Deviation from the duration of the franchise agreement and rental agreement
It often happens that franchisor and franchisee want to link their existing (sub)lease agreement and franchise agreement by means of stipulations that deviate from semi-mandatory tenancy law. In practice, it is then agreed that if the franchise agreement is terminated, the sublease agreement between franchisor and franchisee is also terminated. If the parties want to include such a deviating clause in their sublease agreement and then pass this clause on to their franchise agreement, judicial approval of that clause can be requested. If that approval is granted, the clause is no longer voidable on the basis of its deviating character, which is after all contrary to the law.
The court can only approve stipulations in which the disadvantages of the franchisee, also subtenant, are deviated from the specific provisions in this context. It is therefore useless to seek approval of other legal provisions that provide protection to the franchisee in his capacity as lessee, such as the prevention of abrupt price increase provisions.
In practice, there is usually a joint request from the franchisor and franchisee to obtain approval of the deviating clause. Approval is then granted to allow a different term of the sublease agreement to run parallel to that of the franchise agreement, so that both agreements can be terminated simultaneously for both parties.
In practice, this means that various subdistrict court judges give different judgments on the same applications. Usually, however, a clause as desired by the franchisor and franchisee is approved, provided it is accompanied by a good motivation. A proper clause in this context states that the franchisor, in its capacity as lessor, agrees with the franchisee in the (sublease) agreement that the franchise agreement can be terminated with immediate effect by means of a single written notification from the franchisor to the franchisee, whereby the franchisee will not object to the simultaneous termination of the sublease agreement following the franchise agreement – without further notice and judicial review, the sublease agreement will then also be terminated.
It goes without saying that a nuanced formulation and motivation of the said clause and underlying regulation is a requirement if the approval is to actually have a chance of success.
Franchisor and franchisee must therefore jointly choose to invest in such a clause. Please note: in practice this does not mean that there is no longer any security of tenure for the franchisee / subtenant in that situation. However, the position of the parties is very clearly – pre-marked.
Ludwig & Van Dam franchise attorneys, franchise legal advice

Other messages
The further determination of the rental price of business premises at the request of the lessor/franchisor or the lessee/franchisee
Does the (sub)tenant/franchisee still pay a competitive rent for the leased business space?
Partial indebtedness of entrance fees due to lack of turnover and non-delivery of contractual performance by the franchisor
The franchisee rightly invokes unforeseen circumstances due to the lack of turnover and successfully claims moderation of the entrance fee due.
Termination of the franchise agreement does not automatically lead to termination of the sublease agreement
Franchisor terminated the franchise agreement with the franchisee. The franchise agreement stipulated that termination of the franchise agreement would also terminate the sublease agreement
Despite the franchisee’s counterclaim, the franchisor justified dissolution of the franchise contract
The Rotterdam court recently ruled that payment arrears of more than € 80,000 is sufficient for the franchisor to dissolve the franchise agreement.
Actually using a building, but without a lease
In franchising, it often happens that the business premises from which the franchisee operates his business
Switching franchisee from one franchise organization to another is not without risks
The court in Amsterdam recently ruled in a case where a franchisee switched from one franchisor to another, in the same industry.