Johnnie Faye Spiller, the plaintiff, brought suit against defendants Texas City, its police department, and one of its police officers, Mark Spurgeon, for Spurgeon’s alleged violation of her Fourth Amendment and Texas common law rights. 1 The district court dismissed Spiller’s Fourth Amendment claims because they “fail[ed] to state a claim upon which relief [could] be granted,” Fed. R. Civ. Pro. 12(b)(6), and accordingly declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over her state law claims. Finding Spiller to have alleged a violation of her Fourth Amendment rights, we reverse in part, affirm in part, and remand the ease for further proceedings.
I.
The dismissal of a complaint under Rule 12(b)(6) is reviewed
de novo. House the Homeless, Inc. v. Widnall,
On July 15, 1994, Spiller, who is black, pulled her car into a Chevron station in Texas City. She stopped at a pump being used by Spurgeon, who is white. As she arrived, Spurgeon was finishing pumping gasoline into his pickup truck. After he finished, Spurgeon did not move his truck to allow Spiller to use the pump. Instead, he began talking with a white man on the other side of the pump. Because Spurgeon was not in uniform, Spiller did not know that he was a police officer.
After waiting a few moments for Spurgeon to move his truck, Spiller rolled down her car window and politely asked him to “please pull up” so she could “get some gas.” Spurgeon pretended not to hear this remark, turned his back on Spiller, and continued his conversation. Spiller then opened her car door, placed one foot outside her ear, and once again calmly and politely asked Spurgeon to move his truck so she could get some gas. Although he acknowledged this request, Spurgeon continued his conversation and did not move his truck. A few moments later, he acknowledged, but did not honor, a third polite request by Spiller that he move his truck.
Having grown impatient with Spurgeon’s behavior, Spiller next opened her car door, again placed one foot on the pavement, and told Spurgeon to “move his .damn truck” because “the pumps were not for socializing, they were for people to buy gas and go on about their business.” After hearing these remarks, Spurgeon confronted Spiller and asked her to repeat what she had said. She did so and Spurgeon then moved his truck.
After moving his truck, Spurgeon returned to confront Spiller as she was seated in her car. This time he told her to get out of her car. She refused. Spurgeon then told her to get out of the car because she was under arrest for disorderly conduct. He began laughing as he showed her his police badge.
After Spiller was arrested, a police officer searched her car and she was confined in a jail cell that smelled of urine. She was not prosecuted, however, because the criminal complaint against her was dismissed.
II.
In support of their motion to dismiss, the defendants argued that Spiller’s allegations demonstrate that her Fourth Amendment rights were not violated because there was probable cause for her arrest for disorderly *165 conduct. In addition, Spurgeon asserted that even if Spiller’s allegations stated a claim for the violation of her constitutional rights under Section 1983, he was entitled to qualified immunity because he reasonably believed he had probable cause to arrest her for disorderly conduct. Further, Texas City and its police department contended that the complaint did not adequately allege that Spurgeon acted in accordance with an official government policy or custom as is required for them to be held liable under Section 1983.
Agreeing with the defendants, the district court dismissed each of Spiller’s Section 1983 claims because she failed to state a claim for the violation of her Fourth Amendment rights by Spurgeon. Consequently, the district court did not reach the issues of qualified immunity or municipal liability, and it did not rule on Spiller’s request to amend her pleadings regarding the liability of the city and the police department. Further, after dismissing each of Spiller’s Section 1983 claims, the district court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over her state law claims. See 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3) (allowing a district court to decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction when it “has dismissed all claims over which it has original jurisdiction”). Before us on appeal are Spiller’s assertions that she adequately pleaded the violation of her Fourth Amendment rights by Spurgeon, that Spurgeon is not entitled to qualified immunity, and that she is entitled to amend her allegations of municipal liability on remand if they are insufficient to withstand a motion to dismiss in their present form.
III.
A. Spiller’s Section 1988 Claim Against Spurgeon
Under the Fourth Amendment, an arrest must be based on probable cause, which exists “when the totality of the facts and circumstances within a police officer’s knowledge at the moment of arrest are sufficient for a reasonable person to conclude that the suspect had committed or was committing an offense.”
United States v. Levine,
Although the word “damn” may be profane, the events alleged in Spiller’s complaint did not provide Spurgeon with probable cause to believe that her reference to his truck was likely to incite an immediate breach of the peace. To begin with, Spiller’s expression of frustration from inside her automobile was not part of a confrontational face-to-face exchange. Under these circumstances, her remark cannot reasonably be interpreted as an invitation to fisticuffs.
See Rivenburgh,
In the alternative, Spurgeon suggests that we should nevertheless affirm the district court’s dismissal of this Fourth Amendment claim because he is immune from suit for this allegedly unconstitutional arrest. Spiller’s pleadings, however, do not provide Spurgeon with a qualified immunity defense.
In order to be immune from Spiller’s claim that he violated her Fourth Amendment rights, Spurgeon must show that a reasonable police officer could have believed that her arrest, as described in her complaint, was lawful in light of clearly established law.
See, e.g., Anderson v. Creighton,
B. Spiller’s Section 1983 Claims Against Texas City and Its Police Department
As the above discussion demonstrates, the district court erroneously predicated its dismissal of Spiller’s Section 1983 claims against Texas City and its police department on its finding that her complaint failed to state a claim for the violation of her constitutional rights by Spurgeon. We must therefore consider whether the dismissal of these claims should nonetheless be affirmed because, as these two defendants argue, her complaint fails to link Spurgeon’s misconduct to a specific government policy or custom.
*167
In order to hold a municipality or a local government unit liable under Section 1983 for the misconduct of one of its employees, a plaintiff must initially allege that an official policy or custom “was a cause in fact of the deprivation of rights inflicted.”
Lejfall v. Dallas Indep. Sch. Dist.,
The allegations of municipal liability contained in Spiller’s complaint do not meet these requirements. Her assertion that Texas City is liable because “Spurgeon was acting in compliance with the municipality’s customs, practices or procedures” is insufficient because it is eonclusory. Equally deficient are her allegations regarding the liability of the Texas City Police Department. To begin with, Spiller fails to allege that the three departmental policies she identifies were causally connected to Spurgeon’s misconduct. Instead, she merely asserts that these three policies have “led to” unspecified “unconstitutional arrests and confinements.” In addition, the first departmental policy she identifies — “indiscriminately requesting identification of citizens” — is not implicated by the circumstances of her arrest. Further, her allegation that the department also “operate[s] in a manner of total disregard for the rights of African American citizens” is insufficient because it is eonclusory. Finally, her contention that the department has a third policy of “engaging] in conduct toward African American citizens without regard to probable cause to arrest” is both vague and eonclusory.
Notwithstanding Spiller’s contention that she is entitled to remedy these defects by amending her complaint on remand, an affirmance of the district court’s dismissal of her municipal liability claims is required. This is because a plaintiff is not entitled to “an opportunity to satisfy the heightened pleading requirements” of municipal liability cases when she simply “declares the adequacy of [her] complaint” in “response to the motion to dismiss.”
Jacquez v. Procunier,
Spiller may not avoid the implications of this perfunctory response by noting that she also responded to the motion to dismiss by requesting leave to amend her complaint within a reasonable period of time. This request rings hollow in light of her failure to amend her complaint as a matter of right and her failure to furnish the district court with a proposed amendment during the two months following the filing of the motion to dismiss and the order granting that motion.
See Babb,
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the district court’s holding that Spiller failed to state a claim for the violation of her Fourth Amendment rights, we AFFIRM the dismissal with prejudice of her Section 1983 claims against Texas City and its police department, and we REMAND her constitutional claims for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Although Texas was also a named party, the plaintiff has voluntarily dismissed her claim against the State.
. Spiller also cites
Rivenburgh,
. At oral argument, Spurgeon placed great emphasis on this court’s decision in
Fields v. City of South Houston,
