Hyburnia Husband sued Sheriff Charles Bryan and his deputy, Larry Saurage, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for digging up her pasture in contravention of her Fourth Amendment rights. We affirm the district court’s ordеr denying Bryan and Saurage summary judgment on their claims of qualified immunity.
I. BACKGROUND
Saurage secured a warrant from a Texas judge authorizing him to search an old grаvel-filled well on Husband’s pasture land, where he suspected Husband’s son to have buried the body of a murder victim. To obtain the warrant, Saurage swоre to the judge that Robert Birdwell told him that Husband’s son nervously and hurriedly asked him to fill the well with expensive gravel rather than dirt, and Birdwell believed that there was a body at the well’s bottom when he filled it. Saurage also swore that Bill Billingsley told him that Husband’s son stated to Billingsley that Husband’s son had killed and buried people.
Saurage searched two wells on Husband’s property, neither of which was filled with gravel or concealed a corpse. But Saurage and his crew continued searching Husband’s pasture; they used bulldozers to dig up approximately 3 acres of her land, found no body, and then refused to replace the dirt that they had moved or to repair the land.
Husband sued, inter alia, Bryan and Saurage in their individual capacities for intentionally violating her Fourteenth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches as stated in the Fourth Amendment. Husband alleges that pursuant to а conspiracy of which Bryan and Saurage were members, Saurage lied to get the warrant to search her wells and then exceedеd the warrant’s scope by digging up her land after searching the wells.
In their motion for summary judgment, Bryan and Saurage asserted qualified immunity. The district court held that Husband had stated with sufficient specificity a claim that Bryan and Saurage violated her clearly established constitutional rights, and therefоre issued an order denying their summary judgment motion. Bryan and Saurage appeal the court’s interlocutory order.
II. DISCUSSION
The law accords public officials qualified immunity from suit as well as from liability.
Jacquez v. Procunier,
*29 A. Open Fields
Bryan and Saurage argue that under the “open fields” doctrine, Husband has no Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches of her pasture, so Husband’s section 1983 claim fails as a matter of law. In a long line of cases, the Supreme Court has held that, except for a house’s curtilage, the Fourth Amendment does not protect people from official searches characterized as “sights seen in ‘the open fields.’ ”
Air Pollution Variance Bd. of Colo. v. Western Alfalfa Corp.,
But this argument of Bryan and Saurage ignores
Katz v. United States,
Neither this court nor the Supreme Court have extended the open fields doctrine to anything beyond observation searches.
See generally Donovan v. Dewey,
*30 B. Violation of Clearly Established Law
“The doctrine of qualified immunity shields a police officer from liability for civil damages when a reasonable officer cоuld have believed that the challenged conduct did not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights.”
Simpson v. Hines,
Bryan and Saurage argue, however, that when Saurage searched Husband’s lot it was not clearly established thаt a warrant was required to search beneath an open field. We disagree. Neither this court nor the Supreme Court has hinted that intrusive seаrches in open fields are outside the Fourth Amendment’s scope. Nor did Bryan and Saurage believe that the open fields doctrine extends so far if Husband is correct that Saurage lied to obtain the warrant to search Husband’s field.
C. Complaint Sufficiency
We agree with the district court that Husband’s Third Amended Comрlaint states her claims against Bryan and Saurage with sufficient particularity under
Elliott v. Perez,
III. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the district court’s order denying Bryan and Saurage summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds.
Notes
. Bryan and Saurage may not legitimately rely on
United States v. Fahey,
. Once Saurage dug up the wells on Husband's lot and discovered that neither was filled with gravel, he had every reason to suspect the veracity of the statements allegedly made to him by Birdwell.
