Still deliver in case of payment arrears.
Central Netherlands Court
The Central Netherlands District Court recently ruled that even in the event of payment arrears of more than € 100,000, the franchisor could not unilaterally terminate the franchise agreement and had to deliver. The idea was that the payment arrears had existed for a long time and the franchisee had drawn the franchisor’s attention to this. Payment arrears were also tolerated for a long time and a single policy change on the part of the franchisor proved insufficient to make use of the contractually stipulated right of termination in the event of payment arrears. The court also considered that the franchisor could be expected to draw up a concrete plan for repayment of the payment arrears in consultation with the franchisee. If such consultation and such a plan are not forthcoming, a good defense can be made against the suspension of deliveries by appealing to reasonableness and fairness.
In times of crisis, the court thus puts the brakes on rash decisions to stop such deliveries. Franchisors are thus warned that the duty of care also extends to financial guidance and timely intervention if payment arrears arise.
Mr J. Sterk – Franchise lawyer
Ludwig & Van Dam Franchise attorneys, franchise legal advice Would you like to respond? Mail to info@ludwigvandam.nl
Other messages
The standstill period does not apply
On 17 August 2022, the District Court of Overijssel, ECLI:NL:RBOVE:2022:2385, ...
What to do against (too) substantial rent increases?
In many rental agreements, the rent is indexed annually ...
More clarity on online sales through renewed block exemption regulation for vertical agreements
As of June 1, 2022, the renewed block exemption regulation ...
Franchisor bound by its own failed dispute settlement procedure
Franchise organizations sometimes have their own dispute resolution procedure. Can ...
Goodwill Transfer: Include Google Business Profile?
What is transferred goodwill? This question can be very relevant ...
Not know-how, but fine decisive for compliance with non-compete clause
From mid-2016, franchisees regularly stated that their (former) franchisor had ...