Ms. Calderon filed this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the State of Kansas, Rochelle Chronister as Secretary of the Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services (SRS), and Carol Bacon, a state court judge. In response to defendants’ motions, the district court dismissed the action on various grounds including Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim. Ms. Calderon appeals and we affirm.
I
Ms. Calderon’s underlying suit arises out of state court proceedings that resulted in the removal of her children from her care and custody. During the proceedings, Judge Bacon allegedly asked Ms.' Calderon questions regarding her national origin, immigration status, marital status, socioeconomic status, and birth control practices. Ms. Calderon sued the state, the judge, and Ms. Chronister for allegedly violating her rights under the Fourth, *1183 Fourteenth and Fifth Amendments. She also asserted state tort claims against defendants. Defendant Chronister answered the complaint and filed a motion to dismiss. Without answering, the remaining defendants filed motions to dismiss. The district court held that Eleventh Amendment immunity, judicial immunity, and qualified, immunity protected defendants from suit. In so doing, the court held that the complaint failed to state a federal claim against any of the defendants. The court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the remaining state claims and dismissed them without prejudice.
II
On appeal, Ms. Calderon contends the allegations in her complaint were sufficient to state a claim. We review de, novo the district court’s dismissal for failure to state a claim.
Dill v. City of Edmond,
The district court held that the Eleventh Amendment bars Ms. Calderon’s damage action against the State of Kansas and Ms. Chronister in her official capacity. Ms. Calderon does not contest that conclusion here but asserts that she is nevertheless entitled to sue Ms. Chronister for prospective injunctive relief under
Ex parte Young,
Ms. Calderon concedes that her complaint never expressly requested prospective injunctive relief. She argues instead that this omission should not be fatal because her alleged violations entitled her to injunctive relief as a matter of justice.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(c) (“[E]very final judgment shall grant relief to which the party in whose favor it is rendered is entitled, even if the party has not demanded such relief in the party’s pleadings.”). She cites
Pension Benefit Guar. Corp. v. East Dayton Tool & Die Co.,
In her complaint, Ms. Calderon complained only of a series of questions Judge Bacon and SRS asked her that “elicited information relating to family planning issues and her decisions to procreate, viz, the use of norplant ..., information relating to the plaintiffs race, national origin, and citizenship ... [and] socioeconomic status as it relates to the plaintiffs ability to care for her children.” Aplt.App. at 3. We are not told the manner in which the line of questioning allegedly violated any of Ms. Calderon's rights or would warrant any kind of injunctive relief.
The rest of the complaint asserted vaguely that Ms. Calderon was subjected to the “described treatment,” which we take to mean the line of questioning, “because of her gender (female), race (Hispanic), national origin (Mexico), citizenship (undetermined), and socioeconomic status (at or below the national poverty level);” that the facts “were used to deprive [her] of her rights, privileges and immunities secured by the Constitution and the laws of the United States” in unspecified ways; and that defendants violated her “liberty interest in the security of her person, her *1184 rights to equal protection, her rights to due process of law, and her privilege against self-incrimination under the Fourth, Fourteenth and Fifth Amendments.” Id. at 4. These allegations provided no indication that prospective injunctive relief would ameliorate the alleged violations, which had already occurred.
Furthermore, the only harm Ms. Calderon alleged was her own “substantial and permanent emotional injury, medical expenses and other damages,” and the damages requested were “in excess of $8,000,000.00.”
Id.
at 4-5. Although a court might speculate that the heart of the complaint was to adjust child custody, no court has a duty to read this interpretation from the litigant’s mind,
Brever v. Rockwell Int’l Corp.,
In the most liberal construction of the complaint, we are unable to discern the basis for Ms, Calderon’s claims beyond any embarrassment the questions may have caused her. We cannot deduce any grounds for a federal constitutional violation or for injunctive relief except to enjoin questioning. As the questioning was completed and there was no indication of further questioning, injunctive relief would have been inappropriate.
Notably, Ms. Calderon offered nothing more in her Memorandum in Opposition of Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss to indicate a constitutional violation that would have entitled her to any relief, much less prospective injunctive relief. In addition to repeating, information, in the complaint, the Memorandum asserted that Judge Bacon attempted to regulate contraception. and immigration. See Aplt.App. at 12. Ms. Calderon stated no facts at all to support these allegations, failed to explain the nexus between the judge’s questions and the alleged act of regulating Ms. Calderon, and did not assert that the attempt to regulate was ongoing. Thus, neither Ms. Calderon’s Memorandum nor her complaint specified any constitutional violation that would have entitled her to relief. The district court did not err in holding that Ms. Calderon had not stated a claim against Ms. Chronister.under the doctrine of Ex parte Young.
Ms. Calderon contends Judge Bacon was not entitled to judicial immunity because the judge’s questions regarding Ms. Calderon’s citizenship were 'clearly beyond the scope of her jurisdiction.
See Stump v. Sparkman,
The district court also dismissed all claims against Ms. Chronister in her individual capacity based on qualified immunity. Under this doctrine, government officials. are immune from liability for damages “insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
On appeal, Ms. Calderon asserts a number of specific contentions for the first time. She claims Judge Bacon ordered her to become a citizen in order to regain custody of her children, ordered her to marry the father of the children, ordered her to use birth control, and subjected her to self-incrimination by forcing her to answer questions about her citizenship and to disclose her illegal immigrant status. None of these allegations were made in her complaint. In fact, one cryptic allusion made in the Memorandum below that Judge Bacon attempted to regulate her immigration status made no sense in context until after Ms. Calderon revealed on appeal that she was an illegal immigrant. Since we will not consider an argument based on claims that were not before the district court, we decline to consider these new contentions.
See City of Stilwell, Okla. v. Ozarks Rural Elec. Cop.,
Viewing the record below without Ms. Calderon’s late allegations and revelations, we conclude that Ms. Calderon failed to state a claim for a violation of her constitutional rights. We therefore agree with the district court that Judge Bacon was protected from suit by judicial immunity, and that Ms. Chronister was protected by the Eleventh Amendment in her official capacity and by qualified immunity in her individual capacity.
Ill
Alternatively, Ms. Calderon argues that the district court abused its discretion in failing to grant her leave to amend. On the last page of her Memorandum in Opposition of Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss, Ms. Calderon requested that
should the court determine the need for facts or [that] further facts be stated with “... sufficient particularity to place the defendants in a position of notice as to the nature of the action against them ...” grant leave and sufficient time in which Calderon would be “... permitted to cure any specified defects within the pleadings.”
AptApp. at 72. She contends the district court abused its discretion by failing to consider that statement as a motion for leave to amend her complaint and to sua sponte offer her the right -to do so.
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 15(a) provides that a party has a right to amend the pleading one time without seeking leave of court as long as the amendment occurs before a responsive pleading is served.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a);
Glenn v. First Nat’l Bank,
When a party files a proper motion for leave to amend, rule 15(a) further provides “leave shall be freely given when justice so requires.” Fed.R.CivP. 15(a);
see also Foman v. Davis,
We have recognized the importance of Fed.R.Civ.P. 7(b) and have held that normally a court need not grant leave to amend when a party fails to file a formal motion.
1
See Brever,
While in the spirit of Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(b) we have said that failure to file a formal motion is not always fatal,
see Brever,
Deriving a consistent approach from our case law, we conclude that a request for'leave to amend must give ade
*1187
quate notice to the district court and to the opposing party of the basis of the proposed amendment before the court is required to recognize that a motion for leave to amend is before it. Our conclusion does not detract from the district court’s wide discretion to recognize a motion- for leave to amend in the interest of a just, fair or early resolution of litigation.
See
5 WRIGHT
&
Miller,
supra,
§ 1194 (2d ed. Supp.1999). Our requirement of notice merely assures that “[w]e do not require district courts to engage in independent research or read the minds of litigants to determine if information justifying an amendment exists.”
Brever,
Our holding today resolves any substantive tension between our holdings in
Glenn,
should [the district court] determine that Plaintiff has failed to state facts with sufficient particularity to place the Defendants on notice of the nature of the action brought against them, Plaintiffs would have this Court grant sufficient time in which Plaintiffs would be permitted to cure any specified defects within the pleadings,
and one sentence in their supporting brief that plaintiffs “would have leave of Court to amend their complaint to cure any deficiencies if such deficiencies are hereinafter determined to exist by the Court.” Id. at 588 n. 1. Apparently in Ramirez, the district court was silent regarding the request for leave to amend. Despite the limited notice and lack of grounds to support an amendment provided by the plaintiffs two submissions, we stated in footnote nine that the district court’s failure to grant leave to amend was an abuse of discretion.
Relying solely on the footnote in
Ramirez,
Ms. Calderon contends she made a legitimate motion for leave to amend and argues that the district court abused its discretion in failing to grant leave after it sustained defendants’ motions to dismiss. Footnote nine in
Ramirez
can be characterized as dicta, however, because we held that the plaintiffs complaint as written did in fact state a claim.
Cf. Hinton v. City of Elwood,
Applying the
Glenm-Triplett
standard of adequate notice to the courts and the opposing party, therefore, we hold that Ms. Calderon’s single sentence, lacking a statement for the grounds for amendment and dangling at the end of her memorandum, did not rise to the level of a motion for leave to amend. Because a motion for leave to amend was never properly before it, the district court did not abuse its discretion in failing to address Ms. Calderon’s request for leave to cure deficiencies in her pleadings.
See Brannon v. Boatmen’s First Nat’l Bank,
In conclusion, we AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal of Ms. Calderon’s complaint for failure to state a claim.
Notes
. To comply with the Rules of Practice and Procedure for the United States District Courts of Kansas, a motion must be accompanied by a brief or memorandum, D.Kan. Rule 7.1; and "[i]n addition, ... [it should] set forth a concise statement of the amendment sought to be allowed, and a signed original of the proposed amended pleading [should] be attached,” D.Kan. Rule 15.1. None of these formal procedures were followed in the instant case.
