Partner - Head of Litigation UAE, Ibrahim & Partners
In the UAE, the commercial agency is an arrangement whereby an international company appoints an agent to distribute, offer, negotiate the sale or purchase of goods on its behalf within the UAE market for commission or profit.
The UAE Agency Law no. 18 of 1981 (the “Law”) is a federal law and is, therefore, applicable in all the Emirates. The Law which is very favourable to agents offering certain protections such as exclusivity, commission protection and other statutory protections (as described below) was amended in May 2020 by virtue of federal law no. 11 of 2020, where fundamental requirements were introduced to UAE legal entities entitled to register as commercial agents at the Ministry of Economy (“MOE”).
In light of the recent amendments of the Law, in order for a commercial agency arrangement to be registered with the MOE, the agent must now be:
There are many types of agencies under UAE law, however, the agency types we are addressing are the two (2) most common types; distribution agreements and commercial agency agreements.
Whilst a distribution agreement may have a similar commercial effect to a commercial agency agreement (for example, representation of a principal by a distributor, distribution in a certain jurisdiction, and commission based on sales), unless the distribution agreement is registered with the MOE as a commercial agency agreement, the Law will not apply to it and therefore the exclusivity and other statutory protections under the Law will not be enforceable by the distributor.
If the agreement is not registered, the Commercial Code (federal law no. 18 of 1993) (and Civil Code (federal law no. 5 of 1987) in certain circumstances) will apply. We note that the termination of such agreements, under these laws, is less onerous and will be subject to the usual contractual elements of breach, negligence and fraud.
Under the Law, registered commercial agency agreements cannot be terminated or brought to an end (even if they have expired) unless there is mutual consent or if there is a “material” reason. “Material” reason is not defined under the Law. Still, in our experience it includes (but not limited to) breach of a non-compete provision, failure to meet sales targets (when set out in the contract and hence contractual) or severe breach of KPI.
Furthermore, the agent will be able to block anyone else (including the principal) importing products, within the scope of its territory, into the UAE.
In practice, the termination of a commercial agent who is registered at the MOE can only take place by one of two methods:
The purpose of a settlement agreement with an outgoing registered agent is to (i) record the agent’s consent to the termination of the agreement (thereby avoiding the need to demonstrate a “material” reason to the committee, (ii) set out the agent's obligation to de-register the agreement (because only the agent can do so), and (iii) agree compensation to be made to the agent for termination of the agreement, with any such payment only payable following receipt of the de-registration certificate.
In case of a dispute between the principal and the agent, any decision on whether there is a “material” reason that justifies the agency's termination is subject to the committee’s discretion and their interpretation of the facts of the dispute.
According to Article 27 and 28 of the Law, a commercial agencies committee is authorized to settle any dispute between a commercial agent in the UAE and the foreign principal. The commercial agency committee will take primary jurisdiction over all registered commercial agency disputes.
The following steps need to be taken prior to being able to terminate a registered agency agreement:
The process can be time consuming, taking up to six to eight months, during this time the principal cannot appoint a different agent in the same jurisdiction, or for the same product, before the dispute with the registered commercial agent comes to an end.
UAE law recognizes the principle of freedom to contract, the parties to a contract are, in theory, free to select the governing law of that contract and select arbitration as the governing Law, and arbitration as the dispute resolution mechanism.
However, UAE law and the jurisdiction of the UAE courts is mandatory in a number of instances, including any registered commercial agency agreement that is subject to the Law. The principle and agent cannot opt out of this requirement.
A registered commercial agent protection under the Law, which preclude the principal from terminating the commercial agency without a material reason. The agent also has a right to commission in respect of sales made in the UAE by the principal or any third party, which are in breach of the agent’s exclusive rights.
Further, in cases where the principal appoints a third-party distributor during the term of its dispute with the registered agent, that registered agent may ask the court to compensate them based on the sales and/or profits of the registered products under the registered commercial agency agreement.
This type of claim is very common. In practice, we see these claims being accepted by the court, particularly in circumstances where the court is not convinced of the reasons submitted for the registered commercial agency agreement's cancellation.
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