The legal debate over imposing vicarious liability of franchisors – or making franchisorsliable for the acts of their franchisees and franchisees’ employees – has flared up this year, thanks in large part to a recent court decision and policy directives emanating from the Office of the General Counsel of the National Labor Relations Board.
The franchise model assumes that franchisees merely license franchise trademarks, copyrights and other intellectual property from franchisors, and that the franchisee is not the agent of the franchisor. While franchisors may insist that the franchisee follow quality control, marketing and product consistency standards that affect the franchisor’s trademarks, franchisors typically contractually disclaim any right to control day-to-day hiring, firing and supervision of employees. But that does not prevent parties who assert claims against franchisees from also alleging that the franchisor should be liable as well, based on principles of agency. The claimant alleges that the franchisee and its employees are agents of the franchisor, and thus the franchisor is liable as well.
First, the good news for franchisors: In late August, the California Supreme Court held that Domino’s Pizza LLC was not liable for the acts of a franchisee whose manager had allegedly harassed an employee. The court’s decision was based largely on the terms of the franchise agreement between Domino’s and its franchisee. The court did note, however, that a franchisor “will be liable if it has retained or assumed the right of general control over the relevant day-to-day operations at its franchised locations … and cannot escape liability in such case merely because it failed or declined to establish a policy with respect to that particular conduct.”
Next, the bad news: in July, the Office of the General Counsel to the National Labor Relations Board announced that it would authorize complaints alleging that McDonald’s USA LLC is a “joint employer” of the employees of its franchisees. The Office of theGeneral Counsel found merit in charges that McDonald’s and its franchisees had violated the rights of employees “as a result of activities surrounding employee protests.”
The NLRB release announcing the decision did not set forth the grounds as to why McDonald’s was deemed to be a joint employer, but the NLRB Office of the General Counsel has signaled, in anotherpending case, that it seeks to change the standard for determining when “joint employer” status is applicable.Under the existing standard, which has been in place for 30 years, a finding of joint employer status is appropriate when two or more parties “share or codetermine those matters governing the essential terms and conditions of employment.” The International Franchise Association and other trade groups have filed a brief in the pending case, opposing the attempt by the NLRB Office of the General Counsel to re-define joint employer status so as to include situations where one party indirectly controls the other.
While a revision to the definition of joint employer would affect many industries, it would have a massiveimpact on the franchise industry,whose business model is predicated in large part on the distinction between franchisor and franchisee.