When is there a prognosis?
The Amsterdam court has ruled in an interim judgment of 17 September 2014 (ECLI:NL:RBAMS:2014:6732) considered whether the franchisee had rightly invoked error in entering into the franchise agreement for providing an incorrect forecast. The question is whether a prognosis has been made by the (prospective) franchisor. If that is not the case, then of course the franchisee’s appeal to error regarding that forecast also fails.
The franchisee reproached the franchisor that prior to concluding the franchise agreement, the franchisor had presented a much rosier picture of the expected business results of an average franchisee than was actually the case. After entering into the franchise agreement, the franchisee in question therefore achieved a pittance of what the franchisee had expected (whether rightly or not).
The Court notes that in its judgment of January 25, 2002, NJ 2003, 31, the Supreme Court confirmed that annulment on the grounds of error is also possible in the case of a franchise agreement, if the franchisee has fallen into error as a result of errors in a sales or profit forecast provided by the franchisor. In general, a franchisor is not obliged to provide a turnover or profit forecast, but if the franchisor does, then this forecast must – according to established case law – be based on sound (market and place of business) research.
Before reaching a judgment on whether a prognosis has been provided, the court indicates that if a prognosis has been provided, as the franchisee states, error or plausible. In the view of the court, the difference with the actual turnover is inexplicably large.
The franchisor denies having made a forecast and also refers to a provision in the franchise agreement that states that the franchisor cannot give any turnover guarantee and the franchisee will therefore never hold the franchisor liable for any disappointing business results.
However, this provision does not seem to refer to the situation of a forecast, but only to the situation of a guarantee. Furthermore, destruction is not excluded, but liability.
The franchisee points out a PowerPoint presentation from the franchisor stating, among other things, that it concerns a proven franchise concept and there is a low investment and a high return. Two overviews printed on letterhead of the franchisor read “Average turnover (…) € 58,350” and “Top turnover (…) € 102,600”.
The court is not (yet) convinced that a forecast has been provided and orders the franchisee to prove that a forecast has been provided as franchisee states. It is obvious that the franchisee will present employees of the franchisor as witnesses under oath.
This judgment once again shows that it is important that prior to concluding a franchise agreement, the franchisee makes clear what principles led the franchisee to decide to enter into the franchise agreement. The franchisor would do well, if it wishes to exclude cancellation due to error, to formulate this carefully in the franchise agreement.
mr. AW Dolphijn – Franchise lawyer
Ludwig & Van Dam Advocaten Franchise attorneys, franchise legal advice. Do you want to respond? Mail to dolphijn@ludwigvandam.nl
Other messages
Judge anticipates Franchise Act: no mandatory formula change (without threshold value)
The District Court of Amsterdam ruled that a Blokker franchisee is not obliged to renovate the store in accordance with the latest formula principles, as instructed by Blokker.
Interview Mr. J. Sterk and mr. C. Rutten in Franchise+: “Call to the automotive sector: prepare yourself well for the new Franchise Act” dated October 2, 2020
The new Franchise Act has a broad effect, also in the automotive sector. But are people aware of it enough?
Article The National Franchise Guide – “Corona discount of 50% on the rent” – mr. AW Dolphijn – dated September 15, 2020
Disappointing turnover due to the corona crisis may mean that the rent is halved, even if the rent is partly turnover-related.
Article Franchise+ – “Franchisor uses “derivative formula” (without his knowledge)” – mr. AW Dolphijn – dated September 9, 2020
Many franchisors will not be aware of the fact that they use a "derived formula" as referred to in the Franchise Act.
Article Franchise+ – “Obligations and rights of the starting franchisee” – mr. AW Dolphijn – dd
What should you pay attention to as a starting franchisee, what are your obligations and what are your rights when concluding the franchise agreement?
Article Mr. C. Damen – Three conditions for the right to customer compensation for the agent upon termination of the agency agreement – dated August 26, 2020
In the agency relationship between an agent and a client (the principal), the parties record their cooperation agreements in an agency agreement. When the principal enters into the agency agreement