Landis' Labyrinth v. Whitaker

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 3, 2025
DocketB339581
StatusPublished

This text of Landis' Labyrinth v. Whitaker (Landis' Labyrinth v. Whitaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Landis' Labyrinth v. Whitaker, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 12/3/25 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

LANDIS’ LABYRINTH, INC., B339581

Plaintiff and Appellant, Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. v. 23STCV00964

BRIAN WHITAKER et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Timothy Patrick Dillon and Rolf M. Treau, Judges. Reversed in part, affirmed in part.

Samuel T. Rees for Plaintiff and Appellant.

Hannah Law, Jeffrey Hannah and Russell Handy for Defendants and Respondents. _________________________ Landis’ Labyrinth, Inc. (Landis) appeals a judgment in a malicious prosecution action. In the underlying case, Brian Whitaker sued Landis for violating the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq., the ADA) and the Unruh Civil Rights Act (Civ. Code, § 51 et seq., the Unruh Act).1 Russell Handy and his firm, Potter Handy, LLP, represented Whitaker in the action. Whitaker alleged he visited Landis’s toy store but was dissuaded from making a purchase because the sales counter was too high for him to use comfortably. A federal court dismissed the ADA claim as moot, and the parties tried the Unruh Act claim in the superior court before the Honorable Frederick C. Shaller. Judge Shaller ruled in favor of Landis, concluding Whitaker fabricated a story about shopping at the store and being deterred by the height of the sales counter. Judge Shaller found Whitaker instead visited the store solely to look for ADA violations so he could file a lawsuit. After its success on the Unruh Act claim, Landis filed this malicious prosecution action against Whitaker, Handy, and Potter Handy, LLP (Defendants). Defendants moved for summary judgment on the grounds that Landis could not prove they lacked probable cause or acted with malice. The trial court agreed and entered judgment for Defendants. On appeal, Landis argues the trial court erred in granting Defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Landis contends the trial court should have given preclusive effect to Judge Shaller’s findings in the underlying action, which alone are sufficient to establish a lack of probable cause and malice. We agree with

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Civil Code.

2 Landis in part. Judge Shaller’s findings are entitled to preclusive effect and support a conclusion that Whitaker brought the action against Landis despite knowing facts refuting an essential element of the Unruh Act claim. Therefore, the findings are sufficient to show Whitaker lacked probable cause and acted with malice. However, Judge Shaller’s findings do not support the same conclusions as to Handy and Potter Handy, LLP. Accordingly, we reverse in part and affirm in part. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 1. Whitaker’s federal action for violations of the ADA and Unruh Act In November 2019, Whitaker filed a complaint in federal court against Landis, asserting causes of action under the ADA and Unruh Act.2 Handy and Potter Handy, LLP (the Attorneys) represented Whitaker in the lawsuit. At that time, Landis owned and operated a toy store called Landis’ Labyrinth Toy Shop (the Store), located on Larchmont Boulevard in the Hancock Park neighborhood of Los Angeles. Whitaker alleged in the complaint that he is disabled and uses a wheelchair for mobility. Whitaker allegedly went to the Store in October 2019 “with the intention to avail himself of its goods, motivated in part to determine if the defendants comply with the disability access laws.” While inside the Store, Whitaker “personally encountered” a sales counter that was too high off the floor, which “created difficulty and discomfort”

2 Whitaker also named as a defendant in the federal action Larchmont Village Plaza, LLC (Larchmont). Larchmont is not a party to this case. Therefore, we do not summarize the facts related to it.

3 for Whitaker and denied him full and equal access to the Store. Whitaker sought damages and an injunction compelling Landis to adjust the sales counter to comply with the law. Less than a month after Whitaker filed the complaint, Landis remedied the alleged violation by attaching a lowered counter to the existing sales counter. After doing so, Landis moved for summary judgment. The federal court determined Whitaker’s ADA claim was moot, and it granted partial summary judgment for Landis. The court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Whitaker’s Unruh Act claim and dismissed it without prejudice. 2. Whitaker’s state action for violation of the Unruh Act a. The complaint After the federal court dismissed the case, Whitaker filed a verified complaint in the superior court against Landis, asserting a single cause of action for violation of the Unruh Act. The complaint’s factual allegations were essentially the same as those in the federal complaint. Once again, Whitaker alleged he went to the Store on October 12, 2019 “with the intention to avail himself of its goods, motivated in part to determine if defendants comply with the disability access laws.” b. The trial The parties tried the claim before Judge Shaller over the course of two days. Whitaker testified that he went to the Store on October 12, 2019 to purchase a specific board game. Whitaker searched for the game but could not find it. He was the only person in the Store at the time; there were no employees or customers present. At some point, Whitaker noticed the sales counter was very high off the floor. He went over to the counter to check its height and take a picture of it. Whitaker waited

4 at the counter for two to three minutes, and he left when no one came to help him. Whitaker admitted he visited “a lot” of stores on Larchmont Boulevard on October 12, 2019. He estimated it was “maybe a dozen.” Whitaker filed lawsuits against at least four of the stores he visited that day. In its defense, Landis presented testimony from two of its employees who were working on October 12, 2019. Neither employee saw a person in a wheelchair come into the Store that day. Landis’s owner, Devoney Wolfus, testified that employees are trained to greet every customer who enters the Store. c. Judge Shaller’s statement of decision After trial, Judge Shaller issued a statement of decision finding in Landis’s favor. Judge Shaller explained that, to prevail on the Unruh Act claim, Whitaker had to prove the height of the sales counter violated the ADA, the violation denied him full and equal access to the Store, he personally encountered the violation, and the violation deterred him from accessing the Store on a particular occasion. Judge Shaller concluded Whitaker failed to prove any of those elements. Judge Shaller found Whitaker’s testimony “not . . . credible.” He noted that Whitaker initially “could not describe the interior of the [S]tore . . . or its layout, or anything about the . . . visit.” After a break in his testimony, Whitaker used “photographs of the [Store] to create a story of what happened in the [S]tore. [Whitaker] changed or enhanced his initial testimony to indicate that he was going to the [Store] to buy a board game and that he shopped around the [S]tore without finding it before he noticed the height of the sales counter.”

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