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3 September, 05:21

Mason bought a rotisserie in preparation for a party he was planning. When he put a chicken on the rotisserie, it would not rotate, but stayed in one position where it burned the chicken on one side a left it raw on the other. Does Mason have any recourse?

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  1. 3 September, 09:20
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    Yes Mason has recourse

    Explanation:

    In this scenario Mason bought a rotisserie that did not work as expected. That is it did not rotate as it should thereby causing burning of the chicken.

    Even is the seller of the rotisserie did not give a warranty to cover the product, there is an implied warranty that covers the use of goods.

    Implied warranty is the minimum requirement expected from the use of a product. For example a. television is expected to come on when in use ...

    So Mason has a recourse because he is covered by implied warranty.
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