What is Dryject's obligation to provide written notice of a material breach to the franchisee?
Dryject Franchise · 2025 FDDAnswer from 2025 FDD Document
As a result, You acknowledge and agree that the occurrence of any of the following events, each or any of which shall be considered a Material Breach default of this Agreement, constitutes reasonable grounds for termination of this Franchise Agreement by Us; provided, however that You shall be given the opportunity, within fifteen (15) days after receipt of written notice of such Material Breach, to cure the default by promptly providing proof of cure to Us.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, if the breach is curable but is of a nature which cannot reasonably be cured within such fifteen (15) day period and You have commenced and are continuing to make good faith efforts to cure the breach, You shall be given an additional reasonable period of time to cure the default, and this Agreement shall not terminate.
If any such default is not cured within the time as specified by Us, this Agreement shall terminate effective immediately without further notice to You.
You shall be in default under this Agreement for failure to comply with any of the requirements imposed by the Agreement, or for failure to carry out the terms of this Agreement in good faith.
Such defaults include, but are not limited to:
Source: Item 8 — BUSINESS RELATIONSHIP (FDD pages 68–229)
What This Means (2025 FDD)
According to Dryject's 2025 Franchise Disclosure Document, Dryject must provide the franchisee with written notice of a material breach of the franchise agreement. The franchisee then has fifteen (15) days after receiving the written notice to cure the default by providing proof of the cure to Dryject.
However, if the breach is curable but cannot be reasonably cured within fifteen (15) days, and the franchisee has started and continues to make good faith efforts to fix the breach, Dryject will allow an additional reasonable period to cure the default. If the franchisee does not cure the default within the specified time, the agreement terminates immediately without further notice.
The FDD states that failure to comply with any requirements or to carry out the terms of the agreement in good faith constitutes a default. These defaults include, but are not limited to, the items listed in the franchise agreement.