Thomas McCleary, a Medford police officer, relied on a confidential informant to obtain a search warrant for “the second house on the right” of a street where the Navarros, who were not a target, live. McCleary, and other officers who executed the warrant, figured the Navarros’ house was the second house on the right. It was not, and the Navarros brought this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action alleging violation of their Fourth Amendment rights.
The district court denied McCleary’s motion for summary judgment on the ground of qualified immunity, applying the standard adopted in
Maryland v. Garrison,
McCleary contends that the court incorrectly applied a reasonableness standard, and that instead, because he relied on an informant, his conduct should be measured under the test set out in
Franks v. Delaware,
We believe the district court correctly characterized this case as involving the Na-varros’ Fourth Amendment right to a warrant describing with sufficient particularity the location to be searched, not as a case involving whether the warrant was validly issued with probable cause. We conclude, therefore, that the district court properly judged McCleary’s conduct under an objectively reasonable standard. Accordingly, we affirm.
I
On August 15, 1988, Detective McCleary met with Pedro Ramirez, a confidential informant, who told him that Andres Villa was dealing cocaine out of his house. Ramirez said that Villa’s home was the second house on the right side of a driveway leading off Agate Road to the Southern Oregon Tallow Company.
Police and utility records indicated only that Villa lived on the Tallow Company’s property. McCleary obtained a warrant *333 that directed officers to take the center driveway, and drive towards the Tallow Company buildings to the “second house on the right,” which was occupied by Villa. The access road has one house near the corner of the driveway and Agate Road, then four other houses along the driveway. The informant evidently did not include the house on the corner when he described the house to be searched as the second house along the driveway. The officers executing the warrant counted differently, and ended up kicking down the Navarros’ door at 11:05 p.m. the night of August 24.
II
Under the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Siegert v. Gilley,
— U.S. -,
III
McCleary contends that the next thing we must decide is whether there was probable cause to believe that the second house on the right" was Villa’s. If so, he argues, that ends the inquiry in the absence of evidence that his statements were deliberately or recklessly made in disregard of the truth. We disagree, however, that this is strictly a probable cause question. No one genuinely disputes that there was probable cause to believe that drugs would be found at Villa’s house, or that on one view his was the “second house on the right.” Rather, we agree with the district court that the question in this case is whether a police officer in McCleary’s position would reasonably have described the location with sufficient particularity to direct those executing the warrant to the correct house on the right.
Accordingly, we do not see this as a claim based on judicial deception such that the
Franks
test is triggered. The Warrant Clause categorically protects against unreasonable searches of places inadequately described.
Maryland v. Garrison,
AFFIRMED.
