Showdowns Scheduled in Movie Captioning Cases
Next week in San Francisco, on Jan. 13, a federal appeals court will hear oral arguments in a case out of Arizona that may determine once and for all whether movie theaters may be required to show captioned movies to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Then two months later, on March 12, a superior court judge in Seattle will hear arguments over whether movie captioning may be required by the Washington state Law against Discrimination.
The Arizona Attorney General's Office brought an action against that state's Harkins theater chain contending that under ADA, theaters must show movies that are captioned for people with hearing loss, and that contain audio descriptions for people with vision loss. The AG's office didn't say that the theaters had to create the captions or descriptions -- those are contained on a computer disc that comes with many, although not all, first-run movies. The AG's office was simply stating that Harkins must equip at least some of its theaters to actually display those captions and provide the audio descriptions.
Harkins argued that it had no such obligation. It said that ADA does not regulate the content of goods sold or services offered, and argued that the "goods" or "services" it offers are non-captioned movies. The federal judge in Arizona agreed, and the case is now on appeal.
A number of other lawsuits have been filed requesting movie captioning, with mixed results. But the Harkins case is the watershed event for a couple of reasons.
First, the federal courts of appeal are the second-highest courts in the land, right below the U.S. Supreme Court. This will be the first movie-captioning case to reach the appeals-court level. The decision will be legally binding only in the Ninth Circuit states of Arizona, Nevada, California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana, Hawaii and Alaska. But as a practical matter, most federal courts will generally follow the first appellate-court decision to address a particular issue. So the case could essentially establish a national rule.
Second, if the decision is upheld, we can anticipate all sorts of other businesses arguing that by the same logic, they should not have to provide captions. If a movie theater's "product" is non-captioned movies, then surely, live theaters can argue that their "product" is non-captioned drama, and universities can argue that their "product" is non-captioned lectures.
Needless to say, we think the trial-court decision is profoundly wrong. Wash-CAP filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the Arizona case, and we've been in contact with the Arizona attorneys about the oral arguments. I'll be in San Francisco Wednesday listening to the arguments, and will file a blog entry about them. It generally takes an appellate court from six months to two years or more to announce a decision after oral argument, but sometimes -- not always, but sometimes -- the questions the judges ask at oral argument can give one an idea of what they are thinking.
The arguments will begin at about 11 a.m. Wednesday at the Browning Courthouse, 95 7th Street in San Francisco. We've worked with the court to have the proceedings captioned, and would encourage anyone in the area who is interested to attend.
While the Arizona case will likely establish what ADA requires, it won't directly impact the case Wash-CAP filed in King County Superior Court under our state law, which in many ways is far superior to the ADA, particularly for people with hearing loss. Our complaint claims that under state law, theaters must take those steps "reasonably possible in the circumstances" to make their movie soundtracks understandable. As with the Arizona case, the theaters deny having any such obligation.
We've worked cooperatively with the attorneys for the King County movie theaters to develop a set of stipulated facts. They will then file a motion claiming that they have no obligation, and we will file a cross-motion claiming that they do. Our case is scheduled for oral argument before Judge Regina Cahan in the King County main courthouse, 516 3d Avenue, at 10:00 a.m. on Friday, March 12.