Price maintenance always leads to nullity?
Pursuant to competition law, it is not permitted to include so-called resale price maintenance in franchise agreements, which means that the franchisor may prescribe to the franchisee the selling prices at which the products and/or services must be purchased by consumers from the franchisee. Going against this rule is considered a cardinal and mortal sin in competition law. If such a clause is nevertheless included in a franchise agreement, does this mean that the franchise agreement in question is actually null and void? And what about if the franchisor has issued a margin guarantee to the franchisee and the franchisee cannot or may not deviate from the selling prices? In court proceedings, a franchisee recently argued that there was no possibility whatsoever to deviate from the sales price indicated by the franchisor. It has been ruled in court that it must be verified whether there is actually price maintenance in practice; this is very decisive. This can arise in practice, for example, when the franchisee is not even formally given the opportunity to deviate from these prices and therefore has no leeway whatsoever to charge a different price for a certain product. This resale price maintenance can also arise from the pre-pricing of articles, which the franchisee cannot or may not deviate from when selling. If this is actually the case, then real resale price maintenance only arises, with all the consequences that entails.
Franchisor and franchisee would of course be wise not to include absolute resale price maintenance in their franchise agreement. This in itself can render the franchise agreement null and void. In addition, it is very important to concretely and practically avoid price maintenance in practice and to actually act accordingly. This can be achieved, for example, by the fact that the franchisee continues a certain (price) promotion longer than planned, independently conducts (price) promotions, gives discounts, uses different sales prices for larger (volume) purchases, et cetera. The practice offers countless possibilities for this. In this way, the actual resale price maintenance can be avoided, with all the associated legal and economic risks.
Ludwig & Van Dam franchise attorneys, franchise legal advice
Other messages
Supermarkets COOP and PLUS merge
The intended merger will mean that the COOP supermarkets will ...
Article De Nationale Franchisegids: “Does the Franchise Act offer guidance in the event of disputes arising before January 1, 2021?” – mr. M. Munnik – dated August 16, 2021
The Franchise Act entered into force on 1 January 2021. ...
Success Albert Heijn franchisee against takeover Deen – mr. AW Dolphijn – dated July 29, 2021
An Albert Heijn franchisee has successfully defended itself against the ...
Article Franchise+: “Only with proof of transferred know-how can a non-compete appeal be invoked” – mr. T. Meijer – dated July 26, 2021
On July 16, 2021, the preliminary relief judge of the ...
Judge: “franchisee to move in standstill period” – mr. RCWL Albers – dated July 1, 2021
In recent proceedings before the preliminary relief judge in Utrecht, ...
Article Franchise+: “5 tips for starting franchisees” – mr. RCWL Albers – dated June 30, 2021
Choosing a franchise can be attractive for you as a ...