Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca7-19-02116/USCOURTS-ca7-19-02116-0/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 446
Nature of Suit: Americans with Disabilities Act - Other
Cause of Action: 

---

In the 

United States Court of Appeals 

For the Seventh Circuit ____________________

No. 19‐2116

ACCESS LIVING OF METROPOLITAN CHICAGO, et al.,

Plaintiffs‐Appellants,

v.

UBER TECHNOLOGIES, INC., et al.,

Defendants‐Appellees.

____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the

Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.

No. 1:16‐cv‐9690 — Manish S. Shah, Judge.

____________________

ARGUED DECEMBER 9, 2019 — DECIDED MAY 5, 2020

____________________

Before EASTERBROOK, ROVNER, and SCUDDER, Circuit

Judges.

SCUDDER, Circuit Judge.  Whether the Americans with Dis‐

abilities Act’s public accommodation provisions apply to

ridesharing companies like Uber is unsettled. The lawsuit un‐

derlying this appeal presents that question and the many

complexities that come with considering Uber’s business

model and the discrimination proscribed by the ADA. Before

us are antecedent questions about whether certain plaintiffs—

Case: 19-2116 Document: 40 Filed: 05/05/2020 Pages: 22
2 No. 19‐2116

a disability rights advocacy organization called Access Living

as well as an individual named Rahnee Patrick—have alleged

injuries sufficient to show Article III standing and to state

causes of action under § 12188(a)(1) of Title III of the ADA.

The district court answered no for both plaintiffs. We affirm.  

I

A

Uber operates ridesharing applications that connect cus‐

tomers seeking private transportation with providers of those

services. Founded in 2009, the company has experienced ex‐

plosive growth, going public in 2019 and reporting annual

consolidated revenue of $14.1 billion. For many today, “call‐

ing an Uber,” as the lingo goes, has become commonplace and

preferred over traditional taxi services.

Though Uber does not own or select their drivers’ vehi‐

cles, its app presents riders with options. Many will choose

standard sedans, premium cars, or SUVs. Others, however,

may need a specialized vehicle. Customers restricted to mo‐

torized wheelchairs need wheelchair accessible vehicles, or

WAVs—vehicles equipped with ramps and lifts. Uber’s app

offers that option as well.  

Access Living is a Chicago‐based nonprofit organization

formed to protect and advance the civil rights of people with

disabilities, including by helping them live independently.

Fourteen percent of the organization’s staff and 20 percent of

its board members are wheelchair users who require a WAV.

Access Living and three of its staff members or volunteers,

Michelle Garcia, Justin Cooper, and Rahnee Patrick, brought

this lawsuit in October 2016. The individual plaintiffs would

like to use Uber to order WAVs for rides to meetings and

Case: 19-2116 Document: 40 Filed: 05/05/2020 Pages: 22
No. 19‐2116 3

advocacy events in Chicago. Access Living reimburses its em‐

ployees for these business‐related travel costs and, in further‐

ance of its broader mission, promotes access to equivalent

travel services for all individuals who use motorized wheel‐

chairs.   

The Americans with Disabilities Act prohibits discrimina‐

tion based on disability in “major areas of public life, among

them employment (Title I of the Act), public services (Title II),

and public accommodations (Title III).” PGA Tour, Inc. v. Mar‐

tin, 532 U.S. 661, 675 (2001). The plaintiffs brought their claim

under Title III, which defines a “public accommodation” to

include a “travel service.” 42 U.S.C. § 12181(7)(F). They allege

that Uber, as a travel service and thus public accommodation,

discriminates against people with disabilities by failing to en‐

sure equal access to WAVs for motorized wheelchair users.

This disparity occurs, the plaintiffs contend, because Uber

fails to ensure the availability of enough drivers with WAVs,

instead outsourcing most requests for wheelchair accessible

rides to local taxi companies. As a result, plaintiffs say, mo‐

torized wheelchair users experience longer wait times and

higher prices than other Uber customers.  

Access Living and the individual plaintiffs seek injunctive

relief and a declaration that Title III of the ADA requires Uber

to provide equivalent services to customers requiring a WAV.

For its part, Uber contends that its ridesharing technology—

being altogether different from a physical structure like an of‐

fice building, hotel, or restaurant—is not a “public accommo‐

dation” within the meaning of Title III and thus is not subject

to any equal access mandate imposed by the ADA.  

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4 No. 19‐2116

B

No circuit court has addressed whether the ADA’s Title III

public accommodation provisions apply to companies oper‐

ating ridesharing technology, to say nothing of Uber’s alleged

violation of the statute. This appeal does not require us to be

the first. The question presented is more limited: whether Ac‐

cess Living as an organization and Rahnee Patrick as an indi‐

vidual have alleged facts to establish Article III standing and

to state a cause of action under Title III of the ADA. The dis‐

trict court held that the other two individual plaintiffs,

Michelle Garcia and Justin Cooper, have stated claims, and no

aspect of this appeal challenges that decision. Indeed, both of

those plaintiffs later settled with Uber.  

In a December 2018 order and opinion, the district court

granted Uber’s motion to dismiss Access Living and Rahnee

Patrick as plaintiffs. See Access Living of Metro. Chicago v. Uber

Techs., Inc., 351 F. Supp. 3d 1141, 1159 (N.D. Ill. 2018). The

court concluded that Patrick did not plead the requisite in‐

jury‐in‐fact for Article III standing and Access Living failed to

allege facts to state a cause of action under § 12188(a)(1) of Ti‐

tle III of the ADA. See id. at 1150, 1153–54. In a subsequent

order entered in April 2019, the court denied requests from

Patrick and Access Living to amend their complaint, conclud‐

ing that any amendment would be futile in light of the specific

allegations they proposed adding to the case. The court like‐

wise denied a request by both plaintiffs to expand the scope

of the complaint to cover ridesharing requests beyond the

City of Chicago to include suburban communities. The dis‐

trict court saw this proposed amendment as coming too late

in the litigation—on the eve of discovery closing—to be per‐

mitted.  

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No. 19‐2116 5

Access Living and Patrick now appeal the district court’s

final decision denying them leave to amend.  

II

A

Access Living is a nonprofit organization that coordinates

services and programs and advocates for people with disabil‐

ities. As a “center for independent living,” the organization

receives federal funding under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.

See 29 U.S.C. § 796. Like other centers, Access Living supports

people with disabilities by providing “core services,” such as

training on independent living skills. Id. § 705(17)(B). The or‐

ganization also broadly promotes “equal access” for those

with disabilities “to all services, programs, activities, re‐

sources, and facilities.” Id. § 796f‐4(b)(1)(D).  

Access Living’s advocacy efforts extend to transportation

services. In 2012 the organization successfully campaigned

for a Chicago ordinance requiring more wheelchair accessible

taxis. It has since turned its attention to ridesharing compa‐

nies like Uber, which it alleges are “now a significant part of

our national transportation system and are positioning them‐

selves to be an indispensable part of the transportation sys‐

tems of the future.” In 2016 Access Living advocated for an

amendment to a Chicago ordinance to require ridesharing

companies to provide equivalent services for wheelchair us‐

ers. While the effort failed before the City Council, Access Liv‐

ing continues to press for change, including through litiga‐

tion.  

B

To proceed in federal court, Access Living—like all plain‐

tiffs—must first establish Article III standing. To do so, the

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6 No. 19‐2116

organization must allege that it suffered a concrete and par‐

ticularized injury traceable to Uber and capable of being re‐

dressed through a favorable ruling. See Lujan v. Defs. of Wild‐

life, 504 U.S. 555, 560–61 (1992); see also Lopez‐Aguilar v. Mar‐

ion Cty. Sheriffʹs Depʹt, 924 F.3d 375, 384–85 (7th Cir. 2019). Put

another way, to determine whether Access Living has stand‐

ing “we conduct the same inquiry as in the case of an individ‐

ual: Has the plaintiff alleged such a personal stake in the out‐

come of the controversy as to warrant his invocation of fed‐

eral‐court jurisdiction?” Havens Realty Corp. v. Coleman, 455

U.S. 363, 378–79 (1982) (internal quotations omitted).

The Supreme Court’s decision in Haven’s Realty provides

important guidance. A nonprofit organization dedicated to

ensuring open housing brought claims under the Fair Hous‐

ing Act alleging injury on the basis of having expended

significant resources investigating and reporting racially dis‐

criminatory housing practices by a realty company in a sub‐

urb of Richmond, Virginia. See id. at 369. The organization

contended that the company’s practice of steering apartments

on the basis of race hindered its efforts to assist prospective

tenants in realizing equal access to housing. See id. at 379. The

Court concluded that these allegations sufficed to establish

Article III standing, for “[s]uch concrete and demonstrable in‐

jury to the organization’s activities—with the consequent

drain on the organization’s resources—constitutes far more

than simply a setback to the organization’s abstract social in‐

terests.” Id.; see also Common Cause Indiana v. Lawson, 937 F.3d

944, 952 (7th Cir. 2019) (applying Haven’s Realty and holding

that a voter advocacy organization had standing to challenge

an election law because it would create an unwanted demand

on its resources “to alleviate potential harmful effects” of the

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No. 19‐2116 7

law, which “[would] displace other projects [it] normally un‐

dertake[s]”).  

Access Living has Article III standing here. In clear and

precise terms, the organization alleged that it experiences in‐

creased transportation costs as a result of Uber’s provision of

ridesharing services on unequal terms to persons requiring

WAVs. By way of example, Access Living alleged that the un‐

equal access has prevented its volunteers and staff from at‐

tending meetings with lawmakers and local transportation

boards because getting there would have been too costly. And

these increased costs, Access Living adds, force the organiza‐

tion to divert resources to counter this discrimination that it

could otherwise use to fulfill its disability rights mission.  

All of this is enough to demonstrate a concrete and partic‐

ularized injury for standing purposes. The organization roots

its allegations not in a generalized appeal to its mission, but

in specific contentions about incurring increased costs as a re‐

sult of Uber’s alleged provision of WAVs on terms unequal to

its other rideshare offerings. Article III requires no more.  

C

The question then becomes whether Access Living has

stated a cause of action under Title III of the ADA. See Spokeo,

Inc. v. Robins, 136 S. Ct. 1540, 1549 (2016) (recognizing the dis‐

tinction between standing under Article III of the Constitution

and whether, as a statutory matter, the plaintiff has stated a

cause of action within the meaning of a provision in the U.S.

Code). Principles of statutory construction guide the inquiry.

See Citizens for a Better Env’t v. Steel Co., 230 F.3d 923, 928 (7th

Cir. 2000) (explaining that whether there is a cause of action

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“is a matter of statutory meaning, not of power to adjudi‐

cate”).  

Access Living sued Uber under Title III of the ADA, which

prohibits public accommodations, including travel services,

from discriminating on the basis of disability. See 42 U.S.C.

§ 12182(a). Congress authorized private enforcement of Title

III by “any person who is being subjected to discrimination on

the basis of disability in violation” of that Title. Id.

§ 12188(a)(1) (emphasis added). So the question is whether

Access Living is “subjected to” discrimination by Uber’s pro‐

vision of allegedly unequal services to members of the organ‐

ization’s staff and volunteer corps who wish to order WAVs

for work‐related travel.  

Access Living relies on the same reasons supporting its

Article III standing—Uber’s furnishing of unequal access to

WAVs, which results in the organization incurring increased

transportation costs—to argue that it has been “subjected to”

discrimination. The district court disagreed. It concluded that

Access Living failed to allege in direct enough terms that the

organization itself was “subjected to” discrimination, but ra‐

ther only that its injuries derived from harm experienced in

the first instance by its employees and volunteers. The district

court saw the same pleading deficiency in Access Living’s

proposed amended complaint, as the allegations there, while

advanced in more detail, still only alleged secondhand injury

to the organization.  

We review denials of leave to amend for abuse of discre‐

tion but evaluate the underlying legal basis for futility de novo.

See Runnion ex rel. Runnion v. Girl Scouts of Greater Chicago &

Nw. Indiana, 786 F.3d 510, 524 (7th Cir. 2015). And our inquiry

begins, as it must, with the language Congress employed in

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No. 19‐2116 9

§ 12188(a)(1) to authorize private party lawsuits under Title

III. See Veprinsky v. Fluor Daniel, Inc., 87 F.3d 881, 888 (7th Cir.

1996) (explaining that in interpreting the scope of a cause of

action “we begin with the plain language of the statute we are

called upon to apply”).   

The district court was right to read § 12188(a)(1) and Con‐

gress’s limiting a cause of action to “any person who is being

subjected to discrimination on the basis of disability” as re‐

quiring a direct connection between Uber’s alleged discrimi‐

nation and the injury complained of by Access Living. As a

verb, to “subject” means “[t]o bring under the operation of an

agent, agency, or process; to submit to certain treatment; to

cause to undergo or experience something physically.” Sub‐

ject, OXFORD ENGLISH DICTIONARY ONLINE,

https://www.oed.com/view/Entry/192688 (last visited May 5,

2020). Congress employed “subjected to” the same way in

§ 12188(a)(1): the language requires the would‐be plaintiff to

directly experience the challenged discrimination. The “sub‐

jected to” formulation narrows the pool of possible plaintiffs

in a way that eliminates someone alleging only indirect injury

experienced derivatively or vicariously through another.  

Our construction of § 12188(a)(1) finds reinforcement in

other provisions of Title III. See C.I.R. v. Engle, 464 U.S. 206,

223 (1984) (noting that “the true meaning of a single section

of a statute . . . , however precise its language, cannot be as‐

certained if it be considered apart from related sections”). Ti‐

tle III as a whole prohibits discrimination “on the basis of dis‐

ability in the full and equal enjoyment . . . of any place of pub‐

lic accommodation,” 42 U.S.C. § 12182(a), and therefore “re‐

quires places of public accommodation and commercial facil‐

ities to be designed, constructed, and altered in compliance

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10 No. 19‐2116

with the accessibility standards established by [regulations].”

28 C.F.R. § 36.101(a). Places of public accommodation include

businesses open to the public (hotels and restaurants, for ex‐

ample). See 42 U.S.C. § 12181(7).

Within Title III Congress not only authorized private en‐

forcement through civil actions, but also proscribed particular

acts and types of discrimination. Consider foremost § 12182,

Title III’s discrimination‐by‐association provision, which

states that it “shall be discriminatory” to “deny” equal ser‐

vices “to an individual or entity because of the known disa‐

bility of an individual with whom the individual or entity is

known to have a relationship or association.” Id.

§ 12182(b)(1)(E). Reading this substantive prohibition to‐

gether with § 12188(a)(1) reinforces our conclusion that Con‐

gress intended private enforcement of Title III to hinge upon

a showing of direct injury. Put most simply, an entity denied

equal services because of its association with someone who

has a disability experiences direct harm—is “subjected to”

discrimination—and therefore can invoke § 12188(a)(1) to en‐

force the substantive prohibition embodied in

§ 12182(b)(1)(E).  

The statute’s implementing regulations illustrate the point

even more concretely. By way of example, the regulations

provide that “it would be a violation of [Title III] for a day

care center to refuse admission to a child because his or her

brother has HIV disease.” 28 C.F.R. pt. 36, app. C § 36.205; ac‐

cord Special Educ. Servs. v. Rreef Performance P’ship‐I, L.P., No.

95 C 6468, 1995 WL 745964, at *3 (N.D. Ill. Dec. 11, 1995) (in‐

terpreting the same statutory language and observing that a

school would, for example, have a cause of action if denied a

lease renewal because it served children with disabilities).  

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No. 19‐2116 11

The upshot is clear: § 12182(b)(1)(E)’s discrimination‐by‐

association provision still requires the same direct discrimi‐

nation (and thus direct injury) on which Congress hinged pri‐

vate enforcement of Title III in § 12188(a)(1). It is on this exact

score that Access Living’s effort to state a cause of action falls

short. Nowhere, for instance, does Access Living allege that it

maintains its own corporate Uber account and found itself un‐

able—because it employs or associates with persons with dis‐

abilities—to order Uber rides for its staff, volunteers, or

guests. To the contrary, the discrimination Access Living al‐

leges falls entirely on the indirect side of the line, as it seeks to

recover for discrimination experienced in the first instance by

its staff or volunteers. The alleged harm to the organization

comes only indirectly in the form of increased reimbursement

costs. The district court was right to conclude that Access Liv‐

ing failed to state a cause of action in its original and proposed

amended complaints.

This reasoning aligns with the Eleventh Circuit’s decision

in McCullum v. Orlando Regional Healthcare System, 768 F.3d

1135 (11th Cir. 2014). The district court there dismissed claims

brought by parents against a hospital that allegedly failed to

provide their deaf and mute son with a professional inter‐

preter. See id. at 1138. The child’s parents and sister(much like

Access Living here) invoked § 12182(b)(1)(e) and sought to

state a cause of action under Title III of the ADA, alleging that

the hospital injured them by effectively leaving it to them to

facilitate communication with their son, even though they

had limited knowledge of sign language. See id. at 1142.  

The Eleventh Circuit held that these allegations of injury

were too indirect—the parents alleged discrimination against

their son in the first instance and only against themselves as a

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12 No. 19‐2116

secondary matter, thereby failing to show they were “sub‐

jected to” discrimination within the meaning of § 12188(a)(1).

See id. at 1143. The boy’s parents and sister, as the court put

it, failed to allege any “exclusion, denial of benefits, or dis‐

crimination that they themselves suffer[ed].” Id. They there‐

fore failed—much like Access Living here—to state a cause of

action under Title III of the ADA. See id.

Our conclusion finds additionalreinforcement by compar‐

ing the language Congress used to define the causes of action

in Titles II and III of the ADA. While Title II, which governs

public entities, authorizes suit by “any person alleging dis‐

crimination on the basis of disability,” 42 U.S.C. § 12133, Title

III does so only for someone “subjected to discrimination.” Id.

§ 12188(a)(1). The latter formulation—“subjected to discrimi‐

nation”—is narrower than the former—“any person alleging

discrimination.” And we must presume the difference mat‐

ters. See Russello v. United States, 464 U.S. 16, 23 (1983)

(“[W]here Congress includes particular language in one sec‐

tion of a statute but omits it in another . . . it is generally pre‐

sumed that Congress acts intentionally and purposely in the

disparate inclusion or exclusion.”).

We find it likely that Title II plaintiffs need only trace their

alleged injury to any proscribed discrimination within that

portion of the ADA. See Innovative Health Sys., Inc., v. City of

White Plains, 117 F.3d 37, 47 (2d Cir. 1997) (noting that the

“broad language in [Title II’s] enforcement provision evinces

a congressional intention to define standing to bring a private

action . . . as broadly as is permitted by Article III of the Con‐

stitution”) (internal quotations omitted). But because Uber is

a private entity, Access Living had to sue under Title III and

therefore had to allege being “subjected to” discrimination,

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No. 19‐2116 13

which necessitates more. Access Living does not allege that

the organization itself has been “subjected to” discrimination

by Uber. Rather, by the terms of its original and proposed

amended complaints, the organization’s alleged harm follows

only indirectly from injuries first experienced by others with

disabilities. The district court therefore properly dismissed

Access Living as a plaintiff and denied these amendments.

III

A

We now turn to the district court’s dismissal of Rahnee

Patrick as an individual plaintiff. According to her original

complaint, Patrick serves as Access Living’s Director of Inde‐

pendent Living Services. She uses a motorized wheelchair but

“can often transferinto a standard vehicle.” Her husband, too,

uses a motorized wheelchair but always requires a WAV to

travel. Patrick alleged that, while she has not downloaded

Uber’s app to her smartphone and opened an account, her

husband had concluded from secondhand accounts and a

screenshot of the app that he cannot rely on the company for

regular and efficient access to WAVs. This unequal access to

WAVs, Patrick continued, prevents her from using Uber to

travel with her husband.

The district court dismissed Patrick from the original com‐

plaint. Unlike the other two individual plaintiffs, Michelle

Garcia and Justin Cooper, the court concluded that Patrick’s

allegations rooted themselves not in any personal knowledge

of Uber’s services or experience with the company, but in‐

stead only stated information known to her husband. These

allegations did not suffice to establish Article III standing be‐

cause, as the district court reasoned, “it is not reasonable for

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14 No. 19‐2116

someone to be deterred [and injured] by conduct she never

knew about.” Access Living, 351 F. Supp. 3d at 1150 (citing

Steger v. Franco, Inc., 228 F.3d 889, 892 (8th Cir. 2000) (noting

that ADA plaintiffs “must at least prove knowledge of the bar‐

riers”)).

Patrick responded by seeking permission to amend her

complaint. In her proposed amended complaint, she renewed

many of her original allegations, including by stating that she

is a “motorized wheelchair user who can sometimes, but not

always, transfer to a standard vehicle,” and from there adding

that “she has paid and continues to pay significant attention

to Uber’s activities and travel services for people with disabil‐

ities,” including by personally witnessing colleagues at Ac‐

cess Living experience long wait times upon ordering a WAV

from Uber. She also renewed her desire to travel with her hus‐

band (to dinner and to visit the temple where they were mar‐

ried, for example), who always requires use of a WAV. So, too,

did Patrick renew not only her acknowledgment that she “has

not downloaded the app because Uber does not provide

equivalent services to motorized wheelchair users like her‐

self,” but also her request for declaratory and injunctive relief.  

The district court denied Patrick’s request to amend her

complaint. The court was quick to observe that Patrick had

fixed her prior pleading shortcoming by advancing her pro‐

posed allegations in terms of her own personal knowledge of

Uber’s WAV offerings. But the district spotted a new pleading

deficiency: “The problem now is that though Patrick uses a

motorized wheelchair, she is ‘sometimes, but not always’ able

to transfer to a standard vehicle,” rendering her allegation of

any injury too “speculative” because “Patrick is not injured

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No. 19‐2116 15

by a lack of accessible vehicles when she only needs one

‘sometimes.’”  

Patrick appeals, contending the allegations in her pro‐

posed amended complaint both as to herself and through her

association with her husband are sufficient to establish stand‐

ing and to state a cause of action under § 12188(a)(1) of the

ADA.  

B

We begin with Patrick’s allegations that Uber’s unequal ac‐

cess to WAVs has injured her because of her own disability

and occasional need to use a WAV.  

To establish Article III standing, an injury‐in‐fact must be

“concrete and particularized,” meaning it “must affect the

plaintiff in a personal and individual way.” Lujan, 504 U.S. at

560 & n.1. The alleged injury also must be “actual or immi‐

nent, not conjectural or hypothetical.” Friends of the Earth, Inc.

v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs. (TOC), Inc., 528 U.S. 167, 180 (2000).

Even more, a plaintiff like Patrick who seeks injunctive relief

may do so only upon alleging a “real and immediate threat”

of a future injury. Scherr v. Marriott Int’l, Inc., 703 F.3d 1069,

1074 (7th Cir. 2013) (internal quotations omitted); see also

Carello v. Aurora Policeman Credit Union, 930 F.3d 830, 833 (7th

Cir. 2019) (articulating the same standard). Allegations that

convey but a “possible future injury are not sufficient,” Clapper

v. Amnesty Int’l, 568 U.S. 398, 409 (2013) (internal quotations

omitted), because that makes any injury merely “conjectural

or hypothetical.” Friends of the Earth, 528 U.S. at 180.

Unlike the district court, we do not see Patrick’s allegation

that she “can sometimes, but not always, transfer to a stand‐

ard vehicle” as fatal to her showing Article III injury. The

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16 No. 19‐2116

district court effectively focused on half of Patrick’s allega‐

tion, highlighting only those times she will not need a WAV.

At the pleading stage, though, we must take Patrick at her full

word: she has a disability, uses a motorized wheelchair, and

at times will need a WAV. That she cannot go further and

identify the exact dates on which she will need a WAV does

not render her allegation too speculative or indefinite to es‐

tablish an injury. There is “at least a substantial risk that such

harm will occur.” Hummel v. St. Joseph Cty. Bd. of Comm’rs, 817

F.3d 1013, 1019 (7th Cir. 2016).

In her pursuit of injunctive relief, in no way has Patrick

alleged a future injury as speculative as the one we encoun‐

tered in Hummel, where certain plaintiffs hinged a Title III

ADA claim focused on courthouse access to predictions about

the levels of future snowfalls and the anticipated insufficiency

of municipal snow removal efforts. See id. Patrick’s ongoing,

albeit intermittent, need for a WAV is almost certain to coin‐

cide with a day she would like to use Uber in her professional

or personal life. Unlike the plaintiffs in Hummel for whom

“[w]e could only speculate whether [their] cases will involve

court appearances on future snowy days,” Patrick’s alleged

injury is nowhere near that attenuated. Id.  

While we disagree with the district court’s reasoning, we

still reach the conclusion that Patrick has not alleged enough

to demonstrate Article III standing. What concerns us is that

Patrick, while adequately advancing that she will need at

times to travel in a WAV, has not tethered that contention in a

particularized way to Uber’s alleged discrimination against

her. Recall that Patrick’s Title III claim is that Uber fails to pro‐

vide equivalent services—most especially equivalent re‐

sponse times—to motorized wheelchair users requiring a

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No. 19‐2116 17

WAV. At that level of generality, the allegation is clear. But ar‐

ticulating a legal theory with clarity is not the same as advanc‐

ing an allegation of imminent harm with the particularity—

the individualization—demanded by Article III. See Lujan,

504 U.S. at 560 n.1; see also Spokeo, Inc., 136 S. Ct. at 1548 (col‐

lecting other cases emphasizing the same point).   

Patrick’s proposed amended complaint lacks any allega‐

tion of an individualized experience with Uber. Indeed, Pat‐

rick admits she does not have an Uber account: she has never

downloaded Uber’s ridesharing app or submitted her credit

card information. She has therefore never checked response

times and price quotes on occasions where she needed to ar‐

range private transportation, let alone actually ordered a

WAV and experienced any unequal service firsthand. Having

never taken these steps, Patrick is unable to point to any past

injury or even articulate what future discrimination would

look like as applied to her individual needs. She is without

any personalized experience on which to rest her claim for in‐

junctive relief based on Uber’s failure to provide her with a

WAV on equivalent terms of service.

Perhaps the outcome would be different if Patrick had al‐

leged that Uber, as a categorical matter, refuses to offer its

ridesharing service to users of motorized wheelchairs. See,

e.g., Scherr, 703 F.3d at 1071 (noting that the plaintiff’s case was

premised on the hotel’s use of spring‐hinged doors that alleg‐

edly violated the ADA). But that is not her contention, as she

readily acknowledges Uber’s WAV service offering. Her claim

focuses instead on whether Uber provides WAVs on equiva‐

lent terms, and especially with equivalent response times,

when compared with its standard rideshare offerings.

Whether Patrick herself will be injured is necessarily an

Case: 19-2116 Document: 40 Filed: 05/05/2020 Pages: 22
18 No. 19‐2116

individualized fact‐intensive question and ultimately a mat‐

ter of degree, requiring us to ensure that her complaint con‐

tains allegations sufficient to meet Article III’s particularity re‐

quirement. We cannot get there.  

Instead of advancing allegations in individualized terms,

Patrick resorts to the broad observation that she “has paid at‐

tention to” Uber’s service offerings to persons with disabili‐

ties, only then in other places to say that she has seen “images

of Uber’s app” (presumably on others’ phones) showing an

unavailability of WAVs at her home address while also learn‐

ing from a colleague that “wait times for an UberWAV outside

the Chicago Loop were so long that she sometimes took other

forms of public transportation.” From there Patrick’s only

other allegation is that she would like to travel for personal

purposes with her husband, who always needs a WAV.  

None of this suffices to allege an imminent injury with the

particularity demanded by Article III’s case or controversy re‐

quirement. Patrick’s allegations are too reliant on open‐ended

generalizations or reports from others about Uber’s WAV ser‐

vice offerings rather than on what she herself has experienced

(or is likely to experience) in her own personalized way.  

So what possibly is the explanation? Why would someone

like Rahnee Patrick wishing to litigate an unsettled and im‐

portant issue under the ADA fail to plead the individualized

injury necessary to establish Article III standing? The answer,

as best we can discern, comes from outside her proposed com‐

plaint and indeed from a concern that, had she downloaded

the app, ordered a WAV, and then sought to bring this law‐

suit, Uber would seek to compel arbitration, as reportedly re‐

quired by its customer service agreement. Preferring federal

court over arbitration, Patrick purposely avoided

Case: 19-2116 Document: 40 Filed: 05/05/2020 Pages: 22
No. 19‐2116 19

downloading the app—or so Uber’s hypothesis runs. That

may be right, for Patrick seems to anticipate concerns about

her standing by alleging in the proposed amended complaint

that she “has not downloaded the app because Uber does not

provide equivalent services to motorized wheelchair users

like herself.” We know from Patrick’s briefs that what she

means to say is that she alleged enough about Uber’s practices

to establish being reasonably deterred and excused from

downloading the app, opening an account, and experiencing

the discrimination and clear injury that would surely come

from doing so.

It is not hard to imagine a circumstance where Patrick’s

reasoning would have considerable force. Take, for example,

a modern commercial building with a flight of stairs leading

to the entrance. Nobody would argue that a person restricted

to a wheelchair would need to attempt to climb the stairs as

part of bringing an ADA claim challenging the absence of any

wheelchairramp or elevator. It would be enough to plead per‐

sonal knowledge of the absence of an alternative accessible

entrance and the desire to enter. See Scherr, 703 F.3d at 1075

(noting that the plaintiff “need not engage in the ‘futile ges‐

ture’ of traveling to each” allegedly inaccessible hotel so long

as she asserts her intent to visit); see also Steger, 228 F.3d at

892 (“[P]laintiffs need not engage in the ‘futile gesture’ of vis‐

iting a building containing known barriers that the owner has

no intention of remedying” if they would “visit the building

in the imminent future but for those barriers.”). The chal‐

lenged discrimination—the presence of the stairs alone with‐

out an alternative option for entering—would directly deter

an individual from taking a step that would be certain to re‐

sult in a particularized injury necessary to establish Article III

standing.

Case: 19-2116 Document: 40 Filed: 05/05/2020 Pages: 22
20 No. 19‐2116

But Patrick’s case is different. It is too attenuated to con‐

clude that the mere act of downloading Uber’s app and open‐

ing an account—without more—would subject her to harm

from discrimination. A claim of unequal access to WAVs does

not follow automatically from downloading the app alone.

Patrick needed to go the next step of alleging particular facts

and circumstances illustrating how she would personally ex‐

perience unequal access if she ordered a WAV. Unlike seeing

a picture of an office building with no accessible entrance, see‐

ing screenshots of others’ experiences with Uber at specific

moments in time does not in any way communicate the same

inevitability of what Patrick would experience if she were to

download the app. Those allegations—the factual predicates

of the injury‐in‐fact’s particularity requirement—will depend

on the application of commercial variables to Patrick’s indi‐

vidualized needs and circumstances, including where Patrick

lives, what time of day she orders a WAV, where she wishes

to travel to, and the like.  

Patrick’s amended complaint contains no such personal‐

ized allegations, and we decline for purposes of assessing her

standing to hold that downloading Uber’s app presents

enough of a threat of discrimination to exempt her from stat‐

ing her claim in the individualized terms demanded by Arti‐

cle III. Our conclusion is limited to Patrick’s standing. We of‐

fer no view whatsoever on any arbitration provision that may

(or may not be) in Uber’s customer services agreement.  

C

Though we have concluded that Patrick may proceed not

because of her own injury, remember that she also sued based

on her relationship to her husband, who always requires a

WAV. Patrick alleges that she would like to use Uber to travel

Case: 19-2116 Document: 40 Filed: 05/05/2020 Pages: 22
No. 19‐2116 21

with her husband to go to dinner and for other personal pur‐

poses.  

These allegations fail to establish Article III standing for

the same reasons. Patrick’s husband has also never down‐

loaded Uber’s app, attempted to request a ride, or learned

about the response times he would personally experience.

Any injury to Patrick based on her relationship with her hus‐

band—and her understandable desire to travel together with

him for personal reasons—is therefore even more attenuated

and less individualized. Her allegations from this direction

are insufficient to establish the injury necessary to invoke fed‐

eral subject matter jurisdiction.   

IV

We close with a brief word in response to the plaintiffs’

contention that the district court should have permitted them

to amend their complaint to expand their claim beyond the

City of Chicago to include the surrounding suburbs. The dis‐

trict court concluded that the proposed expansion of the case

came too late in the litigation and would result in unfair prej‐

udice to Uber.  

Our review is limited to whether the district court’s ruling

constituted an abuse of discretion. See Dubicz v. Common‐

wealth Edison Co., 377 F.3d 787, 792 (7th Cir. 2004). A court

abuses its discretion if its conclusions “cannot be rationally

supported by the record.” Taubenfeld v. AON Corp., 415 F.3d

597, 600 (7th Cir. 2005). We “will overturn a district court’s

denial of a motion to amend only if the district court has

abused [its] discretion by not providing a justifying reason for

its decision.” Perrian v. OʹGrady, 958 F.2d 192, 194 (7th Cir.

1992). Undue prejudice from delay can occur, even at the

Case: 19-2116 Document: 40 Filed: 05/05/2020 Pages: 22
22 No. 19‐2116

pleading stage, if the parties have “already invested signifi‐

cant resources in the case.” McCoy v. Iberdrola Renewables, Inc.,

760 F.3d 674, 687 (7th Cir. 2014).

We see no abuse of discretion in the district court’s reject‐

ing Access Living’s attempt to expand the geographic scope

of the case to include the Chicago suburbs at this late stage.

The proposed expansion is massive in a case like this. While

the city of Chicago is home to fewer than three million people,

the metropolitan area encompasses as many as ten million.

These suburban communities all have different demographics

in terms of how many residents have disabilities and need

WAVs, how frequently they request an Uber, and any number

of other factors.  

Recall the timing. These proposed amendments came at

the eleventh hour—after more than two years of discovery,

and shortly before it would close. The circumstances had not

changed—the plaintiffs could have just as easily alleged a

wider geographic scope earlier—indeed at the very outset of

the litigation. In these circumstances, we cannot say the dis‐

trict court’s assessment that this amendment would be “sig‐

nificant” and “unduly prejudice Uber” constituted an abuse

of discretion.  

* * *

We therefore AFFIRM the district court’s order denying

the plaintiffs leave to amend their complaint.

Case: 19-2116 Document: 40 Filed: 05/05/2020 Pages: 22