I made an appointment at another garage that I've patronized before. The person I spoke with said if the brake lines are leaking, he wouldn't allow me to drive it out of the shop. This sound like a high-pressure ploy to make me have that shop do the repairs. I posted that question on a legal help website and this was the reply:
Question: Can a mechanic refuse to let me drive my car if it's unsafe?
Answer: This is an excellent question, and the short answer is: generally, no, a mechanic cannot simply refuse to let you take your own car, but there are important nuances under New York law.
Under New York law, your vehicle is your personal property. A mechanic or garage does not have the right to hold your car hostage solely because they believe it is unsafe to drive. There is no general legal authority in New York that permits a private repair shop to detain your vehicle against your will based on their safety assessment alone.
However, there are a few important exceptions and considerations:
1. Garage Keeper's Lien: Under New York Lien Law, a repair shop has the right to retain possession of your vehicle if you owe them money for authorized repairs or storage. This is known as a garage keeper's or garageman's lien. But this only applies when work was performed with your consent and payment is outstanding. Since you mention you had no prior agreements with this mechanic regarding the condition of your car, this lien would likely not apply unless you authorized and received repair work that you have not paid for.
2. State Safety Inspections: New York has a mandatory vehicle safety inspection program. If your vehicle is at a registered inspection station and fails the safety inspection, the shop can reject the inspection sticker, meaning your car would not pass inspection and could not legally display a valid inspection sticker. However, even in this situation, the shop generally cannot physically prevent you from taking your car. You would simply be driving without a valid inspection, which could result in a traffic citation.
3. Liability Concerns: Many shops will ask you to sign a liability waiver or acknowledgment that they informed you the vehicle is unsafe before releasing it to you. This protects the shop from potential negligence claims if you are involved in an accident due to the condition they identified. This is a common and reasonable practice.
4. What You Can Do: If a mechanic is refusing to release your vehicle and you do not owe them money for authorized work, you have the right to demand your car back. If they still refuse, you can contact local law enforcement, as the shop may be engaging in unlawful detention of your property. You can also file a complaint with the New York State Department of Motor Vehicles, which oversees registered repair shops.
That said, please take the mechanic's safety concern seriously. A corroded and leaking brake line is a genuinely dangerous condition that could lead to brake failure. Even if you have the legal right to drive away, doing so with compromised brakes puts you and others at serious risk. You may want to consider having the car towed to another shop for a second opinion or repair estimate.