1. What Triggers Franchise Litigation and How Claims Are Filed
Most franchise litigation begins when a breach is too severe to resolve without court intervention. The nature of the breach determines which claims are filed, which forum is selected, and which remedies are available.
What Are the Most Common Causes of Franchise Litigation?
Franchise litigation arises when a material breach, FDD fraud, or wrongful termination demands court intervention.
| Cause of Litigation | Claimant | Primary Legal Theory |
|---|---|---|
| Wrongful termination | Franchisee | Breach of contract / statutory franchise law |
| Unpaid royalties or fees | Franchisor | Breach of contract |
| FDD misrepresentation | Franchisee | Fraud in the inducement / state franchise law |
| Post-term non-compete violation | Franchisor | Breach of contract / trade secret misappropriation |
| Territory encroachment | Franchisee | Breach of contract / implied covenant |
| Trademark infringement (post-termination) | Franchisor | Lanham Act / breach of contract |
Business litigations counsel evaluates the materiality of the breach, selects the appropriate forum, and structures the complaint to maximize the available legal remedies.
How Does Franchise Insolvency Affect Pending Litigation?
When a franchisee files for bankruptcy, the automatic stay halts all franchisor enforcement actions. The franchise agreement becomes an executory contract. It may be assumed or rejected under Section 365 of the Bankruptcy Code.
Franchise insolvency counsel evaluates the automatic stay's application, advises on assumption and rejection strategy, and protects franchise rights throughout the bankruptcy proceeding.
2. Fraud, Misrepresentation, and Business Tort Claims in Franchise Litigation
Franchise litigation frequently involves claims beyond simple breach of contract. Fraud in the inducement and business tort claims can significantly expand liability exposure.
How Do Franchisees Prove Fraud in the Inducement?
Fraud in the inducement arises from a material FDD or pre-sale misrepresentation. That misrepresentation must have induced the franchisee to sign. The franchisee must prove five elements: a false statement of material fact, knowledge of falsity or reckless disregard for the truth, intent to induce reliance, actual reliance, and resulting damages. The most common misrepresentations include inflated Item 19 earnings projections without a reasonable basis, false Item 20 statistics about franchisee success rates, and assurances about franchisor support or territorial exclusivity that prove unfounded.
Business torts counsel evaluates the FDD's accuracy, assesses the franchisor's pre-sale representations, and builds the evidentiary record needed to sustain fraud claims through summary judgment.
When Can a Party Seek Declaratory Relief or Injunctive Enforcement?
Declaratory relief allows a party to obtain a court ruling on its contractual rights. It is available before the other party initiates breach proceedings. A permanent injunction prohibiting trademark and trade dress use is one of the most powerful post-trial remedies. Franchisors pursue it after prevailing at trial. Permanent injunctive relief requires proof that the plaintiff prevailed on the merits, that the defendant's conduct caused irreparable harm, and that the balance of hardships and public interest favor relief.
Declaratory relief counsel evaluates the timing and strategic value of declaratory relief, structures the injunction motion, and manages enforcement of injunctive orders against non-compliant franchisees.
3. Discovery, Damages Calculation, and Expert Witness Strategy
Franchise litigation is discovery-intensive. Both parties must produce financial records, communications, and operational data.
What Does Discovery Look Like in a Franchise Case?
Discovery in franchise litigation is extensive. It covers financial records, communications, and operational data. These define each party's obligations and the economic consequences of the breach. Communications ( including field inspection reports, compliance notices, and termination letters ) are critical to establishing each party's knowledge and conduct. Damages evidence includes lost profit projections, comparable franchisee performance data, and business valuation reports. Electronically stored information (ESI) is a major focus. Franchise systems generate substantial digital records through POS systems and email archives. The failure to implement a litigation hold can result in sanctions, adverse inference instructions, or case-dispositive discovery rulings.
Discovery obligations counsel implements the litigation hold, manages ESI production, and defends against overbroad discovery demands in franchise cases.
How Are Damages Calculated in Franchise Litigation?
Franchise litigation damages include lost profits, unpaid royalties, compensatory damages, and punitive damages. The new business rule limits speculative lost profits. It applies to franchisees with no established earnings history. Expert witnesses on lost profits must use reliable methodology, comparable data, and defensible assumptions to survive Daubert motions and cross-examination at trial.
Business fraud counsel retains and prepares the damages expert, challenges the opposing party's damages methodology, and structures the damages case to withstand Daubert scrutiny at trial.
4. Multi-Franchisee Litigation, Class Actions, and Trial Strategy
Franchise litigation sometimes involves multiple franchisees with similar claims. Class action treatment or coordinated litigation can multiply the franchisor's exposure significantly.
Can Franchisees File a Class Action against a Franchisor?
Franchisee class actions face significant certification hurdles. Rule 23 requires numerosity, commonality, typicality, and adequacy of representation. Common questions must predominate over individual issues. Common questions include whether the franchisor made uniform FDD misrepresentations, systematically underfunded the marketing fund, or applied termination criteria discriminatorily. The Class Action Fairness Act gives federal courts jurisdiction over class actions exceeding $5 million in controversy with minimal diversity, moving most large franchise class actions into federal court.
Consumer class actions counsel evaluates class certification strategy, drafts the class complaint, and manages the class action through certification, merits litigation, and settlement or trial.
How Should Defendants Approach Franchise Litigation Strategy?
Effective franchise litigation defense starts with early evaluation of the plaintiff's claims. A structured response plan follows.
- Motion to dismiss: Attack complaint deficiencies, enforce arbitration clauses, and challenge fraud claims that fail Rule 9(b) particularity requirements
- Counterclaims: Assert breach of contract, unpaid royalties, trademark infringement, and unjust enrichment to shift the litigation's economic dynamics
- Summary judgment: Eliminate weak claims using the contract's clear language, financial records, and the plaintiff's admissions in discovery
Unjust enrichment is a powerful counterclaim when the franchisee used the franchisor's trademarks and proprietary methods without paying the required royalties. The measure of recovery is the reasonable value of the benefit the defendant received.
Elements of unjust enrichment counsel evaluates counterclaim strategy, structures the unjust enrichment claim, and integrates counterclaims into the overall litigation defense to maximize negotiating leverage and trial position.
23 Apr, 2026

