Home » Public Accommodations are Starting to Win Website Accessibility Lawsuits
Public Accommodations are Starting to Win Website Accessibility Lawsuits
By Minh N. Vu & Julia N. Sarnoff on March 24, 2017
Posted in Lawsuits, Investigations & Settlements, Title III Access
Seyfarth Synopsis: Two recent decisions by federal judges to dismiss website accessibility lawsuits may cause more public accommodations to fight instead of settle these suits, but businesses must continue to weigh many factors before making that decision.
The litigation tide might be turning for public accommodations choosing to fight lawsuits brought by blind individuals claiming that the businesses’ websites violate Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) by not being accessible to them. As we have previously reported, about a dozen or so plaintiffs’ firms have filed hundreds of lawsuits and sent thousands of demand letters to businesses asserting this type of claim on behalf of blind clients in the past two years. Most of these matters have settled quickly and confidentially, and the relatively few defendants who chose to litigate rarely had success in getting the cases dismissed. However, two recent decisions from California and Florida federal judges do provide encouragement for businesses that are willing to spend the money to [...]