Brigette Honaker  |  June 11, 2018

Category: Consumer News

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Kohl’s must face a class action lawsuit that alleges disabled shoppers in motorized scooters and wheelchairs are unable to navigate the store’s layout, after a federal judge denied the retailer’s motion to dismiss the case.

U.S. District Judge Ronald Guzman found that plaintiff Patricia Thomas’ class action lawsuit was not invalidated by her participation in a dismissed class action filed by the Equal Rights Center.

Additionally, Judge Guzman referenced Kohl’s past arguments which claimed that Thomas’ allegations were different from the Equal Right Center’s lawsuit. The court found that Kohl’s could not change position to benefit themselves in different arguments.

“Here, the Court concludes as a matter of equity that Defendants should not be permitted to take contradictory positions simply because it is expedient for their purposes at a particular point in the litigation,” Judge Guzman stated in his ruling.

Litigation against Kohl’s has argued that the store’s aisles, counters, restrooms, fitting rooms, and parking lots violate the American Disability Act (ADA).

Thomas was originally the named plaintiff in a Kohl’s ADA class action filed by the Equal Rights Center. The proposed Kohl’s class action was filed in 2014 on behalf of Thomas and four other named plaintiffs who were allegedly unable to shop at Kohl’s because of ADA violations.

However, a federal judge denied the plaintiff’s Class certification in 2017 after the group failed the class action numerosity test. The group was only able to reference 12 potential Class Members who couldn’t use motorized scooters in Kohl’s aisles, an amount that was deemed insufficient by the court.

After the Kohl’s class action was dismissed, the Equal Rights Center, Thomas, and other individual plaintiffs filed separate lawsuits, although their claims and arguments were similar.

The plaintiffs requested that the Equal Rights Center’s lawsuit be tried first as a test case, but Kohl’s fought against this request. Kohl’s argued that the center could not sue on behalf of its members and that a test case would give the plaintiffs an unfair second chance at a class action lawsuit.

The Equal Rights Center voluntarily withdrew its complaint afterwards, although the individual plaintiff’s class action lawsuits remained. Kohl’s then filed motions to dismiss the individual lawsuits, arguing that the claims in the suits had already been adjudicated.

Judge Guzman recently stated that Kohl’s cannot argue that the claims have already been litigated since the company previously argued for the severing of suits due to differences in claims.

Counsel for Thomas is encouraged by Judge Guzman’s decision, as this moves the lawsuit closer to trial. “Although the fact that we have to fight at all against Kohl’s to allow persons with disabilities who use wheelchairs and scooters to shop at their stores is baffling,” said plaintiff’s counsel in a statement to Law360. “Why isn’t Ms. Thomas’ money, and the money of other persons with disabilities good at Kohl’s?”

Thomas is represented by Jennifer M. Sender, Tracy E. Stevenson and Andres J. Gallegos of Robbins Salomon & Patt Ltd. and Deepa Goraya and Matthew Handley from the Washington Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights and Urban Affairs.

The Kohl’s ADA Class Action Lawsuit is Thomas v. Kohl’s Corporation, Case No. 1:17-­cv-­05857, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.

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185 thoughts onKohl’s Can’t Escape Wheelchair Inaccessible Aisles Class Action Lawsuit

  1. Dinah Cox says:

    Kohls used to be my favorite store until I had to shop in a wheelchair. The space between merchandise is too narrow to get into and I can’t reach anything unless it is on the outside of the aisle.

  2. Keith Gren says:

    follow

  3. Michael says:

    How do we get in on this suit? My fiance has been in a power wheelchair since the age of 2 and also can’t navigate freely through their stores. Many stores don’t have enough handicap parking or van spaces at all for ramp access and we have to park out in the middle of the lot.

  4. Joe Mack says:

    My older Mother in wheelchair could not be accomodated.

  5. Briauna Williams says:

    This is so true I cannot use my wheelchair when I’m trying to shop I am forced to use a walker or a cane

  6. Laura Beekhuizen says:

    As a consumer, it is hard enough to deal with a disability. Kohl’s makes no effort to

    assist you. I do not have the option to use a cane. My scooter will not get close enough to the clothes.

    . I get as close as I can and then I ask my daughter to bring me items

    that is the color I like. It is humiliating to me. Also, the dressing room doors do not

    accommodate the width of my small scooter.

  7. ELIZABETH DIERKING says:

    True, I cannot use my mom’s wheelchair. She must use a cane.

  8. Kathy S Minard says:

    I have to agree with the rest but there are many others also that I won’t go into a store now. I don’t like getting hit in the face with clothing.

  9. Dianna Robertson says:

    It’s true, I couldn’t use my wheel chair either.

  10. Tammy Prentiss says:

    Yes this is true my husband had to put away his mobility scooter and try to use a cane.

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