When does a franchisor go too far when recruiting franchisees?
In the judgment of the Court of Appeal of Arnhem-Leeuwarden on 5 February 2019, ECLI:NL:GHARL:2019:1024 the issue was whether the franchisor had acted impermissibly when recruiting the franchisees. The franchisor, Otto Simon, was accused of persuading the franchisees to enter into a franchise agreement for the exploitation of the Top1Toys through misleading texts on the franchisor’s website.
The franchisees are particularly concerned with the following passages on the website:
The franchisees emphasized that the franchisor is the expert in this case and that they could simply rely on the statements on the website.
The Court finds that the text on the franchisor’s website is aimed at potential franchisees and that therefore the assessment of whether this publication is misleading must be based on the knowledge and imagination of an averagely informed and observant (prospective) entrepreneur. The average commercial public should be aware of, and therefore not be influenced by, the fact that advertising often has a certain exaggeration. Against the background of those principles, the court does not consider the statements on the website of the franchisor to be misleading.
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
Catering agreements / Beer supply agreements II
An article about catering agreements was recently published in this series of articles.
Exclusive purchase obligations.
In a judgment of the Amsterdam Court of Appeal dated 31 October 2002, which judgment was rendered in response to an appeal lodged against an earlier summary judgment
A new block exemption regulation
Most recently, on 1 October 2002, the European Commission issued a new block exemption regulation.
New policy rules for assessing (fictitious) franchising employment
Recently, the State Secretary for Finance clarified the assessment criteria for the franchisee's independence.
Rayon protection: a nuance.
Most franchise agreements include an exclusive territory for the benefit of the franchisee. The essence of that exclusivity is that neither the franchisor nor fellow franchisees
Franchising and agency
Franchise constructions can sometimes contain elements of agency.