If you run a business in Australia, the Australian Consumer Law (ACL) affects you. Be it business to consumer or business to business, if you provide services or sell goods, consumer law affects your business. Consumer Guarantees is an aspect of your business which must be managed.
The ACL is a national law to protect consumers. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) alongside the state and territory consumer protection agencies administer the ACL.
The ACL creates a fundamental set of guarantees for consumers. The intention of these guarantees is to ensure that you receive the goods or services that you have paid for. When a customer has a problem and one of the guarantees has not been met, the customer is entitled to a remedy. The type of remedy depends on the circumstances and can include a repair, replacement, refund or having the service performed again.
Contractual terms cannot generally exclude, modify or limit these statutory guarantees. Businesses must consider these guarantees. And let’s not forget that businesses are also consumers.
Section 2 of the ACL defines “goods” and “services”. The ACL does not apply to the supply of financial services or financial products. There are other consumer protections for these services under the Australia Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001 (Cth) (ASIC Act).
A person is a consumer if they:
“In trade or commerce”
In trade or commerce means any economic activity involving or relating to any commodity or service. There is no definition of this within the ACL.
Consumer guarantees only apply if the transaction was “in trade or commerce”. “In trade or commerce” involves the conduct being of a commercial, rather than personal, nature; or generally involving profit.
Sections 51 to 59 of the ACL set out nine (9) consumer guarantees that apply to goods sold to a consumer. These guarantees cannot be contracted out of (section 276).
Express warranties are undertakings, assertions and representations made about goods that are of a type to induce people to inquire them. Extended warranties are a distinct category of warranty – where a customer pays a warranty fee to a warranty provider.
Extended warranties are financial products and are dealt with under the ASIC Act.
Here, businesses should be careful about misleading consumers about the benefits or as to other remedies that may be available, as this may constitute misleading conduct or a false or misleading representation.
An express warranty is an extra promise made by a supplier or manufacturer above and beyond the guarantees in the ACL, but once made it becomes enforceable as a guarantee under the ACL.
A ‘warranty against defects’ (also known as a ‘manufacturer’s warranty’) under section 102 of the ACL is different from an express warranty but can sometimes contain an express warranty. It deals with what the supplier or manufacturer must do when something goes wrong with the good or service. A warranty against defects in respect of goods or services must be in writing and contain the compulsory wording set out in Regulation 90 of the Competition and Consumer Regulations 2010 (Cth).
A supplier guarantees that services are provided:
With due care and skill - use an acceptable level of skill or technical knowledge when providing the services; and take all necessary care to avoid loss or damage when providing the services.
Which are fit for any specified purpose - Suppliers guarantee that services will be reasonably fit for any purpose specified by the consumer and any products resulting from the services are also fit for that purpose.
Within a reasonable time (when no time is specified) - A contract or agreement for the supply of services usually states when the services will be provided and the date they will be completed. If not, the supplier guarantees they will supply the service within a reasonable time. What is ‘reasonable’ will depend on the nature of the services.
The consumer guarantees do not apply to goods or services costing more than $40,000 that are normally used for business purposes (for example, installing industrial air conditioning to a factory premises).
Additional exceptions apply in some circumstances. These include:
Contractual terms will be void and unenforceable to the extent that they exclude, modify or limit a consumer guarantee or liability resulting from breach of a consumer guarantee, unless they fall within an exception.
A supplier attempting to contract out of consumer guarantees may risk misleading the consumer about their legal right to compensation.
Under section 64A, a supplier can limit its liability to one or more of:
Under section 276A, a manufacturer can limit its liability to the lower of:
A party may not rely on section 64A to limit its liability if it is not fair and reasonable for it to do so.
Clauses that limit liability “to the extent permitted by law” are common, and are not made void by the ACL.
Contracts for recreation services can exclude restrict or modify the consumer guarantees and liability arising from them in relation to death, physical or mental injury or disease (section 139A, CCA). Contract authors should not over-extend to not over-extend this exception.
The ACL creates national enforcement powers, to be used by all consumer law regulators, including civil penalties and remedies for breaches of the ACL.
Consumers can seek a refund, replacement or repairs if a supplier fails to satisfy its obligations in relation to consumer guarantees. Under pre-existing laws, consumers were required to pursue any failure by suppliers to comply with implied conditions and warranties as breaches of contract. The remedy available to consumers will depend on which guarantee has been breached and the nature of that breach. A consumer will be able to seek damages from a manufacturer if a manufacturer fails to meet its guarantee obligations.
sections 259 – 266 of the ACL in relation to the supply of goods;
sections 267 – 270 of the ACL in relation to the supply of services; and
sections 271 – 273 of the ACL in relation to the manufacture of goods.
Consumer guarantees are not implied terms, and therefore do not give rise to contractual remedies. The statutory remedies operate in addition to remedies available at common law and tort.
Consumer guarantee remedies vary depending on whether the breach constitutes a major failure outlined in section 260 (for goods) or section 268 (for services).
If a law of a foreign jurisdiction is the proper law of the contract, the ACL and the consumer guarantees do not apply.
An attempt to avoid the consumer guarantees, by stating in the contract that the governing law of the contract is a jurisdiction in which consumer guarantees (or liability arising from their breach) may be excluded, modified or limited, will be ineffective.
It is important that you have a product recall plan in place for your tech startup that complies with the relevant laws. Recalls can be damaging to your brand and profits and having a plan in case you are faced with this, will minimise the effects on your business.
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