One Enchilada Short of a Discrimination Complaint
In March, reporting on California state appellate Justice Sills takedown of Proposition 65 "Bounty Hunters", I remarked that the opinion provided "an illustration of how well-intentioned (if overreaching) legislation can be put to less than laudable use in the wrong hands." Here is another example, this time involving the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA):
Jerry Doran is disabled, confined to a wheelchair since a 1985 automobile accident left him paralyzed and unable to walk. Since then, he has become, by his own admission, "a litigious advocate," filing more than 200 lawsuits in state and federal court against restaurants and other public establishments throughout California, alleging insufficient disability access. He has filed so many suits, in fact, that he has begun to lose track. That inability to recall the details of each occasion on which he has been wronged by one fast food emporium or another came back to haunt Mr. Doran when he went to trial before U.S. District Court Judge Cormac J. Carney earlier this month on a claim that he had suffered from discrimination based on his disability at Del Taco restaurant #415 in Mission Viejo -- conveniently located a mere 500 miles from his home.
Judge Carney returned judgment in favor of the defendant restaurant, on the ground that Doran had no standing to bring the action. Although there was no question that Mr. Doran is disabled, Judge Carney was ultimately unable to persuade himself that there was evidence sufficient to prove that Doran had actually sustained any harm at, or had ever actually been to, the Mission Viejo Del Taco.
After describing and praising the purposes of the ADA, Judge Carney's Memorandum Decision [PDF] notes that it is a tool prone to misuse:
Despite the important mission of the ADA, there are those individuals who would abuse its private cause of action provision by filing lawsuits solely with the intent to profit financially. This potential for abuse of the ADA has been well documented in the Central District of California . . . . Courts have referred to this proliferation of ADA lawsuits as a 'cottage industry' and have labeled plaintiffs who file these lawsuits 'professional plaintiffs,' 'serial plaintiffs,' and 'professional pawns.'
* * *
The consequences of this abuse of the ADA are severe: businesses and insurers are harmed, the integrity of the bar is called into question, and the public's confidence in the courts is impaired. . . . Simply put, this litigation abuse of the ADA results in the exact harmful consequences that Congress sought to eradicate by passing the ADA. As more than one court has observed, the result of this abusive litigation is that 'the means for enforcing the ADA (attorney's fees) have become more important and more desirable than the end (accessibility for disabled individuals).'
Most of the remainder of the opinion focuses on the discrepancies in Doran's responses to interrogatories, his responses to questions in deposition three weeks later, and his testimony at trial, in which key details -- such as how often and when he had actually visited the Mission Viejo Del Taco -- slipped and slid uncontrollably. Highlights:
- Doran first went to Del Taco #415 in Spring of 2002 or in Spring of 2003, unless his first visit was in 1988.
- Prior to filing suit, he went to the location twice, or perhaps three times, or possibly just once, although he may have gone there on as many as five or six occasions.
- "Mr. Doran's complaint refers to objects -- display racks and vending machines -- which do not even exist at Del Taco restaurant #415."
- "When Mr. Doran stated that he ordered an enchilada to eat during his alleged visit, he must have been testifying about a trip to a Taco Bell restaurant since Taco Bell -- and not Del Taco -- serves enchiladas."
- "When describing the barriers he encountered at Del Taco restaurant #415, Mr. Doran stated that the hand dryers in the restroom were located too high. . . . Because Del Taco restaurant #415 does not have hand dryers in its restrooms, it is clear that Mr. Doran was testifying about a visit to another restaurant, or place of public accommodation, when asked to identify the barriers he encountered."
- "When asked if there were any fast food chains that Mr. Doran frequented that he had not sued, he replied that he had not sued Kentucky Fried Chicken. In fact, Mr. Doran has sued Kentucky Fried Chicken. When asked to try again, Mr. Doran replied that he had not sued Jack in the Box. Although apparently unbeknownst to him, Mr. Doran has sued Jack in the Box also."
At least Mr. Doran resisted the temptation to respond that "they all look alike to me."
