North Dakota’s lemon law (North Dakota Century Code Sections 51-07-16 through 51-07-22) gives owners of new vehicles the right to get a full refund or a more reliable replacement, minus a reasonable allowance for use of the new vehicle. The lemon law applies only to new vehicle purchases. It does not apply to motorcycles or motor homes.
Under North Dakota law, you have little protection against defects that surface after you buy a used car, unless you purchased an extended warranty or you can prove the seller lied about the condition of the vehicle.
Minor problems with new vehicles which require continual repairs are not covered under the lemon law. Your new car's clock that continually runs 25 minutes fast or a trunk light that repeatedly flickers out is annoying, but it does not make the car a real lemon. Lemon Aid
North Dakota’s lemon law specifically states what must happen before your car is determined to be a true lemon and what you must do to use the law.
The defect must be something that ''substantially impairs the use and market value of the passenger motor vehicle,''.