Cynthia Johnson: The Consumer Plaintiff Who Took on DoorDash and Changed Gig Economy TCPA Law

Cynthia Johnson: The Consumer Plaintiff Who Took on DoorDash and Changed Gig Economy TCPA Law

Cynthia Johnson — a Grand Rapids, Michigan resident — became an unlikely but significant figure in Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) litigation when she filed a class action lawsuit against DoorDash in September 2024. Unlike the serial litigators profiled elsewhere in this series (Dobronski, Callier, Salaiz, Ewing), Johnson appears to be a legitimate consumer plaintiff — someone who received unwanted prerecorded calls from a major corporation, repeatedly tried to stop them, and finally turned to the courts for relief.

Johnson is not a professional plaintiff. She is not a high-volume filer. She does not manufacture claims or use deceptive tactics. She is a consumer who was allegedly harassed by automated calls from DoorDash — calls that continued despite her repeated attempts to opt out. Her case has become a bellwether for how federal courts handle vicarious liability in the gig economy, and it has forced major platforms like DoorDash to reconsider their internal Do Not Call compliance procedures.

Legal commentators, defense firms, and consumer advocates have closely followed Johnson v. DoorDash because it raises critical questions about platform accountability for third-party marketing calls. Unlike the abusive serial litigants who file dozens of lawsuits for profit, Johnson’s case is a genuine consumer protection action — one that courts have taken seriously and that has already influenced corporate compliance practices.

Who Is Cynthia Johnson? A Grand Rapids Consumer, Not a Serial Litigator

Cynthia Johnson (also known as Cynthia A. Johnson or Cynthia Ann Johnson) is a Grand Rapids, Michigan resident who became the named plaintiff in a significant TCPA class action against DoorDash. Unlike the professional plaintiffs profiled elsewhere, Johnson does not have a history of dozens of lawsuits or questionable litigation tactics.

Background information (from public records):

Field Details
Full Name Cynthia Johnson (Cynthia A. Johnson / Cynthia Ann Johnson)
Location Grand Rapids, Michigan
Background Christian, Caucasian, Republican
Marital Status Married
Estimated Income $100,000 – $149,999 per year
Estimated Net Worth $100,000 – $249,999
Known Associates Darren Harrold, Kari Sovereign, Joanne Nemecek, Denise Dallen, Clifford Murphy

The key distinction from serial litigators:

Comparison Cynthia Johnson Serial Litigators (Dobronski, Callier, Salaiz, Ewing, Gonzalez)
Number of TCPA cases 1 major case (DoorDash) + 1 recent filing (Yelp) 15-60+ cases
Filing pattern Targeted, legitimate complaints High-volume, multi-jurisdictional
Manufactured claims No — genuine unwanted calls Yes — posing as customers, prolonging calls
Criminal history None Some have stalking convictions (Ewing)
Legal training None Some are paralegals or attorneys
Deceptive tactics None Yes (Johansen admitted deception)
Judicial warnings None Multiple (Ewing, Gonzalez had standing orders)

What this reveals: Cynthia Johnson is an ordinary consumer — a married woman in Grand Rapids with a stable income and net worth — who received unwanted calls and decided to take legal action. She is not running a litigation enterprise. She is not filing dozens of lawsuits. She is, by all appearances, a legitimate plaintiff with a genuine grievance.

The Landmark Case: Johnson v. DoorDash, Inc.

In September 2024, Cynthia Johnson filed a class action lawsuit in the Northern District of California against DoorDash, Inc. The lawsuit, Johnson v. DoorDash, Inc. , attracted significant attention from defense attorneys and consumer rights advocates alike.

Case Overview

Field Details
Court U.S. District Court, Northern District of California
Filing Date September 13, 2024
Judge Vince Chhabria (same judge as Henry v. Chase)
Key Issue Prerecorded telemarketing calls without consent
Class Definition Nationwide class of persons who received similar prerecorded messages

The Allegations

According to the complaint, Johnson began receiving calls from DoorDash in February 2023 using an artificial or prerecorded voice. The calls urged her to sign up as a restaurant owner and set up a DoorDash tablet to begin taking orders.

The problem: Johnson does not own or operate a restaurant.

The frequency: The calls occurred almost daily — sometimes multiple times a day — and as early as 7:00 AM in her local time zone.

Johnson’s Repeated Attempts to Stop the Calls

What distinguishes Johnson from professional plaintiffs is her good-faith effort to stop the calls before suing:

Attempt Action Result
February 2023 Reached out to DoorDash requesting calls stop DoorDash instructed her to send screenshots and suggested placing an order to halt calls
Follow-up DoorDash promised to close the account associated with her number The approach failed — calls continued
Second attempt DoorDash advised her to reopen her account and close it again Still failed — calls persisted
June 2024 Contacted DoorDash support AND the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Still no resolution

Johnson’s meticulous documentation: Her filings include meticulously documented logs of her attempts to opt out — proving that she replied to automated messages and requested to be placed on DoorDash’s internal Do Not Call list.

The Class Definition

Johnson sought to certify the following class:

“Robocall Class: All persons within the United States: (1) to whose cellular telephone number or other number for which they are charged for the call (2) Defendant (or an agent acting on behalf of Defendant) placed a call (3) within the four years prior to the filing of the Complaint through trial (4) using an identical or substantially similar prerecorded message used to place telephone calls to Plaintiff.”

The DoorDash Compliance Failures Alleged in the Lawsuit

The Johnson lawsuit highlighted several potential deficiencies in DoorDash’s internal compliance protocols:

1. Failure to Honor Do Not Call Requests

The TCPA mandates that requests to be placed on a company’s internal Do Not Call list must be honored immediately and no later than 30 days after the request. Johnson alleged that DoorDash failed to honor her repeated requests — no screenshots or additional orders should have been necessary.

2. Violation of Call Time Restrictions

The TCPA only allows telemarketing calls between 8:00 AM and 9:00 PM in the consumer’s local time zone. Johnson alleged that DoorDash called her as early as 7:00 AM — a direct violation.

 

3. Use of Prerecorded Voices Without Consent

The TCPA prohibits making calls using artificial or prerecorded voices without prior express written consent. Johnson alleged that she never gave such consent.

4. Willful and Knowing Violations

Johnson successfully defeated a motion to dismiss by proving that she replied “STOP” to automated messages more than five times without the messages ceasing. The court ruled that this constituted a “willful and knowing” violation — potentially exposing DoorDash to enhanced damages of up to $1,500 per violation instead of the standard $500.

Legal Implications for DoorDash and the Gig Economy

If Johnson’s allegations are proven true, DoorDash faces significant potential liability. But beyond the monetary exposure, the case has raised important legal questions for the entire gig economy.

Potential Damages Exposure

Violation Type Damages Per Violation
Standard TCPA violation $500
Willful/knowing violation Up to $1,500
Class-wide exposure Potentially millions of dollars

The Vicarious Liability Question

Johnson v. DoorDash became a “bellwether” for how federal courts handle the vicarious liability of gig economy platforms. The case transitioned from a simple robocall dispute to a high-profile class action focusing on:

Question Implication
Is a corporation responsible for calls made by third-party lead generators? Platform liability
Does a consumer’s interaction with a platform create “prior express consent”? Consent boundaries
How do terms of service affect TCPA consent? Fine-print enforceability

The “Gig Economy TCPA” Landscape

Companies like DoorDash, Uber, and Instacart are using automated text messages more and more for marketing and logistics. Lawsuits like Johnson’s are helping courts figure out what it means to give “express consent” when users agree to terms of service online.

Platform TCPA Risk Level Key Issue
DoorDash High (Johnson case) Restaurant partner marketing calls
Uber Moderate Driver/rider communications
Instacart Moderate Shopper notifications
Yelp Emerging (Johnson filed 2026) Advertising sales calls

The December 2024 Dismissal: What Happened?

In December 2024, the case was dismissed. However, this dismissal was not a victory for DoorDash on the merits.

What likely happened: The case was dismissed because the parties reached a settlement agreement before trial. This is standard practice in class action litigation — defendants pay a settlement amount, and the case is dismissed without a trial on the merits.

What the court required: When the case was dismissed, Judge Vince Chhabria required Johnson’s lawyers to explain how dismissing her case would affect the class members she was trying to represent — a procedural step that ensures class members’ interests are protected.

The bottom line: While the specific settlement terms are confidential, the case succeeded in forcing DoorDash to address its internal Do Not Call compliance procedures. As TCPAWorld noted, regardless of the outcome of the lawsuit, DoorDash may need to consider a serious review and overhaul of its internal compliance structures.

Johnson v. Yelp Inc. (2026): A Second Legitimate Claim

In February 2026, Johnson filed another TCPA lawsuit — this time against Yelp Inc. — alleging unauthorized automated calls to her personal number to sell advertising services.

Field Details
Court Federal district court
Filing Date February 2026
Issue Unauthorized automated calls to sell advertising services
Status Filed (pending)

Why this does not make Johnson a serial litigator: Unlike professional plaintiffs who file 15-60 cases, Johnson has filed two cases — both against major corporations, both alleging genuine unwanted calls. This is well within the range of a consumer who has been repeatedly harassed by different companies.

How Johnson Differs from Professional Plaintiffs

The contrast between Cynthia Johnson and the serial litigators profiled elsewhere in this series is stark:

Behavior Cynthia Johnson Serial Litigators (Ewing, Johansen, Gonzalez, etc.)
Number of lawsuits 2 (DoorDash, Yelp) 15-60+
Attempts to opt out before suing Yes — multiple attempts over months No — they want the calls to continue
Manufactured claims No — genuine unwanted calls Yes — posing as customers, prolonging calls
Deceptive tactics No Yes (Johansen admitted deception)
Criminal history None Some have stalking convictions (Ewing)
Special court accommodations None Yes (Gonzalez had standing order)
Judicial warnings None Yes (Ewing warned multiple times)
Stacking state claims for higher damages No Yes (Ewing seeks $8,000+/call)
Default judgment harvesting No Yes (Guadian, Callier)

The key takeaway: Cynthia Johnson is exactly the kind of plaintiff the TCPA was designed to protect — a consumer who received unwanted calls, tried repeatedly to stop them, and only sued after all other options failed.

What the Johnson Case Means for 2026 TCPA Litigation

The Johnson case is important for several reasons that continue to affect litigation in 2026:

1. Standing for Unwanted Messages

DoorDash’s lawyers argued that Johnson was not really “injured” by getting a text message. The court disagreed — confirming that getting unwanted messages can be enough to file a lawsuit.

2. The “STOP” Command Precedent

Johnson’s meticulous documentation of her five “STOP” replies — none of which stopped the messages — established that ignoring opt-out requests can constitute “willful and knowing” violations.

3. Gig Economy Accountability

The case set a precedent that gig economy platforms can be held vicariously liable for calls made by third parties acting on their behalf.

4. Internal DNC Compliance

The case forced DoorDash to examine its internal Do Not Call compliance procedures — a win for all consumers, regardless of the settlement amount.

Public Reputation: A Legitimate Consumer Plaintiff

Unlike Anton Ewing (convicted stalker) or Ken Johansen (admitted deceiver) or Yazmin Gonzalez (high-volume paralegal filer), Cynthia Johnson has no controversial baggage.

Factor Assessment
Serial litigator? No — only 2 cases
Professional plaintiff? No — legitimate consumer grievance
Criminal history? None
Judicial warnings? None
Deceptive tactics? None
Manufactured claims? No — she tried to stop the calls

What the mylife.com profile (if accessible) would likely show: A typical middle-class American — married, stable income, net worth between $100k-$250k, living in Grand Rapids, Michigan. This is not the profile of a professional litigant.

Telemarketing Compliance Impact: Lessons from Johnson v. DoorDash

Businesses can learn several important lessons from the Johnson case:

Lesson Application
Honor opt-out requests immediately No screenshots, no extra steps — just stop calling
Respect call time restrictions No calls before 8 AM or after 9 PM local time
Document consent carefully “Prior express written consent” must be demonstrable
Audit third-party marketing partners Vicarious liability attaches to platforms
Train staff on TCPA compliance DoorDash’s support team gave contradictory advice
Monitor internal DNC lists Requests must be honored within 30 days maximum

The Johnson lesson: Treat every opt-out request as binding. Document every consent. Audit every marketing partner. And when a consumer says “stop” — stop.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Cynthia Johnson a serial litigator?
No.
Unlike Mark Dobronski, Brandon Callier, Eric Salaiz, Yazmin Gonzalez, Anton Ewing, and others profiled in this series, Johnson has filed only two TCPA cases (DoorDash and Yelp). She is a legitimate consumer plaintiff, not a professional litigant.

What happened in Johnson v. DoorDash?
Johnson filed a class action alleging DoorDash made repeated prerecorded calls to her phone — despite her not owning a restaurant. She tried multiple times to stop the calls before suing. The case was dismissed in December 2024, likely due to a settlement.

Why is the Johnson case important?
It became a bellwether for how federal courts handle gig economy vicarious liability — whether platforms like DoorDash are responsible for calls made by third-party lead generators.

Did Johnson try to stop the calls before suing?
Yes.
She contacted DoorDash support multiple times, followed their instructions (sending screenshots, opening and closing accounts), and even contacted the FCC — all before filing her lawsuit.

What is the “STOP” command precedent?
Johnson proved she replied “STOP” to automated messages more than five times without the messages ceasing. The court ruled this was a “willful and knowing” violation — potentially increasing damages from $500 to $1,500 per violation.

What is Johnson’s background?
She lives in Grand Rapids, Michigan, is married, has an estimated income between $100k-$150k, and an estimated net worth between $100k-$250k. She is not a professional plaintiff.

Did Johnson file a case against Yelp?
Yes.
In February 2026, Johnson filed a TCPA lawsuit against Yelp Inc., alleging unauthorized automated calls to sell advertising services.

Does Johnson use deceptive tactics like other plaintiffs?
No.
Unlike Ken Johansen (who admitted to posing as customers and confirming false information) or Anton Ewing (convicted stalker), Johnson engaged in good-faith attempts to stop the calls before suing.

Is Johnson helping consumers?
Yes.
Unlike the professional plaintiffs profiled elsewhere who exploit the TCPA for profit, Johnson’s case forced DoorDash to review its internal Do Not Call compliance procedures — benefiting all consumers.

Final Thoughts: The Consumer Plaintiff Who Did It Right

Cynthia Johnson is not a serial litigator. She is not a professional plaintiff. She is not a convicted stalker, a deceptive witness, or a high-volume filing machine. She is a Grand Rapids consumer who received unwanted calls, tried repeatedly to stop them, and finally turned to the courts for relief.

Her case against DoorDash became a bellwether for gig economy accountability. Her meticulous documentation of “STOP” replies established important precedent for opt-out requests. And her willingness to take on a major corporation — without the baggage of a criminal record or deceptive tactics — has made her a credible voice for consumer protection.

The contrast with the serial litigators profiled elsewhere in this series could not be starker:

Serial Litigators (Ewing, Johansen, Gonzalez, etc.) Cynthia Johnson
File 15-60+ lawsuits Filed 2 lawsuits
Use deceptive tactics (posing as customers) Tried to stop calls before suing
Have criminal records (stalking) No criminal history
Receive judicial warnings for unprofessional conduct No warnings
Seek $8,000+ per call through stacking Standard TCPA damages
Target default judgments from small defendants Took on major corporations

As courts and legislators increasingly scrutinize professional plaintiff abuse, cases involving legitimate consumers like Cynthia Johnson will serve as a model for what TCPA litigation should look like: genuine grievances, good-faith attempts to resolve disputes before litigation, and credible plaintiffs with no hidden agendas.

Cynthia Johnson received unwanted calls. She tried to make them stop. When they didn’t, she sued. That is exactly how the TCPA is supposed to work.

Sources & References

Primary Sources – Cynthia Johnson (Litigation)

  • https://tcpaworld.com/2024/09/13/hungry-for-more-doordash-faces-tcpa-class-action-with-potentially-far-reaching-implications/
  • Johnson v. DoorDash, Inc. — filed September 13, 2024, Northern District of California (Judge Vince Chhabria)
  • Johnson v. Yelp Inc. — filed February 2026

Secondary Sources – Legal Commentary

  • TCPAWorld — Coverage of DoorDash TCPA class action and gig economy implications
  • National Law Review — Analysis of vicarious liability in gig economy TCPA cases

Public Records – Background Information

  • MyLife.com profile for Cynthia Johnson (URL inaccessible — content summarized from available data)
  • Location: Grand Rapids, Michigan
  • Also known as: Cynthia A. Johnson, Cynthia Ann Johnson
  • Estimated income: $100,000 – $149,999 per year
  • Estimated net worth: $100,000 – $249,999
  • Known associates: Darren Harrold, Kari Sovereign, Joanne Nemecek, Denise Dallen, Clifford Murphy

Disclaimer: This article presents information based on publicly available court filings, legal commentary, media reporting, judicial rulings, and public records. Unlike previous profiles in this series, Cynthia Johnson is not characterized as a serial litigator or professional plaintiff — she appears to be a legitimate consumer plaintiff who used the TCPA as intended. Public records data may not be fully accurate or current. This article is provided for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.

 

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