MEMORANDUM & ORDER Re: Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss; Plaintiffs’ Motion for Preliminary Injunction
Plaintiffs National Federation of the Blind, National Federation of the Blind of California, Bruce Sexton, and all those similarly situated, filed this action against Target Corporation (“Target”), seeking declaratory, injunctive, and monetary relief. Plaintiffs claim that Target.com is inaccessible to the blind, and thereby violates federal and state laws prohibiting discrimination against the disabled. Now before the court is defendant’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. Having considered the parties’ arguments and submissions, and for the reasons set forth below, the court enters the following memorandum and order.
BACKGROUND 1
Target operates approximately 1,400 retail stores nationwide, including 205 stores in California. Target.com is a website owned and operated by Target. By visiting Target.com, customers can purchase many of the items available in Target stores. Target.com also allows a customer to perform functions related to Target stores. For example, through Target.com, a customer can access information on store locations and hours, refill a prescription or order photo prints for pick-up at a store, and print coupons to redeem at a store.
Plaintiffs allege that Target.com is not accessible to blind individuals. According to plaintiffs, designing a website to be accessible to the blind is technologically simple and not economically prohibitive. Protocols for designing an accessible internet site rely heavily on “alternative text”: invisible code embedded beneath graphics. A blind individual can use screen reader
On February 7, 2006 plaintiffs filed this action in Superior Court of California for the County of Alameda. On March 9, 2006 defendant removed the case to federal court. Defendant now moves to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim. Defendant claims that each of the antidis-crimination laws protecting the disabled— the Americans with Disabilities Act, 42 U.S.C. section 12182, (“ADA”), Unruh Civil Rights Act, Cal. Civ.Code section 51 (“Unruh Act”), and the Disabled Persons Act, Cal. Civ.Code section 54.1 (“DPA”) — covers access to only physical spaces. Since Target.com is not a physical space, defendant asserts that the complaint does not state a claim under these laws. Additionally, defendant contends that even if the Unruh Act and the DPA do govern access to websites, applying these state laws to the internet would violate the dormant commerce clause.
LEGAL STANDARD
I. Motion to Dismiss
A motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) “tests the legal sufficiency of a claim.”
Navarro v. Block,
A motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) should be granted if “it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claims which would entitle him to relief.”
Conley v. Gibson,
II. Motion for Preliminary Injunction
“A preliminary injunction is a provisional remedy, the purpose of which is to preserve the status quo and to prevent irreparable loss of rights prior to final disposition of the litigation.”
Napa Valley Publ’g Co. v. City of Calistoga,
In cases where a party seeks mandatory preliminary relief the Ninth Circuit has held that there must be a showing that “the law and the facts clearly favor granting such relief.”
Stanley v. University of Southern California,
DISCUSSION
I. Motion to Dismiss
A. ADA
Title III of the ADA prevents discrimination against the disabled in places of public accommodation: “No individual shall be discriminated against on the basis of disability in the full and equal enjoyment of the goods, services, facilities, privileges, advantages, or accommodations of any place of public accommodation by any person who owns, leases (or leases to) or operates a place of public accommodation.” 42 U.S.C. § 12182(a).
“Discrimination” under the ADA encompasses the denial of the opportunity, by the disabled, to participate in programs or services, and providing the disabled with separate, but unequal, goods or services. See 42 U.S.C. § 12182(b)(1)(A)(i-iii). To ensure that the disabled have full and equal enjoyment of the goods and services of places of public accommodation, the ADA requires “reasonable modification” of “policies, practices, and procedures,” the provision of auxiliary aids to ensure effective communication with the disabled, and the removal of architectural and communications barriers. 42 U.S.C. § 12182(b)(2)(A)(ii-iv). The ADA thus departs from certain anti-discrimination statutes in requiring that places of public accommodation take affirmative steps to accommodate the disabled. H.R.Rep. No. 101-485, pt.2, at 104 (1990); 42 U.S.C. § 12182(b)(2)(A)(ii-iv).
Defendant contends that Target.com is not a place of public accommodation within the meaning of the ADA, and therefore plaintiffs cannot state a claim under the ADA. Specifically, defendant claims that the complaint is deficient because it does not allege that “individuals with vision impairments are denied access to one of Target’s brick and mortar stores
Defendant contends that even if Target.com is the alleged service of Target stores, plaintiffs still do not state a claim because they fail to assert that they are denied physical access to Target stores. Although a plaintiff may allege an ADA violation based on unequal access to a “service” of a place of public accommodation, courts have held that a plaintiff must allege that there is a “nexus” between the challenged service and the place of public accommodation. Under Ninth Circuit law, a “place of public accommodation,” within the meaning of Title III, is a physical place.
See Weyer v. Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp.,
In
Weyer,
plaintiff sued an insurance company for offering a policy that allegedly discriminated against people with mental disabilities. The Ninth Circuit adopted the reasoning of the Third and Sixth Circuits, finding that there was “no nеxus between the disparity in benefits and the services which ... [the insurance company] offers to the public from its insurance office.”
Weyer,
Defendant argues that the above-cited cases stand for the proposition that the ADA prohibits only discrimination occurring on the premises of a place of public accommodation, and that “discrimination” is limited to the denial of physical entry to, or use of, a space. Each element of defendant’s argument will be addressed in turn.
1. Off-Site Discrimination
The ADA prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability “in the full and equal enjoyment of the goods, services, facilities, privileges, advantages or accommodations
of
any place of public accommodation.” 42 U.S.C. § 12182(a) (emphasis added). The statute applies to the services
of
a place of public accommodation, not services
in
a place of public accommodation.
Id.
To limit the ADA to discrimination in the provision of services occurring on the premises of a public accommodation would contradict the plain language оf the statute.
See id.; see also Rendon,
2. Physical Access
According to defendants, in order for plaintiffs’ claim to be actionable under the ADA, the “off-site” discrimination must still deny physical access to Target’s brick-and-mortar stores. Relying on
Rendon, Access Now v. Southwest Airlines,
Defendant’s reliance on
Rendon, Access Now
and
Stoutenborough
to support this proposition is misplaced. In
Rendon,
the court held that the plaintiff stated a claim by alleging that an off-site telephone screening process discriminated against the disabled who sought to enjoy a privilege (being a contestant on a television show) offered by a place of public accommodation (the studio).
Rendon,
In
Access Now,
the court held that plaintiff failed to state a claim under the ADA because plaintiff alleged that the inaccessibility of southwest.com prevented access to Southwest’s “virtual” ticket counters.
Access Now,
Ford v. Schering-Plough Corp.,
In
Stoutenborough,
the court found that there could be no Title III liability because the National Football League, the lessor of a public stadium, was not the entity that offered the challenged service.' In the words of the Sixth Circuit, “[t]he televised broadcast of football games is certainly offered through defendants, but not as a service of public accommodation. It is all of the services which the public accommodation offers, not all services which the lessor of the public accommodation offers which fall within the scope of Title III.”
Stoutenborough,
The case law does not support defendant’s attempt to draw a false dichotomy between those services which impede physical access to a public accommodation and those merely offered by the facility. Such an interpretation would effectively limit the scope of Title III to the provision of ramps, elevators and other aids that operate to remove physical barriers to entry. Although the Ninth Circuit has determined that a place of public accommodation is a physical space, the court finds unconvincing defendant’s attempt to bootstrap the definition of acсessibility to this determination, effectively reading out of the ADA the broader provisions enacted by Congress. In Rendon, even though the disabled individual did not contest the actual physical barriers of the facility in question, the Eleventh Circuit found that Title III was implicated because a “discriminatory procedure that deprived [the individual] of the opportunity to compete to be a contestant ...
at
a place of public accommodation” was utilized.
Rendon,
3. Auxiliary Aids and Services
Alternatively, defendant asserts that under the аuxiliary aid provision of the ADA, plaintiffs contentions should be dismissed. Title III of the ADA, in a section entitled “specific prohibitions,” defines discrimination to include:
a failure to take such steps as may be necessary to ensure that no individual with a disability is excluded, denied services, segregated or otherwise treated differently than other individuals because of the absence of auxiliary aids and services, unless the entity can demonstrate that taking such steps would fundamentally alter the nature of the goods, service, facility, privilege, advantage, or accommodation being offered or would result in an undue burden.
42 U.S.C. § 12182(a)(2)(A)(iii). This section explicitly exempts public accommodations from the obligation to provide auxiliary aids or services if doing so would fundamentally change the nature of the good or service, or result in an undue burden. Id.
In regulations implementing this section, the Department of Justice has explained that the ADA obligates public accommodations to communicate effectively with customers who have disabilities concerning hearing, vision, or speech. 28 C.F.R. § 36.303(c);
see also
Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Disability by Public Accommodations and in Commercial Facilities, 56 Fed.Reg. 35544, at * 33, (July 26, 1991). For example, a restaurant must ensure that an employee is available to explain a menu to a blind customer, and a museum offering audio tours must provide alternative formats of the tour that a deaf patron could use. 56 Fed.Reg. 35544 at *34. However, while a bookstore must ensure
Defendant contends that even if plaintiffs demonstrate a nexus between Target.com and Target stores, Target.com falls under the auxiliary aid provision of Title III. The auxiliary aid requirement allows a public accommodation to provide the information in any format, so long as it results in effective communication. Thus, defendant concludes that Target need not modify its website, so long as it provides the information contained therein in some other format, such as by telephone. However, the flexibility to provide reasonable accommodation is an affirmative defense and not an appropriate basis upon which to dismiss the action. After plaintiffs state a claim — by alleging that the website is not accessible to the blind — the burden then shifts to defendants to assert, as an affirmative defense, that they already provide the information on Target.com in another reasonable format (such as over the phone). Indeed, whether or not a blind-accessible Target.com is a form of communication similar to the provisions of Braille menus is not at all clear from the face of the complaint. Nor is it clear whether or not the addition of “alt-tags” and other accessibility programming features would alter the nature of the service. Defendant’s challenge is premature and the court declines to dismiss the action on this basis.
4. Conclusion
In sum, the court finds that to the extent that plaintiffs allege that the inaccessibility of Target.com impedes the full and equal enjoyment of goods and services offered in Target stores, the plaintiffs state a claim, and the motion to dismiss is denied. To the extent that Target.com offers information and services unconnected to Target stores, which do not affect the enjoyment of goods and services offered in Target stores, the plaintiffs fail to state a claim under Title III of the ADA. Defendant’s motion to dismiss this portion of plaintiffs’ ADA claim is granted. 4
The Unruh Act states that individuals with disabilities are “entitled to the full and equal accommodations, advantages, facilities, privileges, or services in all business establishments оf every kind whatsoever.” Cal. Civ.Code § 51(b). Defendant advances three separate reasons for dismissing plaintiffs’ claim under the Unruh Act. First, Target.com is not a business establishment. Second, the complaint does not allege, and cannot prove, that Target engaged in intentional discrimination against the disabled. Third, the Unruh Act does not require modification of Target.com.
5
However, in 1992, the California legislature amended the Unruh Civil Rights Act to state that a violation of the ADA is a violation of the Unruh Act. Cal. Civ.Code § 51(f). Thus, a plaintiff who pleads a violation of the ADA does not need to allege anything further in order to state a claim under the Unruh Act.
Lentini v. California Cntr. for the Arts,
Notwithstanding, it is worth noting that defendant’s argument that Target.com is not a business establishment is misplaced, since the complaint alleges that Target is a business establishment and Target.com is a service provided by Target and its stores. Complaint at ¶ 40. Plaintiffs make two separate allegations. First, defendant is violating the ADA and, thus the Unruh Act, by denying plаintiffs the full and equal enjoyment of a service (Target.com) of a place of public accommodation (Target). Second, defendant is denying the blind equal access to services provided in places of public accommodation (Target stores) by denying the blind access to Target.com. These two legal theories do not assume that Target.com is a business establishment, they rest upon the premise that Target.com is a service of a business establishment, and therefore defendant’s argument that a website cannot be a business establishment is unavailing.
C. Disabled Persons Act
The Disabled Persons Act states that:
Individuals with disabilities shall be entitled to full and equal access to accommodations, advantages, facilities, medical facilities, including hospitals, clinics, and physicians’ offices, and privileges of all common carriers, airplanes, motor vehicles, railroad trains, motorbuses, streetcars, boats, or any other public conveyances or modes of transportation (whether private, public, franchised, licensed, contracted, or otherwise provided), telephone facilities, adoption agencies, private schools, hotels, lodging places, places of public accommodation,amusement, or resort, and other places to which the general public is invited.
Cal. Civ.Code § 54.1(a)(1) (emphasis added).
Defendant argues that the complaint fails to state a claim under the Disabled Persons Act for two reasons. First, the Disabled Persons Act applies to only physical places, and Target.com is not a physical place. Second, a claim under the Disabled Persons Act must be based on a violation of the building code, and plaintiffs do not allege a violation of the building code. However, similar to the Unruh Act, pursuant to Cal. Civ.Code § 54.1(d), a violation of the ADA is a violation of the DP A. The court need not reach defendant’s arguments.
D. Commerce Clause
Defendant argues that even if plaintiffs state a claim under the Unruh and Disabled Persons Acts, applying these statutes to regulate Target.com violates the dormant commerce clause. Defendant advances two reasons that such regulation would violate the commerce clause. First, state regulation of Target.com would regulate conduct occurring wholly outside of California. Second, state regulation of Target.com would regulate an area of commerce that is reserved exclusively for Congress.
1. Extraterritorial Regulation
The Commerce clause forbids a state from regulating commerce “that takes place wholly outside of the State’s borders, whether or not the commerce has effects within the State.”
Healy v. Beer Inst.,
Although the Ninth Circuit has not reached this issue, courts in several circuits have invalidated state laws regulating the internet on the grounds that
any
regulation of the internet regulates conduct occurring outside the borders of the state.
See, e.g., American Booksellers Found. v. Dean,
The cases cited above relied extensively on the analysis of the Southern District of New York in
American Libraries Association v. Pataki,
By contrast, several state and federal courts have held that states may regulate the internet without violating the commerce clause. For example, courts have upheld state anti-spam statutes by distinguishing the regulation of e-mail from the regulation of internet postings; e-mail messages can be targeted at recipients in particular geographical areas, whereas a posting to the internet is accessible to any internet user, regardless of location.
See Ferguson v. Friendfinders, Inc.,
Other courts have upheld state laws regulating the internet by reasoning that the statute was intended to apply only to local conduct, or that the state would enforce the law only against conduct occurring within the state.
See, e.g., Ford Motor Co. v. Texas Dept. Of Transp.,
Defendant distinguishes the cases relied upon by plaintiffs — Ford, Hsu, and
Fri-endfinders
— on three grounds. First, defendant contends that the laws at issue in these cases did not directly regulate the
Second, defendant asserts that none of these laws controlled conduct beyond the borders of the states. It is true that the statute challenged in
Friendfinders
did not control conduct outside California because the law regulated e-mail sent to residents of California via equipment located in California. Friendfinders,
Defendant’s third argument is that the practical effect of regulating Target.com is to regulate conduct outside California because of the nature of the internet. Since Target.com is a single website viewed by customers nationwide, a modification mandated by California necessarily regulates the transactions of customers in other states who use Target.com. However, Plaintiffs respond that it is technologically and economically feasible to establish a separate website directing Target.com visitors to a California-specific site in compliance with state laws and avoiding a commerce clause violation. Defendant maintains that even if it could design a separate website for only California customers, this would still violate the commerce clause.
However, in Healy, the Supreme Court held that:
... a statute that directly controls commerce occurring wholly outside the boundaries of a State exceeds the inherent limits of the enacting State’s authority and is invalid regardless of whether the statute’s extraterritorial reach was intended by the legislature. The critical inquiry is whether the practical effect of the regulation is to control conduct beyond the boundaries of the State.
Healy,
Defendant’s argument&emdash;that if this court applies the Unruh Act and the Disabled Persons Acts to Target.com, the practical effect will be to force it to modify its website for all customers nationwide-is not sustainable. This assumes that Target would decline to design a separate California site, and instead simply modify its Target.com site fоr consumers nationwide. Healy lends no support to defendant’s argument, since Healy does not address whether a statute violates the commerce clause when a defendant can comply with a statute in such a way as to avoid extraterritorial application. The commerce clause is not necessarily implicated since Target could choose to make a California-specific website.
Indeed, even if Target chooses to change its entire website in order to comply with California law, this does not mean that California is regulating out-of-state conduct. Courts have held that when a defendant chooses to manufacture one product for a nationwide market, rather than target its products to comply with state laws, defendant’s choice does not implicate the commerce clause.
See, e.g., Lorillard Tobacco Co. v. Reilly,
Moreover, it is noteworthy that various commentators have observed that the case which many courts have followed in invalidating state regulation of the internet,
Pataki,
rests on an incorrect technical understanding of the internet.
See, e.g.,
Jack L, Goldsmith & Alan O. Sykes,
The Internet and the Dormant Commerce Clause,
110 Yale L.J. 785, 882 (2001) (noting that contrary to the assumption of many courts, including the
Pataki
court, internet content providers can identify the geographic location of their users and target content based on the location of the users).
Pa-taki
asserts that someone who puts content on the internet has “no way to determine the characteristics of their audience ... [such as] age and geographical location.”
Pataki,
Given the foregoing, the court finds that it is inappropriate at the motion to dismiss stage to assert a commerce clause violation based on the mere fact that Target, at the remedy stage, may ultimately choose to make its nationwide website accessible to the blind. The Supreme Court has noted that the relevant inquiry is the “practical effect” of the law.
See Healy,
2. Exclusive Province of Congress
Defendant argues that under the dormant commercе clause California cannot regulate Target.com because the internet requires uniform, national regulations.
The commerce clause prevents a state from regulating “those phases of the national commerce which, because of the need of national uniformity, demand that their regulation, if any, be prescribed by a single authority.”
Southern Pac. Co. v. Arizona,
By contrast, in
Exxon Corp v. Governor of Maryland,
the Supreme Court upheld a Maryland law prohibiting a producer or refiner of petroleum from operating a retail gas station.
Similarly, in
Allied Artists Pictures Corp. v. Rhodes,
a district court upheld an Ohio statute against a commerce clause challenge.
Regulations issued by the Attorney General of Massachusetts concerning advertising and warning labels for cigarettes and cigars were challenged in
Lorillard Tobacco Co. v. Reilly,
However, the court invalidated the application of the advertising regulations to national media, such as magazines, on the grounds that the burdens on interstate commerce would outweigh the state’s interest in promoting public health. Id. at 203. The regulations would otherwise require a company which placed an advertisement in a national market to comply with the Massachusetts regulations in the event that the edition wound up in Massachusetts. Id. If a magazine runs a “Massachusetts edition,” however, it must comply with the regulations. Id.
Applying the forgoing commerce clause analysis to the internet, several courts have held that only Congress can regulate the internet, since the internet requires uniform, national regulations. The most extensive analysis is provided by
Pataki
The court analogized the internet to the interstate railroad and highway systems, implying that just as a single train or car travels through interstate systems, so internet communication travels across states.
Pataki,
However, a state’s ability to extend benefits or protections to its citizens through
In any event, as aforementioned, the commerce clause issue is not triggered at this preliminary stage and thus the court declines to rule on it for purposes of the present motion.
II. Motion for Preliminary Injunction
In opposition to plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction, defendant asserts that (1) the motion is more appropriately conceived of as request for mandatory injunction and under the relevant legal standard plaintiffs cannot demonstrate a clear likelihood of success, (2) plaintiffs cannot even make the initial factual showing that Target’s goods and services are inaccessible to the blind, (3) plaintiffs cannot establish a violation of the “specific prohibitions” of section 12182(b)(2)(A) of the ADA, (4) plaintiffs’ state law claims fail as a matter of law, (5) plaintiffs fail to identify with specificity the standards that the court should impose upon Target in violation of Rule 65(d), (6) the court should deny plaintiffs’ claim for waiver of the bond requirement.
The court need not reach many of these grounds of denial since defendant is correct in its assertion that plaintiffs cannot demonstrate that the relevant facts clearly favor a finding that Target.com is inaccessible to the blind. In support of its contention, defendant submits the declarations of three blind individuals who allegedly have successfully navigated the Target.com website, searching for and purchasing products. See, e.g., Dawn Wilkinson Dec. ¶ 5 (noting that with the use of screen reader JAWS version 7.0 “I was able to access Target.com, navigate the various links on the site, and search for specific products. I was also able to find the specific products I was shopping for, and browse through the various departments within Target.com”); Dave Wilkinson Dec. ¶4 (using JAWS version 7.1 “I spent a little more than two and a half hours on Target.com exploring the various functions and features on the website ... I conducted searches on Target.com by category and department, and was able to find the products I was searching for. I was able to add my product selections to the Target.com virtual shopping cart, and remove items ... that I later chose not to purchase.”); Tritten Dec. ¶¶ 4-6 (“I thought using Target.com was fun. I enjoyed browsing the products sold on Target.com, and playing around with the ‘Gift Finder’ feature. It was not difficult to access or navigate the site. I was able to access different departments, review products, and find out all sorts of details on product availability and return options.”).
Defendant assert that although the screen readers did not always work seam
In response, plaintiffs note that defendant’s declarants are not typical blind shoppers but “web olympians” with unusually high levels of skill in web technology; individuals who enjoy the challenges of troubleshooting and the difficulties of overcoming barriers on a given website. See, e.g., Wilkinson Dep. at 8:22-9:5; 106:16-24, 108:13-23; Dawn Wilkinson Dep. at 7:12-8:8, 11:1-23; Tritten Dec. at ¶ 2.
However, defendant also draws the court’s attention to statements in the deposition testimony of the eight declarants which were submitted by plaintiffs in support of their motion; statements that bring into question plaintiffs’ claims of inaccessibility. For example, many of the declarants admitted to spending a relatively short time on the website before concluding that the website was inaccessible. See, e.g., Volonte Dep. at 29:19-23 (spending no more than “a few minutes on the website”); Uttermohlen Dep. at 26:9-11; Ayala Jacobson Dep. at 44:22-45:18. Moreover, at least one declarant admitted to regularly visiting Target.com to conduct detailed “product searches” before going to a Target store to purchase the chosen products. Jacobson Dep. at 48:12-51:12 (noting that “it’s easiest sometimes to look at a website to see what products are available before we go there.... I recall looking for specific products more than once in some cases, but my intention was to see what products were available”).
It is evident from the foregoing that it would be premature for this court to rule on an injunction as there are sufficiеnt questions raised with respect to whether the average blind person is able to access Target’s website. Additional discovery is required before the trier of fact can adequately make this determination. Moreover, the current motion is not one brought to maintain the status quo and plaintiffs can point to no emergency that “tips the balance of hardships” in their favor. Rather, in this motion, plaintiffs seek an order by the court directing Target to take affirmative steps, with the attendant monetary and man-hour expenditures, to change the programming of its websites to accommodate the blind. The Ninth Circuit has clearly stated that such requests for mandatory relief are disfavored and should be denied absent a showing that the relevant law and facts are clearly in favor of the moving party.
See, e.g., Stanley,
Defendant’s motion to dismiss plaintiffs’ complaint is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. Plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction is DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Unless otherwise noted, background facts are taken from plaintiffs’ complaint.
. Defendant cites to the legislative history of the ADA and the Rehabilitation Act as evidence that Congress did not intend the ADA to apply to websites. Specifically, defendant contends that since Congress has amended the Rehabilitation Act to require that federal government websites be accessible to the blind, but has not similarly amended the ADA, Congress has refrained from imposing accessibility requirements on private websites. See 29 U.S.C. § 794(d). Plaintiffs respond that in passing the ADA, Congress sought to eliminate a broad range of discrimination against the disabled, and intended the ADA to keep pace with technological change. See 42 U.S.C. § 12101(b); H.R.Rep. No. 101-485, pt.2, at 108 (1990). At oral argument, however, the parties conceded that the ADA does not explicitly mention websites. It is clear that the legislative history of the ADA is inconclusive on the issue of the regulation of private websites and the court declines to draw an inferеnce from the absence of congressional action.
. The examples listed by the ADA as examples of places of public accommodation provide support for the notion that such an entity must be a physical place. They include: inns, hotels, restaurants, motion picture houses, auditoriums, bakeries, laundromats, museum, parks, zoos and health spas. See 42 U.S.C. § 12181(7)(A)-(L).
. It appears from a review of the website in question' — which the court notes is not in evidence but nonetheless does raise some questions — that Target treats Target.com as an extension of its stores, as part of its overall integrated merchandising efforts. See www. target.com. This suggests to the court that perhaps with more evidence, the court’s determination of what may be covered under the ADA in this kind of integrated merchandising may be subject to amendment. The website is a means to gain access to the store and it is ironic that Target, through its merchandising efforts on the one hand, seeks to reach greater numbers of customers and enlarge its consumer-base, while on the other hand it seeks to escape the requirements of the ADA. A broader appliсation of the ADA to the website may be appropriate if upon further discovery it is disclosed that the store and website are part of an integrated effort. Parties may file briefing on this issue later if the court deems it appropriate.
. Specifically, defendant argues that, under section 51(d) of the Unruh Act, a business establishment must make a modification only if another provision of law requires the modification in question. According to defendant, no statute requires modification of websites to ensure that they are accessible by the blind. The Unruh Civil Rights Act provides that:
Nothing in this section shall be construed to require any construction, alteration, repair, structural or otherwise, or modification of any sort whatsoever, beyond that construction, alteration, repair, or modification that is otherwise required by other provisions of law, to any new or existing establishment, facility, building, improvement, or any other structure, nor shall anything in this section be construed to augment, restrict, or alter in any way the authority of the State Architect to require construction, alteration, repair, or modifications that the State Architect otherwise possesses pursuant to other laws.
Cal. Civ.Code § 51(d).
