How dealers will be protected from the arbitrary exercise of manufacturers' market power is, of course, a key topic whenever one talks about the block exemption (and who doesn't?). Here's an interesting piece (and here's another) by Irvin Schein, a commercial litigator at Minden Gross LLP, about how such disputes are handled in Canada, where National Automobile Dealer Arbitration Program exists to deal with precisely that sort of thing.
It sets out rules which bind both parties once they adopt them by signing an implementation agreement, usually at the same time as signing the dealer agreement. Where there is a conflict between the program and the dealer agreement, the program explicitly takes precedence. Very similar in many ways to the much-vaunted code of good practice to be operated as a supplement to the block exemption. Make that codes of good practice, as it is unlikely that there'll be one agreed code.
The Canadian program is more than just procedural rules: it also contains substantive provisions. There's a long list of the sorts of disputes that will be covered, including refusals to renew a dealer agreement. So manufacturers and importers are obliged to renew, unless they have cause not to do so. Just as US dealers have their Day in Court Act, so Canadian ones have their day in arbitration.
Just what we need over here - some would say.
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