Utah Code § 13-35-305

Evidence to be considered in determining cause to terminate or discontinue
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) In determining whether a franchisor has established good cause for terminating or not
continuing a franchise agreement, the executive director shall consider:
(a) the amount of business transacted by the franchisee, as compared to business available to
the franchisee;
(b) the investment necessarily made and obligations incurred by the franchisee in the
performance of the franchisee's part of the franchise agreement;
(c) the permanency of the investment;
(d) whether it is injurious or beneficial to the public welfare or public interest for the business of
the franchisee to be disrupted;
(e) whether the franchisee has adequate powersport vehicle sales and service facilities,
equipment, vehicle parts, and qualified service personnel to reasonably provide for the needs
of the consumer for the new powersport vehicles handled by the franchisee and has been and
is rendering adequate services to the public;
(f) whether the franchisee refuses to honor warranties of the franchisor under which the warranty
service work is to be performed pursuant to the franchise agreement, if the franchisor
reimburses the franchisee for the warranty service work;
(g) failure by the franchisee to substantially comply with those requirements of the franchise
agreement that are determined by the executive director to be:
(i) reasonable;
(ii) material; and
(iii) not in violation of this chapter;
(h) evidence of bad faith by the franchisee in complying with those terms of the franchise
agreement that are determined by the executive director to be:
(i) reasonable;
(ii) material; and
(iii) not in violation of this chapter;
(i) prior misrepresentation by the franchisee in applying for the franchise;
(j) transfer of any ownership or interest in the franchise without first obtaining approval from the
franchisor or the executive director; and
(k) any other factor the executive director considers relevant.
(2) Notwithstanding any franchise agreement, the following do not constitute good cause, as used
in this chapter for the termination or noncontinuation of a franchise:
(a) the sole fact that the franchisor desires:

(i) greater market penetration; or
(ii) more sales or leases of new powersport vehicles;
(b) the change of ownership of the franchisee's dealership or the change of executive
management of the franchisee's dealership unless the franchisor proves that the change of
ownership or executive management will be substantially detrimental to the distribution of the
franchisor's powersport vehicles; or
(c) the fact that the franchisee has justifiably refused or declined to participate in any conduct
covered by Section 13-35-201.
(3) For purposes of Subsection (2), "substantially detrimental" includes the failure of any proposed
transferee to meet the objective criteria applied by the franchisor in qualifying franchisees at the
time of application.

‹ Prev All Utah sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.