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Bundy Law Firm PLLC

Franchise Dispute Resolution – Is Arbitration Best?

When reviewing a business contract or franchise agreement for a client, we often read the dispute resolution section first. That section describes the process the parties will use to resolve disputes and what will happen if either party decides to file a lawsuit.

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Bundy Law Firm PLLC

Problems With Your Franchisor–Beware Of Signing Amendments

If you are experiencing problems with your franchisor, beware of signing amendments to your contract or any other document purporting to resolve the problems. It is common for franchisors to give you a small concession to “help” you-but to extract a general release of claims and various factual “representations” in return.

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Bundy Law Firm PLLC

When Buying a Franchise, Think Before You Convert

When buying a franchise, think before you convert your existing business to a franchise.  If you have an existing business, you may discover opportunities to convert your business to a franchise–to get the benefits of a “well known brand”, to gain “purchasing power”, or to gain advertising and support.  You may even be tempted because of the attractiveness of the package.

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Bundy Law Firm PLLC

Why Have a Corporation or LLC if You Don’t Use It?

Why would you spend the time and money to set up a legal entity–a corporation or LLC (Limited Liability Company)–if you did not plan to use it?  It seems that almost weekly we learn that people have a legal entity they paid for–but they never took the steps necessary to properly transfer their business or its assets into the entity.

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Bundy Law Firm PLLC

Buying a Franchise–Lies, Damned Lies and Statistics

In buying a franchise, beware of the lies, damned lies and statistics–about 90% success rates, among other things.  At some point in the process of buying a franchise, someone will probably tell you that 90% of all franchises succeed. That person is lying. Years ago, the Department of Commerce produced a “study” with that statistic and unscrupulous franchisors and franchise brokers have been relying on it ever since.

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Bundy Law Firm PLLC

Buying a Franchise – “I Should Never Have Bought It”

At least weekly we hear from a franchisee, after buying a franchise, that “I should never have bought it.” That realization stings. It signals that the honeymoon has ended and the spell cast by the sales consultant has worn off. Frequently, it signals the impending economic death of the franchisee-and the ultimate “death by a thousand cuts” of the franchisor.

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Bundy Law Firm PLLC

Buying a Franchise – Don’t Sign Agreeing to Lies

Almost every franchisee, when buying a franchise, is asked to sign a document containing false statements–in order to be “awarded” a franchise.  No franchise or other business opportunity is worth signing something false to get it.

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Bundy Law Firm PLLC

Buying a Franchise – College Students Should Beware

With jobs scarce for college students and new graduates, college students should beware of an increasingly active predator-the franchise sales person. They haunt job fairs and campuses with tantalizing “opportunities” to start your own business by buying a franchise; opportunities to be free of the lines for every job opening. What they are offering, unfortunately, is indentured servitude that can be hard to escape.

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Bundy Law Firm PLLC

New Court Decisions – Duty to Protect & Enhance Brand?

On June 21, 2012, the Superior Court for the District of Montreal, Quebec, Canada entered a judgment for $16.4 Million against the Canadian Dunkin Donuts franchisor in favor of 21 former franchisees.  The court held, among other things in a new court decision, that the franchisor breached an express or implied contractual obligation to protect and enhance its brand.

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Bundy Law Firm PLLC

New Court Decisions – Franchisee or Employee?

Two new court decisions, in March and in June of this year, out of Massachusetts raise the issue of what is the line between a franchisee and an employee.  Acknowledging that Massachusetts has some unique laws regarding classification of employees and that at least one state (Georgia) has given franchisors an exemption, the decisions in those cases are worth some thought by every franchisor–and franchisee.

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