Amicus Brief Supporting Full Enforcement of the ADA in Higher Education

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Fox & Robertson along with co-authors Claudia Center and Michelle Uzeta of the Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund and Andrew Rozynski filed an amicus brief to the Ninth Circuit urging the court to reverse decisions in Payan v. Los Angeles Community College District that (1) entered a narrow and virtually toothless injunction despite robust evidence of systemic violations of the ADA; and (2) reduced the damages awarded by the jury by over 99%. The brief was filed on behalf of DREDF and 16 other disability rights organizations.

Plaintiffs in the case were two students at Los Angeles City College (“LACC”), as well as the National Federation of the Blind and the National Federation of the Blind of California. They sued the Los Angeles Community College District (“LACCD”) under Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act alleging that LACCD and LACC discriminated against and failed to provide accommodations to blind students.

Following a trial in May 2023, the jury found that that LACCD’s websites and LACC library resources were inaccessible to blind students, that LACCD had provided inaccessible course materials and software, that it failed to make and honor required accommodations – including note-taking and recording classes – and that it actively excluded or discouraged blind students from certain classes. Based on these violations, the jury awarded $242,500 in damages to the two individual plaintiffs.

Almost a year later, the district court took two actions that the plaintiffs and amici are challenging before the Ninth Circuit: it issued an injunction that fell far short of remedying the violations identified by the jury; and it reduced the damages to $1,650.

The Injunction Should Have Remedied All Discrimination Before the Court.

In our civil legal system, juries are responsible for assessing the evidence at trial, determining whether the defendant violated the law and, if so, how much the plaintiff was entitled to recover in damages. It is up to the judge, however, to craft an injunction — an order — designed to remedy the violations. When the judge does this, they may consider both the jury’s verdict and any other evidence in the case that does not conflict with the jury’s verdict.

In the Payan case, the jury found 14 separate violations of Title II of the ADA and the judge had before him a good deal of additional evidence that these violations were systemic. He also had evidence that LACCD had not remedied these violations despite having an ostensible policy in place for over 20 years and having put other policies in place over the course of the litigation — none of which succeeded in ensuring accessibility. Clearly, the LACCD needed the force of a court order to provide accessible materials, include blind students in classes, and train professors and staff on these requirements. The injunction actually entered by the court did very little of this.

The amicus brief urged the Ninth Circuit to reinforce that courts have “not merely the power but the duty to render a decree which will so far as possible eliminate the discriminatory effects of the past as well as bar like discrimination in the future.” Bayer v. Neiman Marcus Grp., Inc., 861 F.3d 853, 873-74 (9th Cir. 2017) (quoting Albemarle Paper Co. v. Moody, 422 U.S. 405, 418 (1975)).

We also urged that court to reject the district court’s reliance on LACCD’s last minute policy changes as evidence of reform. “It is well settled that a defendant’s voluntary cessation of a challenged practice does not deprive a federal court of its power to determine the legality of the practice. . . . [I]f it did, the courts would be compelled to leave [t]he defendant . . . free to return to his old ways.” Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs. (TOC), Inc., 528 U.S. 167, 189 (2000). Here, LACCD did not “return” to its old ways; it never left them. The plaintiffs provided evidence that, even in 2023, after the issuance of the most recent policy on which the district court relied in justifying its narrow injunction, LACCD’s website and student-facing software continued to be inaccessible to blind users.

The Verdict Should Not Have Been Reduced

The district court made two distinct errors when it gutted the jury’s damages verdict. It improperly extended the Cummings case to preclude emotional distress damages under Title II; and it held that the evidence of harm before the jury consisted almost entirely of emotional distress.

In our brief, Amici explained that Cummings v. Premier Rehab Keller, P.L.L.C., 596 U.S. 212 (2022) — which held that damages for emotional distress were not available under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act — did not apply to Title II of the ADA. We also argued that, even if Cummings applied to Title II, the damages awarded by the jury were not for emotional distress but for lost educational opportunity.

Characterizing the harm incurred by the plaintiffs as “emotional” misconstrued and demeaned their experiences; if adopted more generally, this holding will impact the ability of students to seek full redress for education delayed or denied. The plaintiffs here were two dedicated students, interested in pursuing classes in higher education. When LACCD made those classes inaccessible or unavailable to them, it did not merely cause them to be emotional; it took from them a specific opportunity to learn and to further their lives and careers. Lost educational opportunity is far more than emotional harm.

F&R, DREDF submit amicus brief in support of proactive ADA enforcement.

Fox & Robertson, along with Michelle Uzeta of the Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund (“DREDF”) drafted an amicus — or “friend of the court” — brief to the Ninth Circuit supporting the time-honored and effective civil rights enforcement technique called “testing.” The amici filing the brief were DREDF, the Civil Rights Education and Enforcement Center (“CREEC”) as well as four disabled women who both need accessible businesses and facilities and have served as testers: Corbett O’Toole, Julie Reiskin, Ann Cupolo-Freeman, and Ruthee Goldkorn.

The Ninth Circuit recently issued a decision in the case of Langer v. Kiser, 57 F. 4th 1085 (9th Cir. 2023), strongly supporting civil rights testing in the context of Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act, which prohibits disability discrimination by places of public accommodation. In response, the defendant business — and several supporting businesses and trade associations as amici — are petitioning the Ninth Circuit to rehear the case. Our brief asks the court to deny that petition.

We were inspired to write by the truly astonishing level of invective and baloney in the petition and amicus briefs urging rehearing. Title III testing involves people with disabilities intentionally putting themselves in a situation to experience, observe, and challenge discrimination. Given the vast number of businesses and facilities governed by Title III, testing is essential to full compliance, so people with disabilities can go about their days integrated and included in our society.

In this case, the plaintiff, Chris Langer, is a wheelchair-user who attempted to patronize a lobster shop in San Diego, but was unable to park due to the lack of accessible spaces. Mr. Langer sued the owners of the shop in 2018 and — rather than applying a bit of paint to asphalt to bring their parking lot into compliance — the owners fought back, challenging Mr. Langer’s standing to sue, that is, his right to be in court in the first place. They did not claim that their parking lot was accessible or vow to correct their violations; they just wanted to take away Mr. Langer’s right to challenge those violations and, along with it, both the rights of other plaintiffs to challenge other Title III violations and the rights of people with disabilities in general to use and enjoy the accessible facilities that result from these lawsuits.

The Ninth Circuit’s decision — almost precisely five years after the case was filed — strongly upheld Mr. Langer’s standing as both a patron and a tester, holding that “a plaintiff’s motive for going to a place of public accommodation is irrelevant to standing.” Langer, 57 F.4th at 1084.

In response to this clear and well-supported decision, the defendants asked the Ninth Circuit to rehear the case, and gathered four sets of amici to support them. These briefs were an eyebrow-raising collection of misconstruction and mud-slinging. Lawyers who represent disabled plaintiffs in Title III cases are “unscrupulous,” “opportunistic” and “predatory,” engaging in a “transfer of wealth.” Curiously, they call Title III litigation “meritless” and “baseless” without any argument or evidence to suggest that either the Kisers’ premises or the facilities in the cases they rely on are actually in compliance — 30 years after the deadline for compliance.

So much vitriol – so little substance!

Our amicus brief pushed back hard — not with the counter-invective that hilariously populated the authors’ text threads, but with fact and law. From our brief:

  • Congress chose to make private enforcement “the primary method of obtaining compliance with the [ADA].” Doran v. 7-Eleven, Inc., 524 F.3d 1034, 1039-40 (9th Cir. 2008) (quoting Trafficante v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 409 U.S. 205, 209 (1972)).
  • Based on barriers to the courthouse, “the ADA remains a chronically under-enforced statute.”
  • The “ADA regulates more than 600,000 businesses, [and] 5 million places of public accommodation.”
  • Testers have been widely accepted as enforcers of civil rights starting with Black people intentionally riding a segregated bus or using a whites-only waiting room. Evers v. Dwyer, 358 U.S. 202, 204 (1958); Pierson v. Ray, 386 U.S. 547, 558 (1967). 
  • People with disabilities have been granted standing to challenge architectural barriers in decisions around the country — and previously in the Ninth Circuit. Suárez-Torres v. Panaderia Y Reposteria España, Inc., 988 F.3d 542, 551 (1st Cir. 2021); Mosley v. Kohl’s Dep’t Stores, Inc., 942 F.3d 752, 758 (6th Cir. 2019); Civil Rights Education and Enforcement Center v. Hospitality Properties Trust, 867 F.3d 1093 (9th Cir. 2017); Nanni v. Aberdeen Marketplace, Inc., 878 F.3d 447, 457 (4th Cir. 2017); Colorado Cross Disability Coal. v. Abercrombie & Fitch Co., 765 F.3d 1205, 1211 (10th Cir. 2014); Houston v. Marod Supermarkets, Inc., 733 F.3d 1323, 1332 (11th Cir. 2013); Harty v. Simon Prop. Grp., L.P., 428 F. App’x 69, 71 (2d Cir. 2011.)

We explained the value of testing in terms of the everyday experience of the amici:

It is the experience of the Individual Amici that illegal barriers are a routine impediment to their professional and personal lives. By the time a wheelchair-user arrives at a public accommodation, hoping to enjoy its goods, services, facilities, privileges, advantages, and accommodations, it’s too late for a lawsuit to be much use. You roll up to a place that should have been made accessible some time in the past 30 years only to discover that you can’t park, or you can’t get in the door, or you can’t use the restroom, or – in the case of the Individual Amici in the CREEC case – you can’t get from the airport to your hotel because the hotel’s van is inaccessible. The fact that you just achieved an injury-in-fact and an admit-one ticket to federal court does not let you park, or get in the door, or use the restroom, or get to your hotel.

Testers help solve this problem. Wheelchair-users who are intentional about investigating and challenging barriers can help move our society toward a time when they and others can go about their daily lives expecting and finding access to a wide range of facilities. . .

Throughout its decision, the Ninth Circuit cited to and relied on the CREEC case which was brought by (as the name suggests) CREEC, as well as the individual amici Corbett O’Toole, Julie Reiskin, Ann Cupolo-Freeman, and Ruthee Goldkorn. Because of their crucial role in the case on which the Ninth Circuit relied, these four women, along with CREEC and DREDF, were the amici asking the Court to turn away from the business-side invective and uphold an important tool for civil rights enforcement.