1 WO 2 3 4 5 6 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 7 FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA
9 Peter Strojnik, No. CV-20-08333-PCT-JJT
10 Plaintiff, ORDER
11 v.
12 Kingman Investments, LP dba Best Western Plus a Wayfarer’s Inn & Suites; Best 13 Western International, Inc.,
14 Defendants. 15 16 At issue in this matter are Plaintiff Peter Strojnik’s Motion to Remand Counts 6, 7 17 and 8 of the Complaint (Doc. 7), to which Defendants filed a Response (Doc. 9) and 18 Plaintiff filed a Reply (Doc. 15); Defendant Best Western International Inc.’s Motion to 19 Dismiss (Doc. 19), to which Plaintiff filed a Response (Doc. 20) and Best Western filed a 20 Reply (Doc. 24); Defendant Kingman Investments LP’s Motion to Dismiss (Doc. 27) and 21 associated Motion for Bond (Doc. 28), to which Plaintiff filed a Response (Doc. 39) and 22 Kingman Investments filed Reply (Doc. 42); Plaintiff’s “Motion that Defendant Prove 23 Removal Jurisdiction” (Doc. 29), to which Defendant Kingman Investments filed a 24 Response (Doc. 35) and Plaintiff filed a Reply (Doc. 37); Plaintiff’s Motion to Bifurcate 25 consideration of Defendants’ Rule 12(b) motions (Doc. 30), to which Defendant Kingman 26 Investments filed a Response (Doc. 33) and Plaintiff filed a Reply (Doc. 34); and 27 Defendant Kingman Investments’ Motion to Strike Plaintiff’s second Reply in support of 28 his Motion to Prove Removal (Doc. 38). In reviewing the motions, the Court inescapably 1 concludes that Plaintiff is without standing to proceed with his sole federal claim. The 2 Court thus has no jurisdiction over the claim. It also lacks pendent jurisdiction over 3 Plaintiff’s state law claims. The Court thus will remand the matter to the Superior Court of 4 Arizona in and for Mohave County. 5 I. Posture and Necessary Background 6 In and around 2016, Strojnik, then a licensed attorney in Arizona, filed over 1,700 7 lawsuits against small businesses in Arizona alleging violations of the Americans with 8 Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq. (ADA) and related state law claims. In that time 9 period, Strojnik also filed 160 similar ADA actions with associated state law claims in this 10 Court. In the state court cases, Strojnik represented nominal plaintiffs David Ritzenthaler, 11 an individual with a disability, and an entity known as Advocates for Individuals with 12 Disabilities LLC. Strojnik brought all 160 matters before this Court in the name of 13 Fernando Gastelum, another individual alleging a disability. Judges of this Court, the 14 Superior Court of Arizona, and the Presiding Disciplinary Judge of the Supreme Court of 15 Arizona, found these actions to be “cookie cutter lawsuits” with generally inadequate 16 allegations, and those that were not quickly settled were dismissed en masse by judges of 17 this Court and the state Court. As a result of his representation of the above plaintiffs in 18 these approximately 1860 actions, the State Bar of Arizona sought disciplinary action 19 against Strojnik. The Presiding Disciplinary Judge of the Supreme Court of Arizona issued 20 an Order of Interim Suspension in July 2018, and a Judgment of Disbarment in May 2019. 21 The notice of Strojnik’s disbarment stated Strojnik typically “demanded approximately 22 $5,000 in attorney’s fees regardless if the business remedied the purported violations,” and 23 labeled his misconduct “‘extortionate’ and ‘ethically suspect.’” State Bar of Ariz., 24 https:/azbar.legalserviceslink.com/attorneys-view/PeterStrojnik (last visited July 23, 25 2021). 26 Undeterred, Strojnik began filing volume ADA lawsuits pro se in federal courts 27 beyond Arizona within two months of his disbarment in Arizona. The United States District 28 Courts for the Northern and Central Districts of California found the same inadequacies in 1 those actions as the state and federal courts in Arizona had found, dismissed his actions 2 and declared him a vexations litigant in 2020. See, e.g., Strojnik v. IA Lodging Napa First 3 LLC, 2020 WL 2838814 at *13 (N.D. Cal. June 1, 2020); Strojnik, ACG Am. Constr., Inc., 4 2020 WL 4258814 at 7-8 (C.D. Cal. April 19, 2020) (noting Strojnik had filed “numerous” 5 pro se ADA actions in district courts in the Ninth Circuit since his disbarment, including 6 many in the Central District). 7 And yet, he continued. Between January and at least November of 2020, Strojnik, 8 again representing himself, filed dozens of new but substantively identical ADA actions 9 with accompanying state law claims in Arizona state court against hotels. Defendant hotel 10 operators in Arizona removed 37 of those actions to this Court in the ensuing months. In 11 one of the 37 removal cases, Judge Humetewa found Plaintiff to be a vexatious litigant and 12 ordered in relevant part that any of Plaintiff’s ADA actions thereafter removed to this Court 13 must be screened and accompanied by a $10,000 bond paid within 21 days of removal. 14 Strojnik v. Driftwood Hospitality Management LLC, No. 20-00343-DJH, 2021 WL 50456 15 at *11 (D. Ariz. Jan. 6, 2021). Judge Humetewa’s January 6, 2021, Order has addressed all 16 of Plaintiff’s Complaints removed thereafter, as Plaintiff has not posted the required bond 17 for any of those actions. And every member of this Court that has thus far addressed the 18 standing issue with regard to cases removed prior to the vexatious litigant order—all of 19 whose Complaints contain identical or near-identical allegations—has concluded Plaintiff 20 lacks standing.1 The undersigned’s analysis yields the same conclusion in this matter.2
21 1 E.g., Strojnik v. B&L Motels Inc., No. 20-CV-08306-SPL, 2020 WL 7350897 at *4 (D. Ariz. Dec. 15, 2020); Strojnik v. Ashford Scottsdale LP, No. 20-CV-02352-DWL, 2020 22 WL 2002977 at *8 (D. Ariz. May 19, 2021); Strojnik v. Driftwood Hospitality Management LLC, No. 20-CV-03343-DJH, 2021 WL 50456 at *5 (D. Ariz. Jan. 6, 2021); Strojnik v. 23 Ogle dba Buck Springs Resort, No. 20-CV-08194-JAT, 2020 WL 1250345 at *3-4 (D. Ariz. Apr. 5, 2021); Strojnik v. C&H Kingman LLC, No. 20-CV-08313-MTL, 2020 WL 24 1381354 at *3-4 (D. Ariz. Apr. 13, 2021).
25 2 The Court notes that its Orders in three other ADA cases brought by Plaintiff and now pending before the undersigned—all of which will be disposed of by Orders entered 26 contemporaneously with this Order, and all remanding on the same finding of lack of standing—will look remarkably similar to this Order and contain the identical analysis. 27 This is so because Plaintiff’s Complaints in all four matters are operatively identical, varying only in the identification of the respective defendants, the dates Plaintiff alleged 28 he visited their hotels and or websites, the alleged ADA violations specific to the locations, and the attached photographs of those locations. The Court, in concluding all four 1 Plaintiff alleges on or about August 26, 2020, he visited Defendants’ hotel to test its 2 compliance with the ADA. (Doc. 1-3 at 22.) On November 9, 2020, Plaintiff filed the 3 instant Complaint in the Superior Court of Arizona in and for Mohave County, alleging 4 eight causes of action: 1) violations of the ADA; 2) negligence; 3) negligent 5 misrepresentation; 4) failure to disclose; 5) fraud and consumer fraud; 6) consumer fraud— 6 brand deceit; 7) civil conspiracy; and 8) aiding and abetting. (Doc. 1-3 at 4.) On 7 December 4, 2020, Defendant removed the matter to this Court based on federal question 8 jurisdiction over the ADA claim, and supplemental or pendent jurisdiction over the related 9 seven state law claims. (Doc. 1.) For purposes of the Court’s analysis below, it will focus 10 only on the federal ADA claim to begin with. 11 II.
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1 WO 2 3 4 5 6 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 7 FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA
9 Peter Strojnik, No. CV-20-08333-PCT-JJT
10 Plaintiff, ORDER
11 v.
12 Kingman Investments, LP dba Best Western Plus a Wayfarer’s Inn & Suites; Best 13 Western International, Inc.,
14 Defendants. 15 16 At issue in this matter are Plaintiff Peter Strojnik’s Motion to Remand Counts 6, 7 17 and 8 of the Complaint (Doc. 7), to which Defendants filed a Response (Doc. 9) and 18 Plaintiff filed a Reply (Doc. 15); Defendant Best Western International Inc.’s Motion to 19 Dismiss (Doc. 19), to which Plaintiff filed a Response (Doc. 20) and Best Western filed a 20 Reply (Doc. 24); Defendant Kingman Investments LP’s Motion to Dismiss (Doc. 27) and 21 associated Motion for Bond (Doc. 28), to which Plaintiff filed a Response (Doc. 39) and 22 Kingman Investments filed Reply (Doc. 42); Plaintiff’s “Motion that Defendant Prove 23 Removal Jurisdiction” (Doc. 29), to which Defendant Kingman Investments filed a 24 Response (Doc. 35) and Plaintiff filed a Reply (Doc. 37); Plaintiff’s Motion to Bifurcate 25 consideration of Defendants’ Rule 12(b) motions (Doc. 30), to which Defendant Kingman 26 Investments filed a Response (Doc. 33) and Plaintiff filed a Reply (Doc. 34); and 27 Defendant Kingman Investments’ Motion to Strike Plaintiff’s second Reply in support of 28 his Motion to Prove Removal (Doc. 38). In reviewing the motions, the Court inescapably 1 concludes that Plaintiff is without standing to proceed with his sole federal claim. The 2 Court thus has no jurisdiction over the claim. It also lacks pendent jurisdiction over 3 Plaintiff’s state law claims. The Court thus will remand the matter to the Superior Court of 4 Arizona in and for Mohave County. 5 I. Posture and Necessary Background 6 In and around 2016, Strojnik, then a licensed attorney in Arizona, filed over 1,700 7 lawsuits against small businesses in Arizona alleging violations of the Americans with 8 Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq. (ADA) and related state law claims. In that time 9 period, Strojnik also filed 160 similar ADA actions with associated state law claims in this 10 Court. In the state court cases, Strojnik represented nominal plaintiffs David Ritzenthaler, 11 an individual with a disability, and an entity known as Advocates for Individuals with 12 Disabilities LLC. Strojnik brought all 160 matters before this Court in the name of 13 Fernando Gastelum, another individual alleging a disability. Judges of this Court, the 14 Superior Court of Arizona, and the Presiding Disciplinary Judge of the Supreme Court of 15 Arizona, found these actions to be “cookie cutter lawsuits” with generally inadequate 16 allegations, and those that were not quickly settled were dismissed en masse by judges of 17 this Court and the state Court. As a result of his representation of the above plaintiffs in 18 these approximately 1860 actions, the State Bar of Arizona sought disciplinary action 19 against Strojnik. The Presiding Disciplinary Judge of the Supreme Court of Arizona issued 20 an Order of Interim Suspension in July 2018, and a Judgment of Disbarment in May 2019. 21 The notice of Strojnik’s disbarment stated Strojnik typically “demanded approximately 22 $5,000 in attorney’s fees regardless if the business remedied the purported violations,” and 23 labeled his misconduct “‘extortionate’ and ‘ethically suspect.’” State Bar of Ariz., 24 https:/azbar.legalserviceslink.com/attorneys-view/PeterStrojnik (last visited July 23, 25 2021). 26 Undeterred, Strojnik began filing volume ADA lawsuits pro se in federal courts 27 beyond Arizona within two months of his disbarment in Arizona. The United States District 28 Courts for the Northern and Central Districts of California found the same inadequacies in 1 those actions as the state and federal courts in Arizona had found, dismissed his actions 2 and declared him a vexations litigant in 2020. See, e.g., Strojnik v. IA Lodging Napa First 3 LLC, 2020 WL 2838814 at *13 (N.D. Cal. June 1, 2020); Strojnik, ACG Am. Constr., Inc., 4 2020 WL 4258814 at 7-8 (C.D. Cal. April 19, 2020) (noting Strojnik had filed “numerous” 5 pro se ADA actions in district courts in the Ninth Circuit since his disbarment, including 6 many in the Central District). 7 And yet, he continued. Between January and at least November of 2020, Strojnik, 8 again representing himself, filed dozens of new but substantively identical ADA actions 9 with accompanying state law claims in Arizona state court against hotels. Defendant hotel 10 operators in Arizona removed 37 of those actions to this Court in the ensuing months. In 11 one of the 37 removal cases, Judge Humetewa found Plaintiff to be a vexatious litigant and 12 ordered in relevant part that any of Plaintiff’s ADA actions thereafter removed to this Court 13 must be screened and accompanied by a $10,000 bond paid within 21 days of removal. 14 Strojnik v. Driftwood Hospitality Management LLC, No. 20-00343-DJH, 2021 WL 50456 15 at *11 (D. Ariz. Jan. 6, 2021). Judge Humetewa’s January 6, 2021, Order has addressed all 16 of Plaintiff’s Complaints removed thereafter, as Plaintiff has not posted the required bond 17 for any of those actions. And every member of this Court that has thus far addressed the 18 standing issue with regard to cases removed prior to the vexatious litigant order—all of 19 whose Complaints contain identical or near-identical allegations—has concluded Plaintiff 20 lacks standing.1 The undersigned’s analysis yields the same conclusion in this matter.2
21 1 E.g., Strojnik v. B&L Motels Inc., No. 20-CV-08306-SPL, 2020 WL 7350897 at *4 (D. Ariz. Dec. 15, 2020); Strojnik v. Ashford Scottsdale LP, No. 20-CV-02352-DWL, 2020 22 WL 2002977 at *8 (D. Ariz. May 19, 2021); Strojnik v. Driftwood Hospitality Management LLC, No. 20-CV-03343-DJH, 2021 WL 50456 at *5 (D. Ariz. Jan. 6, 2021); Strojnik v. 23 Ogle dba Buck Springs Resort, No. 20-CV-08194-JAT, 2020 WL 1250345 at *3-4 (D. Ariz. Apr. 5, 2021); Strojnik v. C&H Kingman LLC, No. 20-CV-08313-MTL, 2020 WL 24 1381354 at *3-4 (D. Ariz. Apr. 13, 2021).
25 2 The Court notes that its Orders in three other ADA cases brought by Plaintiff and now pending before the undersigned—all of which will be disposed of by Orders entered 26 contemporaneously with this Order, and all remanding on the same finding of lack of standing—will look remarkably similar to this Order and contain the identical analysis. 27 This is so because Plaintiff’s Complaints in all four matters are operatively identical, varying only in the identification of the respective defendants, the dates Plaintiff alleged 28 he visited their hotels and or websites, the alleged ADA violations specific to the locations, and the attached photographs of those locations. The Court, in concluding all four 1 Plaintiff alleges on or about August 26, 2020, he visited Defendants’ hotel to test its 2 compliance with the ADA. (Doc. 1-3 at 22.) On November 9, 2020, Plaintiff filed the 3 instant Complaint in the Superior Court of Arizona in and for Mohave County, alleging 4 eight causes of action: 1) violations of the ADA; 2) negligence; 3) negligent 5 misrepresentation; 4) failure to disclose; 5) fraud and consumer fraud; 6) consumer fraud— 6 brand deceit; 7) civil conspiracy; and 8) aiding and abetting. (Doc. 1-3 at 4.) On 7 December 4, 2020, Defendant removed the matter to this Court based on federal question 8 jurisdiction over the ADA claim, and supplemental or pendent jurisdiction over the related 9 seven state law claims. (Doc. 1.) For purposes of the Court’s analysis below, it will focus 10 only on the federal ADA claim to begin with. 11 II. Legal Standard 12 “[T]o invoke the jurisdiction of the federal Courts, a disabled individual claiming 13 discrimination must satisfy the case or controversy requirement of Article III by 14 demonstrating his standing to sue at each stage of the litigation.” Chapman v. Pier 1 15 Imports (U.S.) Inc., 631 F.3d 939, 946 (9th Cir. 2011). The doctrine of standing requires a 16 party to “prove that he has suffered a concrete and particularized injury that is fairly 17 traceable to the challenged conduct, and is likely to be redressed by a favorable judicial 18 decision.” Carney v. Adams, 141 S. Ct. 493, 498 (2020) (internal quotes and citations 19 omitted). “A ‘concrete’ injury must be ‘de facto’; that’s is, it must actually exist.” Spokeo, 20 Inc. v. Robins, 136 S. Ct. 1540, 1548 (2016). And “[f]or an injury to be ‘particularized,’ it 21 must affect the plaintiff in a personal and individual way.” Id. (internal citation omitted.) 22 In his Complaint, Plaintiff seeks only injunctive relief in connection with his ADA 23 claim.3 Relevant to the claim at bar, then, an ADA plaintiff can establish standing to sue 24 Complaints suffer from the same fatal defect, also finds the Complaints live up to previous 25 judges’ descriptions of Plaintiff’s work as “cookie-cutter complaints.”
26 3 Indeed, Plaintiff is so limited. All statutory and regulatory authority Plaintiff invokes in his prayer for relief in Count 1 of the Complaint—42 U.S.C. §§ 2000a-3 and 12188(a) and 27 (b), as well as 28 C.F.R. § 36.501(a) and (b)—makes clear that in bringing a private right of action, not through the Attorney General, Plaintiff is only entitled to injunctive relief 28 and attorneys’ fees. And as there is no attorney representing Plaintiff in this matter, he may not seek attorneys’ fees. 1 for injunctive relief either by demonstrating 1) injury-in-fact coupled with an intent to 2 return to a non-compliant facility or 2) deterrence. Chapman, 631 F.3d at 944. The 3 Complaint alleges no injury-in-fact, but focuses on the “deterrent effect doctrine,” under 4 which the Ninth Circuit has held that where a disabled individual is currently deterred from 5 patronizing a public accommodation due to a defendant’s failure to comply with the ADA, 6 that individual has suffered actual injury. Pickern v. Holiday Quality Foods Inc., 293 F.3d 7 1133, 1138 (9th Cir. 2002). However, as observed by Judge Teilborg of this Court in 8 another of Plaintiff’s cases, “the mere existence of an ADA violation does not give any 9 disabled person standing to sue.” Ogle, 2020 WL 1250345 at *3. A plaintiff has no standing 10 for an ADA claim “if the barriers he seeks to enjoin do not pose a real and immediate threat 11 to him due to his particular disability.” Chapman, 631 F.3d at 953 (emphasis added). 12 III. Analysis 13 Plaintiff identifies no concrete or particularized injury to him under the deterrent effect 14 doctrine here—or in any of the cases before the undersigned. He alleges he is disabled 15 based on a list of medical conditions to include prostate and renal cancer, genitourinary 16 impairment, stenosis with neuropathy, a missing right knee, limitations on the use of 17 shoulders, wrists and elbows, pleurisy and high blood pressure. (Doc. 1-3 at 7.) He then 18 goes on to list several conditions at Defendant’s hotel that he documented photographically 19 as violative of ADA requirements, including 1) a lack of markings identifying the 20 passenger loading zone; 2) signage for accessible parking being “too low”; 3) an external 21 access ramp being “too steep” and lacking handrails; 4) hotel stairs having open risers and 22 “wrongly configured handrails”; 5) a hotel hallway door requiring “ten pounds to open”; 23 6) an inaccessible check-in counter; 7) a lobby restroom door with a closing time of 2.5 24 seconds; 8) lack of an accessible route to the hotel’s pool and spa; and 9) an access ramp 25 protruding into the access isle [sic] at accessible parking spaces. (Doc. 1-3 at 13-25.) 26 Plaintiff fails utterly to make the necessary connection between the issues he identifies, 27 even if they all prove to be ADA violations, and a “real and immediate threat to him due to 28 his particular disabilities,” as required by Chapman. He does not allege, nor could the Court 1 divine, how his disabilities stemming from cancers, stenosis, neuropathy, genitourinary 2 impairment, issues of limitation of wrists, elbows, shoulders, pleurisy or high blood 3 pressure rendered any of the identified conditions to be barriers to his use and enjoyment 4 of the hotel facilities. The only plausible alleged disability for which some of these 5 conditions could prove to be barriers is his missing knee joint (ameliorated with a 6 prosthesis), and again, Plaintiff fails to make such a connection. He alleges that his 7 disabilities, “in their unmitigated, active state, . . . require the use of a wheelchair.” 8 (Doc. 1-3 at 7.) But Plaintiff does not allege that any of his conditions are in fact in their 9 active unmitigated state, or were so when he visited the hotel. Nor does he allege he used 10 a wheelchair while visiting the hotel, or at any relevant time. As a result, none of the 11 violations Plaintiff identifies as barriers connect to his alleged disabilities to deter him from 12 use of the hotel, and thus he states no concrete or particularized injury. Put another way, 13 Plaintiff has done nothing more than allege “labels and conclusions,” which are insufficient 14 under Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 555 (2007). He has no standing for 15 the ADA claim regarding the physical barriers he notes in his Complaint. For the same 16 reasons, the component of his ADA claim regarding Defendant’s website’s alleged failures 17 to identify and describe accessible features at the hotel fails. 18 The removal procedure statute, 28 U.S.C. §1447(c), provides in relevant part that 19 “[i]f at any time before final judgment it appears that the District Court lacks subject matter 20 jurisdiction, the case shall be remanded.” Absent jurisdiction over the ADA claim, the 21 Court retains no supplemental jurisdiction over the remaining pendent state law claims 22 alleged in Counts 2 through 8 of the Complaint. 23 The Court has considered whether, rather than remanding, it should dismiss the 24 ADA claim in Count 1, and potentially some or all of the state claims that might be 25 dependent on the success of the ADA claim, under the exception to the above remand rule 26 set forth in Bell v. City of Kellogg, 922 F. 2d 1418, 1424-25 (9th Cir. 1991). In Bell, the 27 Ninth Circuit held that where a federal court is “certain that a remand to state court would 28 be futile,” dismissal of those claims was appropriate to prevent any further waste of 1 || valuable judicial time and resources. Jd. Upon review over the claims in this matter, the || Court concludes that, while it is highly likely the state court would dismiss Plaintiff's ADA 3 || claim in Count | for failure to meet its own “rigorous standing requirement,” see Fernandez v. Takata Seat Belts, Inc., 108 P.3d 917, 919 (Ariz. 2005), it cannot say that result is “certain,” as required by the Ninth Circuit in Bell. See ASARCO Inc. v. Kadish, 490 US. || 605, 617 (1989) (“We have recognized often that the constraints of Article III do not apply to state courts, and accordingly the state courts are not bound by the limitations of a case 8 || or controversy or other federal rules of justiciability even when they address issues of 9|| federal law, as when they are called upon to interpret the Constitution or, in this case, a federal statute.”). For that reason, the Court will remand the ADA claim in Count 1, and as 11 || aresult, the remaining state claims in Counts 2 through 8, for determination by the Arizona || state court. 13 IT IS ORDERED remanding, sua sponte, this matter to the Superior Court of Arizona in and for Mohave County. The Clerk of Court shall terminate this matter. 15 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED denying as moot Plaintiff's Motion to Remand Counts 6, 7 and 8 of the Complaint (Doc. 7), Plaintiff’s Motion for Bond (Doc. 28), Plaintiff’s “Motion that Defendant Prove Removal Jurisdiction” (Doc. 29), Plaintiff’s 18 || Motion to Bifurcate (Doc. 30), and Defendant Kingman Investments’ Motion to Strike 19|| (Doc. 38). 20 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that upon remand, Defendants’ respective Motions || to Dismiss (Docs. 19 and 27) shall remain pending before the Superior Court, and || terminated on the docket in this matter. 23 Dated this 10th day of August, 2021. CN ‘wala 25 wefholee— United StatesDistrict Judge 26 27 28
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