Under what general condition can Deck Medic terminate the Franchise Agreement with cause?
Deck_Medic Franchise · 2024 FDDAnswer from 2024 FDD Document
| d. | Termination by franchisee | 16.B. | You may terminate the Franchise Agreement if you are in |
|---|---|---|---|
| compliance with its terms, we are in material breach of the Franchise Agreement, and we fail to cure the material breach within 30 days of receiving written notice or, if the breach cannot be cured within 30 days, such period of time that is reasonable to cure the material breach. | |||
| e. | Termination by franchisor without cause | Not applicable | Not applicable. |
| f. | Termination by franchisor with "cause" | 16.A. | We can terminate if you are in default of the terms of the Franchise Agreement. |
| g. | "Cause" defined-curable defaults | 16.A.(3), 16.A.(4) | You have 10 days to cure a default where you fail to pay any fees and/or obligations due to us and/or to an affiliate of ours or if you fail to pay a supplier without, as determined by us, a legal justification, provided that the foregoing defaults were not intentionally and knowingly in violation of the Franchise Agreement. You will have 30 days to cure a default where you fail to: timely lease a location that we approve for your Deck Medic Business; timely develop and open your Deck Medic Business; operate your Deck Medic Business in accordance with the specifications, standards, and requirements set forth in our Manuals; develop or operate your Deck Medic Business in compliance with all federal, state, and local laws, rules, and regulations, unless, such violation poses a threat to public health or safety; maintain insurance coverage that we require; comply with our standards, systems or specifications as we may designate or as otherwise designated in the operations manual; fail to operate your Deck Medic Business in conformity with our System or otherwise violate the Franchise Agreement, except as to events of default that are not curable. |
| h. | "Cause" defined-non-curable defaults | 16.A.(1), 16.A.(2) | The following are defaults that cannot be cured: three or more instances where you commit a curable default, whether or not you timely cured such default in each instance; you intentionally and knowingly refuse to comply with the terms of the Franchise Agreement, and/or the standards specifications, and/or requirements set forth in the operations manual and/or as communicated to you by us from time to time; you intentionally, knowingly, or negligently operate the Franchised Business in violation of applicable laws, rules, and regulations and, in doing so, create a foreseeable, imminent, and/or immediate threat to the health and safety of others; you abandon the Franchised Business; you or your Owners intentionally made a material |
Source: Item 17 — RENEWAL, TERMINATION, TRANSFER AND DISPUTE RESOLUTION (FDD pages 34–39)
What This Means (2024 FDD)
According to Deck Medic's 2024 Franchise Disclosure Document, Deck Medic can terminate the Franchise Agreement with cause if the franchisee is in default of the terms of the Franchise Agreement. The FDD outlines both curable and non-curable defaults that can lead to termination.
Curable defaults include failing to pay fees or obligations to Deck Medic or its affiliates, failing to pay a supplier without legal justification, failing to timely lease an approved location, failing to timely develop and open the Deck Medic Business, and failing to operate the business according to the standards and requirements in the manuals. Other curable defaults are not operating in compliance with laws, failing to maintain required insurance, failing to comply with Deck Medic's standards, systems, or specifications, and generally violating the Franchise Agreement.
Non-curable defaults include committing three or more curable defaults, intentionally refusing to comply with the Franchise Agreement or operational standards, intentionally or negligently operating the business in violation of laws that create a threat to public health and safety, abandoning the franchised business, or making intentionally misleading statements to Deck Medic. Prospective franchisees should carefully review Item 17 of the FDD to fully understand the specific conditions that could lead to termination of their franchise agreement.