Lamar Advertising of Penn, LLC (“Lamar”) filed suit in August 2001, challenging a local ordinance governing the erection and maintenance of signs in the Town of Orchard Park, New York (“Orchard Park” or “the Town”), as facially unconstitutional. Lamar thereafter moved for preliminary and permanent injunctions in conjunction with its motion for summary judgment. Just prior to filing its reply to Lamar’s motion for summary judgment, however, Orchard Park amended the ordinance to address some — but not all — of Lamar’s constitutional claims. In light of the amendments, the United States District Court for the Western District of New York (Arcara, J.) dismissed as moot those of Lamar’s claims lodged against the portions of the sign ordinance that were amended. 1
*368
In addition to finding some of Lamar’s claims moot, the district court held that Lamar lacked standing to challenge the sign ordinance, relying on the Seventh Circuit’s decision in
Harp Advertising Illinois, Inc. v. Village of Chicago Ridge, Illinois,
Lamar neither proceeded to trial nor amended its complaint to assert claims against the amended ordinance. Instead, Lamar filed this appeal, challenging the district court’s denial of its motion for preliminary injunction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1) (2000). Orchard Park cross-appeals insofar as it asks this Court to dismiss the suit for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. After determining that the scope of our appellate jurisdiction may extend to the district court’s rulings on Lamar’s motion for summary judgment, we hold that the district court erred in finding that Lamar lacked standing. Although we agree with the district court that some of Lamar’s claims are now moot, we remand for the district court to address the merits of those claims over which a live controversy still remains. Lamar also raises, for the first time on appeal, a number of challenges to the amended provisions of the ordinance. These claims, however, are not properly before us as Lamar never amended its complaint below to include claims against the amended ordinance. Should Lamar move to amend its complaint on remand, the district court should address the merits of Lamar’s claims against the amended ordinance in the first instance.
BACKGROUND
Lamar is an “outdoor advertising business” that wants to erect billboards of varying sizes throughout Orchard Park. Standing in its way, however, are a number of provisions of Orchard Park’s Zoning Code pertaining to signs (“the ordinance”), which Lamar claims are unconstitutional. See Orchard Park, N.Y., Code §§ 144-33 to -42 (2001). Under the version of the ordinance in effect when this suit was filed, Lamar was required to obtain a permit from a Zoning Officer prior to erecting any of its signs. Permits would be issued only if the requested signs met certain size and location requirements that varied depending upon whether the sign was to be erected in an area zoned for residential, commercial, or industrial use. Sign permits, however, would not issue unless a sign’s content were limited to advertising products and services available for sale on the premises. Id. § 144-35(B). 2 The ordinance, in other words, permitted only on-site commercial speech, and effectively barred off-site commercial speech and *369 signs bearing non-commercial speech. If a requested sign met these size, location and content restrictions, the permit would issue upon the payment of a fee of twenty dollars plus one dollar for every square foot of sign space.
Some categories of signs, however, were given different treatment. No permit, for example, was required for “for sale,” “for rent,” or “sold” signs, or for “[c]hurch, school or other exterior institutional bulletin boards.” Id. § 144-35(D), (E). Other signs, such as those with flashing lights or those attached to utility poles or trees, were prohibited outright. 3 Id. § 144-36. Still other categories of signs, including marquees and time and temperature signs, could be erected only upon the approval of Orchard Park’s legislative body, the Town Board. Id. § 144-35(H), (I). Nowhere in the ordinance was there a statement of legislative purpose. Orchard Park’s Municipal Zoning Code, however, did contain a severance clause pertaining to all the Code’s provisions. Id. § 1-5.
Prior to filing suit, Lamar submitted permit requests for eight signs. The signs Lamar proposed were to measure 14 by 48 feet, well in excess of the ordinance’s size limits for freestanding and pedestal signs. Id. § 144-38(B), (C). Lamar’s permits unsurprisingly were denied, because the signs were too big. 4 Lamar thereafter filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (2000), claiming that the sign ordinance was facially unconstitutional. Specifically, Lamar argued that the ordinance violated the First Amendment because (1) it was unsupported by a legitimate government purpose; (2) it discriminated between and among signs bearing commercial and noncommercial speech; (3) it was vague; (4) it left too much discretion over the approval of certain signs to the Town Board; and (5) it conditioned speech on the payment of an excessive fee. Lamar further claimed that, despite the Zoning Code’s severance clause, the unconstitutional provisions could not be severed from the lawful ones without producing results that Orchard Park’s Town Board never intended. Accordingly, Lamar asserted that Orchard Park’s entire sign regulating scheme should be declared unconstitutional and that the Town should be enjoined from interfering with its erection of signs. Shortly after filing suit, Lamar moved for summary judgment, and for preliminary and permanent injunctions.
In its opposition to Lamar’s motions, Orchard Park conceded that its sign ordinance — at least in some respects — was unconstitutional in light of prior decisions from the Supreme Court and this Court pertaining to sign ordinances.
See Metromedia, Inc. v. City of San Diego,
No change, however, was made to the ordinance’s size and location restrictions, or to the fee payment provisions. Nor were definitions added for some of the terms — such as “banner” and “bulletin board” — that Lamar claimed were unconstitutionally vague.
In light of these amendments, the district court held that the repeal of § 144-35(B) — which forbade the posting of signs containing off-site commercial advertising and non-commercial messages — mooted Lamar’s claims insofar as they pertained to that section. Lamar’s claims premised on the absence of a statement of legislative purpose were also deemed moot. The district court further denied Lamar’s motion for summary judgment on its claim that the fees charged constituted an unlawful tax upon its first amendment rights, finding that Lamar had not shown that the fees charged exceeded the costs of administering and enforcing the ordinance.
The district court left unaddressed Lamar’s claims that (i) the ordinance gives “unbridled discretion” over the approval of some signs, such as marquees and time and temperature signs, to the Town Board, and (ii) some of the ordinance’s undefined terms are unconstitutionally vague. The court did not leave these claims alive, however, as it held, in the alternative, that Lamar lacked standing to challenge any part of the sign ordinance. Following the Seventh Circuit’s decision in
Harp Advertising Illinois, Inc. v. Village of Chicago Ridge, Illinois,
Despite finding that Lamar lacked standing, the district court did not enter a final judgment against Lamar but merely denied Lamar’s motion for summary judgment and request for injunctive relief. It then set a trial date. 5 Although Lamar indicated at a pre-trial conference that it intended to amend its complaint to add claims against the amended sections of the ordinance, it never did so. Instead, Lamar appeals from the denial of injunctive relief pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). Orchard Park cross-appeals only insofar as it asks this Court to affirm the district court’s decision on mootness and standing, and dismiss the case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Though the parties expend significant energy on appeal debating the merits of Lamar’s claims against the ordinance — both before and after amendment — our decision addresses only *371 the district court’s rulings on mootness and standing.
DISCUSSION
I. Appellate Jurisdiction
We must deal at the outset with the question of what issues properly are within our jurisdiction on appeal. Because there was no final judgment below and Lamar never sought certification of an interlocutory appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), Lamar appeals only from the denial of its motion for a preliminary injunction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). 6 Orchard Park argues that the scope of our review, therefore, is limited to whether the district court abused its discretion in denying Lamar’s request for preliminary injunction, and that we cannot revisit the district court’s summary judgment rulings on standing and mootness. We disagree.
Although a district court’s ruling on summary judgment is ordinarily not appealable absent a final judgment, we have held that, where our jurisdiction is properly founded upon the district court’s ruling on a preliminary injunction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1), our review “extends to ‘all matters inextricably bound up with the [preliminary injunction].’ ”
SEC v. Credit Bancorp, Ltd.,
*372
We have held that issues usually will not be considered inextricably intertwined where review of the unappealable issue is “not necessary for review of’ the issue over which we have appellate jurisdiction.
See Rein,
II. Lamar’s Standing
To meet Article Ill’s “constitutional requirements for standing, a plaintiff must allege an ‘actual or threatened injury’ to himself that is ‘fairly traceable’ to the allegedly unlawful conduct of the defendant.”
Sullivan v. Syracuse Hous. Auth.,
The district court found that Lamar lacked the redressability element of standing because, even if the challenged provisions of the ordinance were ruled invalid, Lamar still would not be able to erect the signs for which it had submitted permit requests. In order to reach this conclusion, the district court first held that the ordinance’s provisions limiting size were severable, and thus would be unaffected by determinations concerning the constitutionality of other portions of the ordinance.
Because the size restrictions that provided the basis for denying Lamar’s permit requests were deemed lawful and found to stand independent of those provisions of the ordinance Lamar challenged, the district court found this case analogous to
Harp Advertising Illinois, Inc. v. Village of Chicago Ridge, Illinois,
The plaintiff in
Harp Advertising
was exclusively interested in building a 1,200 square foot sign where no sign larger than 200 square feet was permitted, and “for all [the Seventh Circuit could] tell, [the plaintiff had] no interest in erecting anything smaller anywhere in the United States, let alone a sign of 199 square feet in Chicago Ridge, Illinois.”
Id.
at 1292-93. Lamar, by contrast, clearly set out in its complaint that the permits it requested were part of a multi-phase plan to build signs of differing sizes throughout commercial and industrial zones in Orchard Park. Among the signs Lamar’s complaint states an intent to build are “fifty (50) Eight Sheets,” which are described as two-sided signs measuring 6 by 12 feet, or 72 total square feet. Section 144—38.1(A)(2) of Orchard Park’s sign ordinance expressly provides for the erection of two-sided signs, albeit only in industrial zones, measuring up to 80 square feet per side. Thus, even were we to agree with the district court that the size provisions should be considered apart from all the other provisions of the ordinance and upheld, it is simply not the case'—as it was in
Harp
Advertising—that the plaintiff “could
not
put up its sign[s] even if it achieved total victory in this litigation.”
Harp Advertising,
Orchard Park argues that, despite Lamar’s intent to put up at least some signs that would comply with the ordinance’s size restrictions, Lamar lacks standing because it never submitted permit requests for those signs. That Lamar only sought permits for those signs that were larger than the size allowed, however, is of little consequence; Lamar need not have first sought and been denied
any
permit prior to filing a facial challenge.
See Nat’l Adver. Co. v. Town of Babylon,
*375 Were Lamar to succeed on the merits of its claims, it likely would be able to erect at least some of the signs it has asserted an intent to build, even if the size restrictions were held valid and severable. The district court, therefore, erred in concluding that Lamar had not established that its injuries were redressable. We hold that Lamar has standing.
We find it unnecessary, in light of our reasoning, to review that portion of the district court’s decision addressing the sev-erability of the ordinance’s provisions, because we find Lamar would have standing even assuming
arguendo
that the size provisions are lawful and severable.
13
In reversing the district court’s decision on standing, we thus also vacate its ruling on severability, as that discussion is rendered superfluous in light of our holding. Should Lamar prevail on any of its arguments that parts of the ordinance are invalid, the district court should then revisit the issue of severability and ask again “whether the Legislature Vould have wished the statute to be enforced with the invalid part ex-scinded, or rejected altogether.’ ”
Greater N.Y. Metro. Food Council, Inc. v. Giuliani,
III. Mootness of Lamar’s Claims
Having concluded that Lamar has standing to bring its claims, we must determine whether the district court properly held that at least some of its claims are moot in light of the amendments Orchard Park made to the ordinance subsequent to the filing of this action. The district court dismissed as moot Lamar’s claims against the now-repealed § 144-35(B), which restricted the content of signs to on-site commercial advertising and barred all noncommercial signs, as well as Lamar’s claims against the ordinance for failing to contain a statement of legislative purpose, since the amendments added just such a statement. On appeal, Lamar argues that the amendments did not moot its claims because, absent a judgment that the pre-amended ordinance is unconstitutional, Orchard Park is conceivably free to re-enact the offending provisions at any time, and because Lamar acquired vested rights under the pre-amended version of the ordinance. We disagree with both contentions.
The voluntary cessation of allegedly illegal conduct usually will render a case moot “if the defendant can demonstrate that (1) there is no reasonable expectation that the alleged violation will recur and (2) interim relief or events have completely and irrevocably eradicated the effects of the alleged violation.”
Granite State Outdoor Adver., Inc. v. Town of Orange, Conn.,
In
Granite State,
we applied these principles of mootness to determine the effect of amendments made to a sign ordinance after the plaintiff brought a challenge to the ordinance. There, the defendant town amended its challenged sign ordinance pri- or to the district court’s issuance of a ruling on a motion for preliminary injunction.
Granite State,
Lamar’s argument that the amendments to Orchard Park’s ordinance should not be deemed sufficient to moot the controversy relies upon a footnote in our decision in
National Advertising Co. v. Town of Babylon,
Aladdin’s Castle,
the case upon which we relied in
Babylon,
was unusual, however, in that the defendant city had amended its ordinance numerous times in response to court rulings and had expressed an intent to reenact the offending provisions were the litigation to be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.
See Aladdin’s Castle,
*377
We agree, nevertheless, with Lamar that the amendment or repeal of an allegedly unconstitutional legislative provision will not necessarily moot litigation already underway; however,
Harrison
holds that deference to the legislative body’s decision to amend is the rule, not the exception.
See Harrison & Burrowes Bridge Constructors,
We see nothing on this record that would lead us to believe that Orchard Park intends to return to the questionable state of affairs that existed before Lamar filed suit. Indeed, Orchard Park specifically disclaimed any plans to ever “change the ordinance back” during oral argument before the district court. Nor has Orchard Park in any way conceded that the amendments do not render the litigation moot; rather, it argues that the amendments sufficiently altered the ordinance to render Lamar’s claims nugatory. According the representations of the municipality some deference,
see Harrison & Burrowes Bridge Constructors,
Lamar attempts to distinguish
Granite State
by arguing that, whereas the
Granite State
plaintiff did “not contend that the amended sign regulations are unconstitutional, and thus there [was] no reason to believe that any unconstitutional restrictions [were] currently in place,”
Granite State,
Finally, we disagree with Lamar’s contention that the controversy over the original ordinance remains alive because Lamar incurred certain damages under the pre-amended .version of the ordinance that it should still be permitted to recoup. Lamar’s potential receipt of attorneys’ fees, were it to be a “prevailing party” under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, is in itself not enough to keep the controversy alive.
See Lewis v. Cont’l Bank Corp.,
494 U.S.
*379
472, 480,
We therefore agree with the district court’s ruling on mootness and hold that Lamar’s claims against § 144-35(B) and against the ordinance for lack of a statement of purpose are moot. Because none of Orchard Park’s amendments addressed Lamar’s claims against the ordinance based on vagueness, the allegedly excessive discretion given to the Town Board, or the fee provisions, these claims, however, are not moot.
CONCLUSION
Contrary to the district court, we hold that Lamar has standing to challenge Orchard Park’s sign ordinance and, therefore, VACATE the district court’s rulings on standing and severability. We, however, AFFIRM the district court’s ruling on mootness and hold that Lamar’s claims directed at § 144-35(B) and its claims against the ordinance for lacking a statement of legislative purpose are moot.
*380 Lamar’s other claims against the ordinance for vagueness and for leaving unbridled discretion in the Town Board remain viable, because Lamar has standing to assert them, and they are not moot. Because the district court never ruled on the merits of those claims, we express no opinion on the merits of those claims. Nor do we express an opinion on the district court’s denial of summary judgment on Lamar’s claim against the ordinance’s fee provisions, as we decline to exercise jurisdiction over that issue. 20
To summarize, Lamar’s complaint initially challenged Orchard Park’s sign ordinance on the following grounds: 1) the ordinance was unconstitutional because it lacked a statement of legislative purpose; 2) the ordinance — through § 144-35(B)— favored commercial speech over non-commercial speech, and the exceptions to the permit requirement therefore permitted some non-commercial speech and prohibited other non-commercial speech; 3) the ordinance was unconstitutionally vague; 4) the ordinance left too much discretion over the issuance of certain signs in the Town Board; and 5) the requirement of a fee represented an unconstitutional tax upon its exercise of its first amendment rights. We agree with the district court that the first two of these claims are moot. On remand, the case should proceed on, at least, the remaining three claims, unless Lamar amends its complaint to assert claims against the amended provisions of the ordinance. Because we did not exercise jurisdiction over the district court’s denial of summary judgment to Lamar on the fifth claim, pertaining to fees, that aspect of the decision is left undisturbed.
We, therefore, REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this decision and to give Lamar an opportunity, if it so chooses, to amend its complaint to assert claims against the amended provisions of the ordinance. If Lamar should amend its complaint to assert claims against the amendments to the ordinance, the district court should carefully consider whether and how the new ordinance, on its face, unlawfully discriminates against and among different categories of commercial or non-commercial speech. Should this Court be called upon to review the merits of this case at some point in the future, we will benefit from a more developed record and a careful evaluation of the amended ordinance in light of the first amendment principles that have animated prior cases involving sign ordinances.
See, e.g., City of Ladue v. Gilleo,
Notes
. The district court referred this case to Magistrate Judge Scott for consideration of Lamar’s summary judgment motion, who issued a report and recommendation denying summary judgment. After considering the parties' objections to the report and recommendation, the district court issued an order adopting the report in full. Unless stated otherwise, we therefore refer to the Magistrate Judge’s report and recommendation and the district court order adopting that report *368 and recommendation collectively as the decision of the district court.
. Section 144-35(B) of the ordinance provided as follows:
Permitted sign copy. A sign may contain only the name and/or nature of the business conducted and/or the primary goods sold or the services rendered on the premises. Signs not advertising a business conducted, service rendered or primary goods sold on the premises of the sign are prohibited.
. At one point, Orchard Park’s sign ordinance contained an explicit prohibition on certain political signs. Although Lamar's arguments make reference to the prohibition on political signs, we find this provision of little consequence as it was repealed before this lawsuit was filed.
. Lamar’s permit requests were all denied with the following written explanation: PERMIT DENIED. MAX-SIZE OF A PEDESTAL SIGN IS 40 SQ. FT., 16 FT. HIGH. NO PROVISION IN ORDINANCE FOR BILLBOARD SIGNS.
. The district court later adjourned the trial date after being informed by counsel that this appeal had been taken.
. Had a final judgment been entered against Lamar below, that judgment would have been appealable under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We also would have appellate jurisdiction over the district court's summary judgment order if Lamar had successfully sought certification from the district court to take an interlocutory appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b). Orchard Park does not claim, nor do we find reason to believe, that Lamar's appeal pursuant to § 1292(a)(1) was in any way intended to circumvent the district court’s authority to determine whether to certify its non-final order under § 1292(b).
. Because we conclude that the district court’s rulings on summary judgment are inextricably intertwined with its denial of the preliminary injunction, we do not consider whether we could also assert jurisdiction because doing so would be "necessary to ensure meaningful review of' the issues properly on appeal.
See Merritt v. Shuttle, Inc.,
. Other Circuits have explicated their understanding of the "inextricably intertwined” concept somewhat differently.
See, e.g., Cunningham v. Gates, 229
F.3d 1271, 1285 (9th Cir.2000) ("[T]he legal theories on which the issues advance must either (a) be so intertwined that we must decide the pendent issue in order to review the claims properly raised on interlocutory appeal, or (b) resolution of the issue properly raised on interlocutory appeal necessarily resolves the pendent issue.”) (internal citations omitted);
Gilda Marx, Inc. v. Wildwood Exercise, Inc.,
. We find Orchard Park’s reliance upon
Huminski v. Rutland City Police Department,
As the plaintiff here moved for a preliminary injunction, and the district court specifically denied that motion, Lamar unambiguously has the right to appeal under § 1292(a)(1), and the sole question we must answer in this regard is whether the rulings on summary judgment are sufficiently intertwined to bring them within the ambit of our pendent jurisdiction. Huminski does little to aid us in resolving that question.
. The discussion that follows, however, is limited to those issues only, and we express no opinion on the district court's resolution, in dicta, of the merits of Lamar’s first amendment arguments.
Cf. Pathways,
. Similar to the plaintiff in
Harp Advertising,
Lamar has not articulated a specific challenge to the provisions of the ordinance regulating the size of signs. Nor is this a case in which the plaintiff claims that the tandem effect of the size restrictions and other separate ordinances or provisions is to suppress unconstitutionally its protected speech. We note, however, that the Seventh Circuit has distinguished
Harp Advertising
in just such a case.
See North Ave. Novelties, Inc. v. City of Chicago,
In North Avenue Novelties, the plaintiff adult entertainment company challenged a municipal ordinance prohibiting the operation of adult-oriented businesses within certain distances of, inter alia, schools and places of worship. Id. The district court, following Harp Advertising, ruled that the plaintiff lacked standing because, even if these provisions were invalidated, the plaintiff would be barred from operating its business under a separate ordinance prohibiting so-called "adult uses” in districts zoned as Planned *374 Manufacturing Districts. Id. Although the plaintiff had not clearly articulated a challenge to this second provision, the Seventh Circuit construed the plaintiffs complaint liberally as a challenge to "Chicago's overall scheme of limiting adult uses to certain specified areas,” id. at 444 (emphasis added), encompassing claims against both provisions that stood in the way of the operation of its business.
We do not read Lamar’s complaint to claim that the size provisions work as part of an overall scheme to suppress speech protected by the First Amendment. Rather, Lamar only claims that the size restrictions are invalid because they are not severable from other unlawful provisions. The Seventh Circuit's distinguishing of Harp Advertising in North Avenue Novelties, although noteworthy, is likely not helpful to Lamar’s standing claim.
. Because we find that Lamar’s standing to bring this facial challenge is not defeated by its not having submitted permit requests for signs that would have met Orchard Park’s size restrictions, we need not address the par *375 ties’ factual dispute over whether the signs for which Lamar did seek permits did in fact meet the ordinance’s size restrictions pertaining to signs attached to the sides of buildings.
. Of course, some courts have addressed the issue of severability prior to determining whether a plaintiff has standing.
See, e.g., INS
v.
Chadha,
. It also does not escape our attention that the discussion of mootness in Babylon was relegated to a footnote. Though the court’s conclusion that the controversy was not moot *377 was jurisdictional and, therefore, necessary in resolving the merits of the appeal, we disagree with Lamar that this terse holding established a blanket rule that trumps the subsequent holding of Granite State.
.
See also Fed'n of Adver. Indus. Representatives, Inc. v. City of Chicago,
. We find no merit in Lamar’s argument that Orchard Park waived any claim of mootness by making concessions before the district court that the case is controlled by
Babylon.
"[T]he condition of mootness is not a defense that could be waived by [a defendant], but rather is a condition that deprives the court of subject matter jurisdiction.”
Fox v. Bd. of Trustees,
. As discussed
supra,
there are several meaningful differences between Orchard . Park's original ordinance and the ordinance as it exists today. First, the amended ordinance contains a statement of legislative purpose where none previously existed. Orchard Park, N.Y., Code § 144-33(A). Although Lamar argues on appeal that Orchard Park’s mere insertion of a statement of purpose is not enough to justify the ordinance’s speech restrictions, an argument that the government's proffered justifications for an ordinance are insufficient is qualitatively different from an argument that the government has proffered none.
Cf. Babylon,
Second, we find that the amendments sufficiently altered the dividing line between what is and is not permitted, even though both versions of the ordinance may effectively curtail off-site commercial messages. The repeal of § 144-35(B) removed the outright prohibition on non-commercial speech, and, indeed, a provision was added expressly authorizing non-commercial messages where any sign is otherwise allowed. Id. § 144-33(B). Although both versions of the ordinance effectively prohibit off-site commercial speech, Lamar did not argue in its summary judgment motion below that the ordinance impermissi-bly discriminated against off-site commercial speech.
Further, although the amendments did not remove any of the ordinance's exceptions that Lamar claimed discriminated against some non-commercial speech in favor of other noncommercial speech, such discrimination is of a different character now that the prohibition on non-commercial speech has been repealed.
Cf. Messer v. City of Douglasville, Ga.,
. Contrary to Lamar's arguments on appeal, we did not in Babylon hold that the plaintiff had in fact obtained vested rights under state law. Rather, we mentioned the possibility that the plaintiff "might have” obtained vested rights as another reason counseling in favor of recognizing the persistence of a live controversy.
. Nor can we agree that if Orchard Park’s original ordinance had in fact been unconstitutional all along that Lamar obtained vested rights because it should have been able to erect its signs in the absence of a lawful ordinance that would have kept it from so doing.
Cf. Preble Aggregate, Inc. v. Town of Preble,
. Lamar’s claim against the fee provisions, of course, remains viable as there has yet to be a ruling on the merits of the claim, and defendant has not yet moved for summary judgment on that claim.
