Disabled man banned from suing after 400 lawsuits

WHETHER JAREK Molski is a crusader for the disabled or an extortionist who abused the law for personal gain, the vexatious litigant…

WHETHER JAREK Molski is a crusader for the disabled or an extortionist who abused the law for personal gain, the vexatious litigant has filed his last lawsuit.

The US supreme court declined on Monday to hear the case of Molski v Evergreen Dynasty Corporation, owner of a Chinese restaurant in Solvang, California, in a legal Waterloo for the 38-year-old Los Angeles man. Mr Molski filed more than 400 suits under the Americans With Disabilities Act before a federal judge barred him from future litigation.

In a highly unusual action, the late US district judge Edward Rafeedie in 2004 branded Mr Molski a “hit-and-run plaintiff”, accusing him of systematic extortion of small businesses across California.

Mr Molski, who has used a wheelchair since his motorcycle accident two decades ago, sued restaurants, bowling alleys, wineries and other retail outlets for insufficient disabled parking, misplaced handrails and other violations of the Disabilities Act, demanding that owners be fined $4,000 for every day their facilities failed to meet exacting federal standards. Fear of adverse judgments compelled many to settle out of court, earning the Polish-born plaintiff hundreds of thousands of dollars in less than two years.

READ MORE

His lawyer’s firm was also accused by Judge Rafeedie of misusing the courts and barred from filing more suits without the judge’s permission.

A circuit court of appeal in April denied a rehearing of the Evergreen case by the full court. But nine of the court’s 28 judges, including chief judge Alex Kozinski, dissented, arguing that the first amendment right to petition the government for redress of grievances is “one of the most precious of the liberties safeguarded by the Bill of Rights”.

Courts have the right to shield their lists from abuse by frivolous litigation, said Peter Eliasberg, managing attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California. “But this is a remedy that should be used very sparingly, especially with regard to a statute that is disobeyed a lot,” he said of the Disabilities Act.

– (LA Times-Washington Post)