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argue against the changes have raised the possibility of tied selling, or forcing consumers to buy insurance as a condition of getting other financial products. The Canadian Bankers Association points
http://www.wikidfranchise.org/20060515-mps-play
Kevin Marron
Think of franchising and you may conjure up images of look-alike fast-food restaurants on a highway strip, but the franchises that Cliff Sweeney is selling are located at the intersection
http://www.wikidfranchise.org/20000331-franchising-arrives
.
The owners of Bark & Fitz stores, a high-end franchise dealing in luxe doggie products and known for selling treats in bakery-style cases, are trying to separate themselves from the company name
http://www.wikidfranchise.org/20100527-store-owners
filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court to force its decade-old Triangle franchise to sell back three restaurants to the company for violating franchise agreements.
The Arlington, Va., chain alleges
http://www.wikidfranchise.org/20040521-bbq-chain
requires them to pay royalties for 15 years even if the business has been forced to close, according to the lawsuit.
The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
July 8, 2008
Quiznos franchise owners sue sandwich company
http://www.wikidfranchise.org/20080708-quiznos-franchise
Many franchisees are selling their stores, disaffected by what they say was too sweet a sales pitch by Cold Stone headquarters. Owners say potential revenue numbers were misleading
http://www.wikidfranchise.org/20080616-cold-stone
other potential suitors to submit bids. 1800mattress.com already has reached tentative agreement to sell the company to rival Sleepy's for $2.1 million, so the ruling by Judge Dennis Milton means
http://www.wikidfranchise.org/20090327-bankruptcy-judge
of 1800mattress.com earlier filed a petition to force the retailer into Chapter 7 bankruptcy liquidation, but 1800mattress.com has asked to switch the case to a Chapter 11 proceeding.
The franchise group's
http://www.wikidfranchise.org/20090326-franchise-group
Franchising can be another form of servitude.'' Del Blaske, 44, owns 22 franchised Burger King outlets in Minnesota. Last year he was diagnosed with a terminal liver disease and decided to sell out
http://www.wikidfranchise.org/19910201-franchise-hell
by force. “We work them out of it,” he says of those who don’t fit into the system or have financial difficulties. “If they’re cooperative, we’ll help them sell the stock and they can get out.”
Mr. Walker
http://www.wikidfranchise.org/20000809-franchisor-knows