Indemnity I
Many franchise contracts contain clauses that must indemnify the franchisor against the conduct of the franchisee. Not infrequently, such a clause is so general and rigid in nature that the franchisee must, after all, be responsible for matters that simply cannot be held against him. An example of this is guaranteeing any liability that arises directly between the consumer and the franchisee. Such a provision is generally too far-reaching. This scope may, for example, relate to product liability. If the franchisee sells a defective product to the consumer, this does not automatically mean that the franchisee has to guarantee that it is faulty.
It is true that the franchisee can be held liable directly by the consumer, but on the basis of product liability the producer and/or supplier of the product in question is indeed (further) liable for the faulty product delivered. This may be the franchisor or a supplier designated by the franchisor. In practice, the franchisor’s liability may be aggravated by the fact that the franchisee simply had to purchase the product in question from the franchisor or from a supplier designated by the franchisor under an exclusive purchasing provision. In that case, the franchisee therefore had no choice with regard to purchasing the product. Under those circumstances, the franchisor is the one who has to pay for the problem, or the supplier indicated by the franchisor.
The franchisor and franchisee must realize in advance that indemnification clauses must be careful and nuanced in nature and ideally also contain a certain degree of two-sidedness. This makes invoking it much more realistic under concrete circumstances and is therefore much more workable for the franchise practice. Next time, we will look more closely at indemnification clauses related to non-achieved operating forecasts.
Ludwig & Van Dam franchise attorneys, franchise legal advice
Other messages
Article Franchise+ – “Immediate information obligations of franchisors upon operation of the Franchise Act” – mr. AW Dolphijn – dated June 25, 2020
As soon as the Franchise Act enters into force, this will have an immediate effect on franchise agreements that already exist. The question is whether the information flows are set up optimally from a legal point of view.
Senate will adopt Franchise Act – dated 24 June 2020 – mr. AW Dolphin
The House of Representatives had unanimously adopted the proposal to introduce the Franchise Act on 16 June 2020
Franchise Act passed by the House of Representatives – dated 16 June 2020 – mr. AW Dolphin
The Franchise Act was adopted by the House of Representatives on 16 June 2020.
Sandd franchisees find satisfaction in nullifying Sandd and PostNL merger – dated 12 June 2020
The franchisees of mail delivery company Sandd went to court in November, assisted by Ludwig & Van Dam Advocaten. Court of Rotterdam rules on takeover by PostNL.
Plenary debate dated June 9, 2020 in the Lower House of the Franchise Act – dated June 10, 2020 – mr. AW Dolphin
On 9 June 2020, the legislative proposal for the Franchise Act was discussed in plenary in the House of Representatives. An amendment and a motion have been tabled.
Franchising is “a bottleneck in tackling healthcare fraud” – dated 10 June 2020 – mr. AW Dolphin
According to the various supervisory authorities in the healthcare sector, franchise constructions can be seen as a non-transparent business construction in which the supervision of professional and