Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

‘ Serial plaintiffs’ do legal battle with businesses over disabled access

- By Patrick May San JoseMercur­y News

SANJOSE, Calif.— You’ve heardof painting the townred.

When John Ho rolled through San Jose, hewent with blue.

On one fateful weekend in 2012, the wheelchair- bound paraplegic from Southern California said he dropped in on nearly 80 small businesses in the South Bay that he deemed to have inadequate parking or access for the disabled. Then he sued them all, saddling economy motels, burger joints and other humble establishm­ents with fat bills for lawyer fees, settlement­s and buckets of blue paint to bring their properties up to code.

While targeting some legitimate violations, Ho and other socalled “serial plaintiffs” across the country have been blasted by some for taking advantage of the law to line their own pockets, andapplaud­edby others as champions for the disabled. But that debate aside, this much is clear: Ho’s legal carpetbomb­ing left scores of mom- and- pop establishm­ents, some of them struggling to stay afloat, quickly out of tens of thousands of dollars.

“There are a lot of outraged people around here,” said Carole Rast, part- owner of Roy’s Station, a cafe on the main drag of San Jose’s Japantown. “First the restaurant across the street got sued because the front entryway allegedlyw­asn’t big enough for his wheelchair. Then Santo Market got hit for its bathroom and parking lot. Next he sued the Happi House Restaurant, and then just kept moving right through the neighborho­od.

“A lot of us in Japantown are sitting here on pins and needles,” said Rast, “wondering who’ll be next.”

Ho and his San Diego- based attorney, Ray Ballister Jr. with the Center For Disability Access, aren’t the onlyonessu­ingupa storm. Because of state laws that make it easy for plaintiffs to seek damages and fees in disability

Lawsuits by the numbers

cases, California has long proven fertile ground for the litigious disabled who crank out dozens of lawsuits over alleged violations of the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act, or ADA. In fact, California is now ground zero in ADA- related litigation, with an estimated 42 percent of all cases in the country filed in the Golden State.

And with each new filing, more questions arise about the efficacyan­denforceme­ntof a 24- year- old lawdesigne­d to change theway society accommodat­es its disabled citizens.

“This is a shameful abuse of a well- intended law,” said San Jose Councilman Sam Liccardo, who’s beenworkin­g with business owners to fix ADA violations without huge cashpayout­s that threaten to sink theircompa­nies. “We know there are plenty of small businesses out there hanging by a thread right now, and these lawsuits don’t make things any easier.”

And while advocates such as Debra Sue Stevens with the SiliconVal­ley Independen­t Living Center applaud the ADA, even she admits that overly zealous litigators “give all of us in the disability community a black eye. Taking$ 10,000froma small- businessow­ner won’t help fix the problemof accessibil­ity, so these lawsuits just end up draining the resources of the business owner.”

Ho, who according to court documents lives in the Southern California town of Rosemead, could not be reached for comment. His attorney did not return several calls seeking comment. But attorneys such as Tom Frankovich in San Rafael, who has made a very good living over the years filing lawsuits for disabled clients, says plaintiffs likeHoare actually doing defendants a favor.

“In the end, it’s going to be less expensive for any of the placesHo sued, andwhosett­le quickly, than it would be if some more experience­d ADA attorney got involved,” said Frankovich, who has represente­d disabled clients all over the East Bay and San Francisco. “So, as much as people don’t like to be sued, it may be to the business owner’s advantage because they’ve saved themselves a lot of money.”

Besides, Frankovich said, “if you ask a business nicely to fix something, they never do. Litigation is the only thing that gets anything done.”

One of his clients

is

Marshall

Loskot,

1990:

25,000- 35,000:

42:

56.7 million:

30.6 million: wheelchair- using herb farmer whose website says he’s currently developing a “paraplegic accessible garlic clove separator.” Asked in a brief phone interview about his dozens of lawsuits, many in the East Bay, Loskot said, “Everything in law is confidenti­al. I can’t tell you anything, not even my attorney’s name.”

Improvemen­ts demanded by plaintiffs like Loskot can come at a high cost to smallbusin­ess owners. Vikas Patel said he was alreadywor­king on a planned ADA- parking upgrade at his Santa Clara Econo Lodge whenHo showed up.

“Unfortunat­ely, my wife died while we were working on it and in the meantime I got sued,” said Patel, who has owned the franchise since 1984. “These are good laws and they need to be followed, but when my attorney explained to them that we’d already donesomeof thework andwewere in the midst of doing more, thatwasn’t enough for them. They said, ‘ That’s fine, butwe still need to get paid.’ “

The ordeal cost Patel nearly $ 20,000 in settlement and legal fees, along with the constructi­on work at the hotel, where Ho had complained about a lack of proper parking spaces.

“It costs us quite a bit to run this place and the hotel business took a big hit over the past five years,” Patel said. “This lawsuit really hurt us; it didn’t put us out of business, but it definitely hit the bottom line.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY KARL MONDON/ BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ?? Vikas Patel, owner of the EconoLodge in Santa Clara, Calif., shows the handicappe­d parking he added after being sued for alleged ADA violations. He paid $ 20,000 to defend himself against serial ADA litigant John Ho and his San Diego attorney, who have...
PHOTOS BY KARL MONDON/ BAY AREA NEWS GROUP Vikas Patel, owner of the EconoLodge in Santa Clara, Calif., shows the handicappe­d parking he added after being sued for alleged ADA violations. He paid $ 20,000 to defend himself against serial ADA litigant John Ho and his San Diego attorney, who have...
 ??  ?? Patel
Patel

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States