Transfer of the franchisor
Most franchise agreements include a comprehensive transfer arrangement for the benefit of the franchisee, detailing how the franchisee may transfer its business to a third party if it so desires. However, the franchisor can also transfer his company, although franchise agreements often contain little or nothing about this. A provision that sometimes recurs is that the franchisor is free to transfer his business to a third party, provided that this does not affect or encumber the rights of the franchisees in any way. That is of course also correct and summarizes the point in a nutshell: ideally, a franchisee will not notice a takeover or sale of the franchisor’s business.
However, this does imply that both the selling party and the acquiring party must realize that the rights of the franchisees cannot actually be challenged. Incidentally, this is a principle that arises from contract law itself and therefore also applies if the franchise agreement does not expressly contain a provision to that effect. In practice, it sometimes happens that franchise organizations are transferred to third parties while there are conflicts within that organization between the franchisor and one or more franchisees. Perhaps unnecessarily, it should be noted in that context that the transfer of the franchise organization does not imply the end of that conflict. It is then one of the two: either the acquiring party will in so many words, made known to the franchisee(s) involved, also “take over the conflict”, or the selling party will declare in so many words that it is responsible for the further settlement of the that conflict, in both cases including the settlement of any compensation obligations and the like. In this context, it is good franchising practice to inform all franchisees, including those involved in the conflict, of the intended transfer and its consequences in a timely manner, in the broadest sense of the word, so that both the business operations in a broad sense the franchisees, as well as the handling and further settlement of the conflict as a result of the acquisition.
Ludwig & Van Dam franchise attorneys, franchise legal advice
Other messages
Magazine Franchise & Law, episode 2 (November 2015)
Ludwig & Van Dam Advocaten wrote a chronicle of case law in franchise law over the first half of 2015.
Can a franchisee leave sales channels unused?
Franchise formulas are now generally well equipped with an online sales channel.
Distribution over the franchisor’s trade name
A franchisor's trade name is one of the most important elements of the formula.
Legal workshop Turnover forecasts at Ludwig & Van Dam
Legal workshop Turnover forecasts at Ludwig & Van Dam
The rules of the game when renting a property
Buy or rent. That's the question with a new business, a subsequent building. Apart from the possibilities you have to buy another property, renting is also a good option.
From omni-channel to single-channel allowed
Can a bicycle supplier terminate the dealer agreement if the dealer no longer operates physical stores, but restricts itself to a web shop?