East Bay Times

Judge orders serial plaintiffs in 9 ADA cases to prove standing to sue

- By Joe Dworetzky

Acting on his own initiative, a federal judge sitting in San Francisco has ordered three disabled plaintiffs and their lawyers to prove they are entitled to bring their lawsuits in federal court.

Because the plaintiffs brought their federal claims under the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act, they must have legal “standing,” which requires that they genuinely expect to return to the places where they allege they experience­d discrimina­tion.

The unusual orders require the plaintiffs and their lawyers to submit declaratio­ns under the penalty of perjury that prove they genuinely intend to return to the places that they say were inaccessib­le when they first visited.

The orders, issued by U.S. District Court Judge Vince Chhabria, on April 18 and 19 apply to at least nine different cases in which the plaintiffs are represente­d by the San Diego law firm Potter Handy.

The orders follow an April 11 civil lawsuit in San Francisco Superior Court jointly initiated by the district attorneys of San Francisco and Los Angeles accusing Potter Handy of filing hundreds of fraudulent lawsuits under the ADA.

The district attorneys allege that Potter Handy was aware that their clients did not have legal standing to bring the cases in federal court, but the firm filed the cases anyway. The lawsuit seeks an order that, among other things, would require the firm to repay the amounts that defendants have paid to settle the allegedly fraudulent lawsuits over the last four years.

Two of the three disabled plaintiffs identified in the nine orders use wheelchair­s for mobility. Both are frequent ADA litigators in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.

The two litigants — Brian Whitaker and Scott Johnson — have been extremely active. A Bay City News analysis shows that in 2021, Whitaker filed 509 lawsuits in the district and Johnson, the plaintiff in six of the cases Judge Chhabria has called out, more than a thousand.

Johnson attracted media attention after he was indicted in May 2019 for failing to declare income from his ADA lawsuits on his federal tax return. Johnson denied that the income was taxable. His trial was postponed for over a year because of COVID-19 and is currently scheduled for January 2023.

Johnson holds the distinctio­n of filing the most ADA cases in the district, having filed more than 2,500 cases since 2010. He is also the statewide champion over that period, with more than 4,000 filings. While that averages to roughly a case a day every single day for 11 consecutiv­e years, in 2021, he stepped up the pace, filing more than a thousand cases that year alone.

Johnson's filings say that he physically visited the location of almost every one of the businesses he has sued, and in each case where he did, he personally encountere­d barriers to accessibil­ity. He also says that he intends to return to each of them when the barrier to accessibil­ity is remediated.

Dennis Price, a partner at Potter Handy, defends Johnson. In an interview, Price said, “Mr. Johnson is somebody that the people like to kind of pick on in this area. But if you go to Sacramento, Sacramento is viewed widely as one of the most accessible places in America. And that is entirely because of Mr. Johnson. … That's where he lives. And he aggressive­ly pursued compliance in that area and frankly, other people with disabiliti­es are the beneficiar­ies of that.”

Each of the judge's orders notes the district attorneys' lawsuit against Potter Handy, and each directs the plaintiff to “substantia­te” the allegation about an intent to return to the defendant's establishm­ent.

Potter Handy must file its own declaratio­n that describes in detail “the investigat­ion counsel conducted to ensure that their client visited the establishm­ent and intends to return there.”

The intention of returning has become a flashpoint in the standing discussion.

Standing is the legal term used to describe what a plaintiff must prove that he is entitled to litigate a claim in federal court. Without legal standing, a judge has no jurisdicti­on and must dismiss the case.

In order for an ADA plaintiff to have standing to seek an injunction, he or she must not only demonstrat­e that he or she has been injured by actions of the defendant but also that there is a real and immediate risk that he or she will suffer harm in the future if the injunction is not issued.

As a 2011 decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit put it, a plaintiff “lacks standing if he is indifferen­t to returning to the store or if his alleged intent to return is not genuine.”

The district attorneys' lawsuit said that in “vast numbers” of Potter Handy lawsuits, the firm “falsely alleges that … the Serial Filer genuinely intends to return to the sued business.”

The lawsuit — a 58-page document with almost 300 pages of exhibits — alleges that Potter Handy's clients “almost never return to the businesses they sue after a settlement is reached” and the firm uses “false standing allegation­s to maintain their scheme of deceiving the courts and businesses they sue into believing they have federal standing.”

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