Sasser v. City of Los Angeles CA2/8

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 2, 2021
DocketB295300
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sasser v. City of Los Angeles CA2/8 (Sasser v. City of Los Angeles CA2/8) 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
Sasser v. City of Los Angeles CA2/8, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 2/2/21 Sasser v. City of Los Angeles CA2/8 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

PRESCIOUS SASSER, B295300

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. BC644290) v.

CITY OF LOS ANGELES et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Mary Ann Murphy, Judge. Affirmed. Law Office of Michael J. Curls, Michael J. Curls and Nichelle D. Jones for Plaintiff and Appellant. Michael N. Feuer, City Attorney, Kathleen A. Kenealy, Chief Assistant City Attorney, Scott Marcus, Chief, Civil Litigation Branch, Blithe S. Bock, Managing Assistant City Attorney, and Shaun Dabby Jacobs, Deputy City Attorney, for Defendants and Respondents. ____________________ Officer Evan Urias suspected Kenney Watkins had a weapon and ordered him to show his hands and get on the ground. Watkins ran away from him. On his police motorcycle, Urias trailed about 10 feet behind Watkins, keeping pace. Watkins slowed down and began turning towards Urias. Watkins held two guns, one in each hand. Watkins started to point a gun at Urias. Urias shot Watkins to death. Police investigating the shooting found Watkins’s guns at the scene. Both were loaded, operational, and ready to fire. Watkins’s mother sued the Los Angeles Police Department and the City of Los Angeles for her son’s wrongful death. The jury returned a defense verdict. On appeal, Watkins’s mother assigns errors and attacks the trial judge as biased. We affirm. I We summarize the facts in the light favorable to the party prevailing at trial. (Cassim v. Allstate Ins. Co. (2004) 33 Cal.4th 780, 787 (Cassim).) Watkins was a car passenger on an August afternoon. The weather was clear and warm: about 85 degrees. The uniformed Urias was patrolling on a police motorcycle. In a roll call briefing, superiors instructed Urias to be alert for the type of cars commonly used in robberies, including cars with license plate violations and tinted windows. Urias saw and began following a car with tinted windows and a missing license plate. Watkins was a passenger in this car. Urias turned on his red and blue lights to command the driver to stop. The car did not stop. Urias followed as the car made turns and then pulled over at a gas station.

2 Watkins got out of the car with his hands in his waistband. He put his hands under his jacket with his arms crossed in front. Despite the temperature, Watkins used a hood that concealed his face. Watkins began walking away from Urias. Urias suspected Watkins was carrying weapons and decided to detain him. Urias drove to about eight or 10 feet behind Watkins and ordered him to stop and show his hands. Watkins did not stop. He began running through the gas station and along the Century Boulevard sidewalk. His hands appeared to Urias to still be in his jacket, hampering his gait. Watkins looked back at Urias and kept running. Urias radioed for backup: man with a gun. Urias kept following Watkins on his motorcycle, staying a little behind Watkins and to his left. Urias issued a second command: stop and get on the ground. Watkins began running full stride. Watkins looked over his shoulder, made eye contact with Urias, and slowed his running pace. Watkins began to turn. Urias saw one gun in Watkins’s left hand. Then Urias saw a second gun in Watkins’s right hand. Watkins moved the barrel of one gun towards Urias. Watkins’s pivot towards Urias was about 30 to 40 degrees. Believing Watkins was about to shoot him, Urias drew his gun and fired two rounds at the center of Watkins’s abdomen. Watkins stumbled, fell, and died. The fatal bullet hit Watkins in his back and struck his heart. The episode had unfolded quickly: about 20 seconds elapsed from when Watkins first began running to when Urias fired.

3 After the shooting, police picked up two guns from where Watkins fell. One was a Smith & Wesson .44 Magnum revolver. The other was a Bursa .380 semiautomatic pistol. Both were loaded. Both were operational in the sense that a bullet would fly from the barrel if you pulled the trigger. The Bursa had a safety; it was off, meaning a trigger pull would fire the gun. The revolver had no safety. Prescious Sasser, Watkins’s mother, proceeded to trial against Urias and the City of Los Angeles on a claim for wrongful death predicated on negligence and battery. We refer to the defendants collectively as the City. The trial lawyers appeared for pretrial matters on September 17, 2018. Michael J. Curls and Nichelle Jones represented Sasser. Geoffrey Plowden was the lawyer for the City. Over Sasser’s objection, the court bifurcated the trial into a liability phase and a damages phase. The court and parties selected a jury. The trial took seven weekdays. Opening statements began on September 19, 2018. Closing arguments ended September 27, 2018. Sasser called Urias, civilian eyewitness Calvin Gatison, a coroner, and two experts in her case-in-chief. The City called two detectives, five criminalists, and two experts. It recalled the coroner. Key facts were uncontested. Watkins ran down the street away from Urias carrying two loaded guns. Watkins had not heeded Urias’s commands. There was no trial dispute on these points. The major factual contest was what Watkins did just before his death: whether he turned his body, or just his head, towards Urias while running, and whether Watkins turned away from

4 Urias towards a driveway. Sasser’s theory was Watkins was simply fleeing when Urias unjustifiably decided to shoot him. By contrast, the City’s theme was Watkins posed a deadly threat by carrying the loaded guns, by defying police commands, and by slowing, by beginning to turn, and by starting to point a gun at Urias. Eyewitness Calvin Gatison was driving nearby as Watkins ran down Century Boulevard. Police interviewed Gatison shortly after the shooting. Gatison told them Watkins was turning to his left, which would have been towards the street and Urias. At trial, Gatison testified Watkins turned only his head, not his body, towards the officer. Gatison testified he had never told police otherwise. The interviewing detective, however, testified Gatison, when describing the incident, made a turning motion with his body to demonstrate Watkins had been turning his body towards Urias. The jury reached a defense verdict on its third day of deliberations. It found the force Urias used against Watkins was reasonable. Sasser appeals the verdict. She asserts four grounds: improper bifurcation; instructional error; incorrect evidentiary rulings; and permeating bias by the trial court. We analyze these four claims. II We start with bifurcation. The court bifurcated the trial into a liability phase and a damages phase. The defense verdict on liability obviated the damages trial. First we summarize our conclusion: the court’s bifurcation decision was sound. It saved trial time because the liability witnesses and the damages witnesses were different: there was

5 no overlap. Bifurcation also focused the liability trial on the liability issue, which was what happened in the moments leading up to the shooting. The trial court did not abuse its discretion. Now we support our conclusion. The City moved to bifurcate the liability and damages phases under Code of Civil Procedure sections 598 and 1048.

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Sasser v. City of Los Angeles CA2/8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sasser-v-city-of-los-angeles-ca28-calctapp-2021.