Gastelum v. Brixton Metro Plaza LLC
Filing
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ORDER - IT IS FURTHER ORDERED directing the Clerk of Court to file this Order in each of the listed cases and dismiss each of them for Mr. Gastelum's lack of Article III standing and enter judgment accordingly. (See document for complete details). Signed by Judge G Murray Snow on 5/25/18. (SLQ)
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WO
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IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
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FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA
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Fernando Gastelum,
Plaintiff,
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Canyon Hospitality LLC,
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ORDER
v.
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No. CV-17-02792-PHX-GMS
Defendant.
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Pending before the Court is the Motion to Dismiss of Defendant Canyon
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Hospitality, LLC for lack of standing. (Doc. 12). Recently, in Civil Rights Education
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and Enforcement Center v. Hospitality Properties Trust, 867 F.3d 1093, 1099 (9th Cir.
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2017) (hereinafter “CREEC”), the Ninth Circuit restated and clarified the broad scope of
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standing in ADA cases involving public accommodations as it relates both to the
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deterrent effect doctrine and to tester standing. Plaintiff has filed 133 similar cases
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against hotels in the Phoenix area. Because the issue of standing affects all of Plaintiff’s
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cases before the Court, the Court ordered a consolidated hearing at which the Court could
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consider Mr. Gastelum’s standing in all his cases then pending before this Court. In
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addition to the Canyon Hospitality case, Mr. Gastelum had eleven other ADA complaints
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against hotels pending in this Court. The hearing held was noticed for ten of them.1
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After reviewing the evidence from the hearing, the Court determines that Plaintiff
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The hearing in Gastelum v. Drury Southwest Inc., No. 17-cv-03626-PHX-GMS
(D. Ariz. filed Oct.10, 2017) was postponed for one week at the request of the Defendant.
(Doc. 39).
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nevertheless fails to meet the requirements for standing in every case. Thus, the Court
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grants Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss and enters this Order dismissing both the Canyon
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Hospitality case and all other cases brought by Plaintiff that were the noticed subject of
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the motion hearing.
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BACKGROUND
Plaintiff Fernando Gastelum’s left leg is amputated below the knee, requiring him
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to move around either with a prosthetic leg or the aid of a wheelchair.
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approximately 85% of his time in a wheelchair. In his Complaint,2 as it pertains to his
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interaction with Defendant Canyon Hospitality’s hotel, Plaintiff merely alleges that “on
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or about August 17, 2017” “Plaintiff reviewed a 3rd party lodging website to book an
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ambulatory and wheelchair accessible room.” (Doc. 1, pp. 15, 26, 30).
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Plaintiff, this website did not contain sufficient information for Plaintiff to determine
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whether Defendant’s hotel complied with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), 42
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U.S.C. §§ 12181–89. (Doc. 1, p. 5). Next, Plaintiff visited Defendant’s first-party
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website, www.gcuhotel.com, attempting to find the information that was not available on
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the third-party website. Plaintiff found that the first-party website also lacked enough
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detail on ADA compliance. Id. at p. 8. Because he could not ascertain from the websites
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whether the hotel complied with the ADA, he thereafter called Defendant’s hotel to
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inquire whether it was ADA compliant and was assured by an employee, Rena, that it
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was. Id. at pp. 33–35. Nevertheless, on August 18, 2017, Plaintiff visited Defendant’s
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hotel to verify in person whether the hotel was ADA compliant and suitable for Plaintiff
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to stay.
He spends
According to
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In his visit to this Defendant, Plaintiff noted 22 areas where Defendant’s external
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facilities were allegedly out of compliance with the ADA. Id. at pp. 10–12. That same
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day, August 18, 2017, Plaintiff filed the present lawsuit seeking injunctive relief under
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the ADA. (Doc. 1). Plaintiff does not state in his Complaint how any of the failures of
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As the motion was filed in the Canyon Hospitality case, the Court uses facts from
it as illustrative. Should there be relevant distinctions between the cases, the Court will
provide that information and cite to those cases separately.
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compliance discriminate against him or his disability, but the Complaint does make the
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bare allegation that he “intends to book a room at the Defendant’s hotel once Defendant
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has removed all accessibility barriers.” (Doc. 1, pp. 16, 19, 30). On that same date,
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Plaintiff also filed a separate complaint concerning a separate hotel with virtually
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identical allegations. See Gastelum v. BRE/LQ Properties LLC, No. 17-cv-02802-PHX-
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DGC (D. Ariz. filed Aug. 18, 2017).
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At the time of the filing of Defendant Canyon Hospitality’s Motion to Dismiss,
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Plaintiff had, in the previous six weeks, filed over thirty-three ADA complaints against
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hotels in the Phoenix area alleging that he has been personally harmed by the ADA
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violations of those hotels.
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acknowledged that he has filed a total of approximately 125 similar lawsuits in the
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District of Arizona against various hotels in the Phoenix area. At present, Plaintiff has
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apparently filed 133 lawsuits. He has continued to file such suits after the hearing.3 The
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complaints filed in all the cases pending in front of this Court are substantially similar,
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boilerplate complaints. In all the complaints, Mr. Gastelum alleges the same process of
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checking a third-party website, then a first-party website, and finally an in-person visit.
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If the websites make different levels of disclosure of ADA accommodations, the
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complaints reflect the specific disclosures, seemingly copied and pasted from the website.
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See, e.g., Gastelum v. AUM Hospitality Ventures, LLC, No. 18-cv-0104-PHX-GMS (D.
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Ariz. filed Jan. 11, 2018) (Doc. 1, pp. 9–10). All of the complaints contain the same
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language that Mr. Gastelum “intends to book a room at the Defendant’s hotel once
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Defendant has removed all accessibility barriers.” See, e.g., id. at p. 4. No complaint
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contains further detail on Mr. Gastelum’s return plans.
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different list of ADA barriers found on Plaintiff’s inspection, though many of the same
By the time the hearing was held on this matter Plaintiff
Each complaint contains a
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The cases assigned to this Court and filed after this Court set a hearing are:
Gastelum v. DHILLON Properties & Investments LLC, No. 18-cv-01283-PHX-GMS (D.
Ariz. filed April 24, 2018), Gastelum v. Concord CS Chandler LLC, No. 18-cv-01429PHX-GMS (D. Ariz. filed May 9, 2018), and Gastelum v. Chandler HG LLC, No. 18-cv01453-PHX-GMS (D. Ariz. filed May 11, 2018). An additional case was reassigned
from a magistrate judge to this Court after the hearing: Gastelum v. CP Buttes LLC, No.
18-cv-00940-PHX-GMS (D. Ariz. filed March 26, 218).
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barriers appear on each complaint. Thus, while details gleamed from the inspections are
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changed, the substance of the rest of the complaints are almost exactly the same.
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Defendant Canyon Hospitality operates the Grand Canyon University Hotel in
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Phoenix, and moved the Court to dismiss on the grounds that Plaintiff has failed to plead
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the necessary requirements to establish Article III standing. (Doc. 12). In light of the
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questions raised by Defendant in its motion that were similar to virtually all of the cases
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filed by Mr. Gastelum in this Court, and the Court’s obligation to sua sponte determine
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whether there is standing in its cases, see Bernhardt v. County of Los Angeles, 279 F.3d
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862, 868 (9th Cir. 2001), the Court held evidentiary hearings on May 4, 2018 and May
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11, 2018 that pertained to all of the cases filed by Mr. Gastelum that were being heard by
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this Court.
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Mr. Gastelum was present to testify on both occasions. Mr. Gastelum testified that
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he lives in Casa Grande, Arizona, approximately fifty-five miles from Phoenix, Arizona.
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He is 57 years old and has lived in Casa Grande all of his life. Mr. Gastelum testified
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that since he began to file ADA lawsuits against lodgings in the Phoenix area last year he
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has stayed overnight at ten hotels.
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Mr. Gastelum sued each of these ten hotels for failure to comply with the ADA.4 He
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testified that he has not returned to any of the hotels with which he has settled his claims,
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or in which he has stayed, because they have not yet completed their compliance with all
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ADA standards. In addition to staying at the ten lodgings, he has paid visits within the
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past year to many other Phoenix area lodgings to assess whether they comply with the
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ADA.
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the principal reasons that he comes to Phoenix: Mr. Gastelum meets with his attorney,
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Mr. Peter Strojnik, in Phoenix, twice a week. Mr. Gastelum’s son, Eric, who receives
He never stayed in the same hotel twice.
Inspecting hotels for ADA compliance in the company of his attorney is one of
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To the best of this Court’s knowledge, the suits involving only one of these
hotels are in front of this Court: Gastelum v. Hilton Garden Inns Management LLC, No.
18-cv-00820-PHX-GMS (D. Ariz. filed March 13, 2018) (Doc. 28, pp. 7, 15). The
Complaint in this case (Doc. 1) contains no substantial differences in its allegations
compared to the complaints filed in the cases in which Mr. Gastelum has not stayed the
night and paid for a room.
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compensation for the inspection of the hotels, and Mr. Strojnik himself generally
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accompany Mr. Gastelum to the hotels. In fact, Mr. Gastelum stated in a deposition that
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he usually stays in the car while Eric and Mr. Strojnik inspect the hotel.5 Gastelum v.
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Pride Hospitality, No. 17-cv-03607-PHX-GMS (D. Ariz. filed Oct. 8, 2017) (Doc. 27,
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Ex. 1, p. 106:10–16). Mr. Gastelum testified that he had been given a three-ring binder
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prepared by his counsel Mr. Strojnik6 which contains materials and instruction by which
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he can ascertain whether a lodging is in compliance with all ADA regulations. He takes
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the binder with him when he visits those lodgings. If the lodging is out of compliance
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with the ADA, Mr. Strojnik files suit on his behalf.
Mr. Gastelum estimates that he
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visits four Phoenix-area hotels a week, usually two per day. But he generally returns to
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Casa Grande for the evening without staying at any of the Phoenix lodgings that he has
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visited. In addition to bringing suit against each of the ten lodgings at which he actually
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stayed during the past year, he has brought suit against more than 120 other facilities that
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he has visited or otherwise contacted to evaluate for ADA compliance. And as the facts
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of some of the cases demonstrate, the lawsuit is at least sometimes filed on the same date
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as Mr. Gastelum’s visit. At the hearing, Mr. Gastelum testified that it was his intent and
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desire in bringing these suits to represent all persons with disabilities in asserting their
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rights to ADA compliance, and that he had a general desire to live in communities and
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stay at lodgings that accommodated persons with disabilities as full members of the
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“Q: Do you stay in the car during the compliance checks?
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A: Most of the time, I would say, yes.”
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Q: And Eric gets out and ––
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A: Yes.
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Q: And Mr. Strojnik is there sometimes as well?
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A: He is there I would say 95 percent of the time.”
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Mr. Strojnik created this binder and has, in at least two cases, requested
attorney’s fees for his time spent preparing the materials. Gastelum v. Pride Hospitality,
No. 17-cv-03607-PHX-GMS (D. Ariz. filed Oct. 8, 2017) (Doc. 22, p. 7); AUM
Hospitality Ventures, No. 18-cv-0104-PHX-GMS (Doc. 15, p. 7).
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community.
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As has been discussed, an examination of the Complaints in these lawsuits reveals
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that the Complaints are boilerplate complaints that have identical language in many
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particulars and are minimally tailored to accommodate the facts of the individual lodging
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defendant.
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brought. His attorney covers the filing fee. The amount of filing fees alone paid to file
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the suits in the last year exceeds Mr. Gastelum’s yearly household income of $44,000.7
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His wife is employed and works a regular work week from Monday to Friday. In his
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deposition in the Pride Hospitality case, Mr. Gastelum testified that his wife of over
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twenty years is unaware that he is a plaintiff in ADA cases and that he frequently travels
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to Phoenix with his son to investigate hotels and meet with his attorney. No. 17-cv-
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03607-PHX-GMS (Doc. 27, Ex. 1, pp. 26:6–27:4).
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Mr. Gastelum has not personally paid the filing fees for any of the cases
Mr. Gastelum’s counsel has already settled 6 of the suits that were filed in this
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Court for undisclosed sums.
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successfully terminated by his counsel. Pride Hospitality, No. 17-cv-03607-PHX-GMS
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(Doc. 27, Ex. 1, pp. 173:24–174:10). In two of the cases that are currently before this
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Court the parties have resolved the underlying matters but have asked the Court to award
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attorneys’ fees to Mr. Gastelum’s counsel as representing the prevailing party. In both
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cases, Mr. Gastelum’s counsel has quickly settled the case against the Defendants and
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then sought attorney’s fees and costs awards of $21,291 and $12,643, respectively,
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without doing any substantial discovery in the case. Pride Hospitality, No. 17-cv-03607-
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PHX-GMS (Doc. 22); AUM Hospitality Ventures LLC, No. 18-cv-00104-PHX-GMS
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(Doc. 15).
Mr. Gastelum is paid $350 for every case that is
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Mr. Gastelum stated that he likes to come to Phoenix to attend baseball games, and
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to go to karaoke bars and shopping with his wife, and meet with his attorney.
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Mr. Gastelum filed an evidentiary memorandum with the court, prior to the first hearing.
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The Court’s filing fee is $400.00. With 133 cases filed in under a year, the total
filing cost for Mr. Gastelum equates to $53,200.
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In the evidentiary memorandum he provided receipts from all of the hotels at which he
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has stayed and all of the sporting events he attended in Phoenix in the last year. The
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sporting events are for Diamondback games together with two football related events.
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(Doc. 28). To the extent that Mr. Gastelum attempts to suggest that he stays overnight in
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Phoenix when he attends Diamondbacks games, the receipts and dates of the tickets
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demonstrates that he does not. The dates he has stayed in lodgings in the Phoenix in the
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last year do not coincide with dates on which he was attending Diamondbacks games,
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and he provides no corroboration that he stayed with his wife on such occasions when
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shopping or going to karaoke with her.
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Prior to the time he began initiating these lawsuits, Mr. Gastelum generally
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returned to Casa Grande for the night when he had business in Phoenix, or he stayed with
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his friend who lived in Phoenix or with his sister who lives in Mesa. He believed he had
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stayed at hotels in the Phoenix area approximately ten other times in his life during all of
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which he has resided in Casa Grande. On his family’s household income––$44,000 per
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annum––Mr. Gastelum estimated that he would be able to stay in hotels in the Phoenix
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area a maximum of twelve to fifteen times per year. Mr. Gastelum stated that it would be
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impossible to stay at all of the approximately 125 (now 133) hotels he has sued, but he
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would like to stay at some.8 He testified that he would return to and stay at any of the
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hotels he has sued if the alleged ADA violations were fixed.
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Mr. Gastelum has never before visited Defendant Canyon Hospitality, nor has he
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since visited. Nor at the hearing was he able to set forth any persuasive reasons why he is
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likely to visit the Defendant Canyon Hospitality in the future.
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although Mr. Gastelum did visit the Defendant’s facility as a tester, he did so only with
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the purpose of filing a lawsuit to obtain injunctive relief as a part of pattern of litigation
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against many Phoenix area hotels.
The Court finds that
He has offered no sufficiently persuasive reason to
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“Q: So in the past 279 days you filed about 125 lawsuits. Were you planning on
actually staying at all the hotels you were visiting, at all 125 hotels?
A: That would be impossible if I’m looking at two per day. I would like to stay at
one of those.” (Doc. 41, p. 29:14–18).
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believe that he would revisit the facility, or any other facility in the cases for which the
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hearing was noted, except to the extent that such a revisitation or an avowal of
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willingness to revisit would be necessary to maintain standing to obtain injunctive relief.
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Mr. Gastelum did identify a few generalized reasons why he might want to return
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to other hotels he has sued, including, for example, their proximity to water parks or
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malls. But he offered no reasonable plans to believe that he had any specific intent or
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likelihood of doing so. Further, Mr. Gastelum has sued 133 hotels in the Phoenix area
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and avowed in doing so that he intended to book a room at each one of them once the
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defendant resolved its ADA issues. However, Mr. Gastelum testified that he has never
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stayed at a hotel more than once.
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In his verified complaints Mr. Gastelum does not avow that he would actually
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return to any of the facilities against which he is bringing suit, only that he would “book a
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room” in such facilities. In none of the complaints does Mr. Gastelum allege a specific
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persuasive reason why he would return to the lodging he sues. Because of the volume of
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cases he has brought, his limited reasons for staying in Phoenix, the proximity to Casa
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Grande to which he easily can, and frequently does, return for his overnight stays, the
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evident enterprise in conjunction with his attorney to sue many hotels in the Phoenix area
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for ADA compliance, his personal finances, his past travel habits, and his testimony that
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he could not return to all hotels he has sued, the Court finds that he has failed to establish
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a sufficient likelihood that he would return to any of the hotels that are the defendants in
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the cases in which this hearing is noticed.
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Based upon the above facts the Court concludes that Mr. Gastelum and his counsel
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Mr. Strojnik are engaged in a joint enterprise in which they are filing multiple suits
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against any Phoenix area lodgings that they believe to be out of compliance with the
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ADA in some respect or respects. They are filing such suits without reference to whether
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Mr. Gastelum actually had any intent to make future visits to those facilities for reasons
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not related to his pursuit of ADA claims against them. Given the facts of this case Mr.
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Gastelum has failed to establish that he would have any likelihood of revisiting these
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facilities except to the extent it would be deemed necessary for him to do so to bring suit
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against each of the Defendants.
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DISCUSSION
I.
Legal Standard
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Standing under Article III of the Constitution is a constitutional limitation on a
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court’s subject matter jurisdiction and cannot be granted by statute. See Cetacean Cmty.
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v. Bush, 386 F.3d 1169, 1174 (9th Cir. 2004) (citing Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504
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U.S. 555, 576–77 (1992)). Because standing is a jurisdictional question, it is properly
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addressed in a Rule 12(b)(1) motion instead of a Rule 12(b)(6) motion. Cetacean Cmty.,
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386 F.3d at 1174. “A district court may hear evidence and make findings of fact
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necessary to rule on the subject matter jurisdiction question prior to trial, if the
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jurisdictional facts are not intertwined with the merits.” Rosales v. United States, 824
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F.2d 799, 803 (9th Cir. 1987).
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II.
Analysis
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The Constitution requires that litigants “who seek to invoke the jurisdiction of the
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federal courts must satisfy the threshold requirements imposed by Article III . . . by
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alleging an actual case or controversy.” City of Los Angeles v. Lyons, 461 U.S. 95, 101
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(1983). This Constitutional prerequisite of standing is so fundamental that federal courts
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are required to consider these issues sua sponte. See Bernhardt, 279 F.3d at 868. Three
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elements must be present for a Plaintiff to have standing: (1) the Plaintiff must have
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“suffered an injury in fact—an invasion of a legally protected interest which is (a)
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concrete and particularized, and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical;”
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(2) there must be a “causal connection between the injury and the conduct complained
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of;” and (3) it must be “likely, as opposed to merely speculative, that the injury will be
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redressed by a favorable decision.” Lujan, 504 U.S. at 560–61. When a plaintiff seeks
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injunctive relief, there is an additional requirement of showing “a sufficient likelihood
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that [the plaintiff] will again be wronged in a similar way . . . [t]hat is, . . . a real and
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immediate threat of repeated injury.” Fortyune v. American Multi-Cinema, Inc., 364 F.3d
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1075, 1081 (9th Cir. 2004) (quoting Lyons, 461 U.S. at 111, and O’Shea v. Littleton, 414
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U.S. 488, 496 (1974)) (internal quotations omitted).
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statutes, such as the ADA, courts are instructed to take a “broad view” of constitutional
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standing. Doran v. 7–Eleven, Inc., 524 F.3d 1034, 1039–40 (9th Cir. 2008) (citing
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Trafficante v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 409 U.S. 205, 209 (1972)).
In the context of civil rights
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But, Congress “cannot erase Article III’s standing requirements by statutorily
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granting the right to sue to a plaintiff who would not otherwise have standing.” Raines v.
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Byrd, 521 U.S.811, 820 n. 3 (1997).
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elevating intangible harms does not mean that a plaintiff automatically satisfies the
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injury-in-fact requirement whenever a statute grants a person a statutory right and
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purports to authorize that person to sue to vindicate that right.” Spokeo, Inc. v. Robbins,
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136 S.Ct. 1540, 1549 (2016). Plaintiffs cannot “allege a bare procedural violation,
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divorced from any concrete harm, and satisfy the injury-in-fact requirement of Article
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III.” Id.
As such, “Congress’ role in identifying and
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A.
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Although Defendant Canyon Hospitality challenges all three elements of standing,
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the crux of the argument is that Mr. Gastelum has not suffered an injury in fact, and thus,
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all other deficiencies flow from that.9 An injury-in-fact is (a) concrete and particularized,
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and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical. Under the ADA, “[n]o
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individual shall be discriminated against on the basis of disability in the full and equal
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enjoyment of the goods, services, [or] facilities . . . of any place of public
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accommodation.” 42 U.S.C. § 12182(a). Hotels are places of public accommodation. Id.
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at § 12181(7)(A).
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Injury-in-Fact
1.
Actual or Imminent Injury
In the context of ADA discrimination claims, the Ninth Circuit recognizes a
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Defendant argues that because there is no injury, there can be no causation.
Similarly, Defendant argues that without an injury, there is nothing to redress. (Doc. 12,
pp. 8–9). These claims are derivative of the general claim that Plaintiff has not suffered
an injury-in-fact. As such, the Court will only address the question of whether the
Plaintiff has suffered an injury-in-fact.
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deterrent effect doctrine. For the requirement that the injury be actual or imminent, “a
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disabled individual who is currently deterred from patronizing a public accommodation
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due to a defendant’s failure to comply with the ADA has suffered ‘actual injury.’” Doran,
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524 F.3d at 1040 (quoting Pickern v. Holiday Quality Foods Inc., 293 F.3d 1133, 1138
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(9th Cir. 2002)). The Ninth Circuit recently clarified that a plaintiff need not personally
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encounter a barrier in order to be injured.
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knowledge’ of a barrier, rather than the source of that knowledge, that is determinative.”
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CREEC, 867 F.3d at 1099. Injury is imminent when a plaintiff “is threatened with harm
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in the future because of existing or immediately threatened non-compliance with the
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ADA.” The ADA provides that plaintiffs need not “engage in a futile gesture if such
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person has actual notice that a person or organization . . . does not intend to comply with
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the ADA.” 42 U.S.C. § 12188(a)(1). Where an individual knows of ADA violations at a
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public accommodation, he is not required to keep returning in order to show imminent
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injury. Instead, the ongoing deterrence is sufficient to satisfy the requirement of an actual
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and imminent injury. Doran, 524 F.3d at 1040 (quoting Pickern, 293 F.3d at 1138).
Instead, “[i]t is the plaintiff’s ‘actual
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Similarly, in CREEC, the Court noted that the plaintiff’s motivation in visiting the
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public accommodation is irrelevant. This so-called “tester standing” rule means that a
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plaintiff can visit or otherwise obtain information about a public accommodation solely
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for the purpose of ensuring ADA compliance and with the intent to bring a lawsuit if
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deficiencies are found. An ADA plaintiff has suffered an “actual” injury, even if the
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plaintiff had no intention or plan to visit the hotel at the time of the acquisition of
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knowledge of ADA noncompliance. CREEC, 867 F.3d at 1101–02.
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Mr. Gastelum has actual knowledge of the alleged barriers, and may have even
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encountered some of them. And the fact that he has visited the lodgings as a tester does
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not negate his knowledge of or encounters with the alleged barriers. The recognition of
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the deterrent effect and tester standing doctrines, however, does not do away with the
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standing requirements necessary to obtain injunctive relief nor does it free the Plaintiff
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from the obligation to show injury-in-fact with respect to the discrimination alleged in the
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complaint.
2.
Injunctive Relief
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A plaintiff seeking injunctive relief, as Mr. Gastelum does in each of his
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complaints here, must also show that there is a “real and immediate threat of repeated
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injury.” Lyons, 461 U.S. at 111.
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threat of injury in two ways. First, the plaintiff can show that “he intends to return to a
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noncompliant accommodation and is therefore likely to reencounter a discriminatory
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architectural barrier.” Chapman v. Pier 1 Imports (U.S.) Inc., 631 F.3d 939, 950 (9th Cir.
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2011). Or second, the plaintiff can show that the “discriminatory architectural barriers
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deter him from returning to a noncompliant accommodation” which he would otherwise
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visit in the course of his regular activities. Id. Even in holding that the ADA permits
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tester standing in CREEC, and the further holding that a personal encounter with an
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alleged barrier was not a prerequisite for standing purposes, the Ninth Circuit did not
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relax the requirement that the Plaintiff demonstrate real and immediate threat of repeated
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injury by showing a legitimate intent to visit again the public accommodation in question.
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In CREEC, the Ninth Circuit stated that “past exposure to illegal conduct does not in
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itself show a present case or controversy . . . the plaintiff must allege continuing, present
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adverse effects stemming from the defendant’s actions.” 867 F.3d at 1098 (quoting
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Lyons, 461 U.S. at 102) (quotation marks omitted).
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continuing adverse effects by showing a “defendant’s failure to comply with the ADA
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deters her from making use of the defendant’s facility.” CREEC, 867 F.3d at 1098. But,
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to be deterred from making use of the defendant’s facility, one must have a true desire to
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return to the facility but for the barriers. See Chapman, 631 F.3d at 949 (“Article III,
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however, requires a sufficient showing of likely injury in the future related to the
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plaintiff’s disability to ensure that injunctive relief will vindicate the rights of the
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particular plaintiff rather than the rights of third parties.”). CREEC shows no desire to
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change the clear holding in Chapman that a plaintiff must make a sufficient showing of
28
likely injury in the future. See also Pickern, 293 F.3d at 1138 (noting, in the context of
An ADA plaintiff may show a real and immediate
- 12 -
An ADA Plaintiff may show
1
discussing the actual and imminent injury requirement, that plaintiff has “visited
2
Holiday’s Paradise store in the past[,]. . . that he prefers to shop at Holiday markets and
3
that he would shop at the Paradise [location] if it were accessible); Doran, 524 F.3d at
4
1040 (“As to whether Doran’s injury is actual or imminent, Doran alleged that he had
5
visited the 7-Eleven store on ten to twenty prior occasions, . . . that the store is
6
conveniently located near his favorite fast food restaurant in Anaheim, and that he plans
7
to visit Anaheim at least once a year on his annual trips to Disneyland.”); D’Lil v. Best
8
Western Encina Lodge & Suites, 538 F.3d 1031, 1037–38 (9th Cir. 2008) (“In order to
9
show the actual and imminent nature of her injury, then, D’Lil must demonstrate her
10
intent to return to the Santa Barbara area and, upon her return, her desire to stay at the
11
Best Western Encina if it is made accessible. . . . [S]he explained that her preference for
12
staying at the Best Western Encina during future trips to Santa Barbara was based on the
13
hotel’s proximity to downtown, its accessibility from the freeway, and its amenities,
14
including lush gardening and fresh country linen quilts.”).
15
Both the Tenth and the Eleventh Circuit opinions cited in CREEC continue to hold
16
that a tester plaintiff seeking injunctive relief must demonstrate a real and immediate
17
threat of repeated injury. Colorado Cross Disability Coalition v. Abercrombie & Fitch
18
Co., 765 F.3d 1205, 1211–12 (10th Cir. 2014) (noting that “the fact that ‘tester standing’
19
exists under [the ADA] does not displace the general requirements of standing” and
20
finding that a plaintiff who testified that she intends to return to a store in the mall at least
21
six times in the next year has demonstrated a real and immediate threat of injury);
22
Houston v. Marod Supermarkets, Inc., 733 F.3d 1323, 1336 (11th Cir. 2013) (finding that
23
a tester plaintiff who had visited the defendant’s store twice in the past and lived 30 miles
24
from the store has sufficiently demonstrated a likelihood of future injury).
25
In determining whether a plaintiff has a future intent to visit the public
26
accommodation at issue, factors such as “(1) the proximity of the place of public
27
accommodation to plaintiff’s residence, (2) plaintiff’s past patronage of defendant’s
28
business, (3) the definitiveness of plaintiff’s plans to return, and (4) the plaintiff’s
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1
frequency of travel near defendant” are relevant. Harris v. Del Taco, Inc., 396 F.Supp.2d
2
1107, 1113 (C.D. Cal. 2005).
3
Court emphasized that a past visit to a hotel is not necessarily sufficient to establish the
4
likelihood of a future visit. It noted that while “[r]equiring a plaintiff to ‘personally’
5
encounter a barrier in order to obtain an injunction under Title III might screen out
6
plaintiffs who do not in fact intend to use the facility—that is, plaintiffs for whom an
7
injury is not actually imminent”–– a requirement of past visits was both under- and over-
8
inclusive. CREEC, 867 F.3d at 1099. It could be under-inclusive because “evidence of
9
concrete travel plans would be sufficient to show that a disabled plaintiff intends to visit a
10
facility, even if she has not travelled there in the past.” Id. at 1100. Such a rule could also
11
be over-inclusive because “in the absence of travel plans, a past visit might not be
12
sufficient evidence of imminent future harm.” Id. The CREEC court thus expressed
13
confidence that making “case-by-case determinations about whether a particular
14
plaintiff’s injury is imminent is well within the competency of the district courts.” 867
15
F.3d at 1100 (citing Houston, 733 F.3d at 1335–37) (using similar factors as in Harris to
16
evaluate the imminence of a plaintiff’s injury).
But even these factors are not definitive. The CREEC
17
In CREEC, the three Plaintiffs each identified a separate hotel under common
18
ownership at which they would stay in the future if that hotel would cease to discriminate
19
against their disability by providing equivalent transportation to wheelchair bound
20
patrons.
21
lodgings in the Phoenix metropolitan area for their failure to comply with ADA
22
requirements without specifying how it relates to his disability and without setting forth
23
any reason why he would plan to visit that hotel again. In each of the complaints at issue
24
here, Mr. Gastelum identically alleges that “Plaintiff intends to book a room at the
25
Defendant’s hotel once Defendant has removed all accessibility barriers, including the
26
ones not specifically referenced herein, and has fully complied with the ADA.” (Doc. 1,
27
p. 4). But, Plaintiff cannot substitute a “formulaic recitation of the elements of a cause of
28
action” in the place of factual allegations. Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544,
By contrast, although he lives close by, Mr. Gastelum has sued over 130
- 14 -
1
555 (2007). Plaintiff must provide facts that establish an intent to visit Defendant’s hotel
2
in order to have standing; Plaintiff cannot simply state the rule. While the need to look at
3
the specificity with which the Plaintiff has pleaded the likelihood of future visits might be
4
less stringent had he only sued one hotel in the Phoenix area, as had the Plaintiffs in
5
CREEC, the inquiry must be more exacting where he has expressed only a rote intent to
6
“book rooms” in 133 other lodgings in the same geographic area.
7
Mr. Gastelum’s standard avowal in his verified complaints that he intends to “book a
8
room” at each lodging is not sufficient to establish concrete injury, absent a showing that
9
he would likely visit that hotel again (as opposed to merely booking a room) for some
10
purpose other than maintaining his litigation against that hotel. Avowing to a desire to
11
“book a room,” is different than avowing an intent to actually visit a hotel.
Further,
12
Mr. Gastelum has only visited Defendant Canyon Hospitality’s hotel on the visit
13
that gave rise to this lawsuit, and he did not stay there then. He has not pled any facts
14
about a specific plan to return or about why he is likely to want to stay or visit at
15
Defendant’s hotel in the future. Cf. D’Lil, 538 F.3d at 1037–38. At the evidentiary
16
hearing, Mr. Gastelum could not remember why he had been interested in staying at the
17
GCU Hotel. Mr. Gastelum and his counsel Mr. Strojnik are engaged in a joint enterprise
18
in which they are filing multiple suits against any Phoenix area lodgings that they believe
19
to be out of compliance with the ADA in some respect or respects. They are filing such
20
suits without reference to whether Mr. Gastelum actually intends to actually revisit those
21
facilities except to the extent he would be required to do so to maintain the right to pursue
22
litigation against them. This is insufficient to grant him standing against any of these
23
Defendants.
24
Moreover, even though Mr. Gastelum likes to travel to Phoenix to attend sporting
25
events, karaoke bars, and go shopping, there is insufficient support that Mr. Gastelum
26
actually stays in hotels after he comes to the Phoenix area for those purposes, or that he
27
would stay at a particular hotel or hotels again for those purposes.
28
stay at the Hilton Garden Inn, and that case is pending before this Court. But as the
- 15 -
Mr. Gastelum did
1
CREEC court noted, a past stay is not indicative of an intent to return. 867 F.3d at 1100.
2
To accord standing allowing Plaintiff to sue Defendants when he can establish no
3
likelihood of again visiting their facilities in the course of his normal activities other than
4
maintaining litigation against a defendant would violate the standing principles set forth
5
in Raines, Spokeo, and Lyons. A plaintiff must show a likelihood of future injury, Lyons,
6
461 U.S. at 111, and that alleged statutory violations exist does not give rise, on its own,
7
to an injury. Spokeo, 136 S.Ct. at 1549. Nor does “booking a room” establish sufficient
8
future concrete injury absent some likelihood that the Plaintiff would actually visit the
9
hotel again for some non-litigation purpose. Without a showing of future injury and true
10
deterrence from returning, the alleged ADA violations at the lodgings are mere statutory
11
violations that do not give rise to standing in Mr. Gastelum to bring suit.
12
In addition, at hearing and in his motion papers Mr. Gastelum seemed to suggest
13
that he has standing due to a broader right under the statute to stay at a hotel that does not
14
discriminate against any person based on disability. But his desire to lodge in a hotel that
15
provides equal access to persons of all disabilities is insufficient to provide him with
16
standing to represent such persons’ claims especially if he cannot establish a real non-
17
litigation related reason why he is likely to stay at that particular hotel in the future.
18
Further, as will be explained below, his Complaint does not adequately allege how he is
19
deprived access due to the failure of the hotel to comply with ADA regulations, let alone
20
how others with separate disabilities are denied access. It is true that in the Fair Housing
21
context, Havens Realty Corp. v. Coleman, 455 U.S. 363 (1982) held that those who lived
22
close to the apartment complex at issue would also have standing to sue for steering
23
practices that deprived the neighbors of the right to the benefits of interracial associations
24
that arise from living in integrated communities. Id. at 376. But Havens Realty further
25
specified that such “neighborhood” standing would not extend to everyone in the city or
26
the county. Id. at 377 (“It is indeed implausible to argue that petitioners’ alleged acts of
27
discrimination could have palpable effects throughout the entire Richmond metropolitan
28
area. At the time relevant to this action the city of Richmond contained a population of
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1
nearly 220,000 persons, dispersed over 37 square miles. . . . Our cases have upheld
2
standing based on the effects of discrimination only within a ‘relatively compact
3
neighborhood[.]’ . . . We have not suggested that discrimination within a single housing
4
complex might give rise to ‘distinct and palpable injury,’ . . . throughout a metropolitan
5
area.”).
6
Even assuming that the same logic would apply to the neighborhoods in which
7
hotels as opposed to apartment buildings are located, Mr. Gastelum lives in Casa Grande.
8
That is not sufficiently close to any of the Defendants’ hotels to suggest that
9
Mr. Gastelum suffers a personal loss because of the proximity of his residence to the
10
hotel that he alleges is discriminating against persons who have disabilities that he does
11
not.10 Thus he is unable to assert a theory of “neighborhood standing” on behalf of others
12
with disabilities he does not have when he is not a member of a “relatively compact
13
neighborhood” near any of these hotels and he cannot establish through facts a real
14
likelihood to visit these hotels in the future that arises other than from his desire to bring
15
suit against them. While this Court does not doubt the good-faith desire of Mr. Gastelum
16
to be an advocate for the disabled, he has no standing to assert claims for disabilities that
17
he himself does not possess, or for a failure to follow regulations that do not affect his
18
personal ability to access the facility.
19
3.
Concrete and Particularized Injury
20
In addition to his failure to sufficiently demonstrate a likelihood of revisiting any
21
of the facilities that are the subject of this order, Mr. Gastelum has failed to indicate in
22
any of the complaints how the facility constructs a barrier to his particular disability. A
23
barrier in a public accommodation must “interfere with the plaintiff’s ‘full and equal
24
enjoyment’ of the facility.” Chapman, 631 F.3d at 947 (quoting 42 U.S.C. § 12182(a)).
25
But, “a ‘barrier’ will only amount to such interference if it affects the plaintiff’s full and
26
27
28
10
Even a hotel in Chandler, Arizona, a city in the southeastern part of the Phoenix
metropolitan area, would be approximately thirty miles from Casa Grande. A hotel in
Peoria, Arizona, a city in the northwestern part of the Phoenix metropolitan area, would
be approximately sixty miles from Casa Grande.
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1
equal enjoyment of the facility on account of his particular disability.” Chapman, 631
2
F.3d at 947 (emphasis added). A plaintiff may show a concrete and particularized injury
3
by “stating that he is currently deterred from attempting to gain access” to the public
4
accommodation due to that barrier. Doran, 524 F.3d at 1040. Plaintiff only has standing
5
to assert discrimination that results from the disabilities that he has. The statutory
6
language in the ADA contains broad language that does not limit rights based on the
7
motivation of the plaintiff. The ADA states that “[n]o individual shall be discriminated
8
against on the basis of disability” and that “any person who is being subjected to
9
discrimination on the basis of disability” may bring a lawsuit. 42 U.S.C. §§ 12182(a),
10
12188(a)(1) (emphasis added). But, even when the statute is read at its most permissive,
11
it still only provides standing to anyone who is discriminated against on the basis of
12
disability. See, e.g., Havens Realty, 455 U.S. at 375 (holding that, in a case involving
13
black and white testers for violations of the Fair Housing Act, the white testers who were
14
not lied to regarding housing availability did not have standing to assert FHA claims). In
15
Chapman, the Ninth Circuit held that the plaintiff’s complaint alleging “that he is
16
‘physically disabled,’ and that he ‘visited the Store’ and ‘encountered architectural
17
barriers that denied him fully and equal access’” was insufficient.
18
Mr. Chapman attached an Accessibility Survey to his complaint which “simply identifies
19
alleged ADA . . . violations without connecting the alleged violations to Chapman’s
20
disability, or indicating whether or not he encountered any one of them in such a way as
21
to impair his full and equal enjoyment of the Store.” Id. Plaintiffs “cannot satisfy the
22
demands of Article III by alleging a bare procedural violation.” Spokeo, 136 S.Ct. at
23
1550.
Id. at 954.
24
As in Chapman, Mr. Gastelum’s formulized Complaint filed in each action fails to
25
detail how his injury is particularized to his specific disability. Mr. Gastelum’s complaint
26
“does nothing more than perform a wholesale audit of the defendant’s premises.” Id. at
27
955 (internal quotations omitted). The Complaint lists over twenty alleged violations of
28
the ADA.
(Doc. 1, pp. 10–11).
However, this “cannot substitute for the factual
- 18 -
1
allegations required in [a] complaint to satisfy Article III’s requirement of an injury-in-
2
fact.” Chapman, 631 F.3d at 955. Like the Chapman complaint, Mr. Gastelum “does not
3
even attempt to relate the alleged violations to his disability.” Id. Instead, this Court is
4
left “to guess which, if any, of the alleged violations deprived him of the same full and
5
equal access that a person who is not wheelchair bound [or who does not use prosthetics]
6
would enjoy.” Id. Mr. Gastelum states that these violations deterred him from booking a
7
room at the hotel, but he does not discuss “how any of [the alleged violations] deter him
8
from visiting the [hotel] due to his disability.” Id.
9
violations vary from complaint to complaint, depending on the results of the inspection
10
by Mr. Gastelum, his son, and Mr. Strojnik, the “wholesale audit” nature of the complaint
11
does not change. Each complaint details dozens of alleged violations without relating the
12
violations to Mr. Gastelum’s disability.
Although the specific alleged
13
Mr. Gastelum alleges, for example, that the Defendant is noncompliant with the
14
ADA because “[s]ome parts of the accessible routes have a cross slope greater than
15
1:48.” (Doc. 1, p. 11). As the Supreme Court held in Spokeo, however, Mr. Gastelum
16
cannot “allege a bare procedural violation, divorced from any concrete harm” and
17
maintain standing to bring the lawsuit. 136 S.Ct. at 1549. Mr. Gastelum has not alleged
18
that a cross slope that varies from the statutory requirements concretely impacts his
19
ability to enjoy the public accommodation.
20
alleges that the “[o]utside smoking area is inaccessible,” the “[p]et waste station by the
21
pool is inaccessible,” and the “[w]ashing machines have improper reach ranges.” (Doc. 1,
22
p. 11). At the evidentiary hearing, Mr. Gastelum testified that he does not smoke, he
23
does not have a pet, and he has never done laundry at a hotel. The Complaint in
24
Gastelum v. CPX Phoenix Airport Gateway Opag, LLC, No. 18-cv-00068-PHX-GMS (D.
25
Ariz. filed Jan. 8, 2018) alleges that “[t]here is no van accessible parking space” and
26
“[t]he shuttle is not ADA accessible.” (Doc. 1, pp. 13–14). At the evidentiary hearing,
27
Mr. Gastelum testified that he does not drive a van and has never used a shuttle from a
28
Phoenix hotel. The same allegation about a lack of van accessible parking is contained in
Additionally, for example, the Complaint
- 19 -
1
the Complaint in AUM Hospitality Ventures, LLC, No. 8-cv-00104-PHX-GMS (Doc. 1,
2
p. 14). Similarly, the Complaint in Gastelum v. Kuber-Rambdas Investments, LLC, No.
3
18-cv-00470-PHX-GMS (D. Ariz. filed Feb. 12, 2018) alleges that “[t]he van accessible
4
parking space has a width less than the required minimum of 132 inches. Mr. Gastelum
5
alleges in the Hilton Garden Inns Management Complaint that “[t]he area with the
6
microwave and the mini fridge has an insufficient clear floor space for a parallel
7
approach,” “[t]he iron in the accessible guest room is located at an improper reach range
8
over 48 inches high,” “[t]he fitness center door requires a twisting of the wrist motion to
9
open,” and “[t]he guest laundry room requires a twisting of the wrist motion to open.”
10
Mr. Gastelum testified that he has only ever brought snacks to a hotel, he has never used
11
an iron in a hotel, he has never done laundry in a hotel, and he has never used a hotel’s
12
fitness center. No. 18-cv-00820-PHX-GMS (Doc. 1, p. 15). Even assuming that the
13
Defendant’s hotel is in violation of the ADA in those regards, Mr. Gastelum cannot show
14
that he suffers an injury due to these violations. Finally, Mr. Gastelum’s prayer for relief
15
seeks an “[i]njunctive relief order to alter Defendant’s place of public accommodation to
16
make it readily accessible to and usable by ALL individuals with disabilities.” (Doc. 1 at
17
p. 12) (emphasis added). It might be easier for both Mr. Gastelum and the hotel to allow
18
a disabled person like Mr. Gastelum to assert all ADA deficiencies for all disabled
19
persons so that such matters could theoretically be resolved in the course of one lawsuit.
20
But, Mr. Gastelum simply does not have standing to assert discrimination for disabilities
21
that he does not have, nor can he assert a failure to comply with regulations that do not
22
discriminate against him. Nothing in CREEC implies that tester standing lessens the
23
factual pleading requirements.
24
B.
25
The Complaints in all of these actions also bring state law claims of negligence,
26
negligent misrepresentation, failure to disclose, and consumer fraud. Because the Court
27
has concluded that it does not have jurisdiction over Mr. Gastelum’s ADA claim, the
28
Court no longer has supplemental jurisdiction over the remaining state law claims.
Other Causes of Action
- 20 -
1
28 U.S.C. § 1367.
2
CONCLUSION
3
Mr. Gastelum has failed to show injury-in-fact or a likelihood of future injury, as
4
required for injunctive relief. Mr. Gastelum’s Complaint contains no detail on how the
5
Defendant’s alleged ADA violations act as a barrier and interfere with Mr. Gastelum’s
6
equal enjoyment of the accommodation. Because Mr. Gastelum has failed to show
7
injury-in-fact, he lacks standing to pursue his claims in federal court.
8
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that the Motion to Dismiss of Defendant
9
Canyon Hospitality, LLC (Doc. 12) is GRANTED. The Clerk of Court is directed to
10
terminate and enter judgment accordingly.
11
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED directing the Clerk of Court to file this Order in
12
each of the following cases and dismiss each of them for Mr. Gastelum’s lack of Article
13
III standing and enter judgment accordingly:
14
1.
Gastelum v. Brixton Metro Plaza LLC, No. 17-cv-02903-PHX-GMS
15
2.
Gastelum v. 11111 North 7th Street Property De LLC, No. 17-cv-03017-
16
PHX-GMS
17
3.
Gastelum v. Drury Southwest Inc., No. 17-cv-03626-PHX-GMS
18
4.
Gastelum v. Marriott Int’l Inc., No. 17-cv-04667-PHX-GMS
19
5.
Gastelum v. CPX Phoenix Airport Gateway Opag LLC, No. 18-cv-0068-
20
PHX-GMS
21
6.
Gastelum v. CGD Tempe L P, No. 18-cv-00512-PHX-GMS
22
7.
Gastelum v. Hilton Garden Inns Management LLC, No. 18-cv-00820-PHX-
24
8.
Gastelum v. Debaca Land & Cattle LLC, No. 18-cv-01112-PHX-GMS
25
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that in addition to directing the Clerk of Court to
26
file this Order, the Motions for Attorney’s Fees are moot and the following cases shall
27
remain closed.
28
///
23
GMS
- 21 -
1
1.
Gastelum v. Pride Hospitality Inc., No. 17-cv-03607-PHX-GMS (Doc. 22).
2
2.
Gastelum v. AUM Hospitality Ventures LLC, No. 18-cv-00104-PHX-GMS
3
4
(Doc. 15).
Dated this 25th day of May, 2018.
5
6
7
Honorable G. Murray Snow
United States District Judge
8
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