Franchise & Law No. 5 – Acquisition Fraud and Franchising Act
The Acquisition Fraud Act came into effect on 1 July 2016. This includes amendments to Section 6:194 of the Dutch Civil Code. In short, the amendment means that if there is misrepresentation when offering goods or services in business relationships, this will result in an unlawful act. This implies that the Acquisition Fraud Act also applies in the pre-contractual phase of entering into a franchise agreement.
In this contribution, the civil law aspects of the Acquisition Fraud Act and the pre-contractual phase in entering into franchise agreements will be examined in more detail, in particular the reversal of the burden of proof.
![243Foto-franchiseovereenkomst](https://www.ludwigvandam.nl/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/243Foto-franchiseovereenkomst-scaled.jpg)
Other messages
Nuanced franchise agreement on the grounds of error is a nuanced consideration
The Court in preliminary relief proceedings in Rotterdam recently ruled that a franchisor is not automatically responsible
The duty to offer in the franchise agreement is not valid
Recently, the Court of Appeal determined that an obligation of the franchisee
Franchise agreements of an indefinite term cannot be terminated just like that
Contrary to what is sometimes thought, franchise agreements for an indefinite period cannot be terminated just like that.
Sale of a franchise company, a subject to consider in good time
When entering into the franchise agreement, the fact that and under what conditions is not always considered in good time
Delivery of the rented property at the end of the rental agreement
Article 7:224 of the Dutch Civil Code stipulates that the tenant will leave the rented property at the end of the rental agreement
Dissolution due to deviation from recommended prices: unacceptable under competition law
An important statement was recently made with regard to margin management and ditto pricing policy.