Colorado Code § 44-20-141.5

Fulfillment and compensation for warranty and recall obligations - definitions
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(1) As used in this section:
(a) "Manufacturer" includes a manufacturer, a distributor, and a manufacturer
representative.
(b) "Nonwarranty repair" means a diagnosis, repair, labor, or part for which payment
was made by a person other than a manufacturer and that was not a warranty obligation.
"Nonwarranty repair" also means customer-pay repairs, labor, or parts.
(c) "Part" means an accessory, a part, or a component used to repair a motor vehicle.
"Part" includes engine and transmission parts and all motor vehicle assemblies.
(d) "Repair" means diagnosing, work, and labor performed by a motor vehicle dealer for
which the motor vehicle dealer is making a claim for compensation.
(e) "Retail labor rate" means the rate for labor calculated by the motor vehicle dealer in
accordance with subsection (4) of this section that a manufacturer is required to pay a motor
vehicle dealer in accordance with subsection (2) of this section.
(f) "Retail parts markup percentage" means the percentage markup on parts calculated
by the motor vehicle dealer in accordance with subsection (4) of this section that a manufacturer
is required to pay a motor vehicle dealer in accordance with subsection (2) of this section.
(g) "Warranty obligation" means diagnosing and repairing a motor vehicle in accordance
with any warranty, recall, or certified preowned warranty, under which a manufacturer makes a
repair commitment to a consumer or motor vehicle dealer.
(2) At a motor vehicle dealer's request, a manufacturer shall timely compensate the
motor vehicle dealer at the retail labor rate and the retail parts markup percentage in accordance
with this section for all labor performed and parts used by the motor vehicle dealer for covered
repairs performed in accordance with the warranty obligation. 
(3) (a) A motor vehicle dealer may establish the retail labor rate and the retail parts
markup percentage by submitting to the manufacturer either of the following as decided by the
motor vehicle dealer:
(I) One hundred sequential repair orders containing nonwarranty repairs, which may
include a nonwarranty repair that is included in a repair order with a warranty obligation repair,
that have been paid by a consumer and closed by the time of submission; or
(II) All repair orders for nonwarranty repairs, which may include a nonwarranty repair
that is included in a repair order with a warranty obligation repair, that have been paid by a
consumer and closed by the time of submission for a period of ninety consecutive days.
(b) A manufacturer shall not disqualify a repair order under this subsection (3) because
the repair order contains both warranty and nonwarranty repairs, but only nonwarranty repairs
are used in the calculation of the retail labor rate and the retail parts markup percentage.
(c) A motor vehicle dealer may submit one set of repair orders for the purpose of
calculating both its retail labor rate and the retail parts markup percentage or may submit
separate sets of repair orders for purposes of calculating only its retail labor rate or for purposes
of calculating only its retail parts markup percentage. If the rates from the calculation are ten
percent higher or lower than the current rates, the manufacturer may request additional repair
orders for the ninety days before or after the submitted repair orders for purposes of alteration.
(d) Except with regard to a request for additional repair orders as provided in subsection
(3)(c) of this section, the repair orders submitted under this subsection (3) to determine the retail
labor rate must contain only repair orders from the last ninety days before the date the
submission is sent to the manufacturer.
(e) Except with regard to a request for additional repair orders as provided in subsection
(3)(c) of this section, the repair orders submitted under this subsection (3) to determine the retail
parts markup percentage must contain only repair orders from the last ninety days before the date
the submission is sent to the manufacturer.
(4) (a) Except as provided in subsection (4)(c) of this section, to calculate the retail labor
rate, the motor vehicle dealer must divide the motor vehicle dealer's total nonwarranty labor
sales generated from the nonwarranty repairs submitted under subsection (3) of this section by
the total number of labor hours that generated those total labor sales.
(b) Except as provided in subsection (4)(c) of this section, to calculate the retail parts
markup percentage, the motor vehicle dealer must divide the motor vehicle dealer's total parts
sales generated from nonwarranty repairs submitted under subsection (3) of this section by the
amount of the motor vehicle dealer's total cost for those parts, subtracting one from this amount,
and then multiplying the amount by one hundred.
(c) The calculation of the retail labor rate in subsection (4)(a) of this section and of the
retail parts markup percentage in subsection (4)(b) of this section do not include parts used or
labor performed:
(I) For manufacturer or motor vehicle dealer special events, one-time specials, express
service, and quoted-price promotional discounts, but this exclusion from the calculation does not
include broadly applicable discounts offered by the dealer, such as percentage-off coupons, that
apply to repairs and parts;
(II) For parts sold at wholesale;
(III) For routine maintenance, including replacement fluids, filters, batteries, bulbs, nuts,
bolts, fasteners, tires, and belts;
(IV) That do not have individual part numbers;
(V) For the repairs of a motor vehicle owned by the motor vehicle dealer, an affiliate of
the motor vehicle dealer, or an employee of either the motor vehicle dealer or the affiliate;
(VI) For motor vehicle dealer reconditioning;
(VII) For window tint, protective film, masking products, or window replacement labor;
(VIII) For manufacturer-approved and -reimbursed goodwill repairs or replacements;
(IX) For emission inspections required by law;
(X) For safety inspections required by law;
(XI) For which a volume discount was negotiated with a third-party payer, including
government agencies, insurance carriers, and fleet operators, but not including third-party
warranty companies or service contract companies.
(5) (a) Notwithstanding any manufacturer requirement, policy, procedure, guideline, or
standard, a motor vehicle dealer may submit to the manufacturer the retail labor rate or retail
parts markup percentage as each is calculated in accordance with subsection (4) of this section.
(b) A motor vehicle dealer may request in writing, not more often than once annually, an
increase in compensation for labor at the retail labor rate for warranty obligations.
(c) A motor vehicle dealer may request in writing, not more often than once annually, an
increase in compensation for parts at the retail parts markup percentage for warranty obligations.
(d) (I) A manufacturer may conduct a periodic review of a motor vehicle dealer's service
records to verify the continuing accuracy of the retail labor rate or retail parts markup percentage
proposed by or in effect for the dealer.
(II) A manufacturer shall not conduct a periodic review more than once per calendar
year. This periodic review is not an audit in accordance with section 44-20-135.
(6) (a) (I) If the submitted calculation of the retail labor rate or retail parts markup
percentage is deemed materially inaccurate, a manufacturer may contest the motor vehicle
dealer's submitted calculations of the retail labor rate or retail parts markup percentage by
delivering a notice to the motor vehicle dealer within forty-five days after receiving the
submission in accordance with subsection (3) of this section from the motor vehicle dealer. To
comply with this subsection (6), the notice must:
(A) Include an explanation of the reasons why the manufacturer believes the calculation
is materially inaccurate;
(B) Provide evidence substantiating the manufacturer's position; and
(C) Propose an adjustment of the contested retail labor rate or retail parts markup
percentage.
(II) Upon the discovery of new relevant information by the manufacturer, the
manufacturer may modify the reasons for contesting the retail labor rate or retail parts markup
percentage after delivering the notice to the motor vehicle dealer under this subsection (6), but
the modification does not change the timing requirements in this section.
(b) If the manufacturer does not timely contest the motor vehicle dealer's calculation of
the retail labor rate or retail parts markup percentage in accordance with this subsection (6), the
uncontested retail labor rate or retail parts markup percentage becomes effective forty-five days
after the manufacturer has received the submission from the motor vehicle dealer, and thereafter,
the manufacturer shall use the motor vehicle dealer's increased retail labor rate and retail parts
markup percentage in calculating compensation for warranty obligations until a subsequent
calculation of the motor vehicle dealer's retail labor rate or retail parts markup percentage is
established in accordance with this section.
(c) (I) If the manufacturer timely contests the motor vehicle dealer's calculation of the
retail labor rate or retail parts markup percentage and the manufacturer and motor vehicle dealer
are unable to resolve the disagreement, the motor vehicle dealer may seek a determination by
filing a complaint with a court of competent jurisdiction or the executive director no later than
sixty days after the new motor vehicle dealer receives the manufacturer's challenge to the
determined retail labor rate or retail parts markup percentage.
(II) In a court proceeding, the court shall determine, in accordance with this section, the
proper retail labor rate or retail parts markup percentage.
(III) Any retail labor rate or retail parts markup percentage established through the
proceeding applies retroactively to calculate reimbursement for any labor and part beginning
thirty days after the manufacturer received the submission required by subsection (3) of this
section.
(IV) If the manufacturer contests the motor vehicle dealer's calculation of the retail labor
rate or retail parts markup percentage, the manufacturer shall continue to reimburse the motor
vehicle dealer for warranty obligation repairs at the retail labor rate and retail parts markup
percentage as both existed before the motor vehicle dealer submitted a request for an increase
under subsection (5) of this section. When the manufacturer and motor vehicle dealer agree on
the retail labor rate or retail parts markup percentage, the manufacturer shall pay any difference
between the amount the manufacturer compensated the dealer and the amount agreed to by the
motor vehicle dealer and manufacturer as of thirty days after the manufacturer received the
submission required by subsection (3) of this section.
(d) In the court proceeding, the court shall award the prevailing party reasonable
attorney fees and costs. If the motor vehicle dealer prevails, the court shall award as damages the
full amount of reimbursement that should have been paid to the motor vehicle dealer.
(7) When calculating the retail labor rate and the retail parts markup percentage, the
manufacturer:
(a) Shall not establish an unreasonable flat-rate time, nor establish unreasonable flat-rate
labor times for new line-makes that are inconsistent with the existing rates;
(b) Shall, if the manufacturer furnishes a part to a motor vehicle dealer at no cost for use
in performing a repair under a warranty obligation, compensate the motor vehicle dealer for the
authorized repair part by paying the dealer an amount equal to the retail parts markup percentage
multiplied by the cost the dealer would have paid for the authorized part as listed in the
manufacturer's price schedule;
(c) Shall not establish a different part number for repairs made in accordance with a
warranty obligation than the part number established for nonwarranty repairs solely to provide a
lower compensation to a motor vehicle dealer;
(d) Shall not recover or attempt to recover, directly or indirectly, in whole or in part, any
of its costs from the motor vehicle dealer for compensating the motor vehicle dealer under this
section;
(e) Shall not, directly or indirectly, in whole or in part, assess penalties or surcharges to
the motor vehicle dealer, limit allocation of motor vehicles or parts to the motor vehicle dealer,
or take any adverse action based on the motor vehicle dealer's exercise of the dealer's rights
under this section;
(f) Shall not require from a motor vehicle dealer any information that is unduly
burdensome or time consuming to obtain, including any part-by-part or transaction-by-
transaction calculations.
(8) Nothing in this section prohibits a manufacturer from increasing the price of a motor
vehicle or motor vehicle part in the normal course of business.
(9) This section does not apply to any of the following that are involved in the
manufacturing of or selling of recreational vehicles:
(a) A motor vehicle dealer;
(b) A manufacturer or component manufacturer;
(c) A distributor; or
(d) A manufacturer representative.

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