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Legal: Tony Wilson

Want to buy a franchise? Read this first

Tony Wilson | Columnist profile | E-mail
Vancouver—

If you're considering “buying” a franchised business in Canada and you live in Ontario, Alberta or PEI (and soon, New Brunswick), consider yourself lucky because they have specific legislation that protects franchisees.

In the current Canadian “disclosure jurisdictions” of those three provinces, the franchisor is required by law to give prospective franchisees a Franchise Disclosure Document, and a franchise agreement cannot be entered into until at least 14 days after the delivery of that document to the franchisee. In Ontario, no deposit can be provided or any other contract entered until that time period passes.

The three provinces provide substantial remedies to franchisees when the franchisor has not provided the disclosure document, or the franchisor has entered into a franchise agreement before the expiry of the 14-day “cooling off period,” or the franchisor has failed to disclose (or has improperly disclosed) a material fact.

It's a substantial legal document, and it must contain all agreements the franchisee is required to enter (including subleases and general security), as well as the franchisor's most recent audited or reviewed financial statements.

Here area few important things to know about the disclosure document:

1. Once you've read it in detail, speak to a franchise lawyer. Franchise law is a fairly specialized area of practice in Canada, and there's a lot of crucial information in the disclosure document, particularly relating to costs and fees to acquire and operate the franchised business. Remember that franchisors spend tens of thousands of dollars on their own lawyers to draft these documents. Part of the lawyer's job is to ensure that all material facts related to the franchise are disclosed, but another part is to “spin” any unhelpful or negative facts in such a way that they are not perceived as poorly as they could be. Your franchise lawyer should be able to help you with that.

2. Some of the key items that must be disclosed involve whether franchisors or their principals are involved in any litigation, whether they've been involved in bankruptcy proceedings over the past six years, or whether they are involved in administrative proceedings such as an investigation under securities legislation. Pay attention to these sections carefully. If there is litigation against or initiated by the franchisor, you may be able to access some of the court pleadings directly to get a better handle on what the allegations are.

3. The disclosure document will list current and former franchisees. Whether they are in Moncton or Nanaimo, talk to them. If they are nervous about discussing the franchise with a total stranger like you, or they fear it could get them into trouble with the franchisor, consider asking three simple questions:

• Are you happy you bought it?

• Are you making money?

• If you had to do it all over again, would you buy it?

If the answers are no, no and no, this should give you a pretty good indication as to whether you should make this investment. Happy franchisees will tell you they're happy and they will rave about their franchise. Unhappy ones won't. Out of fairness, speak to more than one franchisee and as many former franchisees as you can. The disclosure document should list them all.

4. U.S. franchisors may provide you with a copy of their disclosure document for the United States (now called an FDD). Some American franchisors who don't do much business in Canada will presume, incorrectly, that “Canada's the 51st state anyway, so why should it matter if I give them my U.S. document?”

It matters a lot because the U.S. Disclosure Document may describe facts that have no bearing on the franchise opportunity in Canada. An unmodified U.S. disclosure document will not contain certain information required to be disclosed here.