Pizza Hut franchisee Chaac Pizza Northeast LLC is suing their franchisor chain and Pizza Hut’s parent company Yum! Brands for $100 million, claiming Pizza Hut's Dragontail AI dispatch system caused delivery delays that impacted customer satisfaction and delivery accuracy.
The lawsuit filed May 6, 2026 in the Business Court of Texas, First Division detailed the failure of the system along with the parent company refusal to heed the warnings of the franchisee.
“Despite Chaac’s objections, Pizza Hut required Chaac to adopt and continue use of the Dragontail software system without reasonable accommodation for Chaac’s third-party delivery model (which relies exclusively on DoorDash drivers), and without providing the consultation and field support Pizza Hut promised, therefore depriving Chaac of the benefit of its bargain,” the lawsuit reads.
The plaintiffs continue by explaining the damage the AI systems caused the franchisee.
"The destruction caused by the Dragontail technology used in Chaac’s restaurants could have been avoided. Dragontail’s integration with kitchen workflow and aggregator dispatch predictably stripped Chaac’s managers of operational control, introduced delays, and invited stacking and other algorithmic behaviors that slowed production and delivery. Despite the predictable incompatibilities and the immediate deterioration in Rack Time, Delivery Time, and on-time performance, Pizza Hut demanded the continued use of Dragontail, causing cascading operational breakdowns and customer dissatisfaction,” the plaintiffs argued.
Chaac continued by accusing the defendants of breaking their own Five-Star Operations Manual through the use of the Dragontail systems. The franchisee alleged that the parent company has been making daily operations unnecessarily complicated through the implementation of the new technology.
Chaac, which operates dozens of Pizza Huts locations in Northeast states including New York, New Jersey and Maryland, is one of Pizza Hut's largest franchisees in both size and earnings. According to reporting done by Fortune.
While there has been a recent AI push to modernize Pizza Hut locations by the chain, there have been simultaneous efforts to bring back a more retro nostalgic image with more than 150 locations being outfitted with Tiffany-style lamps, classic arcade games, red cups and the restaurant's iconic red roofs. Yum! Brands, Pizza Hut's owners, said that people are traveling from neighboring states to visit the newly retro-inspired stores.