The benchmark for franchise forecasts – dated 29 May 2019 – mr. AW Dolphin
On 19 March 2019, the Den Bosch Court of Appeal, ECLI:NL:GHSHE:2019:1037, listed the case law of the Supreme Court on prognosis in franchising. The Court of Appeal summarizes that the Supreme Court has ruled that in principle there is no obligation on the franchisor to inform the franchisee about the expected turnover or about the profit forecast. However, the special circumstances of the case could entail such an obligation.
It cannot be inferred from the mere circumstance that the franchisor provided the franchisee with a report on the expected turnover and profit during the negotiations prior to the conclusion of the franchise agreement that an obligation to that effect rested on the former. However, the franchisor who provides a report as referred to above to his counterparty may, under certain circumstances, act unlawfully.
In the event that the franchisor has outsourced the investigation and the preparation of the report based on it to a third party, the franchisor may also generally rely on the correctness of the report drawn up by the third party. In that case, however, there will in principle be negligence on his part if he knows that this report contains serious errors and he does not draw the other party’s attention to these errors.
In the event that the franchisor itself, or a person for whom it is liable, conducts the investigation and provides the results thereof to its counterparty, negligence may also exist without the franchisor (or the person for whom it is liable) know that the report contains errors if negligence on the part of the franchisor (or the person for whom it is liable) led to the errors in the report.
After the Court of Appeal explained the Supreme Court’s teaching in this case, it tested it against the present case. The franchisee bases two arguments on the franchisor’s alleged errors. First, the franchisee points to an email from the franchisor from the pre-contractual stage, with the subject; “estimate of potential toy turnover” which includes a calculation, which closes on a net turnover forecast of € 274,477. In that e-mail, a number of factors were listed as unknown, namely purchasing power retention, indexation and rent levels. In addition, the e-mail emphatically states that no rights can be attached to the figures, that it is the responsibility of the entrepreneur to check the data and that specialist agencies are referred to for an extensive location investigation. In view of the foregoing, according to the Court of Appeal, the franchisees have not sufficiently substantiated that this e-mail can be regarded as a turnover forecast on which they could justifiably rely.
Second, the franchisee had stated that the franchisor would have provided an itemized investment budget, a location survey and two statements of net sales data. However, those documents were not submitted, so that this second claim was also rejected.
Against the assessment framework outlined, forecasting issues remain a matter of sound factual substantiation.
mr. AW Dolphin – franchise lawyer
Ludwig & Van Dam Franchise attorneys, franchise legal advice.
Do you want to respond? Go to dolphijn@ludwigvandam.nl

Other messages
The limitation of a non-competition clause
A former franchisee has a non-compete clause in his franchise agreement that prohibits him from cooperating during and for two years after the termination of the franchise agreement.
Franchise agreement/sublease agreement link
Franchise agreements and sublease agreements must be adequately linked. After all, the sublease agreement is governed by mandatory tenancy law. Not easy here
Franchising is serious business
Franchise practice is characterized by a wide variety of issues that manifest themselves in it.
Price maintenance: always void?
The Court of Appeal in The Hague ruled some time ago that influencing the price level at which the franchisee sells the products to the consumer can be susceptible to competition law.
Another franchisor against will and thanks?
For various reasons, franchisors and franchisees are confronted with the (desire to) transfer of rights
Compensation for insufficient duty of care by the franchisor
Compensation for insufficient duty of care by the franchisor