The tied franchisee
Sometimes we talk about a tied franchisee. It is important for starting franchisees to determine whether, and to what extent, the franchisee is bound before signing the franchise agreement. In short, these are provisions that may hinder the franchisee if he wishes to continue operations after the end of the franchise agreement. Some examples of this are mentioned in this contribution.
Especially in retail, a branch is an important part of the collaboration between franchisor and franchisee. The intention is to make the location an attraction for (potential) customers. In this way, regular customers can be created and the importance of the location increases. “Traffic” is then generated.
It is quite conceivable that a franchisor wants to maintain a good location for the chain of franchise stores. The potential customers know the point and the formula that is operated there. On the other hand, after the end of the franchise agreement, a franchisee may want to continue operating the relevant location under its own name or another formula. He will also want to (continue to) benefit from the accumulated traffic.
Some franchise agreements contain agreements with which the franchisor tries to maintain the location for the chain of the franchise formula. One then speaks of a “tied” franchisee. After all, the franchisee is, as it were, “stuck” to the formula and cannot simply continue operations at the location in question at will without the franchise formula. Such binding agreements could be, for example, the following:
– A post-contractual non-competition clause: The franchisee may not operate competing activities (at or near the location) after the termination of the franchise agreement;
– An obligation of the franchisee to offer: The franchisee must offer the company for sale to the franchisor in the event of a proposed cessation or sale of the operation;
– A purchase option for the franchisor: The franchisor has the right to buy the company from the franchisee after the franchise agreement expires;
– The franchisee rents the location from the franchisor, so that the franchisor, as landlord, sometimes has control over who or what happens in the rented property.
There are many variations on methods in which the franchisor can bind the franchisee. Not all bonds by the franchisor are valid. Sometimes there may be a conflict with competition law or the Franchise Act.
It is advisable to consider in advance as much as possible how any binding agreement works, to what extent it is valid and whether it is necessary to make other or alternative agreements.
Ludwig & Van Dam lawyers, franchise legal advice.
Do you want to respond? Then email to dolphijn@ludwigvandam.nl
Other messages
Legal Franchise Statistics 2019: slight decrease in number of franchise disputes
In 2018, 44 judgments were published on Rechtspraak.nl, 12 of which were appeal cases and one in cassation (a prognosis issue against Albert Heijn).
Article De Nationale Franchisegids: “Judge again rules in favor of Domino’s franchisees” – dated September 3, 2019 – mr. RCWL Albers
At the beginning of 2018, almost all franchisees of Domino's and the Association of Domino's Pizza Franchisees submitted two issues to the court in Rotterdam.
Article De Nationale Franchisegids: “The interim termination of the franchise agreement” – August 12, 2019 – mr. JAJ Devilee
A franchise agreement can end prematurely in many ways.
Article De Nationale Franchise Gids: “Parliamentary questions asked about (false) self-employment franchisees” – dated 24 July 2019 – mr. M. Munnik
Parliamentary questions have recently been asked about the so-called bogus self-employment within the relationship between franchisor and franchisee.
Article Franchise+: “With our franchise formula you will earn mountains of gold.” dated 10 July 2019 – mr. AW Dolphin
The distinction between permissible promotions and misleading information remains a gray area, despite the relevant legislation.
Franchisee may purchase a range of foreign products after mandatory formula change – June 6, 2019 – mr. JAJ Devilee
The District Court of East Brabant recently dealt with an important matter in preliminary relief proceedings in which a franchisee was completely involuntarily forced to adopt an alternative formula.