Post non-compete clause in hard franchising

The summary proceedings judge of the Amsterdam District Court ruled on August 1, 2022, ECLI:NL:RBAMS:2022:8010, on the question of whether a franchisee was bound by a post-contractual non-competition ban.

A franchisee claims exemption from the post-contractual ban on competition, apparently in order to continue operating the business under its own name at the same location after the franchise agreement expires.

It has been established that the franchisee intends to continue operations with another entity, unless it uses a new name at the same location. However, this is precisely what the franchisor intended to prevent with the post-competition ban.

According to the judge, the franchisor has made it sufficiently plausible that the franchise formula qualifies as a ‘hard franchise’ and that uniformity, identity, image and name recognition play a major role, unlike in some other rulings where there was a ‘soft franchise’ in which these characteristics played no role. See for example Midden-Nederland District Court January 13, 2016, ECLI:NL:RBMNE:2016:191, Overijssel District Court June 22, 2016, ECLI:NL:RBOVE:2016:2914, Overijssel District Court September 21, 2016 ECLI:NL:RBOVE:2016:3742 and Gelderland District Court February 16, 2021, ECLI:NL:RBGEL:2021:1875.

All in all, the franchisor has a compelling interest in preserving, or at least being able to protect, the know-how, identity and reputation associated with its franchise formula. In view of the foregoing, it is therefore not unacceptable according to the standards of reasonableness and fairness under Article 6:248 paragraph 2 of the Dutch Civil Code that the franchisor holds the franchisee to the post-contractual prohibition on competition.

All this means that the franchisor can fully hold the franchisee to the non-compete clause (the post-contractual non-competition clause) and that the franchisee is therefore – in short – not permitted to, during the period of one year after expiry of the franchise agreement, to undertake activities at the location of the branch that are similar and/or competitive to/with the activities of the franchisor, or at least at the aforementioned address to undertake activities that are similar to those carried out by the franchisee in the context of activities carried out under the franchise agreement. The claim in convention will therefore be rejected.

mr. A.W. Dolphijn
Ludwig & Van Dam lawyers, franchise legal advice.
Do you want to respond? Then email to dolphijn@ludwigvandam.nl

Other messages

Amsterdam Court of Appeal restricts franchisor’s appeal to non-competition – dated July 6, 2020 – mr. T. Meijer

On 30 June 20202, the Amsterdam Court of Appeal ruled that a franchisor is not entitled to an (unlimited) appeal to a contractual non-competition clause.

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.

By Alex Dolphijn|25-06-2020|Categories: Statements & current affairs|
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