Check how courts have cited this case. Use our free citator for the most current treatment.
No. 9999054
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Rosa Cuevas v. City of Tulare
No. 9999054 · Decided July 10, 2024
No. 9999054·Ninth Circuit · 2024·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
July 10, 2024
Citation
No. 9999054
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
ROSA CUEVAS, No. 23-15953
Plaintiff-Appellant, D.C. No.
1:19-cv-01525-
and JLT-SAB
LETITIA TUGGLE, as Representative
of The Estate of Quinntin Castro; OPINION
CAMERON WARE,
Plaintiffs,
v.
CITY OF TULARE; MATT
MACHADO, Police Chief; RYAN
GARCIA; ANDY GARCIA;
EDWARD PUENTE, Officer;
DANIEL BRADLEY, Officer,
Defendants-Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of California
Jennifer L. Thurston, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted June 13, 2024
2 CUEVAS V. CITY OF TULARE
San Francisco, California
Filed July 10, 2024
Before: Ronald M. Gould, Richard C. Tallman, and Ryan
D. Nelson, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge R. Nelson
SUMMARY *
Excessive Force/Qualified Immunity
The panel affirmed on qualified immunity grounds the
district court’s summary judgment in favor of police officers
in an action brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and
California law alleging that the officers used excessive force
by shooting into a vehicle following a high-speed felony
chase, seriously injuring passenger Rosa Cuevas.
Quinntin Castro led police on a high-speed chase and
kept trying to flee after he got stuck in mud. A responding
officer broke his car window to order him to stop and another
officer put his police dog through the window. Castro
responded by shooting—and killing—the dog, hitting the
dog’s handler in the process. The remaining officers
returned fire in defense of themselves and the fallen officer,
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
CUEVAS V. CITY OF TULARE 3
ultimately killing Castro. During the gunfight, they
accidentally hit Cuevas multiple times.
The panel held that under clearly established Fourth
Amendment law, Cuevas was seized. It was not clearly
established, however, that the force the officers used was
excessive. None of Cuevas’s cited cases clearly establish
that officers violated her rights when they shot her while
defensively returning fire during an active shooting. Nor
was it obvious that the officers could not return fire after
Castro killed their police dog and shot an officer. In
excessive-force cases where police officers face a threat, the
obviousness principle will rarely—if ever—be available as
an end-run to the requirement that law must be clearly
established.
COUNSEL
Michael J. Haddad (argued), Julia Sherwin, and Teresa
Allen, Haddad & Sherwin LLP, Oakland, California, for
Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Bruce D. Praet (argued), Ferguson Praet & Sherman APC,
Santa Ana, California; for Defendants-Appellees.
4 CUEVAS V. CITY OF TULARE
OPINION
R. NELSON, Circuit Judge:
Quinntin Castro led police on a high-speed felony chase.
Although Castro got stuck in mud, he kept trying to flee. A
responding officer broke the car window to order him to stop
and another officer put his police dog through the car’s
window. Castro responded by shooting—and killing—the
dog, hitting the dog’s handler in the process. The remaining
officers returned fire in defense of themselves and the fallen
officer, ultimately killing Castro. During the gunfight, they
accidentally hit Rosa Cuevas, a passenger in the front seat,
multiple times. She survived, but she was severely injured.
She sued under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and California law. The
district court granted summary judgment to defendants
based on an erroneous finding that Cuevas was not seized for
Fourth Amendment purposes, and alternatively, that even if
she were seized the officers are entitled to qualified
immunity. Because we find that the officers are entitled to
qualified immunity, we affirm.
I
We begin by reviewing the facts in the light most
favorable to Rosa Cuevas. A few weeks after Cuevas
befriended Quinntin Castro in 2018, she met up with him and
his friend, Cameron Ware. They gave Ware a ride in
Cuevas’s car. Castro drove, Cuevas sat in the front
passenger seat, and Ware sat in the back.
Officer Daniel Bradley observed their car as Castro
rolled through several intersections without stopping.
Officer Bradley decided not to pull him over for the first
infraction, but he started a stop after Castro turned left
CUEVAS V. CITY OF TULARE 5
without using a blinker and rolled through another stop sign.
Officer Bradley told dispatch that two other people were
with Castro.
Rather than stopping, Castro fled, driving over several
residential lawns. This was only a misdemeanor. But as
officers pursued him for the next four to ten miles, he drove
recklessly, resulting in multiple near collisions with other
drivers. Because of this, the officers intended to perform a
typical felony stop. 1 Although the police were pursuing
Castro, no one had any reason to suspect either Cuevas or
Ware of any wrongdoing.
The chase ended after Castro got stuck in mud on the
roadside. Officer Bradley’s vehicle also got stuck in the
mud. Soon after, K-9 Officer Ryan Garcia and Officer
Edward Puente arrived with Sergeant Andy Garcia. The
officers surrounded Cuevas’s car as Castro kept trying to
escape. 2 But the more Castro revved the engine, the more
Cuevas’s car sank into the mud. As this happened, Cuevas
sat terrified in the front seat with her hands up, waiting for
orders.
Castro continued hitting the gas, and the officers
repeatedly shouted at him to stop. The engine, however, was
so loud that the officers did not believe Castro could hear
their orders. Sergeant Garcia broke the driver’s side window
and quickly retreated to continue ordering Castro to turn off
the car. Once Sergeant Garcia broke the window, Castro
1
California Vehicular Code § 2800.2, which criminalizes driving in
wanton or willful disregard for public safety while fleeing an officer, can
be charged as a misdemeanor or a felony.
2
The officers offer inconsistent testimony about whether Castro was in
drive, which would have propelled him into a wheat field, or whether he
was in reverse, which would have thrown the car into the officers.
6 CUEVAS V. CITY OF TULARE
stopped revving the engine. Without warning, K-9 Officer
Garcia threw his police dog, Bane, through the window with
a command to bite Castro.
Castro grabbed a gun from the car’s center console and
fired at least five shots. Two hit and killed Bane. Another
two hit K-9 Officer Garcia. Throughout the encounter,
Cuevas sat in the front passenger seat with her hands raised.
The officers—without warning that they would shoot
back—returned thirty-four shots into the vehicle. Although
they aimed for Castro, the officers hit Cuevas several times.
Once the shooting stopped, Castro climbed out of the car’s
passenger side, firing two additional shots. These last shots
did not hit an officer, but one did hit Officer Bradley’s patrol
car. Castro died at the scene.
Cuevas sued the City of Tulare, its Police Chief Matt
Machado, Sergeant Garcia, and Officers Garcia (who
survived the encounter), Puente, and Bradley under 42
U.S.C. § 1983. 3 Cuevas alleged that the officers violated her
Fourth Amendment right to be free from excessive force,
that the city was liable under Monell v. Department of Social
Services of New York, 436 U.S. 658 (1978), and that Chief
Machado was liable as the officers’ supervisor. She also
raised a bevy of state-law claims. Tuggle v. City of Tulare,
No. 1:19-cv-01525-JLT-SAB, 2023 WL 4273900, at *3
(E.D. Cal. June 29, 2023). K-9 Officer Garcia and the City
of Tulare counterclaimed against Cuevas and the other
plaintiffs. Id.
Cuevas and the defendants cross-moved for summary
judgment. Id. at *1. The district court granted summary
3
Castro’s executor and Ware were also plaintiffs, but this appeal deals
only with Cuevas’s claims.
CUEVAS V. CITY OF TULARE 7
judgment to the defendants on the federal claims. Id. It first
held that Cuevas’s excessive-force claim failed because
Cuevas was never seized. Id. at *16. It then held that, even
if the officers had seized Cuevas, it was not clearly
established that the officers’ use of force was constitutionally
excessive. Id. at *16–17. The district court thus concluded
that they were entitled to qualified immunity.
Having rejected the federal claims, the district court
declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over either the
state claims or the defendants’ counterclaims. It denied
Cuevas’s motion for summary judgment as moot. Id. at *19.
This appeal followed.
II
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. Waid
v. County of Lyon, 87 F.4th 383, 387 (9th Cir. 2023). “In
qualified immunity cases, as in other cases, we view the facts
in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.” Id.
(internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
III
Qualified immunity protects government officials from
liability under § 1983 “unless (1) they violated a federal
statutory or constitutional right, and (2) the unlawfulness of
their conduct was clearly established at the time.” Id.
(internal quotation marks and citations omitted). “A
[g]overnment official’s conduct violates clearly established
law when, at the time of the challenged conduct, ‘[t]he
contours of [a] right [are] sufficiently clear’ that every
‘reasonable official would [have understood] that what he is
doing violates that right.’” Ashcroft v. al-Kidd, 563 U.S. 731,
741 (2011) (alteration in original) (quoting Anderson v.
Creighton, 483 U.S. 635, 640 (1987)). A case need not be
8 CUEVAS V. CITY OF TULARE
“directly on point, but existing precedent must have placed
the . . . constitutional question beyond debate.” Id.
“The dispositive question is therefore ‘whether the
violative nature of particular conduct is clearly established’
in the specific context of the case.” Vos v. City of Newport
Beach, 892 F.3d 1024, 1035 (9th Cir. 2018) (quoting
Mullenix v. Luna, 577 U.S. 7, 12 (2015)). The Supreme
Court has “repeatedly told courts—and the Ninth Circuit in
particular—not to define clearly established law at a high
level of generality.” al-Kidd, 563 U.S. at 742 (internal
citation omitted). The “specificity” of clearly established
law “is especially important in the Fourth Amendment
context, where the Court has recognized that ‘[i]t is
sometimes difficult for an officer to determine how the
relevant legal doctrine . . . will apply to the factual situation
the officer confronts.’” Mullenix, 577 U.S. at 12 (alteration
in original) (quoting Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 205
(2001)).
A
Cuevas argues that the district court erred in granting
qualified immunity to the officers on her excessive-force
claim. The Fourth Amendment protects “[t]he right of the
people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and
effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S.
CONST. amend. IV. The Supreme Court has interpreted that
amendment to prevent excessive force. Scott v. Harris, 550
U.S. 372, 381 (2007). Excessive force claims require (1) a
seizure and (2) excessive force. See id. We first hold that,
under clearly established law, Cuevas was seized. We then
hold that it was not clearly established that the force the
officers used was excessive.
CUEVAS V. CITY OF TULARE 9
1
The district court held that Cuevas was not seized. We
disagree.
There are two types of Fourth Amendment seizures.
“[A]n officer seizes a person when he uses force to
apprehend her.” Torres v. Madrid, 592 U.S. 306, 309 (2021).
An officer can also seize a person through a “show of
authority” that “in some way restrain[s] the liberty” of a
person. Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 19 n.16 (1968). For this
latter type of stop, “there is no seizure without actual
submission.” Brendlin v. California, 551 U.S. 249, 254
(2007); accord California v. Hodari D., 499 U.S. 621, 626
(1991) (“An arrest requires either physical force . . . or,
where that is absent, submission to the assertion of
authority.”). “Attempted seizures . . . are beyond the scope
of the Fourth Amendment.” County of Sacramento v. Lewis,
523 U.S. 833, 845 n.7 (1998) (discussing Hodari D., 499
U.S. at 626 n.2). Without actual force, an officer’s pursuit
of a fleeing felon or misdemeanant, though a “show of
authority,” is not a seizure if the person does not “comply
with” commands to halt. Hodari D., 499 U.S. at 629.
Thus, when a person is pulled over by the police, that
person is seized because she complied with a show of
authority. Passengers in the car are seized together with the
driver. Brendlin, 551 U.S. at 251. In 2021, we held that, as
of 2016, it was established “that a passenger struck by a
bullet intended to stop the driver of a vehicle” has been
seized. Villanueva v. California, 986 F.3d 1158, 1165 (9th
Cir. 2021).
Under these clearly established principles, the officers
seized Castro. True, Castro was not seized when he first got
stuck in the mud. His repeated attempts to flee suggest that
10 CUEVAS V. CITY OF TULARE
he did not consider himself restrained and belie that he
submitted to the officers. But there are multiple points at
which Castro—and therefore Cuevas—was seized after he
became stuck in the mud. The exact point at which the
seizure occurred is less important.
Castro was seized, at the very least, when K-9 Officer
Garcia put Bane through the broken window instructing him
to bite Castro. This was a use of force. So too were the shots
that the officers fired at Castro after he shot Bane and his
handler. See id.at 1165. Since Cuevas was Castro’s
passenger, she too was seized. The district court’s contrary
conclusion was incorrect.
2
Because Cuevas was seized, we next turn to the
excessive-force prong. The district court held that no case
clearly established that the officers could not return fire at
Castro, collaterally hitting Cuevas. We agree. And because
“we find the clearly established prong dispositive,” we
“exercise our discretion to resolve [the] case only on” that
ground. Waid, 87 F.4th at 387 (internal citation omitted).
Cuevas relies on several cases to argue that her rights
were established when the officers, returning fire at Castro,
also shot her. None of them have facts similar enough to
“clearly establish” that the officers used excessive force.
The first case is Boyd v. Benton County, 374 F.3d 773
(9th Cir. 2004). There, officers executed a search warrant on
an apartment where they believed “five to eight people,”
including “an armed robbery suspect,” may have been
located. Id. at 777. They used “a flash-bang device . . . to
gain entry and secure the premises.” Id. To minimize the
risk to “someone sleeping,” the officers “determined that the
CUEVAS V. CITY OF TULARE 11
flash-bang should be deployed against the apartment’s front
wall and near the door.” Id. They did just that. Boyd, who
was sleeping on the floor, “suffered burns on her forearm”
from the flash bang. Id. at 778. We held that this violated
Boyd’s right to be free from excessive force because, given
the time available, they did not “consider[] alternatives such
as a controlled evacuation followed by a search.” Id. at 779.
But we recognized that there may be “circumstances in
which a risk to officers’ safety would make the use of a flash-
bang device appropriate.” Id. Boyd thus established that a
flash bang cannot be blindly thrown into a room with
innocent bystanders “absent a strong governmental interest,
careful consideration of alternatives and appropriate
measures to reduce the risk of injury.” Id.
The material facts here differ from those in Boyd.
Although Boyd involved a high-risk raid with armed
suspects, the Boyd suspect was neither trying to escape nor
shooting at the officers when Boyd herself was injured.
Further, the officers in Boyd had the benefit of time to decide
how to proceed—they had a plan before they deployed the
flash bang. The officers devised that plan recognizing the
risk that the flash bang could hurt someone in the apartment.
And even with the benefit of time and a plan, the Boyd
officers deployed the flash bang indiscriminately by
throwing it into a building, meaning that they did not know
whether they would be affecting the suspect they were
seeking to arrest.
By contrast, the officers here did not use force until
Castro killed Bane and shot K-9 Officer Garcia. Boyd’s facts
differ enough from this case that it cannot have clearly
established that officers returning fire aimed at an armed
suspect who has shot an officer and killed a police dog
violates the Fourth Amendment. The officers had a
12 CUEVAS V. CITY OF TULARE
compelling interest in ensuring that Castro did not harm
themselves or others. And they did not have time to come
up with a better plan—they needed to act to prevent further
harm to themselves, Cuevas, or Ware. While some bullets
hit Cuevas, the officers were not firing indiscriminately into
the car but were instead aiming—as best they could—at
Castro as he moved from the front driver’s seat to the right
passenger side during the gunfight. This is apparent because
Ware left the encounter unharmed despite being in the car
with Castro and Cuevas. Boyd does not establish Cuevas’s
rights.
Cuevas next cites Nelson v. City of Davis, 685 F.3d 867
(9th Cir. 2012). There, we considered whether officers used
excessive force against Nelson, a university student, when
they fired a pepperball into a crowd to “clear an apartment
complex of partying students,” including a group of
“individuals hurling both bottles and expletives at officers.”
Id. at 872, 883. Nelson was not in that group, and the officers
“did not see anyone in Nelson’s group throwing bottles or
engaging in any other threatening or dangerous behavior.”
Id. at 880. Still, the officers shot “projectiles in the direction
of Nelson” as he “stood in the breezeway of the apartment
complex, attempting to leave the party and awaiting
instruction from the officers.” Id. at 872. On these facts, we
held that the officers violated Nelson’s right to be free from
excessive force because the application of force was not
“justified by the government’s interest in stopping any and
all disorderly behavior,” particularly when the rowdy
students could have been “dispersed by less forceful means.”
Id. at 883.
Nelson is also distinguishable. There, while some
students were engaged in the dangerous activity of throwing
bottles at the police, others—including Nelson’s group—
CUEVAS V. CITY OF TULARE 13
were not. They were partying. Worse, Nelson was trying to
leave the party when he was hit. He thus posed no risk to
the responding officers. And while the evidence shows that,
like Nelson, Cuevas was submitting to police orders, no one
around Nelson had done anything to harm the police that
would have warranted a violent response. Once more,
Castro’s firing at the officers before they returned fire in
Cuevas’s direction is a material fact—indeed, the material
fact—that hinders Nelson’s ability to establish Cuevas’s
rights.
Cuevas’s final case is Villanueva, 986 F.3d 1158. That
case, which was decided after the shooting here, held that it
was “clearly established that an officer who shoots at a slow-
moving car when he can easily step out of the way violates
the Fourth Amendment” as of 2016. Id. at 1171 (citations
omitted). We are bound by that conclusion. But that
established rule does not control here. The car was stuck in
the mud, and unlike in Villanueva, Castro was shooting at
the officers. And there is no evidence that, in this intense
scenario, any of the officers could have safely moved out of
the way. Bullets, unlike slow-moving cars, are not so easy
to dodge—K-9 Officer Garcia had already been hit.
In short, none of Cuevas’s cases clearly establish that
officers violated her rights when they shot her while
defensively returning fire during an active shooting. Cuevas
has not carried her burden. See Romero v. Kitsap County,
931 F.2d 624, 627 (9th Cir. 1991). 4
4
The number of shots fired does not alter our conclusion. “[I]f police
officers are justified in firing at a suspect in order to end a severe threat
to public safety, the officers need not stop shooting until the threat has
14 CUEVAS V. CITY OF TULARE
B
Although it was not clearly established that the officers’
force was excessive, that does not end our analysis. Cuevas
also argues that the constitutional violation was obvious. We
are not persuaded.
Although the Supreme Court has recognized that some
constitutional violations are so obvious that qualified
immunity is inappropriate, it has only done so in Eighth
Amendment cases. See generally Hope v. Pelzer, 536 U.S.
730, 734–38 (2002); Taylor v. Riojas, 592 U.S. 7 (2020) (per
curiam). And while our court has found an obvious
constitutional violation in an excessive-force case, it did so
only where officers killed a man who posed “no immediate
threat.” Est. of Aguirre v. County of Riverside, 29 F.4th 624,
626–27, 629 (9th Cir. 2022). As we have already explained,
the officer in Estate of Aguirre obviously violated the
Constitution when he “shot and killed a suspect holding a
baseball bat because the suspect was not facing the officer,
was holding the bat pointed downwards, and was not
threatening anyone else when he was shot.” Waid, 87 F.4th
at 389 (discussing Est. of Aguirre, 29 F.4th at 626–27, 629).
But the fact that officers cannot kill a man who is not a
threat says little about what they can do in the myriad cases
where a suspect does pose a threat. The Supreme Court has
instructed us that “[t]he calculus of reasonableness must
embody allowance for the fact that police officers are often
forced to make split-second judgments—in circumstances
that are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving—about the
ended.” Plumhoff v. Rickard, 572 U.S. 765, 777 (2014). That Castro
continued firing shots even after he was hit makes clear that the threat
had not ended.
CUEVAS V. CITY OF TULARE 15
amount of force that is necessary in a particular
situation.” Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386, 396–97
(1989). Indeed, “[w]e have noted that ‘this obviousness
principle, an exception to the specific-case requirement, is
especially problematic in the Fourth-Amendment context.’”
Waid, 87 F.4th at 388 (quoting Sharp v. County of Orange,
871 F.3d 901, 912 (9th Cir. 2017)). A categorical statement
that conduct obviously violates the Fourth Amendment “is
particularly hard to make when officers encounter suspects
every day in never-before-seen ways,” including “countless
confrontations . . . that yield endless permutations of
outcomes and responses.” Sharp, 871 F.3d at 912. For this
reason, in excessive-force cases where police officers face a
threat, the obviousness principle will rarely—if ever—be
available as an end-run to the requirement that law must be
clearly established.
With this understanding in mind, the officers’ returning
fire was not obviously unconstitutional—even though they
collaterally hit Cuevas. The alternative would be untenable.
Officers would have to either not defend themselves or risk
liability if they accidentally hit a bystander when they return
fire. The officers are therefore entitled to qualified
immunity.
IV
No case clearly established, and it was not obvious, that
the officers could not return fire after Castro killed their
police dog and shot K-9 Officer Garcia. Accordingly, the
officers are entitled to qualified immunity.
AFFIRMED.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT ROSA CUEVAS, No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT ROSA CUEVAS, No.
021:19-cv-01525- and JLT-SAB LETITIA TUGGLE, as Representative of The Estate of Quinntin Castro; OPINION CAMERON WARE, Plaintiffs, v.
03CITY OF TULARE; MATT MACHADO, Police Chief; RYAN GARCIA; ANDY GARCIA; EDWARD PUENTE, Officer; DANIEL BRADLEY, Officer, Defendants-Appellees.
04Thurston, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted June 13, 2024 2 CUEVAS V.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT ROSA CUEVAS, No.
FlawCheck shows no negative treatment for Rosa Cuevas v. City of Tulare in the current circuit citation data.
This case was decided on July 10, 2024.
Use the citation No. 9999054 and verify it against the official reporter before filing.