Cohen asserted that building materials fall within the 
    category of personal property intended to be attached to or installed 
    in any real property. Cohen also cited the House Committee's discussion 
    of the definition as support for the proposition that Congress intended 
    that items that were to become part of realty were to be covered by 
    Magnuson-Moss as ``consumer products.'' 21
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \21\  ``There are many products which fall within this 
    definition (tangible personal property normally used for personal, 
    family, or household purposes) which are also used for other than 
    personal, family, or household purposes * * *. Under concepts of 
    property law, fixtures such as hot water heaters and air 
    conditioners when incorporated into a dwelling become a part of the 
    real property. It is intended that the provisions of Title I 
    continue to apply to such products regardless of how they are 
    classified.'' H.R. Rep. No. 93-1107, 93rd Cong., 2d Sess., (1974) 
    reprinted in 1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 7702, at 7716-7717.
    
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    [[Page 19703]]
    
        The Commission is not persuaded by these arguments. The 
    Commission's analysis starts with the statute. The Commission believes 
    that there are three conclusions that can be drawn based on the 
    language used in the statutory definition of ``consumer product.'' 
    First, the definition assumes the traditional legal distinction between 
    real property and personal property. Second, it clearly places 
    ``personal'' property within the scope of the Act's coverage. Third, 
    through the drafters' choice of language, the definition obviously 
    stops short of sweeping within the scope of the Act's coverage all 
    property, real and personal. In this connection, the legislative 
    history includes the following instructive colloquy, which was part of 
    the floor debate on the legislation by Congressmen Broyhill and Moss, 
    two members of the Conference Committee and of the House Committee 
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    responsible for the Act: 22
    
        \22\ Congressional Record, Vol. 120, No. 139 (September 17, 
    1974) p. H9316.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Mr. Broyhill of North Carolina. I would like to address a 
    question to Mr. Staggers or Mr. Moss concerning the definition of 
    ``consumer product'' in section 101(1) of the bill. Would a house be 
    in the definition of consumer product?
        Mr. Moss. A house would not fall within the definition of 
    consumer product since a house is not quite ``tangible personal 
    property.''
        Mr. Broyhill of North Carolina. If a warranty applied to 
    component parts of a home such as dry wall, plumbing, heating and 
    air conditioning, would these items be in the definition of 
    ``consumer product''?
        Mr. Moss. The definition of consumer product in section 101 
    includes ``tangible personal property which is distributed in 
    commerce and which is normally used for personal, family or 
    household purposes--including any such property intended to be 
    attached to or installed in any real property.'' This definition 
    would apply to any separate equipment such as heating and air 
    conditioning systems which are sold with a new home. However, such a 
    definition would not apply to items such as dry walls, pipes, or 
    wiring which are not separate items of equipment but are rather 
    integral components of a home.
    
        The Commission believes that the Interpretations embody the same 
    practical rationale as that espoused by the Act's sponsor in the above-
    quoted exchange. The Interpretations draw the line, apparently 
    contemplated by the language of the statute, to separate personalty 
    (covered by the Act) and realty (not covered) in a manner that is clear 
    and workable, and that is consistent with the intent of Congress, to 
    the extent it can be determined. Thus, after having reconsidered this 
    issue, the Commission adheres to the view that its original 
    interpretation is correct and should be retained as written: Structural 
    components of a new home such as lumber, dry wall, pipes or electrical 
    conduit or wiring are not considered separate items of equipment and 
    are not considered consumer products within the meaning of section 101 
    of the Act. Insulation is another item that is a structural component 
    of a new home and thus would not be a consumer product. These items are 
    not functionally separate from the realty. In contrast, such items 
    would be ``consumer products'' and within the scope of the Act were 
    they purchased either separately or in combination to improve, repair, 
    replace or otherwise modify an existing structure. This distinction 
    holds true regardless of whether the consumer purchased the items for 
    new home construction directly from a retail supplier.
        b. Coverage of export items. In its comment, NCLC asked the 
    Commission to reconsider whether its warranty regulations should apply 
    to goods exported to foreign countries. In Sec. 700.1(i) of its 
    Interpretations, the Commission stated that, although the Act arguably 
    applies to products exported to foreign jurisdictions:
    
    the public interest would not be served by the use of Commission 
    resources to enforce the Act with respect to such products. 
    Moreover, the legislative intent to apply the requirements of the 
    Act to such products is not sufficiently clear to justify such an 
    extraordinary result.
    
        No evidence has been submitted to the Commission that would justify 
    changing its stated position. The Commission's enforcement 
    responsibilities have expanded since adoption of the Interpretations in 
    1976, spreading scarce law enforcement resources further. Therefore, 
    the Commission has decided to retain Sec. 700.1(i) remain as written.
        c. Warrantor's decision as final. Section 700.8 prohibits the 
    warrantor from indicating in any warranty or service contract that the 
    decision of the warrantor, service contractor, or any designated third 
    party is final or binding in any dispute involving the warranty or 
    service contract. NCLC expressed the fear that a warrantor who is also 
    the seller could circumvent this prohibition by placing such a 
    restriction in a document other than the warranty or service contract 
    and, therefore, suggested that the Commission reword this section in 
    order to bar such a possibility. No evidence has been provided, 
    however, to indicate that this hypothetical situation occurs, or that 
    it occurs with a frequency that would merit the expenditure of 
    Commission resources necessary to make the wording change. Absent such 
    evidence, the Commission has decided to retain Sec. 700.8 unchanged.
        d. Tying arrangements. Section 700.10 sets out the Commission's 
    interpretations regarding the use of tying arrangements in connection 
    with warranties. Among other things, Sec. 700.10 prohibits conditioning 
    the continued validity of a warranty on the use of authorized repair 
    service for non-warranty service and maintenance. NCLC recommended that 
    the Commission amend Sec. 700.10 to prohibit used car warranties which 
    provide for a percentage (e.g., 25 percent) of parts and labor costs 
    provided the repair is done by the dealer or a place of the dealer's 
    choosing. According to NCLC, these warranties allegedly are for a short 
    term, often 30-days or 1,000 miles. NCLC stated that these warranties 
    are common among ``low-end'' used car dealers and alleges that the 
    warranties harm consumers because they provide little value and that 
    the consumer has little control over the prices charged for the repair. 
    Since the consumer is paying 75 percent of the repair cost under the 
    warranty, the consumer may actually lose money by using the warranty to 
    obtain repairs, according to NCLC.
        The Commission has determined not to incorporate the change NCLC 
    proposed into the Interpretations for two reasons. First, a drafting 
    change probably is not necessary to accomplish what NCLC advocated, 
    since such warranties already likely violate section 102(c) of the Act. 
    Section 102(c) prohibits arrangements that condition warranty coverage 
    on the use of an article or service identified by brand, trade, or 
    corporate name unless that article or service is provided without 
    charge to the consumer. Since the consumer must pay a significant 
    charge for parts and labor under these warranties, the warranties may 
    violate section 102(c) by restricting the consumer's choices for 
    obtaining warranty service. Second, the Commission notes that, although 
    consumers may have little control over the prices charged for repairs 
    under such warranties, they do have a choice of whether to use the 
    warranty. Many states have enacted legislation requiring auto servicers 
    to give estimates on any repair to be done. These estimates allow the 
    consumer to shop for the best price. If the consumer realizes that 
    having a repair done under the warranty may actually cost more than 
    having the repair done by an independent servicer, the consumer can go 
    elsewhere for the
    
    [[Page 19704]]
    
    work. For these reasons, the Commission has decided to retain 
    Sec. 700.10 as written.
    
    2. 16 CFR Part 701: Disclosure of Terms and Conditions (Rule 701).
    
        a. ``On the face of the warranty'' requirement. Two commenters 
    (AAMA and AIAM) suggested that the Commission modify the requirement in 
    Sec. 701.3(a)(7) that limitations on the duration of implied warranties 
    be ``disclosed on the face of the warranty.'' In the case of multi-page 
    warranty documents, Sec. 701.1(i)(1) of the Rule defines ``face of the 
    warranty'' to mean ``the page on which the warranty text begins.'' The 
    commenters stated that this restriction constrains the warrantor's 
    ability to make the warranty document more user-friendly. They maintain 
    that a warranty booklet is more difficult for consumers to read when 
    the limitations come before complete descriptions of all warranty 
    coverage. These commenters suggest that Sec. 701.3(a)(7) be modified to 
    permit the limitations to appear anywhere within the text of the 
    warranty, provided that the limitations are displayed prominently, 
    clearly and conspicuously.
        The Commission believes that Sec. 701.3(a)(7) should be retained 
    without change. One of the problems that led to passage of the 
    Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act was that warrantors frequently gave 
    warranties which at first appeared to offer very expansive coverage, 
    which was in fact severely eroded by provisions buried further on in 
    the document limiting coverage of the written warranty, or of the 
    implied warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular 
    purpose. Such warranties were deceptive, since they could mislead 
    consumers into thinking that coverage is greater than it actually is. 
    Protection of the consumer's implied warranty rights is the bedrock of 
    the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act regulatory scheme. Accordingly, it is 
    essential that any limitation on these rights be disclosed up-front and 
    not buried elsewhere in a multi-page document. The Commission has been 
    provided with no evidence that would compel revision of this core 
    provision of Rule 701.
        b. Value thresholds. Two commenters 23 suggested that 
    the Commission should modify Secs. 701.3(a) and 702.3 to increase the 
    threshold for products subject to the rules in order to account for the 
    impact of inflation. The AAMA suggested that the threshold be raised 
    from $15 to $25, and also suggested that the Commission report to 
    Congress, recommending that the corresponding value thresholds in the 
    statute itself also be adjusted (15 U.S.C. 2302(e) and 
    2303(d)).24 The Commission, however, believes that the 
    dollar thresholds set out in the rules and in the statute remain 
    appropriate. The statute and the rules were drafted to be flexible. 
    There is no requirement that a company offer a written warranty. 
    Therefore, a company that sells a product costing less than $15 is 
    under no obligation to give a written warranty. The costs of compliance 
    are minimal for those products that cost under $15--i.e., principally a 
    prohibition against warranty tying arrangements and a requirement that 
    the warranty be labeled either ``limited'' or ``full.''
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \23\ AAMA at 3; NAIMA at 5.
        \24\ Section 102(e) of the Act provides that all written 
    warranties on consumer products costing $5 or more will be subject 
    to the provisions of section 102. This threshold serves two 
    purposes: First, it insures that any warrantor giving a written 
    warranty on a consumer product costing $5 or more may not condition 
    the warranty on the consumer's use of a specific brand or trade name 
    of product or service (15 U.S.C. 2302(c)). Second, this section sets 
    a floor for the written warranties to be covered by the Commission 
    rules which were to be promulgated under the Act. Those rules could 
    set the threshold higher than $5, but could not lower the threshold 
    to encompass all products. In addition, section 103(d) provides that 
    only those warranties on products costing $10 or more must adhere to 
    the labeling requirements of section 103 (i.e., labeling the 
    warranty either ``limited'' or ``full.'')
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Furthermore, the Commission believes that consumers might be 
    deprived of important protections if the threshold for rule coverage 
    were to be raised to $25. Although many warrantors voluntarily would 
    continue to disclose fully the terms and conditions of the warranty, 
    others might choose not to do so since the legal obligation would no 
    longer be present. It is true that, if a low-cost product were to 
    malfunction, some consumers might choose to simply throw it away and 
    purchase another. However, not all consumers view products costing $15-
    $25 as disposable. Some consumers might choose to assert their warranty 
    rights in getting the product repaired or replaced.25 
    Therefore, the Commission has decided that the threshold values for 
    coverage by the statute and the rules shall remain unchanged.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \25\ This position has some support from the 1984 Warranty 
    Consumer Follow-Up Study, (``Warranty Rules Consumer Follow-Up: 
    Evaluation Study Final Report'' (1984), at ES-4. (``Warranty 
    Study'')), in which over 30 percent of the respondents felt that it 
    was important to see the warranty for products costing as little as 
    $15.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        c. Use of owner registration cards. One commenter 26 
    recommended that Sec. 701.4 27 should be eliminated due to 
    perceived conflict with the Commission's interpretations in 16 CFR 
    700.7(b) regarding the use of owner registration cards in connection 
    with a full warranty, and with the intent of Section 104(b)(1) of the 
    Act.28 NARDA stated the view that retaining 701.4 would 
    allow manufacturers to continue ``raiding'' retailer customer lists 
    under the guise of ``warranty card registration.'' NARDA opined that 
    such customer information can be used by manufacturers to compete 
    directly with the retailer in offering service contracts and other 
    products. NARDA did not oppose that manufacturers be allowed to collect 
    demographic and similar market information on consumers, but urged that 
    they should not be allowed to do so under the premise of conditioning 
    warranty coverage on the furnishing of that information.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \26\ NARDA at 1-2.
        \27\ Section 701.4 requires a warrantor to disclose in the 
    warranty if an owner or warranty registration card is a condition 
    precedent to warranty coverage. The section also requires the 
    warrantor to disclose that the return of the card is not necessary 
    for warranty coverage if the return of such a card reasonably 
    appears to be a condition precedent to warranty coverage and 
    performance, but is not such a condition.
        \28\ Section 104(b)(1) of the Act prohibits a warrantor that 
    offers a ``full'' warranty (i.e., one that meets the minimum 
    standard of coverage set out in section 104(a)) from imposing on the 
    consumer any duty other than notification in order to obtain 
    warranty service. Section 770.7 of the Interpretations cover the use 
    of warranty registration cards as a condition precedent to perform 
    obligations under a full warranty and whether the use of such cards 
    constitutes an ``unreasonable duty'' in violation of section 
    104(b)(1). The Interpretations state that the use of such cards 
    constitute an ``unreasonable duty'' when their return is a condition 
    precedent to warranty performance and coverage under a full 
    warranty. However, warrantors may suggest the use of such cards as 
    one possible means of proof of the purchase date of the product. In 
    addition, sellers can use these cards to obtain information from 
    purchasers at the time of sale on behalf of the warrantor.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        A second commenter (NCLC) suggested that Sec. 700.7(c) should be 
    clarified to prohibit return instructions for registration cards that 
    imply that returning the card is necessary in order to obtain warranty 
    coverage. NCLC cites language such as ``Return this card to ensure 
    warranty registration'' as misleading because consumers are led to 
    believe that registration is necessary to obtain coverage.
        The Commission is aware that warrantors commonly request that 
    purchasers return owner or warranty registration cards in order to 
    obtain marketing and demographic information. The required return of 
    such owner registration cards is prohibited as an ``unreasonable duty'' 
    only when the warrantor gives a full warranty; requiring return of such 
    cards is permitted under a limited warranty as long as the warrantor 
    discloses in the
    
    [[Page 19705]]
    
    warranty that the consumer must return the card in order to get 
    coverage.
        However, no evidence submitted to the Commission identified 
    specific situations where the return of such a card is a condition 
    precedent for warranty coverage, or how often this occurs, if at all. 
    Nor has any evidence been provided that consumers actually are being 
    misled by the language used on owner registration cards. The record, 
    therefore, contains no indication that such language is inherently 
    deceptive or misleading and as such should be banned. (Of course, 
    particular language or instructions could still be challenged as 
    deceptive or unfair under section 5 of the FTC Act (15 U.S.C. 45)).
        In sum, in the absence of specific evidence that these cards are 
    being misused by warrantors and/or that the language used is inherently 
    deceptive or misleading, the commission believes that Secs. 701.4 and 
    700.7 should remain unchanged.
    
    3. 16 CFR 702: Pre-Sale Availability (Rule 702)
    
        a. Should the Rule be Rescinded? The NRF proposed that Rule 702 no 
    longer serves the purpose for which it was intended and that it should 
    be rescinded. Section 102(b)(1)(A) of the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act 
    29 directs the Commission to promulgate rules requiring that 
    the terms of any written warranty be made available to the consumer 
    prior to sale. Because the Act specifically requires a pre-sale 
    availability rule, the NRF recommended that the Commission report to 
    Congress that the rule is no longer necessary to ensure that consumers 
    are informed about warranties and request that Congress repeal section 
    102(b)(1)(A) of the Act.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \29\ 15 U.S.C. 2302(b)(1)(A).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The NRF asserted that consumers no longer need Rule 702 in order to 
    obtain information about warranties since a variety of sources exist 
    for consumers to educate themselves about consumer issues in general, 
    including warranties. To buttress this argument, the NRF cited an 
    anecdotal survey conducted by three of its members indicating that 
    consumers rarely request warranty information from 
    retailers.30 The NRF also cited the Commission's 1984 
    Warranty Study as further support for rescinding the rule. According to 
    NRF, that study indicated that the primary reason consumers did not ask 
    retailers for warranty information was that they already knew all they 
    needed to know about the warranty for the particular product they were 
    buying.31 The NRF reasoned that since few consumers request 
    warranty information from retailers, most consumers are aware of 
    warranties. Therefore, according to NRF, the Commission is imposing 
    unnecessary costs on retailers to maintain product warranties on hand 
    and up to date.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \30\ The NRF also cites the Commission's statement in its 1987 
    amendment of Rule 702 that ``consumers rarely consult warranty 
    binders.'' (NRF at 2, citing 52 FR 7569, 7569 (March 12, 1987). 
    However, the Commission notes that it made this statement in the 
    context of explaining why the specific detailed methods of 
    compliance were not needed and why detailed regulatory requirements 
    were unnecessary. While the statement is useful in explaining why 
    more flexible methods are necessary to provide warranty information, 
    Commission believes that it would be incorrect to infer from that 
    statement that it is unnecessary to ensure that warranty information 
    is available.
        \31\ Warranty Study at 57.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission believes that NRF is misguided in its interpretation 
    of the Warranty Study results. The Commission believes that the 
    Warranty is more a measure of the importance of warranties in making a 
    purchase decision on certain products rather than the importance to 
    consumers of pre-sale availability of warranty information generally on 
    all products. The study shows that warranties were considered in the 
    purchase decision for 54.2 percent of the products for which buyers 
    comparison shopped.32 In 40 percent of those cases, 
    consumers reported having information about the warranty prior to 
    purchasing the product. Of those 40 percent, 23.1 percent said that 
    they received at least some of that information from reading the 
    warranty.33 The study goes on to state:
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \32\ The Warranty Study implies that one reason many consumers 
    do not read warranties before buying a product is because they 
    rarely experience problems with the products they purchase and, 
    those who do, had few problems in obtaining satisfactory repairs 
    under the warranty. (Warranty Study at ES-3)
        \33\ Warranty Study at ES-2. The Warranty Study also indicates 
    that more people apparently learn about warranties from salespersons 
    and newspaper or magazine articles than from an actual reading of 
    the document. However, more people will seek out warranty 
    information on high-priced goods. (Warranty Study at 50)
    
        Most consumers [who did not read warranties before buying] did 
    not believe pre-purchase warranty reading was important in that 
    particular instance. * * * While very few consumers appear to engage 
    in serious warranty reading, most feel that it is important to see 
    the written warranty before buying--only 11.8 percent of the 
    respondents believed that it was never important to see the warranty 
    before buying. [emphasis added] 34
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \34\ Warranty Study at ES-4.
    
        If most consumers believe that it is important to see the warranty 
    before buying in some instances, the Commission believes that it would 
    not be in the public interest to recommend legislative action that 
    would permit rescission of Rule 702. Certainly, before recommending 
    that such a drastic step be taken, the Commission would require more 
    up-to-date factual evidence countering the results of the 1984 Warranty 
    Study regarding the importance to consumers of having warranty 
    information available before the sale.
        The Commission believes that Rule 702 continues to serve the 
    purpose for which it was intended: to ensure that full and accurate 
    warranty information is available prior to sale when consumers want it. 
    In some instances and with respect to some purchases, consumers might 
    be satisfied with general information about a warranty that can be 
    gleaned from other sources such as advertising or a salesperson's oral 
    presentation. Nonetheless, the warranty survey indicates that, in a 
    substantial number of instances, such information will not satisfy 
    consumers' needs. Because a warranty is a legally enforceable document 
    that defines the respective rights and obligations of the purchaser and 
    the warrantor, a summary description of the warranty, derived from 
    advertising or from a salesman's oral representations, may or may not 
    completely and accurately convey material terms of coverage. Such 
    alternative sources of information are an inadequate substitute for the 
    actual text of the warranty.
        Furthermore, the 1987 amendment to Rule 702 gave retailers a great 
    deal of flexibility in how to comply with the rule and alleviated much 
    of the burden imposed by the original rule. The Commission believes 
    that this flexibility has made compliance costs minimal. Anecdotal 
    information provided by the NRF for three members regarding compliance 
    costs does not provide an adequate basis to conclude that compliance 
    costs outweigh benefits and that Congress should repeal the Act's 
    requirements for a rule on pre-sale availability of warranty 
    information.
        b. Posting requirement. NARDA recommends that the Commission should 
    amend Sec. 702.3(a) to eliminate the requirement that retailers post 
    signs notifying customers where actual copies of the warranties may be 
    obtained.35 NARDA maintains that since the rule was adopted 
    in 1975, compliance with
    
    [[Page 19706]]
    
    the posting requirement has ebbed to the point where few retailers 
    comply. However, despite the alleged non-compliance, NARDA believes 
    that there has been no corresponding decrease in information made 
    available to consumers. NARDA recommends that the rule should be 
    amended to eliminate the posting requirement and simply require 
    retailers to make warranty information available upon 
    request.36 NARDA believes that this modification would cause 
    no consumer harm and would eliminate compliance costs for those 
    retailers who do attempt to comply with the requirement.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \35\ Section 702.3(a) requires the retailer to either display 
    the actual product warranty in close proximity to the product, or to 
    furnish it upon request. If the retailer chooses to furnish it on 
    request, the retailer must place signs in prominent locations 
    advising buyers that copies of warranties are available upon 
    request.
        \36\ NARDA at 2-3.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Commission has been concerned about the non-compliance with the 
    Rule 702 that NARDA alleges is commonplace. As a result, the Commission 
    has brought several actions against major retailers in recent years for 
    failing to comply with the rule's requirements.37 These 
    actions place all retailers on notice that they risk Commission action 
    by ignoring their compliance responsibilities under Rule 702. If NARDA 
    is correct that there is widespread non-compliance with the posting 
    requirements of Rule 702, such non-compliance would not support 
    eliminating the requirement as much as it would support an argument for 
    increased enforcement activity.38
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \37\ See, e.g., Circuit City Stores, Inc., FTC Docket No. C-3389 
    (1992); Nobody Beats the Wiz, FTC Docket No. C-3329 (1991); The Good 
    Guys, FTC Docket No. C-3388 (1992); Sears, Roebuck & Co., FTC Docket 
    No. C-3529 (1994); Montgomery Ward & Co., FTC Docket No. C-3528 
    (1994); and R.H. Macy & Co., Inc., FTC Docket No. C-3115 (1994). In 
    addition, the Commission brought an action against a mail order 
    company which included charges that the company had violated Rule 
    702 See, Advance Watch Co., Civil Action No. 94 CV601 78AA (E.D. 
    Mich. 1994).
        \38\ Interestingly, the NRF recognized the Commission's 
    commitment to enforcing Rule 702 and asked the Commission to 
    ``reexamine its enforcement priorities in this area.'' (NRF at 2).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        NARDA does not offer any empirical evidence regarding the 
    compliance costs of posting signs regarding the availability of 
    warranty information. When the Commission amended Rule 702 in 1987, it 
    substituted the posting requirement for the requirement in the original 
    rule that specified the particular methods by which retailers should 
    make the warranty information available (e.g., by the use of a binder). 
    At that time, the evidence available to the Commission indicated that 
    the cost of posting signs is relatively low. The Commission concluded 
    that, on balance, this low compliance cost was substantially outweighed 
    by the potential benefit of raising consumer awareness about their 
    ability to obtain warranty information. The Commission has seen no 
    evidence which would challenge this conclusion and, therefore, has 
    determined that Sec. 702.3(a) be retained unchanged.
        c. Plain language warranties. One commenter (NCLC) suggested that 
    the Commission amend Sec. 702.3 to require the display of ``key 
    points'' of warranties, especially on big-ticket items.39 
    NCLC also suggested that the Commission consider creating model 
    ``plain-language'' warranty forms as a guide on how to write warranties 
    that can be easily understood.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \39\ Section 702.3 is the core section of Rule 702 that sets out 
    the duties of the seller and the warrantor in making warranty 
    information available prior to sale.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission believes that market forces already drive many 
    warrantors and retailers to promote the key points of their warranties, 
    in print and broadcast media as well as in point-of-sale promotional 
    pieces. In fact, because of this competition, the Commission issued its 
    Guides for the Advertising of Warranties and Guarantees to ensure that 
    consumers are not misled into thinking that the ``key points'' 
    mentioned constitute all material terms of coverage. The Guides require 
    a statement directing consumers to where they can obtain full details 
    of the warranty. Given the apparent healthy competition in promoting 
    warranties, the Commission sees no basis for government intervention to 
    impose such a ``key points'' disclosure requirement. With regard to 
    creating model ``plain-language'' warranty forms, the Commission 
    believes that the examples and guidance set out in the FTC business 
    education publications, A Businessperson's Guide to Federal Warranty 
    Law and Writing Readable Warranties, are sufficient to assist those who 
    want to make their warranties readable.40
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \40\ These publications as well as other consumer and business 
    education brochures and other materials are available online in the 
    FTC Consumer Publications and FTC Business Publications sections of 
    the FTC's Home Page, located at http://www.ftc.gov/ftc/news.htm.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    4. 16 CFR Part 239: Warranty Guides
    
        One commenter (AIAM) suggested that the Commission amend the 
    Warranty Guides to eliminate the requirement that an advertisement 
    mentioning a warranty also include a statement of where the consumer 
    can find complete details about the warranty. The AIAM believed that, 
    at least for automobiles, the statement ``See your dealer for details'' 
    is a ``statement of the obvious and accordingly unnecessary.''
        The Commission does not believe the disclosure of such information 
    is unnecessary. The message intended is not just that the dealer or 
    other retailer has the warranty; that much is obvious. What may not be 
    obvious is the remainder of the message: that prospective purchasers 
    have a right to read the warranty, if they desire, before purchasing. 
    Because the aspects of warranty coverage touted in an advertisement may 
    not necessarily provide a complete understanding of a warranty's 
    overall coverage, the Commission believes that it is important to alert 
    consumers that the actual warranty text is available for review, to 
    obtain an accurate and complete understanding of the coverage. 
    Accordingly, the Commission has determined to retain the Warranty 
    Guides unchanged.
    
    C. Analysis of Comments on Rule 703
    
        Thirteen (13) organizations submitted comments in response to the 
    April 2, 1997 Federal Register notice.41 The comments 
    generally reflected strong support for the Rule 703 and indicated that 
    the Rule is achieving the objectives it was fashioned to achieve--i.e., 
    to encourage the fair and expeditious handling of consumer disputes 
    through the use of informal dispute settlement mechanisms.42 
    Commenters pointed to the importance of Rule 703 in serving as a 
    standard for IDSMs in general (particularly in the absence of any other 
    standards from private or government organizations) and, more 
    specifically, in providing a benchmark for the state lemon law 
    IDSMs.43 Commenters noted that, for those 45 states that 
    incorporate Rule 703 into their lemon laws or reference the Rule in 
    these laws, 44 Rule
    
    [[Page 19707]]
    
    703 provides either the sole standard or a critical part of the 
    standards that are used to determine the threshold acceptability of a 
    dispute resolution program in accordance with state law prior resort 
    requirements.45 Commenters believed that the minimum 
    standards set out in Rule 703 were developed with forethought and have 
    withstood the test of time and usage.46 As one commenter put 
    it, ``Rule 703 is an integral part of a wide-ranging system of informal 
    dispute resolution procedures * * * (which) functions smoothly and 
    provides quick, inexpensive and informal dispute resolution.'' 
    47
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \41\ The thirteen commenters are: (1) American Automobile 
    Manufacturers Association (``AAMA''); (2) Association of 
    International Automobile Manufacturers, Inc. (``AIAM''); (3) 
    California Arbitration Review Program (``California''); (4) The CIT 
    Group (``CIT''); (5) Consumers for Auto Reliability and Safety 
    Foundation (``CARS''); (6) Council of Better Business Bureaus, Inc. 
    (``BBB''); (7) Jay R. Drick, Esq. (``Drick''); (8) Manufactured 
    Housing Institute (``MHI''); (9) Frank E. McLaughlin 
    (``McLaughlin''); (10) National Association of Consumer Advocates 
    (``NACA''); (11) National Consumer Law Center, Inc. (``NCLC''); (12) 
    P.R. Nowicki & Company (``Nowicki''); and (13) Donald Lee Rome, 
    Esq., Robinson & Cole (``Rome'').
        \42\ AAMA at 1; AIAM at 1; BBB at 1-2; California at 1; CARS at 
    2; McLaughlin at 2-3; NACA at 1; NCLC at 1; Nowicki at 2. Although 
    not expressly endorsing retention of the present regulatory regime, 
    three other commenters (CIT, MHI, and Rome) supported such retention 
    by implication in suggesting modifications to the Rule which they 
    believed would provide greater consumer protections or would reduce 
    burdens on firms subject to the regulations. CIT, MHI, and Rome. 
    Only one commenter (Drick) recommended that Rule 703 be rescinded, 
    stating that the Rule serves no useful purpose since few if any 
    programs actually operate under Rule 703. Drick at 2.
        \43\ AAMA at 1; BBB at 2.
        \44\ Many state lemon laws prohibit consumers from pursuing a 
    state lemon law action in court unless the consumer first attempts 
    to resolve the claim through the manufacturer's IDSM, if it complies 
    with Rule 703.
        \45\ BBB at 2.
        \46\ McLaughlin at 2; Nowicki at 2.
        \47\ AIAM at 1.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Commenters cautioned the Commission that rescinding the Rule would 
    create significant problems for consumers and manufacturers because of 
    the impact such action would have on the functioning of state lemon 
    laws.48 Rescission would create a vacuum in the 45 states 
    that reference Rule 703 in their lemon laws, thus requiring massive 
    efforts to alter existing state laws and reconfigure auto maker 
    programs.49 The uniformity in dispute resolution programs 
    which Rule 703 promotes would be lost, to the detriment of consumers, 
    warrantors, IDSMs, and state governments.50
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \48\ AIAM at 1; McLaughlin at 2-3; Nowicki at 2. As mentioned, 
    many state lemon laws require consumers to resort to a 
    manufacturer's IDSM before pursuing a legal remedy in court. 
    However, the consumer is required to do so only if  the IDSM 
    complies with Rule 703.
        \49\ AIAM at 1; Nowicki at 2.
        \50\ McLaughlin at 2.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Commenters generally did not think that compliance with the Rule 
    was particularly burdensome or costly. The AAMA estimated that its 
    three member companies pay the independent suppliers that administer 
    their IDSMs an estimated $10 million, in addition to corporate staff 
    support or related filing, recordkeeping or administrative 
    costs.51 However, other commenters noted that, except for 
    the annual audit and specific record keeping requirements in Rule 703, 
    most of the costs involved are the administrative costs that would be 
    associated with the operation of any dispute resolution 
    program.52 The only IDSM to submit a comment was the BBB 
    which operates the BBB AUTOLINE program. The BBB estimated that the 
    annual costs of Rule 703's audit and record keeping requirements were 
    less than $100,000 for the entire AUTOLINE program.53 
    California stated that manufacturers have indicated that IDSM programs 
    are a cost effective way to avoid expensive litigation and that they 
    would continue to use these programs for warranty disputes even if not 
    required to do so by state lemon laws.54
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \51\ AAMA at 2-3. Another report indicated that GM alone spent 
    $8.4 million in 1994 on its BBB AUTOLINE program. Leslie Marable, 
    ``Better Business Bureaus Are A Bust,'' Money, October 1995, p. 108, 
    cited in Nowicki at 5, fn. 5.
        \52\ BBB at 3; California at 2. CARS noted that any discussion 
    of cost burdens by the manufacturers should be viewed with 
    skepticism since most have opted not to offer Rule 703 programs and 
    thus they are not in a position to calculate any additional costs 
    that a 703 program would cause them to incur. CARS at 6, 7.
        \53\ BBB at 3. The AAMA estimated that the annual aggregate cost 
    for its three members to conduct the annual audits is about 
    $160,000. AAMA at 3. (One of the three members of AAMA is General 
    Motors, which uses the BBB AUTOLINE as its dispute resolution 
    mechanism; thus, there may be some duplication between the BBB 
    figures and the AAMA figures.)
        \54\ California at 2.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Based on its review of the comments and on its experience with the 
    evolving area of alternative dispute resolution, the Commission has 
    decided to retain Rule 703 unchanged. Although most commenters 
    supported retention of Rule 703, they also recommended certain 
    modifications that they believed would benefit consumers or reduce the 
    burden on warrantors and IDSMs. These recommendations fall into four 
    major categories: (1) Certification or other oversight of IDSM 
    compliance; (2) mandatory pre-dispute arbitration clauses; (3) 
    increasing the time limit for rendering a decision from 40 days to 60 
    days; (4) encouraging a mediation approach to dispute resolution; and 
    (5) other suggested modifications (e.g., allowing electronic storage of 
    records and changing the nature of the required statistical 
    compilations).
        1. Certification and oversight of IDSMs. Commenters generally 
    expressed the view that a need exists for stronger government oversight 
    both on the federal and state levels and for increased funding to 
    monitor IDSM and warrantor operations to ensure that their procedures 
    comply with Rule 703.55 However, commenters did not suggest 
    how such increased oversight or monitoring could, as a practical 
    matter, be achieved given the voluntary nature of the Rule. As noted, 
    the Rule applies only to warrantors who ``give or offer to give a 
    written warranty which incorporates an informal dispute settlement 
    mechanism,'' 56 but few warrantors incorporate an IDSM into 
    their warranties--i.e., few include a prior resort requirement in their 
    warranties. Therefore, there are few IDSMs that come within the ambit 
    of the Rule's existing monitoring requirement (in Sec. 703.7), which 
    mandates an annual audit for compliance with the Rule.57 The 
    comments do not support radically revising the Rule to mandate use of 
    IDSMs across the board, regardless of whether a warrantor incorporates 
    an IDSM into its warranty.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \55\ CARS at 3; McLaughlin at 3-4; Nowicki at 4-5. One 
    suggestion was to use the model of California and Florida where 
    manufacturers pay between 25-28 cents on each car sale to fund the 
    state lemon law programs, including the annual review of IDSM 
    operations. Nowicki at 5. Another commenter suggested that increased 
    warrantor and IDSM compliance might be achieved at a lower cost by 
    establishing a voluntary offenders program similar to the Funeral 
    Rule Offenders Program (``FROP''), which is used in conjunction with 
    law enforcement actions under the Commission's Funeral Rule, 16 CFR 
    part 453. McLaughlin at 4.
        \56\ 16 CFR 703.1(d).
        \57\ Nonetheless, the manufacturer IDSMs continue to submit 
    annual audits to the FTC on a voluntary basis.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Despite the fact that the Rule seldom comes into play in the manner 
    originally contemplated (i.e., by inclusion of prior resort 
    requirements in warranties), the Rule now serves as an essential 
    reference point for state lemon laws. Specifically, many state lemon 
    laws, paralleling section 110(a)(3) of the Warranty Act, prohibit the 
    consumer from pursuing any state lemon law rights in court unless the 
    consumer first seeks a resolution of the claim to the manufacturer's 
    (or a state-operated) IDSM.58 Those statutes also provide 
    that the consumer is required to use the manufacturer's IDSM only if it 
    complies with the FTC's standards set out in Rule 703. Thus, in effect, 
    these states incorporate Rule 703 into their lemon laws.59 A 
    threshold question for many state lemon law suits is whether the IDSM 
    complies with Rule 703 and thus whether the consumer must use that IDSM 
    or may proceed directly to a court action.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \58\ ``Lemon laws'' entitle the consumer to obtain a replacement 
    or a refund for a defective new car if the warrantor is unable to 
    repair the car after a reasonable number of repair attempts.
        \59\ Some state lemon laws require that the IDSM comply with 
    additional state standards in addition to complying with the Rule 
    703 provisions. For example, approximately ten states (CA, CT, FL, 
    GA, IA, NJ, NY, OH, OR, WI) require manufacturer IDSMs to maintain 
    state-specific records in addition to the recordkeeping requirements 
    in Rule 703.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The problem of determining compliance is not a new 
    one.60 The auto manufacturers recommended nationwide 
    certification of IDSM compliance with Rule 703, possibly through a 
    neutral third-party organization, that would preempt state
    
    [[Page 19708]]
    
    certification standards.61 The manufacturers argued that a 
    federal certification program would be an incentive to warrantors to 
    set up Rule 703 IDSMs because, among other benefits, it would eliminate 
    the uncertainty of conflicting state certification standards and the 
    risk of litigation over the issue of whether a mechanism complies with 
    Rule 703.62 Manufacturers further argued that not only does 
    the lack of a national certification program lead to economic 
    inefficiencies, but it also harms consumers by prolonging the dispute 
    settlement process through fostering litigation over the issue of 
    compliance.63 The manufacturers maintained that non-
    uniformity in federal and state laws increases costs to warrantors, to 
    IDSMs, and to consumers, thus frustrating the Congressional policy 
    stated in the Warranty Act 64 of encouraging the development 
    of IDSMs.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \60\ In 1988, the auto manufacturers petitioned the Commission 
    to initiate a rulemaking proceeding to amend Rule 703, proposing, 
    among other things, that the Commission institute a national 
    certification program for IDSMs in order to determine whether a 
    specified warrantor or IDSM complies with Rule 703's standards.
        \61\ See, generally, AAMA and AIAM.
        \62\ AAMA at 2, 5-6; AIAM at 2.
        \63\ AAMA at 2. No data was supplied as to the actual number of 
    cases in which compliance with Rule 703 is litigated.
        \64\ 15 U.S.C. 2310(a)(1).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission recognizes that a uniform certification program 
    could possibly diminish uncertainty as to whether an IDSM complies with 
    Rule 703 and, thus, whether the consumer must use the IDSM before 
    pursuing a court action. Nonetheless, for the reasons stated below, the 
    Commission has decided to reject the suggestion that it institute a 
    national certification program.
        First, it is possible that FTC certification would not eliminate an 
    IDSM's alleged non-compliance with Rule 703 as an issue for litigation, 
    but merely shift the focus for consumer litigants to challenge FTC 
    certifications.65 Such an outcome would not likely curtail 
    the litigation that the manufacturers allege makes final resolution of 
    disputes elusive; in fact, such a certification program might well 
    prolong and further complicate such litigation.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \65\ Conceivably, auto manufacturer litigants also might 
    challenge the denial of certification.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Second, as a general matter, the Commission traditionally has been 
    unwilling to commit its limited law enforcement resources to regulatory 
    schemes that entail licensing or prior approval, such as the 
    certification program recommended by some commenters. The Commission, 
    moreover, would be loathe to take regulatory action likely to exert a 
    chilling effect on competition and on experimentation by IDSMs, 
    warrantors, and state governments in setting up and administering these 
    programs.
        Finally, were the Commission to follow some commenters' 
    recommendation to preempt state certification standards through a 
    federal certification program, it could jeopardize the very laws that 
    give force to Rule 703's IDSM standards by incorporating them into 
    state lemon law statutory schemes. For these reasons, the Commission 
    has determined not to undertake a national certification program for 
    IDSMs.
        2. Binding arbitration clauses. Two commenters urged that the Rule 
    be amended to permit mandatory binding arbitration clauses in consumer 
    contracts,\66\ while comments from two consumer advocacy groups (NACA 
    and NCLC) urged the Commission to continue the Rule's current 
    prohibition against binding arbitration.\67\ NACA and NCLC pointed to 
    the increased use by corporations of mandatory binding arbitration 
    clauses in standard form contracts with consumers. They expressed the 
    belief that the use of binding arbitration is more favorable to 
    institutional interests than to the consumer and that it provides the 
    corporation with a way to avoid class actions, punitive damage awards, 
    attorney fee awards, discovery, and juries.\68\ NACA and NCLC indicated 
    that the use of mandatory binding arbitration clauses is expanding in 
    the securities, credit, and health care industries and expressed the 
    fear that, without the protection of Rule 703 in its current form, 
    warrantors may begin to require mandatory binding arbitration as a 
    precondition of warranty coverage on consumer products.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \66\ MHI and CIT proposed a ``streamlined'' warranty dispute 
    resolution process when the dispute is related to manufactured 
    homes. Among other characteristics of such a process, MHI 
    recommended that the process allow the decision of the IDSM to be 
    binding on the parties.
        \67\ See, generally, NACA and NCLC. Section 703.5(j) of the Rule 
    states that the informal dispute settlement procedure cannot be 
    legally binding on any person.
        \68\ NACA at 1-2; NCLC at 2-3.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission examined the legality and the merits of mandatory 
    binding arbitration clauses in written consumer product warranties when 
    it promulgated Rule 703 in 1975. Although several industry 
    representatives at that time had recommended that the Rule allow 
    warrantors to require consumers to submit to binding arbitration, the 
    Commission rejected that view as being contrary to the Congressional 
    intent.
        The Commission based this decision on its analysis of the plain 
    language of the Warranty Act. Section 110(a)(3) of the Warranty Act 
    provides that if a warrantor establishes an IDSM that complies with 
    Rule 703 and incorporates that IDSM in its written consumer product 
    warranty, then ``(t)he consumer may not commence a civil action (other 
    than a class action) * * * unless he initially resorts to such 
    procedure.'' (Emphasis added.) This language clearly implies that a 
    mechanism's decision cannot be legally binding, because if it were, it 
    would bar later court action. The House Report supports this 
    interpretation by stating that ``(a)n adverse decision in any informal 
    dispute settlement proceeding would not be a bar to a civil action on 
    the warranty involved in the proceeding.'' \69\ In summarizing its 
    position at the time Rule 703 was adopted, the Commission stated:
    
        \69\ House Report (to accompany H.R. 7917), H. Report, No. 93-
    1107, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. (1974), at 41.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Rule does not allow (binding arbitration) for two reasons. 
    First * * * Congressional intent was that decisions of section 110 
    Mechanisms not be legally binding. Second, even if binding 
    Mechanisms were contemplated by section 110 of the Act, the 
    Commission is not prepared, at this point in time, to develop 
    guidelines for a system in which consumers would commit themselves, 
    at the time of product purchase, to resolve any difficulties in a 
    binding, but nonjudicial proceeding. The Commission is not now 
    convinced that any guidelines which it set out could ensure 
    sufficient protection for consumers. (Emphasis added.) \70\
    
        \70\ 40 FR 60168, 60210 (1975). The Commission noted, however, 
    that warrantors are not precluded from offering a binding 
    arbitration option to consumers after a warranty dispute has arisen. 
    40 FR 60168, 60211 (1975).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Based on its analysis, the Commission determined that ``reference 
    within the written warranty to any binding, non-judicial remedy is 
    prohibited by the Rule and the Act.'' \71\ The Commission believes that 
    this interpretation continues to be correct.\72\ Therefore, the 
    Commission has determined not to amend Sec. 703.5(j) to allow for 
    binding arbitration. Rule 703 will continue to prohibit warrantors from 
    including
    
    [[Page 19709]]
    
    binding arbitration clauses in their contracts with consumers that 
    would require consumers to submit warranty disputes to binding 
    arbitration.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \71\ 40 FR 60168, 60211 (1975).
        \72\ At least one federal district court has upheld the 
    Commission's position that the Warranty Act does not intend for 
    warrantors to include binding arbitration clauses in written 
    warranties on consumer products. Wilson v. Waverlee Homes, Inc., 954 
    F. Supp. 1530 (M.D. Ala. 1997). The court ruled that a mobile home 
    warrantor could not require consumers to submit their warranty 
    dispute to binding arbitration based on the arbitration clauses in 
    the installment sales and financing contracts between the consumers 
    and the dealer who sold them the mobile home. The court noted that a 
    contrary result would enable warrantors and the retailers selling 
    their products to avoid the requirements of the Warranty Act simply 
    by inserting binding arbitration clauses in sales contracts. Id. at 
    1539-1540.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        3. Increase time limit for rendering a decision from 40 days to 60 
    days. The BBB recommended that the time limit for rendering a decision 
    be increased from 40 days to 60 days, at least for those dispute 
    resolution programs that provide for oral hearings.\73\ The BBB stated 
    that BBB and State experience with arbitration programs indicates that 
    time requirements should be more flexible in order to provide for an 
    arbitration hearing, and notes that several states with state-run 
    programs (e.g., Florida, Connecticut, and Texas) allow for a 60-day 
    time period to render decisions.\74\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \73\ BBB at 2.
        \74\ BBB at 2. Twelve states offer consumers the opportunity to 
    use a state-run arbitration program in addition to, or in lieu of, a 
    manufacturer-sponsored IDSM. Although those states require that the 
    manufacturer-sponsored IDSM comply with Rule 703's 40-day 
    requirement, ten of them allow their state-run panels longer than 40 
    days to render a decision. The time limits for state-run panels in 
    those twelve states are as follows: 40 days: NJ, NY; 45 days: HI, 
    ME, MA. The remaining states require decisions within 50-150 days: 
    50 days: VT (30 days to hold hearing and 20 days thereafter to 
    render decision); 60 days: CT, FL; 70 days: NH (40 days to hold 
    hearing and 30 days thereafter to render decision) and WA (10 days 
    to forward application to Board, 45 days thereafter to hold hearing, 
    and 15 days after hearing to render decision); 150 days: TX (60 days 
    to render decision after hearing; if process not completed within 
    150 days of date consumer application and fee received, consumer can 
    go into court); no stated time limit: GA.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The BBB argued that the 40-day time frame set by Rule 703 may work 
    to the detriment of consumers because the BBB is often unable to 
    accommodate consumer requests for delay or postponement of hearings 
    because the Rule requires that disputes be resolved within 40 days. 
    Furthermore, the BBB maintained that the 40-day time period often 
    constrains their efforts to mediate disputes for those consumers who 
    prefer a mediated resolution rather than the more formal arbitration 
    process that Rule 703 sets forth.
        When the Rule was promulgated in 1975, the Commission received many 
    comments on its proposal that decisions must be rendered within 40 
    days. Many consumer commenters believed that 40 days was too long to 
    wait when there is a malfunctioning product, while industry comments 
    generally took the position that the time limit was too short.\75\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \75\ 40 FR 60168, 60208. Consumer witnesses recommended a time 
    period of 10 to 30 days, while industry recommended a 90-day limit.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The goal of encouraging fair and expeditious informal handling of 
    consumer warranty disputes remains an important step in providing 
    consumers a means to obtain relief for defective products. The 
    Commission's intent in promulgating the requirements set out in Rule 
    703 was to avoid creating artificial or unnecessary procedural burdens 
    so long as the basic goals of speed, fairness, and independent 
    participation are met.\76\ The Commission is concerned that by the time 
    a dispute has ripened to referral to an IDSM the consumer in many cases 
    has already had to contend with a defective product for a protracted 
    period. The Commission is concerned that any period longer than 40 days 
    would, in many cases, serve only to wear down consumers so they will 
    abandon their attempts to obtain redress. In the absence of firmer 
    evidence to the contrary, the Commission believes that the 40-day time 
    period, on balance, is beneficial to consumers most in need of an IDSM 
    remedy. The Commission believes that the 40-day time limit should 
    remain in effect.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \76\ 40 FR 60168, 60193.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        4. Encourage the use of a mediation approach to settling disputes. 
    Two commenters sounded the theme that warrantors, consumers, and IDSMs 
    need flexibility to fashion dispute resolution procedures using 
    mediation and other forms of alternative dispute resolution mechanisms 
    so disputes can be resolved in an expeditious and cost effective 
    manner.\77\ MHI recommended that mediation be allowed in addition to, 
    or in lieu of, arbitration.\78\ Donald Rome recommended that the Rule 
    encourage mediation as an approach to facilitate the early resolution 
    of warranty disputes in a manner that would better meet the needs and 
    expectations of consumers than more formal arbitration proceedings.\79\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \77\ See, Rome; MHI.
        \78\ MHI, Appendix A at 3.
        \79\ See, generally, Rome.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission supports the use of mediation to achieve a mutually-
    agreed-upon settlement among the parties to the dispute prior to 
    initiating the more formal arbitration process outlined in the Rule. 
    Indeed, Sec. 703.5(d) itself implies that there will be ongoing 
    attempts to settle the dispute short of having the decision maker 
    render a decision.
    
        If the dispute has not been settled, the Mechanism shall, as 
    expeditiously as possible, but at least within 40 days of 
    notification of the dispute * * * render a fair decision. (Emphasis 
    added.)
    
        The Commission has made clear, however, that the use of mediation 
    must not impede those consumers who wish to pursue a remedy through 
    other avenues (e.g., arbitration and litigation). Those avenues must be 
    readily accessible if mediation does not produce a satisfactory 
    resolution of the dispute. In addition, consumers must not be obligated 
    to use mediation instead of the Rule 703 arbitration process, nor 
    should they be pressured into accepting a settlement that is 
    unsatisfactory to them. The Commission articulated its position on this 
    subject in 1984 when it granted limited exemptions from Rule 703, for a 
    two-year trial period, to the BBB, the Chrysler Customer Arbitration 
    Board, the Automotive Consumer Action Panel, and the Ford Consumer 
    Appeals Board programs.\80\ The exemptions suspended the 40-day time 
    limit and extended the Rule's time limit for arbitration decisions to 
    60 days in order to allow the programs up to 20 days to pursue 
    mediation prior to conducting arbitration. In granting the exemption, 
    however, the Commission imposed three conditions to ensure that 
    consumers retained control over the speed of the process.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \80\ 49 FR 28397 (July 12, 1984) (Approval of Exemption for BBB, 
    Chrysler, and Automotive Consumer Action Panel); and 50 FR 27936 
    (July 9, 1985) (Approval of Exemption for Ford Consumer Appeals 
    Board). These programs did not renew their requests for exemptions 
    after the two-year trial period ended.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (1) The mediation process must be optional. Consumers should not be 
    required to participate in mediation and must be allowed to terminate 
    mediation at any time during the process and still obtain a decision 
    from the IDSM.
        (2) As soon as the consumer notifies the IDSM that he or she elects 
    to terminate mediation and begin the arbitration process, the IDSM must 
    render a decision within 40 days of that notification, or within 60 
    days of the date on which the IDSM first received notification of the 
    dispute, whichever is less.
        (3) The above two conditions must be disclosed clearly and 
    conspicuously to the consumer after the mechanism has received notice 
    of the dispute and prior to beginning the arbitration process.
        The Commission believed that these conditions would ensure that 
    consumers would not lose any of their protections under Rule 703 for a 
    speedy and fair resolution of their warranty disputes. Consumers would 
    retain control over which approach (mediation and/or arbitration) they 
    wished to use and also would control the speed of the process.
        The Commission continues to believe that mediation's informality, 
    flexibility, and emphasis on the particular needs of
    
    [[Page 19710]]
    
    disputing parties makes it a useful tool in achieving a fair and 
    expeditious resolution of consumer product warranty disputes. However, 
    the Commission does not believe that it is necessary to amend the Rule 
    to specifically encourage the use of mediation since the Rule's 
    provisions already allow for such settlements before a decision is 
    rendered.
        5. Other recommendations.
        a. Changes in technology. The BBB notes that it is implementing an 
    electronic document management system that will enable all case records 
    and documents to be stored as electronic images. The BBB asks that Rule 
    703 be updated to specifically provide for storage of records as 
    electronic images. \81\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \81\ BBB at 4.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        As the BBB notes, Rule 703's recordkeeping requirements do not 
    mandate the form in which records are stored. There is nothing in the 
    Rule to prohibit the use of electronic storage or any other new 
    technology, as long as the IDSM can meet its obligations under the Rule 
    to allow public inspection and copying of the statistical summaries and 
    other public records, to allow parties to the dispute to access and 
    copy the records relating to the dispute, and to allow an annual audit 
    of the IDSM's operations. It is not the Commission's intention that the 
    Rule be interpreted to restrict to antiquated technological methods the 
    form or format of records required to be kept under the Rule.
        b. Changing the type of required statistical analyses. One 
    commenter (Nowicki) recommends that Sec. 703.6(e) be abolished. \82\ 
    Section 703.6(e) requires the IDSM to maintain certain statistical 
    compilations, including the number and percent of disputes resolved or 
    decided and whether the warrantor has complied; the number of decisions 
    adverse to the consumer; and the number of decisions delayed beyond 40 
    days and the reasons for the delay. Mr. Nowicki argues that the 
    categories of statistical compilations the mechanism must maintain are 
    ``either moot, nebulous, or even worse, misleading and deceptive.''
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \82\ Nowicki at 3-4.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Mr. Nowicki maintains, for example, that the statistical 
    compilations underreport the number of decisions that are not resolved 
    within 40 days because many manufacturer IDSMs assign a new file each 
    time a consumer files a complaint, even if the consumer previously had 
    filed a complaint for the same vehicle and the same problem. Thus, if a 
    consumer was awarded an interim repair and refiles because the repairs 
    did not cure the problem, the refiling is assigned a new case number 
    and triggers a new 40-day time period. Mr. Nowicki believes the 
    statistics would be more meaningful if they tracked the entire process 
    of resolving the consumer's complaint about a particular vehicle, 
    regardless of how many times the consumer refiles. Similarly, he 
    maintains that the statistical compilations understate the level of 
    compliance by warrantors with settlements and decisions and that the 
    category that reports the number of ``adverse decisions'' under reports 
    the number of consumers who are not awarded the relief they sought 
    (e.g., the consumer is awarded further repairs instead of a 
    replacement).
        The Commission appreciates that the statistical compilations 
    required by Sec. 703.6(e) cannot provide an in-depth picture of the 
    workings of a particular IDSM. However, the statistics were not 
    intended to serve that function. The statistical compilations attempt 
    to provide a basis for minimal review by the interested parties to 
    determine whether the IDSM program is working fairly and expeditiously. 
    Based on that review, a more detailed investigation could then be 
    prompted. In addition, in adopting the recordkeeping requirements, the 
    Commission was mindful that substantial recordkeeping costs might 
    dissuade the establishment of IDSMs. Therefore, the Commission sought 
    to minimize the costs of the recordkeeping burden on the IDSM while 
    ensuring that sufficient information was available to the public to 
    provide a minimal review. The Commission does not believe that there is 
    sufficient record evidence to prompt changes in the statistical 
    compilations required under Sec. 703.6(e). Accordingly, the Commission 
    has determined to retain Sec. 703.6(e) unchanged.
    
    D. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
    
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act provides for analysis of the 
    potential impact on small businesses of Rules proposed by federal 
    agencies. (5 U.S.C. 603, 604). Rules 701 and 702 are the only warranty-
    related matters currently under review that require such an analysis. 
    \83\ In 1987, the Commission conducted a Regulatory Flexibility Act 
    analysis of Rule 702 in connection with its amendment of that Rule. See 
    52 FR 7569. The April 3, 1996 request for comment was the first review 
    of Rule 701 since it was promulgated in 1975 and thus presented the 
    first opportunity to conduct such an analysis for that Rule. Therefore, 
    the April 3 notice included questions to elicit the necessary 
    information.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \83\ Rule 703 does not require a Regulatory Flexibility Act 
    analysis because the only entities affected by the requirements of 
    Rule 703 are those warrantors and IDSMs who purport to follow Rule 
    703 standards (the auto manufacturers and their IDSM programs). 
    Currently, none of those entities fall within the definition of 
    ``small'' based on Small Business Administration size standards. 
    Therefore, Rule 703 does not appear to have a significant effect on 
    a substantial number of small entities.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The Commission believes that a very high percentage of businesses 
    subject to Rule 701 are ``small'' based on Small Business 
    Administration size standards. Unfortunately, the available data do not 
    provide a precise measurement of the impact Rule 701 has had on small 
    businesses nor the economic impact that would result from leaving the 
    Rule unchanged.
        For example, in the regulatory analysis conducted for Rule 702, the 
    Commission's investigation found that nearly all the manufacturers 
    (11,365 companies or 97 percent) and nearly all retailers (952,916 
    companies or 99.3 percent) affected by Rule 702 were considered 
    ``small'' using the size standards promulgated by the Small Business 
    Administration. That investigation indicated that, if the companies 
    were compared according to annual receipts, small retailers would 
    represent about 47 percent and small manufacturers about 23 percent of 
    the gross annual receipts in their respective industries.
        In 1984, the FTC's Office of Impact Evaluation issued a study 
    evaluating the Impact of the Warranty Rules (Market Facts, Warranty 
    Rules Consumer Follow-Up: Evaluation Study. Final Report, Washington, 
    DC, July 1984 (``the Study'')). The Study found that some type of 
    warranty was offered for 87 percent of the consumer products surveyed. 
    Of those warranted products, almost 63 percent carried only a 
    manufacturer's warranty, about 12 percent were warranted only by the 
    retailer, and about 13 percent were covered by both a manufacturer's 
    and a retailer's warranty. Thus, the costs of Rule 701 would appear to 
    fall principally on manufacturers, since those entities are more likely 
    to provide a written warranty. However, it is unknown how many of those 
    manufacturers or retailers who give written warranties are also small 
    entities.
        Much of the burden imposed on business by Rule 701 is statutorily 
    imposed. Section 102 of the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, 15 U.S.C. 2301 
    et seq., requires warrantors who use written warranties to disclose 
    fully and conspicuously the terms and conditions of the warranty. The 
    Act lists a number of items that may be included in any
    
    [[Page 19711]]
    
    rules requiring disclosure that the Commission might prescribe, and, in 
    Rule 701, the Commission tracked those items. Nonetheless, in 
    promulgating the Rule, the Commission attempted to comply with the 
    Congressional mandate in Section 102 of the Act while minimizing the 
    economic impact on affected businesses. For example, the Commission 
    limited the disclosure requirements to warranties on consumer products 
    actually costing the consumer more than $15.00. Furthermore, the 
    Commission exempted ``seal of approval'' programs from providing the 
    disclosures on the actual seal.
        The comments provided some indication that the Commission succeeded 
    in drafting the Rule so as not to make it unduly burdensome to 
    business. The comments from AAMA and NAIMA indicate that Rule 701 is 
    not unreasonably costly to warrantors. These two commenters indicated 
    that the system is working well. The AAMA stated that the current 
    system is working well and is not unreasonably costly to warrantors: 
    The Rules are workable and understood by industry and that there is no 
    evidence that the adequacy of warranty disclosure nor that the legal 
    sufficiency of the warranties given is a major source of complaints, 
    nor is there evidence that customers are unaware of their warranty 
    rights. The AAMA stated ``As presently structured, these Rules are 
    workable and effective, and permit warrantor compliance without 
    unreasonable expense.'' 84
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \84\ AAMA at 2.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The NAIMA echoed AAMA's opinion. NAIMA indicated that the costs of 
    the warranty regulations are not imposed upon businesses by government, 
    but rather are voluntarily assumed by companies that choose to offer 
    written warranties. As such, NAIMA states that ``any cost incurred by a 
    firm would be calculated into a business decision to offer a warranty 
    or guarantee and should not be weighed as a factor to eliminate or 
    diminish the requirement.'' 85
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \85\ NAIMA at 3.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The other commenters were silent as to the effects of Rule 701 on 
    small businesses. Therefore, based on the information available, the 
    Commission has determined that, to the extent that Rule 701's 
    requirements are not Congressionally mandated, the current version of 
    Rule 701 does not unduly burden small businesses.
    
    List of Subjects in 16 CFR Parts 239, 700, 701, 702, and 703.
    
        Warranties, advertising, dispute resolution, trade practices.
    
        Authority: 15 U.S.C. 41-58.
    
        By direction of the Commission.
    Donald S. Clark,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 99-9841 Filed 4-21-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6750-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
4/22/1999
Published:
04/22/1999
Department:
Federal Trade Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Notice of final action.
Document Number:
99-9841
Dates:
April 22, 1999.
Pages:
19700-19711 (12 pages)
PDF File:
99-9841.pdf