• No results found

FRANCHISE LAW WHAT THE GENERAL PRACTITIONER NEEDS TO KNOW

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2021

Share "FRANCHISE LAW WHAT THE GENERAL PRACTITIONER NEEDS TO KNOW"

Copied!
19
0
0

Loading.... (view fulltext now)

Full text

(1)

FRANCHISE LAW

WHAT THE GENERAL

PRACTITIONER NEEDS TO KNOW

October 2012

Law Offices of Carl Khalil & Sada Sheldon 2000 General Booth Blvd, Suite 201

Virginia Beach, VA 23454 (757) 263-4596

[email protected] (e-mail) [email protected] (e-mail)

www.carl-and-sada-law.com

(2)

About the Authors About the Author, Carl Khalil, Esq.:

Carl Khalil is a Partner in the Law Offices of Carl Khalil and Sada Sheldon, PLC. He has 17 years of franchise law experience and previously worked as Corporate Counsel for Jackson Hewitt and Liberty Tax Service. During his tenure at Liberty Tax Service, it grew from 35 offices and zero Area Developers to 4000+ offices and 100+ Area Developers, with over $200M in franchise fees earned. He may be contacted at

[email protected] and his firm’s website is located at www.carl-and-sada-law.com.

About the Author, Sada Sheldon, Esq.:

Sada Sheldon is a Partner of Carl Khalil & Sada Sheldon, PLC in Virginia Beach,

Virginia, a nationwide franchise and trademark practice. She is admitted to the State Bar of both California and Virginia. She is a member of the ABA Forum on Franchising.

Previously, she worked as an in-house attorney for Liberty Tax Service, which grew to over 4000 offices in its first fifteen years of operation. She can be reached at

[email protected] and her firm website is at www.carl-and-sada-law.com.

(3)

What is a franchise?

§ The use of another’s trademark in the operation of a business;

§ Where the franchisor has substantial control over or provides significant assistance in the franchisee’s methods of operation; and

§ The franchisee makes a required payment to the franchisor. 16 CFR § 436.1(h).

Specifically exempted from the federal definition of a franchise is a business concept where the required payment from the start of the business relation going forward six months is less than $500. 16 CFR § 436.8(a)

Most State’s law have a similar definition, but some are different. For example, New York's definition only requires element three, plus either element one or two from the above definition.

History of Franchise Laws in the United States 1950’s and 1960’s- Growth and legal claims

The 1950’s and 1960’s saw the advent and growth of the franchise business format in the United States. As the concept grew, so did claims of fraud and deception in the selling process and unfair treatment by franchisors against franchisees.

1971- California

In 1971, California passed the first franchise laws in the United States requiring

franchisors to register their franchise systems with the State of California and provide a franchise disclosure document to prospective franchisees before a franchisee could purchase a franchise.

1979 – FTC Franchise Rule

The FTC passed the FTC Franchise Rule requiring a Disclosure Document containing 23 items about the franchisor and a 10-business day holding period by a prospective

franchisee before they could purchase a franchise.

2007- FTC issues an updated Franchise Rule

In 2007, the FTC issued an updated Franchise Rule which largely tracked the original Franchise Rule, but had certain updated requirements, again requiring the disclosure of 23 items in a Franchise Disclosure Document and this time carrying a 14-calendar day hold before a prospective franchisee can enter into a binding contract or make a payment to a franchisor. 16 CFR § 436.1 et seq.

(4)

The 23 Items Required in the Franchise Disclosure Document are:

1. The Franchisor and any Parents, Predecessors and Affiliates 2. Business Experience

3. Litigation 4. Bankruptcy 5. Initial Fees 6. Other Fees

7. Estimated Initial Investment

8. Restrictions on Sources of Products and Services 9. Franchisee’s Obligations

10. Financing

11. Franchisor’s Assistance, Advertising, Computer Systems and Training 12. Territory

13. Trademarks

14. Patents, Copyrights and Proprietary Information

15. Obligation to Participate in the Actual Operation of the Franchise Business 16. Restrictions on What the Franchisee May Sell

17. Renewal, Termination, Transfer and Dispute Resolution 18. Public Figures

19. Financial Performance Representations 20. Outlets and Franchisee Information 21. Financial Statements

22. Contracts

(5)

23. Receipt

State Franchise Laws-

Registration States- A franchisor must file the FDD with the state to be able to sell franchises in the state. Examiners review the FDD to varying levels and can issue comments to require changes.

See Appendix A for the 27 non-registration states, the 13 states with franchise registration laws, the 6 states with abbreviated filing laws, and the 5 trademark states through which ownership and doing business under a federal trademark exempts a franchise from business opportunity laws.

Relationship/Termination Laws

20 states also have laws that govern franchise registration/filing and relationship laws.

Generally, relationship/termination laws require fair dealing with the franchisee and required good cause and a certain notice period (e.g., 30 or 60 days) be given before termination of a franchise.

(Arkansas Code § 4-72-201 et seq., California Bus. & Prof. Code § 20000 et seq., Connecticut Gen. Stat. § 42-133e et seq., Delaware Code tit. 6 § 2551 et seq,, Hawaii Stat. § 482E-1 et seq., 815 Illinois Stat. § 705/18 et seq. , Indiana Code § 23-2-2.7-1 et seq., Iowa Code § 523H.1 et seq., Louisiana Stat. tit. 23, § 921(E) and tit. 12, § 1042, Michigan Laws § 445.1527 et seq., Minnesota Stat. § 80C.14 and 2860.4400,

Mississippi Code § 75-24-51 et seq., Missouri Stat. § 407.400 et seq., Nebraska Stat. § 87-401 et seq., New Jersey Stat. § 56:10-1 et seq., Rhode Island Gen. Laws § 6-50-1 et seq., Virginia Code §13.1-557, Washington Code § 19.100.180 et seq., Wisconsin Stat.

§ 135.01 et seq.).

(6)

The Three Most Likely Client Scenarios I. SCENARIO ONE: A client wants to purchase a franchise-

1. There are, of course, basic business considerations:

a. Does the client have knowledge about the industry from his or her own experiences?

b. Sufficient Capital?

2. Franchise specific considerations:

a. Did the franchisor comply with the law?

i. Did the Franchisor provide a Franchise Disclosure Document?

ii. Did the Franchisor register with the state?

iii. Did the Franchisor give 14 Days to review the FDD before signing agreement or requiring payment?

b. What are the Franchisee’s risk factors in the Franchise Disclosure Document?

i. Costs and fees [FDD Items 6 and 7- Appendix B]

ii. Franchisee’s Duties [Item 9]

iii. Franchisor’s Duties [Item 11 ] iv. Territory Protections [FDD Item 12]

v. Renewal Rights [FDD Item 17]

vi. Legal Waivers (Arbitration, Forum Selection, Jury Waiver) [FDD Item 17]

vii. Non-compete [FDD Item 17]

viii. Advertising fund [FDD Item 11]

ix. Franchisee Organization [FDD Item 20]

c. Due Diligence:

i. Evaluate Financial Performance Representation [FDD Item 19.

See Appendix C for sample negative Financial Performance Representation]

ii. Analyze Franchisee Turn-Over [FDD Item 20- see Appendix D]

iii. Contact Franchisees who have been terminated, cancelled, not renewed, or otherwise ceased to do business as a franchisee [FDD Item 20 Exhibit]

iv. Contact current Franchisees [FDD Item 20 Exhibit]

v. Evaluate the Franchisor’s Financial Strength [FDD Item 21]

(7)

3. Single unit versus multi-unit ownership.

a. Higher capital needs and risk in multi-unit ownership b. More of a managerial role over staff in a multi-unit format c. More diversity of risk with several outlets

4. Area Developer or Master Franchisee versus unit franchise owner.

a. Amount of initial investment

b. Would client rather sell and support unit owners or deliver the ultimate product or services of the franchisor?

c. Ultimate goal- Area Developer often looks to develop seasoned unit business owners, resulting in a reduction of selling and support function and a long term income stream more akin to an annuity.

d. The #1 consideration for an Area Developer is- will the franchises sell and be viable.

e. The #2 consideration for an Area Developer is- what happens if the Area Developer does not meet Minimum Sales Requirements

II. SCENARIO TWO- A Business Client Wants to Franchise their Business 1. Franchise Considerations

a. Profitable b. Will it sell

c. Credibility of the management team d. Support System

e. Personnel- Operations, Marketing, Sales, Accounting and Legal i. Operations Manual (Item 11 of FDD)

ii. Training Program (Item 11 of FDD) f. Sufficient Capital

i. Financial Statements required for FDD ii. Regulators may require Addendum

III. SCENARIO THREE- A Franchisor Wants to Start an Area Developer or Master Franchise Program

1. Unit franchise v. Area Developer

a. Unit franchise refers to an individual operator

b. Area Developer refers to someone who has a large territory of unit franchises and attempts to sell those territories and offer some support to the unit franchise owners

c. See Appendix E for an article published in the IFA’s July 2012 Franchising World magazine entitled, “Benefits and Challenges of Implementing an Area Developer Program.”

(8)

2. Investment Level v. Gain

a. Area Developers have higher capital level, but also a higher potential return

b. Area Developer are customarily paid a portion of the initial franchise fee and royalties paid by the unit franchise owner

(9)

Appendix A

Non-Registration States Full Registration States One-time Filing

Alabama California Kentucky

Alaska Hawaii Nebraska

Arizona Illinois Texas

Colorado Indiana

Delaware Maryland One-time w/Federal Trademark

District of Columbia Minnesota Connecticut

Idaho North Dakota

Iowa New York Annual Filing States

Kansas Rhode Island Michigan

Massachusetts South Dakota Utah

Mississippi Virginia

Missouri Washington Business Opportunity Exemptions

Montana Wisconsin w/ Federal Trademark

Nevada Florida

New Hampshire Georgia

New Jersey Maine

New Mexico North Carolina

Ohio South Carolina

Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Tennessee Vermont West Virginia

(10)

Appendix B ITEM 6 OTHER FEES*

Fee Amount Due Date Remarks

Royalties $4000/mo. 5th day of each month as to royalties owed for prior month

See Franchise Agreement

Advertising

fees $600/mo. 5th day of each month

as to advertising fees owed for prior month

See Franchise Agreement

Renewal Fee $25,000 When you enter into a new franchise

agreement upon the expiration of the term of your original franchise agreement

See Franchise Agreement

Interest 6% or the maximum

permitted by law Owed on past due

amounts See Franchise Agreement Transfer fee $5,000 At the time you

transfer the franchise See Franchise Agreement Sales or gross

receipts tax If required by the state or locality in which your franchise is located, the initial franchise fee, royalties, and advertising fees will be subject to sales or gross receipts tax.

5th day of the month as to monies owed for the prior month

See Franchise Agreement

*Except where otherwise specified, we impose all the fees in this table, you pay them to us, and we do not refund them.

(11)

ITEM 7

ESTIMATED INITIAL INVESTMENT*

YOUR ESTIMATED INITIAL INVESTMENT Estimated

Amount Method of

Payment When Due To Whom

Payment is to be Made

Initial Franchise Fee $30,000 (Note 1) Check Upon entering into franchise agreement

Us

Opening Advertising $500-$9,000 Check/Charge As incurred Suppliers Initial Training $0-$5,000 (Note

2)

Check/Charge As arranged Third-party vendors

Start-up

Supplies/inventory

$2,000-$3,000 (Note 3)

Credit card As incurred Suppliers

Equipment and Furniture $1,000-$5,000

(Note 4) Check/Charge Before opening Third-party vendors

Rent $0-$5,000 (Note

5) Check Monthly Landlord

Payroll $3,000-$6,000

(Note 6) Check Bi-weekly Employees

Insurance $500-$1,000 Check Bi-weekly Insurance agent

Additional Funds-3 months $3,000-$15,000 (Note 7)

Check or credit card

As incurred Third party vendors

TOTAL $40,000-$79,000

(Notes 8 and 9)

*The initial franchise fee is refundable upon the conditions described in Item 5 above.

Otherwise, none of the expenses described in this chart are refundable.

Note 1: The initial franchise fee for a new franchise is $5,000. Please see Item 5 for a description of the separate pricing applied to existing franchises.

Note 2: Normally, we will offer initial training via the internet and you will incur no expense to attend. However, we reserve the right to occasionally offer initial training live. If you attend in person, travel and living expenses will vary significantly depending upon whether you live in the local area or whether you must drive a distance, fly, rent a car, or incur lodging expenses. The cost of air travel varies considerably upon time of year, city of origination, how far in advance you purchase your ticket, and other factors.

(12)

Note 3: Your primary cost for start-up supplies and inventory will be to purchase office supplies.

Note 4: Unless you have these items already, you will need a computer, a printer, internet service, fax service, a telephone, desk, chair, and file cabinet along with standard office supplies to operate the franchise. Further, you must maintain a dedicated telephone number for use as a franchisee.

Note 5: We recommend that you operate your franchise from home and not incur any rent expense. However, if you lease an office and make improvements to the property, you will incur additional expense.

Note 6: Wage rates vary by market areas.

Note 7: Additional funds are to pay government fees, miscellaneous supplies, utility costs, internet access, professional expenses, and other items.

Note 8: Does not include royalties or advertising fees that you also pay to us. See Item 6, above, for a description of these fees.

Note 9: These figures are estimates of your initial expenses covering the first three months of your operation. We cannot guarantee that you will not have additional expenses starting the business. Do not construe the estimates as a break-even point. Your costs will depend on: how well you follow our methods and procedures; your management skills; experience and business acumen; local economic conditions; the local market for our services; the prevailing wage rate;

competition; and the sales level reached during the initial period. You should review these figures carefully with a business advisor before making any decision to purchase the franchise.

(13)

Appendix C- Sample Item 19- Negative Financial Performance Representation ITEM 19

FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE REPRESENTATIONS

The FTC’s Franchise Rule permits a franchisor to provide information about the actual or potential financial performance of its franchised and/or franchisor-owned outlets, if there is a reasonable basis for the information, and if the information is included in the disclosure document. Financial performance information that differs from that included in Item 19 may be given only if: (1) a franchisor provides the actual records of an existing outlet you are considering buying; or (2) a franchisor supplements the information provided in this Item 19, for example, by providing information about possible performance at a particular location or under particular circumstances.

We do not make any representation about a franchisee’s future financial performance or the past financial performance of company-owned or franchised outlets. We also do not authorize our employees or representatives to make any such representations either orally or in writing. If you are purchasing an existing outlet, however, we may provide you with the actual records of that outlet. If you receive any other financial performance information or projections of your future income, you should report it to the franchisor’s management by contacting [name of responsible person at franchisor, address, and phone number], the Federal Trade Commission, and the appropriate state regulatory agencies.

(14)

Appendix D- Sample Item 20 (taken from a start up franchisor) ITEM 20

OUTLETS AND FRANCHISEE INFORMATION Table No. 1

Column 1

Outlet Type Column 2

Year Column 3

Outlets at the Start of the Year

Column 4 Outlets at the End of the Year

Column 5 Net Change

Franchised 2011 0 0 0

2010 0 0 0

2009 0 0 0

Company-Owned 2011 0 0 0

2010 0 0 0

2009 0 0 0

Total Outlets 2011 0 0 0

2010 0 0 0

2009 0 0 0

Systemwide Outlet Summary

For Fiscal Years Ending December 31, 2009 to December 30, 2011

Table No. 2

Transfers of Outlets From Franchisees to New Owners (Other than the Franchisor) For Years Ending December 31, 2009 to December 31, 2011

Column 1 State

Column 2 Year

Column 3 Number of Transfers

All States 2009 0

2010 0

2011 0

Total 2009 0

(15)

2010 0

2011 0

Table No. 3

Status of Franchised Outlets

For Fiscal Years Ending December 31, 2009 to December 31, 2011*

Column 1 State

Column 2 Year

Column 3 Outlets at Start of Year

Column 4 Outlets Opened

Column 5 Termina- tions

Column 6 Non- Renewals

Column 7

Reacquired By Franchisor

Column 8 Ceased Opera- tions-Other Reasons

Column 9 Franchised Stores Operating at Year End

All States 2009 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

2010 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

2011 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Total 2009 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

2010 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

2011 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

*If multiple events occurred affecting an outlet, this table shows the event that occurred last in time.

Table No. 4

Status of Company-Owned Outlets

For Fiscal Years Ending December 31, 2009 to December 30, 2011

Column 1

State

Column 2

Year

Column 3

Outlets at Start of Year

Column 4

Outlets Opened

Column 5 Outlets Reacquired from Franchisees

Column 6

Outlets Closed

Column 7

Outlets Sold to

Franchisees

Column 8

Outlets at End of the Year

All States 2009 0 0 0 0 0 0

All States 2010 0 0 0 0 0 0

All States 2011 0 0 0 0 0 0

(16)

Table No. 5

Projected Openings as of June 30, 2012

State

Franchise Agreements Signed But Outlet Not Open

Projected New Franchised Outlets in the Next Fiscal Year

Projected New Company- Owned Outlets in the Current Fiscal Year

Alabama 0 0 0

Alaska 0 0 0

Arizona 0 0 0

Arkansas 0 0 0

California 0 0 0

Colorado 0 0 0

Connecticut 0 0 0

Delaware 0 0 0

D. of Columbia 0 0 0

Florida 0 0 0

Georgia 0 0 0

Hawaii 0 0 0

Idaho 0 0 0

Illinois 0 0 0

Indiana 0 0 0

Iowa 0 0 0

Kansas 0 0 0

Kentucky 0 0 0

Louisiana 0 0 0

Maine 0 0 0

(17)

Maryland 0 0 0

Massachusetts 0 0 0

Michigan 0 0 0

Minnesota 0 0 0

Mississippi 0 0 0

Missouri 0 0 0

Montana 0 0 0

Nebraska 0 0 0

Nevada 0 0 0

New Hampshire 0 0 0

New Jersey 0 0 0

New Mexico 0 0 0

New York 0 0 0

North Carolina 0 0 0

North Dakota 0 0 0

Ohio 0 0 0

Oklahoma 0 0 0

Oregon 0 0 0

Pennsylvania 0 0 0

Rhode Island 0 0 0

South Carolina 0 0 0

South Dakota 0 0 0

Tennessee 0 0 0

Texas 0 0 0

Utah 0 0 0

(18)

Vermont 0 0 0

Virginia 0 0 0

Washington 0 0 0

West Virginia 0 0 0

Wisconsin 0 0 0

Wyoming 0 0 0

TOTALS 0 0 0

(19)

Appendix E

*IFA Franchising World magazine article July 2012 by Carl Khalil: “Benefits and Challenges of Implementing an Area Developer Program”

References

Related documents