I bought a washer because of what the salesperson said it would do. It doesn’t. Do I have any legal recourse?

QUESTION: I bought a washer because of what the salesperson said it would do. It doesn’t. Do I have any legal recourse?

ANSWER: The implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose is a promise that the law says you, as a seller, make when your customer relies on your advice that a product can be used for some specific purpose. For example, suppose you are an appliance retailer and a customer asks for a clothes washer that can handle 15 pounds of laundry at a time. If you recommend a particular model, and the customer buys that model on the strength of your recommendation, the law says that you have made a warranty of fitness for a particular purpose. If the model you recommended proves unable to handle 15-pound loads, even though it may effectively wash 10-pound loads, you’ve breached your warranty of fitness for a particular purpose.

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