Case Information
*1 Before ED CARNES, Chief Judge, HULL and MARCUS, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
North Springs Associates operates a shopping center in Sandy Springs, Georgia. When Gary Gaylor, who was disabled within the meaning of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), visited the shopping center in February 2013, he encountered 74 architectural barriers that, he said, limited his use of the property. He sued North Springs, seeking injunctive relief under Title III of the ADA.
North Springs moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that Mr. Gaylor lacked Article III standing to sue. North Springs contended that he was an ADA “tester” — someone who visits public accommodations for the purpose of verifying their compliance with the ADA. In support of that contention, North Springs pointed out that Mr. Gaylor had a lengthy history of filing ADA suits against places of public accommodation in Georgia, Florida, Mississippi, and Tennessee; that the shopping center was mostly vacant when he visited it; and that it was 70 miles away from his home in Cleveland, Georgia. According to North Springs, because Mr. Gaylor had no real intention to return to the shopping center except to test its compliance with the ADA, it was not likely that he would actually be injured in the future by the architectural barriers there, meaning he lacked standing to sue.
In response to North Springs’ motion, Mr. Gaylor submitted an affidavit describing his previous visit to the shopping center and his plans to visit it in the *3 future. He stated that he had visited the shopping center on February 19, 2013, and had browsed at the shopping center’s Big Lots store and purchased a snack there. He explained that he intended to visit the shopping center again on August 8, 2013 to “avail [himself] of the goods and services offered there” and to see whether North Springs had eliminated the architectural barriers. He also noted that the shopping center was just a short distance off Georgia Highway 400 South, and that he drove past it when visiting his family in Mableton, Georgia, and his doctors in Atlanta, Georgia. He declared in his affidavit that he “expect[ed] to frequent the [shopping center] at least 4–5 times a year when [visiting his] doctors’ offices,” particularly because the shopping center is just ten miles from them.
The district court denied North Springs’ motion on November 12, 2013, finding that Mr. Gaylor’s status as an ADA “tester” did not preclude his having standing to bring his claims, and that he had shown a sufficient likelihood that he would be harmed by the architectural barriers at the shopping center. A few months later, Mr. Gaylor moved for summary judgment as to all 74 of his claims. On September 9, 2014, the district court granted his motion as to 29 of the 74 barriers and entered an injunction ordering North Springs to eliminate those barriers within 90 days. As to the remaining 45 barriers, the district court found that fact questions prevented the entry of summary judgment. Instead of going to trial on the remaining claims, Mr. Gaylor moved the district court to dismiss them *4 and enter final judgment as to the 29 barriers for which it had granted him summary judgment. He also moved for attorney’s fees. On April 2, 2015, the district court granted his motion for final judgment and, as part of that judgment, partially granted his motion for attorney’s fees, ordering North Springs to pay Mr. Gaylor’s lawyer $56,207.25 in attorney’s fees and $5,810.25 in costs.
North Springs filed a notice of appeal on April 21, 2015. The notice specified that North Springs was appealing the district court’s final judgment and the accompanying order. It did not mention the district court’s order finding that Mr. Gaylor had standing to sue, nor did it mention the district court’s order of injunctive relief. In May 2015, while the appeal was pending, Mr. Gaylor filed a motion seeking to have North Springs held in civil contempt because it had failed to make any of the improvements required by the injunction entered on September 9, 2014. Before the district court could rule on that motion, however, Mr. Gaylor died. We subsequently permitted Carol Gaylor, Mr. Gaylor’s widow and the executor of his estate, to substitute as appellee in her capacity as executor of his estate.
The parties present three questions on appeal: 1. Do we have jurisdiction over the arguments raised in North Springs’ appeal? 2. Does Mr. Gaylor’s death moot the injunction?
3. Did Mr. Gaylor have standing to pursue his claims against North Springs?
We answer those questions below, starting with the first one.
North Springs’ brief on appeal argues just two issues — (1) whether Mr. Gaylor had standing to sue, and (2) whether the injunction against North Springs is moot in light of Mr. Gaylor’s death — and we have jurisdiction to consider both of them. Mrs. Gaylor contends that, because we may consider only those judgments and orders identified in an appellant’s notice of appeal, see Fed. R. App. P. 3(c)(1)(B), and because North Springs noticed for appeal neither the district court’s order finding that Mr. Gaylor had standing nor the order enjoining North Springs to eliminate the architectural barriers at the shopping center, we lack jurisdiction to review the district court’s conclusions concerning standing and the injunction. But North Springs appealed from the final judgment against it, and
[a] notice of appeal that names the final judgment suffices to support review of all earlier orders that merge in the final judgment under the general rule that appeal from a final judgment supports review of all earlier interlocutory orders, at least if the earlier orders are part of the progression that led up to the judgment rather than being separate from that progression.
16A C HARLES A. W RIGHT ET AL ., F EDERAL P RACTICE AND P ROCEDURE § 3949.4
(4th ed.) (footnote omitted); see Kong v. Allied Prof’l Ins. Co.,
North Springs’ appeal of the injunction is also timely. Subject to certain
irrelevant exceptions, an appeal is timely if filed within 30 days of the judgment or
order appealed from. Fed. R. App. P. 4(a)(1)(A). The district court entered final
judgment in this matter on April 2, 2015, and North Springs appealed that
judgment 19 days later, on April 21, 2015. Mrs. Gaylor posits that the 30-day
clock for appealing the injunction should run from the date the district court issued
the injunction (September 9, 2014, in this case), not from the date the district court
entered final judgment. Under that view, a party in North Springs’ shoes would
have to take an interlocutory appeal within 30 days of the appeal’s becoming
available or permanently forego any appeal of the underlying order. We rightly
rejected a materially indistinguishable argument almost three decades ago. See
Hunter v. Dep’t of Air Force Agency,
Mrs. Gaylor also asserts that we lack jurisdiction to consider her contempt
motion, which is currently pending in the district court. She is correct but that is
immaterial, since North Springs makes no arguments concerning that motion. To
be sure, the propriety of a contempt sanction is sometimes related to the validity of
an injunction, depending on whether the sanction is compensatory or coercive. See
F.T.C. v. Leshin,
Having dispensed with Mrs. Gaylor’s jurisdictional arguments, we consider
whether Mr. Gaylor’s death mooted the injunction. When a solo plaintiff dies, any
claims he had for injunctive relief become moot. See Rhodes v. Stewart, 488 U.S.
1, 4,
Even though Mr. Gaylor’s death moots his claim for injunctive relief, it does
not affect his status as a prevailing party for purposes of attorney’s fees for the
district court litigation. See Thomas v. Bryant,
in Houston was actually less specific about the likelihood of future injury than is Mr. Gaylor’s affidavit in this case, because the affidavit in Houston specified *9 neither a date on which the plaintiff planned to return to the place of public accommodation, nor the number of times he planned to return there in the future. Id. at 1327. Nevertheless, we held in Houston that the plaintiff had Article III standing to bring suit. Id. at 1335–40. Because there is no material difference between the facts in Houston and the facts in this case, we must conclude that Mr. Gaylor had Article III standing to sue North Springs for injunctive relief.
The district court’s order requiring North Springs to remove certain architectural barriers from the shopping center is VACATED as moot. The district court’s judgment is otherwise AFFIRMED .
