The franchise formula as the destination of the rented property
The Amsterdam Court of Appeal recently ruled on the question of whether a rental agreement can be dissolved and the rented property should be vacated, because the renting franchisee acted contrary to the destination clause in the rental agreement. That clause prescribed use of the leased property according to the franchise formula. See: http://uitspraken.rechtspraak.nl/inziendocument?id=ECLI:NL:GHAMS:2013:4913&keyword=franchise
The tenant, who is also the franchisee, defended himself against the claims, arguing, among other things, that the formula in practice deviated strongly from what had been agreed in writing at the time.
The Court of Appeal has established that a franchise formula is usually subject to development, and that this is all the more true in this case since the lessee is the formula’s first and only franchisee. The franchise agreement also stipulates that the franchisee is obliged to cooperate in the further development of the formula. The Court of Appeal ruled that it can be argued against the franchisee that he violated the destination clause in the rental agreement because he did not meet the essential characteristics of the formula.
It follows from this ruling that franchisees should be vigilant when interpreting the franchise formula, especially if the formula is relatively new and under development. Franchisors would do well to include a clause in the rental agreement that the tenant is obliged to use the formula, as well as that the tenant is obliged to cooperate in the further development of the formula.
Mr AW Dolphin – Franchise attorney
Ludwig & Van Dam Franchise attorneys,franchise legal advice. Do you want to respond? Mail to dolphijn@ludwigvandam.nl

Other messages
Price maintenance always leads to nullity?
Under competition law, it is not permitted to include so-called resale price maintenance in franchise agreements
Again turnover-related rent
In an earlier contribution to First Formula (November 10, 2006) about turnover related issues, I asked the question whether unilateral change
Turnover and result: the principle of prudence
In various countries in the world, franchising is subject to increasingly stringent regulations.
How is the (sub)lease agreement concluded?
As is well known, tenancy law is largely subject to (semi) mandatory law.
Advantages and disadvantages of the turnover-related rent
A commonly used construction in franchise relationships is where the franchisee owns the premises in which he operates his business
Recent jurisprudence
Discussion deserves a recent ruling by the Court in preliminary relief proceedings.