Gilliland v. City of Pleasanton

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 19, 2025
DocketA170666
StatusPublished

This text of Gilliland v. City of Pleasanton (Gilliland v. City of Pleasanton) 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
Gilliland v. City of Pleasanton, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 11/19/25 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

MELANIE GILLILAND, Plaintiff and Appellant, A170666 v. CITY OF PLEASANTON, (Alameda County Super. Ct. No. RG18924833) Defendant and Respondent.

Plaintiff Melanie Gilliland was severely injured after a car driven by 18-year-old Elijah Henry ran a red light and collided with her vehicle. At the time, Henry was being followed by Officer Matthew Harvey, a police officer employed by defendant City of Pleasanton. Gilliland sued Henry and the City for negligence. After a bench trial on the City’s liability only, the trial court concluded the City was not liable under Vehicle Code1 section 17004.7, which immunizes a public entity from liability for collisions caused by fleeing suspects when the entity has a written policy on “vehicular pursuits” by peace officers and provides regular training on the policy. On appeal from the judgment entered in the City’s favor, Gilliland contends the trial court applied an incorrect legal standard in finding that the collision occurred during a qualifying vehicular pursuit under section 17004.7, subdivision (b)(1) (section 17004.7(b)(1)). We agree.

1 All further statutory references are to the Vehicle Code unless

otherwise noted. Section 17004.7(b)(1) applies when a suspect either “is being or has been . . . pursued” (an actual pursuit) or “believes he or she is being or has been . . . pursued” (a perceived pursuit) by a peace officer. (§ 17004.7(b)(1).) The trial court found that the word “pursued” has two different meanings in this provision. It ruled that Henry was not actually “pursued” because Officer Harvey did not initiate a “pursuit” as defined in the City’s vehicular pursuit policy. At the same time, it ruled that Henry believed he was being “pursued” because—under the word’s broader ordinary meaning—he thought that Officer Harvey was following him for an investigative purpose. This case is unusual in that the City seeks statutory immunity based on its vehicular pursuit policy even though it admits that no actual pursuit was initiated—meaning that section 17004.7’s main purpose of freeing peace officers to make decisions about initiating or continuing pursuits without worrying about their employer’s potential liability does not apply here. (See Kishida v. State of California (1991) 229 Cal.App.3d 329, 338.) Under these narrow circumstances, we reach the commonsense holding that “pursued” in section 17004.7(b)(1) has only one meaning. Whether a suspect was actually pursued and whether the suspect had a perception of being pursued both turn on the definition of “pursuit” in the public entity’s vehicular pursuit policy. Since the trial court disregarded evidence that Henry did not believe he was pursued within the meaning of the City’s pursuit policy, which requires that the suspect be “attempting to avoid arrest,” Gilliland was deprived of the opportunity to establish that section 17004.7 does not immunize the City because no pursuit of any type occurred. We therefore reverse and remand for the court to apply the correct legal standard.2

2 As a result, we need not reach Gilliland’s claim that the trial court

also erred by determining that the City substantially complied with

2 I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND3 On the afternoon of August 3, 2017, Henry drove himself and three friends from his home in Oakland to a parking lot on Laurel Creek Drive in Pleasanton, an access point for nearby hiking trails. Henry had smoked marijuana earlier that day, and he claimed not to remember what he was doing at that location. Around 6:50 p.m., Officer Harvey entered the parking lot in his police car to conduct “a patrol check” of the lot, because the area experienced “a lot of vehicle break-ins.” He saw Henry’s blue Nissan Altima parked a few feet from a dark sedan. Two people were standing between the Altima and the dark sedan, and after seeing the police car they ran to the Altima and entered it. Officer Harvey then noticed the dark sedan had a broken window. Henry saw the police car enter the parking lot, after which his friends immediately got back into the Altima. Henry was afraid of the police because “sometimes they racially profile black people and . . . suspect us of doing things.” He decided to leave the parking lot because he thought Officer Harvey might try to talk to him, and he “just [did not] like being around police officers.” Henry specifically denied that he thought the officer was going to try to pull him over or arrest him. Henry drove the Altima slowly through the parking lot and exited onto Laurel Creek Drive, where the speed limit was 25 miles per hour. In doing

section 17004.7’s training requirements. We express no opinion on the merits of this claim. 3 We draw the underlying facts primarily from Henry’s and Officer

Harvey’s depositions and other evidence submitted in conjunction with the City’s unsuccessful motion for summary judgment. No new evidence on the “pursuit” requirement was presented at the bench trial.

3 so, he had to drive “straight towards” Officer Harvey, who pulled his car to the side to let the Altima pass. Suspicious that a vehicle burglary had just occurred, Officer Harvey made a U-turn to follow the Altima out of the lot. At this point, the officer intended “to catch up to” the Altima and perform a “traffic stop” to “investigate further.” Henry saw the police car make “a sudden U-turn,” which “frightened [him] and caused [him] to accelerate[] quickly” as he drove downhill on Laurel Creek Drive. Henry wanted to “get away” from Officer Harvey, whom he thought “maybe . . . was trying to talk to [him],” but he was unsure if the officer would try to pull him over because the police car “[d]idn’t have sirens on or anything.” Officer Harvey saw the Altima “accelerating at a high rate of speed,” and it quickly disappeared from his sight after rounding a corner and proceeding down the hill.4 At this point, the Altima was traveling so fast that the officer did not believe he could “catch up to” it without endangering public safety. He explained, “[I]t was . . . commute traffic hours. We would never initiate a traffic pursuit or . . . drive that fast on the city streets and conduct a pursuit at that time . . . of day. . . . [W]e would not get approved by my supervisor. So it wouldn’t even be reasonable to do that.” Since Officer Harvey “did not intend to initiate a vehicle pursuit,” he “did not activate [his patrol car’s] lights . . . or siren.” He informed dispatch that he had possibly “interrupted a vehicle burglary,” and he increased his speed to follow the Altima. He testified that he wanted “[t]o try to determine

4 Officer Harvey estimated that the Altima was traveling over 45 miles

per hour, possibly as fast as 60 miles per hour. According to an eyewitness whose vehicle was also involved in the collision, the Altima was driving “at least 50 miles per hour” when it entered the intersection.

4 the location that the vehicle was traveling so [he] could put it out over the radio. You can outrun an officer, but you can’t outrun a radio.” After accelerating away from the police car, Henry looked in his rearview mirror to check if it was following him. He did not see the other vehicle again until “[r]ight before” he reached the intersection of Laurel Creek Drive and Foothill Road, where the collision occurred. He also never saw the police car’s lights and did not hear any sirens before the collision. As Henry reached the intersection, the traffic light was “yellow, turning red.” He decided to enter the intersection to “have more distance between [himself] and the officer,” because he “[did not] like police” and did not want to speak to them. Without slowing down, Henry drove into the intersection and hit Gilliland’s car.

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Gilliland v. City of Pleasanton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilliland-v-city-of-pleasanton-calctapp-2025.