Cuevas v. City of Tulare CA5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 20, 2026
DocketF089929
StatusUnpublished

This text of Cuevas v. City of Tulare CA5 (Cuevas v. City of Tulare CA5) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cuevas v. City of Tulare CA5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Filed 5/20/26 Cuevas v. City of Tulare CA5

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

ROSA CUEVAS, F089929 Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. VCU312132) v.

CITY OF TULARE, et al., OPINION Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Tulare County. David C. Mathias, Judge. Haddad & Sherwin, Michael J. Haddad and Julia Sherwin, for Plaintiff and Appellant. Jones-Mayer and Bruce D. Praet for Defendants and Respondents. -ooOoo- Quinntin Castro led Tulare Police Department officers on a high-speed chase that ended when his car got stuck in the mud. Plaintiff Rosa Cuevas was in the front passenger seat. Castro continued revving the engine, causing the tires to spin. He ignored officers’ commands to stop and to turn off the engine. A responding officer broke the driver’s side window, and another officer put his police dog through the window. Castro responding by shooting and hitting the dog and the dog’s handler. The dog died, but the handler survived. The remaining three officers returned fire, ultimately killing Castro. During the gunfight, Cuevas was unintentionally hit several times. She survived, but suffered severe injuries. Cuevas sued the officers and the City of Tulare for violation of the Tom Bane Civil Rights Act (Civ. Code, § 52.1) (the Bane Act), battery, negligence, and intentional infliction of emotional distress (IIED). The underlying basis of her claims was that the officers unreasonably used deadly force. The trial court entered summary judgment for the defendants, concluding the officers acted reasonably, and Cuevas appeals. We affirm the judgment. BACKGROUND I. The subject incident The following facts are taken from the evidence submitted in connection with defendants’ motion for summary judgment. About two weeks after meeting Castro, Cuevas met up with him and his friend, Cameron Ware, on December 9, 2018, at about 7:00 p.m. They gave Ware a ride in Cuevas’s car, a 4-door Mercury sedan. Castro drove, Cuevas sat in the front passenger seat, and Ware sat in the back. Officer Daniel Bradley of the Tulare Police Department watched Castro roll through two stop signs without stopping and make a left turn without signaling. Bradley followed the car into the driveway of a residence. He partially pulled into the driveway behind the car to initiate a traffic stop. He turned on his spotlight and saw three people in the sedan: the driver, front passenger, and rear passenger. The officer told dispatch there were three people in the car. Rather than stopping, Castro fled, driving across several residential lawns before returning to the street.

2. A high-speed pursuit began, with three more officers joining Bradley: Sergeant Andy Garcia, K-9 Officer Ryan Garcia, and Officer Edward Puente. The officers had their lights and sirens on. Castro drove recklessly, “putting lives and other people in danger.” The pursuit continued through downtown Tulare, into residential areas, and eventually into a rural area. It ended after Castro got stuck in a berm of mud on the roadside. Bradley’s vehicle also got stuck in the mud on the roadside behind and slightly to the right of the sedan. Moments later, Sergeant Garcia, Officer Garcia, and Puente arrived on scene and formed a semi-circle around the sedan, which was stuck facing the wheat field. Bradley intended to perform a felony stop.1 Castro continued revving the engine, which caused the tires to spin and sink further into the mud. Officer Garcia at first saw the wheels spinning forward. Though he never saw the wheels spinning backwards, he heard the engine revving intermittently, which made him think Castro could have been putting the car into reverse. He testified he did not pay attention to the tires and was instead “focused on trying to see the driver.” Sergeant Garcia thought Castro was trying to escape. During this time, Cuevas sat with her hands up, looking straight, and waiting for orders from the officers. Bradley and Sergeant Garcia stood in the “V” of each of their driver’s side doors, using their vehicles as cover, and pointed their guns at the Mercury sedan. Puente also got out of his vehicle and pointed his gun at the car. The sedan’s windows were tinted and it was dark outside, which prevented the officers from being able to see all occupants even with the headlights and spotlights from the police cars. Castro continued hitting the gas, and the officers repeatedly shouted at him to stop and turn off the engine. But the engine was so loud that the officers did not believe

1 California Vehicle Code section 2800.2, which criminalizes driving in wanton or reckless disregard for public safety while fleeing an officer, is chargeable as a misdemeanor or felony.

3. Castro could hear the orders. Sergeant Garcia broke the driver’s side window with his baton and retreated to his vehicle to continue giving commands to Castro to turn off the car. Sergeant Garcia was asked in his deposition by plaintiff’s counsel if Casto stopped revving the engine “as soon as he broke the window,” and Sergeant Garcia replied, “Seems about right, yes.” Officer Garcia testified that he told Sergeant Garcia, “[H]ey, Sarge, if you’re able to break that window, I can deploy my dog.” The next thing Sergeant Garcia did was break the window, but Sergeant Garcia said nothing to Officer Garcia. Sergeant Garcia testified that he may have talked to Officer Garcia about deploying the dog, but he does not remember the conversation, if it happened.2 Neither Bradley nor Puente heard anything about the dog being deployed. After the window was broken, Officer Garcia continued yelling commands. He testified that after Sergeant Garcia broke the window, “the tires intermittently stopped and continued[.]” He feared the sedan could become unstuck at any moment and be used as a weapon against the officers. He told Castro that if he did not “stop the car” he (Officer Garcia) was “going to send the dog.” By “stop the car,” Officer Garica meant spinning the tires. Officer Garcia repeated this warning to Castro “many times” during the 15 to 30 seconds it took him to walk with his canine partner, Bane, from behind his patrol vehicle to the sedan. Officer Garcia picked up Bane and put him through the broken window into the car. Within seconds of Officer Garcia putting Bane into the car, he saw that Bane was “focused” on Castro, and he gave the bite command to Bane. As soon as Officer Garcia gave that command, Castro grabbed a gun and fired at least six shots from inside the car.

2 Sergeant Garcia did not affirmatively say that he did not talk with Officer Garcia about deploying the dog.

4. Bane was shot and killed, and Officer Garcia was hit in his right wrist and chest. Officer Garcia was wearing a bulletproof vest. The other three officers immediately returned 34 shots into the sedan. Although they aimed for Castro, the officers hit Cuevas several times, severely injuring her. At some point, Castro climbed over the front seat and exited the sedan out of the rear passenger seat. He then fired two more errant shots toward the officers. Castro died at the scene. Ware was uninjured. After Officer Garcia was hit, he “army crawled” toward the nearest patrol vehicle and took cover behind the left front wheel area. When Castro started shooting, Sergeant Garcia was near the rear driver side window. Sergeant Garcia fired into the “driver’s area,” where he had seen the muzzle flash from Castro’s gun.

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