Mendoza v. City of West Covina

206 Cal. App. 4th 702, 141 Cal. Rptr. 3d 553, 2012 WL 1941748, 2012 Cal. App. LEXIS 639
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 8, 2012
DocketNo. B227812
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 206 Cal. App. 4th 702 (Mendoza v. City of West Covina) 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
Mendoza v. City of West Covina, 206 Cal. App. 4th 702, 141 Cal. Rptr. 3d 553, 2012 WL 1941748, 2012 Cal. App. LEXIS 639 (Cal. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Opinion

RUBIN, Acting P. J.

The City of West Covina and West Covina Police Officer Enrique Macias appeal from the judgment entered after a jury found that Macias caused the wrongful death of David Mendoza through the unconstitutional use of excessive force while Mendoza was in custody at a hospital. We reject appellants’ contentions that Macias was entitled to qualified immunity for his conduct; the jury’s verdict was excessive; and an inadvertent instructional error was prejudicial. We therefore affirm the judgment.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

David Mendoza, 42, died of asphyxiation on March 17, 2007, while in police custody in the emergency room of Citrus Valley Medical Center, after [706]*706he was first repeatedly “Tasered” and punched by West Covina Police Officer Enrique Macias, and then pinned to the ground and handcuffed by Macias and three other West Covina police officers. Mendoza’s sons, David, Jr., and Irvin, sued the city and Macias for wrongful death, alleging that Macias used excessive force in violation of their father’s constitutional rights.1 A jury awarded respondents $750,000 each for the wrongful death of their father, but determined that Mendoza was 30 percent at fault in the incident. The jury found that Macias had acted with “malice, oppression and/or fraud.” In a bifurcated proceeding before the trial court, the court assessed punitive damages against Macias in the amount of $4,500.

The facts that brought Mendoza into the hospital under police custody are not in dispute. In the days leading up to his death, Mendoza went to the hospital three times because of alcohol withdrawal sickness. The last two hospital visits took place on late night March 15 into early March 16, and late night March 16 into early March 17.2 On those last two occasions, an intravenous needle was used. On the second, at around 3:30 a.m. on March 17, Mendoza pulled the needle from his arm and walked out of the hospital.

A few hours later, Mendoza walked into the backyard of a nearby home, tried to open a window, and asked in Spanish to use a telephone. The home’s owner called the police, who found Mendoza seated on a curb not far away. One of those officers was Macias. Mendoza told Macias that he went to the house to ask if he could use the phone to call his family. Mendoza asked Macias to help him. Macias arrested Mendoza on suspicion of burglary and took him to a holding cell. Mendoza complained that he had stomach pains and was hearing voices, and told Macias that he also had diabetes and high blood pressure. Macias took Mendoza to the hospital so Mendoza could be medically cleared for booking.

Once at the hospital, Mendoza submitted to a physical examination and gave a urine sample. His right arm was then handcuffed to the arm of something called a “BA chair,” which was designed as a seat for drawing blood samples for testing blood-alcohol content. Up to this point, from his entry into the backyard through his arrest and transportation to the hospital, Mendoza remained cooperative, nonthreatening, and noncombative. When a nurse applied a tourniquet to Mendoza’s arm in order to draw a blood sample, however, Mendoza said he did not want a needle in his arm. From this point on, the events leading to Mendoza’s death were very much in dispute at trial. We begin with appellants’ version of events.

[707]*707According to Macias, Mendoza stood up, moved toward the nurse who was applying the tourniquet, and said, “I don’t want this,” and “I don’t want to be here.” Macias told Mendoza to relax and sit down. Mendoza complied, but stood up several more times. Although Macias kept telling Mendoza to relax, Mendoza became increasingly agitated and began struggling to get out of the chair.

Paisley Velasquez, a Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputy, was also in the emergency room area, and Macias asked her to watch Mendoza while he called his watch commander about Mendoza’s conduct. Mendoza rushed out of his chair and moved toward Velasquez, which both Velasquez and Macias considered a threat. Velasquez responded by placing her hands on Mendoza’s chest and moving him back against a wall. She claimed Mendoza resisted and kept pushing against her. Macias went back to help Velasquez, and tried to get Macias to sit back down.

Because Mendoza continued to resist, and because Macias believed Mendoza might use the chair to which he was handcuffed as a weapon, Macias decided to use his Taser on Mendoza. Macias warned Mendoza for about 30 seconds that he would “Taser” Mendoza unless he sat back down, and pressed the Taser against Mendoza’s torso. When Mendoza did not comply, Macias activated the Taser.3 Mendoza came toward Macias, and they both fell to the ground. A prolonged struggle followed, during which, according to Macias, Mendoza swung the chair that was handcuffed to his wrist and flipped it from side to side. Mendoza knocked the Taser from Macias’s hands, but Velasquez retrieved it and returned it to Macias, who applied it to Mendoza three or four more times in an attempt to subdue him. Mendoza was yelling and screaming and kept grabbing Macias. Macias punched Mendoza in the face five or six times.

In response to Macias’s radio call for help, three more West Covina police officers arrived and helped Macias subdue Mendoza. Between the four of them, they rolled Mendoza over on to his stomach, held him down, and handcuffed him. The officers then pulled Mendoza up into a sitting position. A doctor walked by and asked whether Mendoza was breathing. He was not. Efforts to revive him were futile, and Mendoza died.

[708]*708The testimony of various witnesses tells a different version of the events.4 Macias conceded that between the time he pressed the Taser against Mendoza’s body and the first time he fired it, Mendoza did not try to hit him or Deputy Velasquez. Nurse Judi Valenzuela, who had tried to draw blood from Mendoza, testified that Mendoza was seated when Macias first “Tasered” him.

Cristina Madrigal had been brought to the hospital by Deputy Velasquez after being involved in a traffic accident. Madrigal was lying on a gurney in the emergency room.5 She could not see Mendoza, but was able to overhear what was going on.6 She heard Macias telling Velasquez that Mendoza had been wandering the streets. She then heard Mendoza refusing something that “they” wanted to give him, and also heard Macias tell Mendoza to calm down and that he would be fine. She then heard the sound of a chair moving around, followed by the snapping sound of a Taser. Mendoza then fell into her view, and from that point on she was able to see what was happening.

Mendoza was facedown on his stomach with his right hand still cuffed to the chair. Madrigal heard him plead numerous times, “Please God, make it stop. Make it stop. Please help me.” He was also screaming in pain. Some nurses moved Madrigal, but she was still able to see what was happening to Mendoza. Madrigal never saw Mendoza touch or resist anyone. The only movements Mendoza made were “minimum.” He did not appear to be trying to leave or move away. His left hand was by his side and his right hand was out toward the front, still cuffed to the chair. Madrigal never saw Mendoza lift or swing the chair. As Mendoza remained facedown on the floor, one officer had a foot near Mendoza’s head and another had a foot on his back. She did not think Mendoza was moving during this time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 Cal. App. 4th 702, 141 Cal. Rptr. 3d 553, 2012 WL 1941748, 2012 Cal. App. LEXIS 639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mendoza-v-city-of-west-covina-calctapp-2012.