Daves v. City of Cathedral City CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 6, 2023
DocketD082253
StatusUnpublished

This text of Daves v. City of Cathedral City CA4/1 (Daves v. City of Cathedral City CA4/1) 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
Daves v. City of Cathedral City CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 12/6/23 Daves v. City of Cathedral City CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

CHERYLYN DAVES, D082253

Plaintiff and Appellant,

v. (Super. Ct. No. PSC1902338) CITY OF CATHEDRAL CITY et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Riverside, Kira L. Klatchko, Judge. Reversed and remanded. Walter Clark Legal Group and Jessica A. Albert, for Plaintiff and Appellant. Graves & King, Harvey W. Wimer III, Michael D. Sargent, and Brendan J. Coughlin, for Defendants and Respondents. Cherylyn Daves, a phlebotomist, was struck and injured by a car as she prepared to assist police officers in obtaining a blood sample from a DUI suspect. Seeking redress for her injuries, Daves sued four of the officers and their employer—Jesse Borrego, Steven Lara, Jesse Vela, Ryan Schroeder, and the City of Cathedral City (the City)—alleging a cause of action for negligence against the officers and a cause of action for vicarious liability against the City. The officers and the City filed a motion for summary adjudication, and the trial court granted the motion and entered judgment in their favor. Daves now appeals the judgment, arguing the trial court erred in: (1) concluding that Daves could not establish the essential element of a duty on which to premise her negligence and vicarious liability causes of action as against Borrego and the City and (2) concluding that the immunity that Government Code sections 820.2 and 815.2, subdivision (b) confer upon public employees and public entities for discretionary acts insulated Borrego and the City from liability in any event. We agree with Daves. Hence we reverse. I. BACKGROUND A. The Evening on Which Daves Sustained Her Injuries The genesis of this case is a pair of collisions that occurred late one night in Cathedral City, near the intersection of Cathedral Canyon Drive and Dinah Shore Drive. The first of the two collisions drew Borrego, Vela, Lara, and Schroeder (the four officers) to the scene. Suspecting that a driver involved in this collision had been driving while under the influence of drugs or alcohol (DUI), Borrego asked for a forensic evidence collection service to be sent to the scene to draw blood; and the City contractor to which the request was relayed—American Forensic Nurses—sent Daves. When Daves arrived at the scene, Borrego told her the officers wanted to collect a blood sample from the DUI suspect in a “grassy area adjacent to the sidewalk and curb” “at the southeast corner of the subject intersection.” Depending on whose version of the interaction is to be believed, Borrego also pointed out (or did not point out) a nearby marked police car parked in a

2 northbound lane of Cathedral Canyon Drive and directed (or did not direct) Daves to proceed to that location and park her car there. Daves then drove to the location that she says Borrego had designated, parked her car there, and began preparing the materials she would need to complete the blood draw. But “[w]hile [she] was standing in front of her vehicle and preparing to collect the blood evidence, another vehicle . . . collided with [her] vehicle, pushing it into [her]” and causing her injuries. B. Proceedings Below 1. Causes of Action Alleged Against the Officers and the City Daves and her husband, Thom Daves, filed claims against the City, Thereafter, they initiated this lawsuit. During the lawsuit, the Daveses filed a second amended complaint against the four officers, the City, the two drivers who were understood to have caused the collisions, and unnamed Does. Although the record is somewhat unclear, the parties appear to agree that, subsequent to the filing of the second amended complaint, the case was pared down such that: Schroeder was no longer a defendant; the only cause of action remaining against the other three officers was Daves’s negligence cause of action; and the only cause of action remaining against the City was her vicarious liability cause of action. 2. The Summary Adjudication Motion Approximately two years into the lawsuit, the four officers and the City filed a motion for summary adjudication targeting the two remaining causes of action alleged against them—negligence and vicarious liability.

3 a. He Said / She Said, Between Borrego and Daves, Regarding Whether the Location Where Daves Was Struck and Injured Was a Location to Which Borrego Had Directed Her In the separate statement of undisputed material facts that they filed in support of their motion for summary adjudication, the four officers and the City claimed it was undisputed that the location where Daves had parked was a location of her own choosing, and that Borrego had not directed her to park there: Undisputed Fact No. 13: “Upon arriving at the scene, [Daves] parked her car without . . . Borrego instructing her where to park.” (Italics added.)

Undisputed Fact No. 16: “Without prompting or instruction by . . . Borrego, [Daves] drove her [car] to a position along the east curb of Cathedral Canyon Drive approximately ten feet behind Officers Lara’s and Vela’s marked patrol SUV.” (Italics added.)

But, in her response to the motion, Daves presented evidence that—if believed—would contradict these purportedly undisputed facts. That evidence came in the form of passages from Daves’s deposition testimony in which she repeatedly and specifically testified that the location where she had parked her car (and where she had been struck and injured) was a location to which Borrego had directed her to proceed and park. b. The Trial Court’s Ruling on the Motion Following oral argument, the trial court issued a ruling on the motion. The court denied the motion as to Schroeder because it said Schroeder had been dismissed from the case before the motion was heard, thus “making the [m]otion moot as to him;” however, it granted the motion as to Borrego, Vela, Lara, and the City.

4 i. The Trial Court’s Duty Analysis In the portions of its ruling focusing on the negligence cause of action and the question of whether any of the officers owed Daves a duty of care, the trial court acknowledged and quoted case law addressing circumstances in which a “special relationship” creating such a duty is deemed to arise between a police officer and an individual with whom the officer interacts. As the trial court correctly stated: “ ‘Under some circumstances, a defendant may have an affirmative duty to protect the plaintiff from harm at the hands of a third party, even though the risk of harm is not of the defendant’s own making.’ ” ([Brown v. USA Taekwondo (2021) 11 Cal.5th 204], at p. 215.) “In that circumstance, the defendant’s ‘affirmative duty’ may arise where they have a ‘special relationship’ with . . . the plaintiff. (Ibid.) ‘A special relationship between the defendant and the victim is one that ‘gives the victim a right to expect’ protection from the defendant. (Id. at p. 216.) [¶ . . . ¶]

“In the case of police officers, the special relationship may arise where an officer ‘create[d] the peril in which plaintiff found herself’ or where they took an ‘affirmative action which contributed to, increased or changed the risk which would have otherwise existed.’ ” (Williams [v. State of California (1983) 34 Cal.3d 18] at pp. 27–28.)” (Italics added.)

Then, to illustrate this concept, the trial court quoted Lugtu v.

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Daves v. City of Cathedral City CA4/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daves-v-city-of-cathedral-city-ca41-calctapp-2023.