Duty of care in the event of franchisee business difficulties
Duty of care in the event of franchisee business difficulties
Court in Zwolle
The issue at hand has recently made headlines as news of the issue has spread ‘on the street’. A franchisee of the ‘Kentucky Fried Chicken’ fast-food chain leaves unpaid his debts to the franchisor in respect of goods and services supplied. The parties discuss the repayment of these debts, but ultimately fail to reach an agreement.
For this reason, the franchisor decides to impose a prejudgment attachment against the parent company of the franchisee. After all, this parent company was jointly and severally liable for the franchisee’s debts, pursuant to contractual provisions. Furthermore, the franchisor files a petition for bankruptcy with regard to the franchisee itself.
The franchisee is of the opinion that this constitutes an abuse of law, because the imposition of a prejudgment attachment should only be seen as the willful ‘placing’ of the franchisee by the franchisor. The bankruptcy petitions have also been filed for this purpose. Furthermore, the attachment is unnecessary, because it will only take longer to pay the outstanding debts. The franchisee therefore asks for the attachment to be lifted, because the franchisor is not behaving as a prudent franchisor.
However, the court is of the opinion that there is no abuse of law, because the franchisor has deliberately chosen not to impose an attachment against the franchisee itself, but against the parent company. Because it has not become apparent that an attachment against the parent company also affects the franchisee, there is – according to the court – no question of a situation in which the franchisor has breached its duty of care. The attachment is therefore maintained.
The motives of the franchisor can only be guessed at, but it cannot be ruled out that the attachment was levied – partly – to give the bankruptcy petition a better chance of success. That in itself is an easily arguable strategy, but the judgment of the court shows that such ‘one-two’ (seizure + filing for bankruptcy) can in certain cases indeed constitute a violation of the duty of care of the franchisor. Consider, for example, a situation in which the attachment and the immediately subsequent bankruptcy petition concern the franchisee itself. In that case, there could be a violation of the duty of care and an abuse of law with all the consequences that entails.
Incidentally, it has recently become known that the franchisor has reached an agreement with the trustees of the (now: former) franchisee, so that the restaurants could soon be opened to the public again. The franchisor was pleased with this development and the trustees were also satisfied with the result achieved. What the (former) franchisee thinks of it is not apparent from the relevant publication, but one can easily guess.
Mr JH Kolenbrander – Franchise lawyer
Ludwig & Van Dam Franchise attorneys, franchise legal advice Would you like to respond? Mail to info@ludwigvandam.nl
Other messages
Article Franchiseplus: “Franchisors participate in franchisees” – dated June 3, 2020 – mr. AW Dolphin
Franchisors are increasingly participating in the franchisee's business. There are several benefits for both the franchisee and the franchisor.
Article The National Franchise Guide – “Corona discount on rent” – dated June 2, 2020 – mr. AW Dolphin
If a rental property is obliged to be closed due to corona, there may be a right to a rent reduction, according to the Northern Netherlands court.
Article Franchise+ – Franchisees enjoy the same protection as employees and commercial agents with regard to a non-competition clause – dated 7 May 2020 – mr. RCWL Albers
It often happens that, especially by franchisees, the validity of a post-contractual non-compete clause is considered too lightly.
The support agreement for the Retail sector in this Corona crisis – dated 15 April 2020 – mr. K. Bastian
On April 10, 2020, the Ministry of Economic Affairs, together with a number of landlords, retailers and banks, reached a support agreement.
Court rules that corona crisis does not constitute force majeure – dated April 10, 2020 – mr. AW Dolphin
If payment cannot be made due to a decrease in income, then there is not always a force majeure situation.
Important information for directors of franchisees associations: Online meetings and decision-making in times of corona – dated April 10, 2020 – mr. J. Strong
Emergency law provisions for legally valid decisions without physically meeting within the association structure.