Thе focus of this case is whether Appellant Christopher Mack’s Fourth Amendment rights were violated by a series of warrantless vehicle searches. As set out below, we have determined that one of the vehicle, searches was unconstitutional. Re-latedly, we hold that the police officers who conducted that search are not entitled to the defense of qualified immunity. Additionally, we hold that the arrest and apartment search warrant was valid and that Appellant’s arrest therefore was lawful. Finally, we affirm the dismissal of Appellant’s state law claims against the City of Abilene but vacate the dismissal of Appellant’s section 1983 claims against the City of Abilene.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The named police officers (“Appellees”), who were employed by the City of Abilene (the “City”), applied for and received a warrant to arrest Appellant and search his apartment based on information obtained from a confidential informant. The confidential informant stated that he had seen Appellant with marijuana at Appellant’s apartment.
The next day, Appellant left his place of employment, a restaurant, and walked across a parking lot toward his parked Suburban. As he approached the vehicle, Appellant remotely unlocked the doors and started the engine. Immediately thereafter, he was intercepted by two officers, including Officer Jimmy Seals. Appellant confirmed his identity. Officer Seals then placed him under arrest. After searching Appellant and finding no weapons or contraband, Appellees handcuffed Appellant and placed him in a police vehicle. Appel-lees then advised Appellant that the officers had an arrest and search warrant for him and his apartment. They then searched the Suburban after placing him in a patrol car. A search of the vehicle revealed no weapons or contraband.
Appellees subsequently transported Appellant to his apartment complex in a police vehicle, with one officer driving Appellant’s vehicle to the complex. Appellees obtained a key and executed a search of the apartment. Again, no contraband was found. Appellees next searched Appellant’s Suburban a second time. Appellees found one marijuana seed. Then, Appel-lees searched Appellant’s Cadillac, which was parked in the apartment complex lot. Appellees found nothing illegal. Consequently, Appellant was released and no charges were filed against him.
Appellant filed suit against Appellees and the City alleging that Appellеes violated his constitutional rights pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 1985 and that the unconstitutional conduct by the police was the result of the City’s official policy, custom, or practice. He additionally brought state law claims. Appellees filed a motion to dismiss and motion for summary judgment, claiming that the warrant was valid, all of the searches were constitutional, and, even if a search were unconstitutional, Ap-pellees are immune from liability. The district court granted Appellees’ motions on all claims. Appellant appeals.
II. DISCUSSION
Whеn ruling upon a qualified immunity issue, the Supreme Court has instructed that the threshold question to be answered is: “[Tjaken in the light most favorable to the party asserting the injury, do the facts alleged show the officer’s con
*551
duct violated a constitutional right?”
Saucier v. Katz,
A. The Warrant Was Valid
Appellant challenges the warrant on the basis of insufficient probable cause. He claims the magistrate incorrectly determined that probable cause existed and therefore issued an invalid warrant. In reviewing the issuance of a warrant, we pay great deference to a magistrate’s determination of probable cause.
Illinois v. Gates,
The magistrate considered the affidavit of Officer Seals. In his affidavit, Officer Seals states that an informant reported that Appellant possessed marijuana at his residence. “An informant’s ‘veracity,’ ‘reliability,’ and ‘basis of knowledge’ are all highly relevant in determining the value of his report.”
Gates,
Officer Seals also established the veracity and reliability of the informant by stating that, although he only knew the informant for less than a month, the informant had supplied Officer Seals with truthful and correct information about criminal activity. Additionally, the informant is described as lawfully employed within the community and having no felony convictions. Officer Seals, in his affidavit, presented facts tending to evince the veracity and reliability of the informant. In sum, the magistrate had a substantial basis for finding рrobable cause. Therefore, the warrant should be considered facially valid.
Appellant additionally argues that the warrant was facially invalid because the affidavit “contains conclusory, vague and ambiguous allegations regarding the credibility of the confidential informant.” However, the affidavit was specific in its statement regarding the knowledge obtained from the informant. Appellant has not pointed to particular claims in the affidavit as false and therefore does not seem to be making a
Franks
challenge.
See Franks v. Delaware,
*552
We сannot conclude that Appellant’s arrest was unconstitutional. “The Constitution does not guarantee that only the guilty will be arrested.”
Baker v. McCollan,
B. Fourth Amendment Claims
Appellees searched Appellant’s Suburban twice and also searched his Cadillac. Each of these searches is evaluated below. Unless otherwise stated, we review the district- court’s findings of fact for clear error and its ultimate determination of Fourth Amendment reasonableness
de novo. United States v. Sinisterra,
1. Both Searches of the Suburban Were Constitutional
Appellant claims that Appellees unlawfully searched his Suburban after his arrest and later in his apartment complex parking lot. Appellant’s argument fails. The searches were constitutional under the automobile exception to the warrant requirement. This exception applies when a vehicle is “readily capable” of “being used on the highways,” and it “is found stationary in a place not regularly used for residential purposes .... ”
California v. Carney,
Here, Appellees had probable cause to search the Suburban both times. The district court found that Officer Seals was told by the informant that Appellant “sometimes hid marijuana in his 1999 Green Chevrolet Suburban bearing Texas License # ILHS87.” The court also found that the information received from the informant was reasonably trustworthy.
See United States v. Forrest,
2. Search of the Cadillac Was Unconstitutional
Appellees violated Appellant’s constitutional rights when they searched his Cadillac. Appellees claim that no search took place because they merely looked through the vehicle’s windows. Appellant, however, alleges and presents evidence that Appellees opened all the Cadillac’s doors and “began looking all through thе car.” Like the district court, we take the Appellant’s allegations as true in the motion-to-dismiss context. Therefore, we proceed with our determination assuming the Cadillac was searched.
The Cadillac was not subject to a valid warrantless search under the automobile exception since Appellees had no probable cause to believe that marijuana would be found in the Cadillac.
See United States v. Hogan,
The warrantless search of the Cadillac might be constitutional if the Cadillac was parked within the apartment’s curtilage. Appellees had a valid warrant to search Appellant’s apartment. The question before us is whether the Cadillac was a part of the apartment’s curtilage and therefore subject to search pursuant to the warrant, assuming the warrant’s scope could validly include the apartment’s curti-lage. “[T]he curtilage is the area to which еxtends the intimate activity associated with the sanctity of a man’s home and the privacies of life.”
Oliver v. United States,
The circuits are split on the appropriate standard of review on a curtilage determination. 3 In civil cases, however, all courts agree that antecedent facts found by the district court pursuant to such a determination áre reviewed for clear error. Here, we need not decide the correct review of a district court’s constitutional determination because the district court declined to decide the constitutional curtilage question. Instead, the court assumed without deciding that a constitutional violation occurred and proceeded to thé qualified immunity ánalysis. 4 The court’s factual findings included that the Cadillac was parked in the apartment complex parking lot (not a garage or other enclosure), the lot had multiple spaces, and the Cadillac was parked in an assigned space. It did not make a finding regarding- the proximity • of the Cadillaс to the apartment.
In light of these findings of fact, we hold that this parking space in the apartment complex parking lot is not part of the curtilage of Appellant’s apartment. In determining whether the space was part of the curtilage, this Court looks to the four
Dunn
factors to guide Our inquiry: “the proximity of the area claimed to be curtilage to the home, whether the area is included within an enclosure surrounding the home, the nature of the uses to which the area is put, and the steps taken by the resident to proteсt the area from observation by people passing by.”
United States v. Dunn,
This holding comports with the determinations by several other courts that a parking lot or garage is not curtilage subject to Fourth Amendment protections under similar factual circumstances.
See United States v. Stanley,
In sum¿ we hold that Aрpellees’ search of Appellant’s Cadillac violated his rights protected by the Fourth Amendment. Next, we turn to whether Appellees are entitled to qualified immunity for the unconstitutional search.
C. Qualified Immunity
Appellees claim the defense of qualified immunity to avoid liability for the unlawful search of the Cadillac. Government officials acting within their discretionary authority are immune from civil damages if their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.
Mendenhall v. Riser,
To determine whether Appellees are entitled to the defense of qualified immunity, we ask whether the contours of the constitutional right in question were sufficiently clear that a reasonable officer would understand that what she is doing violates that right.
See Saucier,
Additionally, Appellees lacked probable cause to search the Cadillac. Nothing the informant told Appellees implied that Appellant kept marijuana in the Cadillac. The informant merely stated that Appellant allegedly kept marijuana in his Suburban. Obviously, no reasonable officer would mistake a Cadillac for a Suburban.
Cf. Knott v. Sullivan,
Moreover, Appellees cannot claim that the vehicle was searched in furtherance of officer safety.
See Estep v. Dallas County,
Appellees’ search of a car in an open parking lot without a search warrant, without probable cause, without a concern for *556 officer safety, and without consent violates clearly established law. A reasonable officer would not think the Constitution allows a random seаrch of a vehicle where none of the above justifications apply. Thus, Appellees are not entitled to the defense of qualified immunity for the unconstitutional search of the Cadillac. Accordingly, we vacate the district court’s finding that qualified immunity was available to Appel-lees.
D. Claims Against the City Are Sufficiently Alleged
The district court held that Appellant could not succeed on a claim of municipal liability because he could not show that one or more of the City’s employees violated his civil rights as a result of a City policy or custоm.
See Monell v. New York City Dep’t of Soc. Servs.,
Generally, a plaintiff must identify a policy or custom that gave rise to the plaintiffs injury before he may prevail.
Canton v. Harris,
In his amended complaint, Appellant alleges that it is a policy and/or custom of the City to inadequately supervise and train its police officers, including those who were known to have engaged in police misconduct. Appellant further alleges that, as a result of those policies and/or customs, Appellees believed their actions would not be properly monitored by supervisory officers and that misconduct would not be investigated but would be tolerated. Appellant thus identifies a custom or policy on the part of the City that allegedly gave rise to his injuries.
See Canton,
Appellant meets the liberal pleading standard of FED. R. CIV. P. 8(a). Rule 8 requires a complaint provide a “short and plain statement of the claim.”
Id.
A complaint also must “give the defendant fair notice of what the plaintiffs claim is and the grounds upon which it rests.”
Leatherman v. Tarrant County Narcotics Intelligence & Coordination Unit,
E. Dismissal of Appellant’s State Law Claims
Appellant argues that his statе law claims were improperly dismissed for lack of notice. Section 101.101(a) of the Texas Tort Claims Act provides that a “governmental unit is entitled to receive notice of a claim against it under this *557 chapter not later than six months after the day that the incident giving rise to the claim occurred.” Tex. Crv. PRAC. & ReM. Code § 101.101(a). Here, the City received a letter from Appellant’s attorney on March 10, 2003. Whether or not it was sufficient notice, the letter was untimely for that purpose as it was not received within six months of March 8, 2002, the day aftеr the incident. Appellant concedes that he untimely advised the City of his injuries through formal notice but argues that the City had actual notice of his injuries. The Texas Tort Claims Act notice requirements do not apply if the governmental unit has “actual notice” that the claimant was injured. Tex. Civ. Prao. & Rem.Code § 101.101(c).
For the purpose of bringing state law claims against the City, Appellant fails to show that the City had actual notice of his injuries. Appellant contends that the City had actual notice of his injuries when “Appellant’s supervisor reported him as being abducted and when Appellant requested an incident report regarding the search of his home.” The Texas Supreme Court has held that actual notice to a governmental unit requires knowledge of “(1) a death, injury, or property damage; (2) the governmental unit’s alleged fault producing or contributing to the death, injury, or property damage; and (3) the identity of the parties involved.”
Cathey v. Booth,
III. Conclusion
We AFFIRM the district court’s dismissal of Appellant’s challenge to the validity of the warrant; Appellant’s claim that searches of his Suburban amounted to a constitutional violation; and Appellant’s state law claims against the City. Because we hold that the search of the Cadillac was unconstitutional and the police officers conducting the search are not entitled to qualified immunity, we VACATE the district court’s summary judgment dismissing Appellant’s claim in relation to the search of the Cadillac. We also VACATE the district court’s dismissal of Appellant’s claims against the City under section 1983 in relation to the search of the Cadillac. The case is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
. Assuming,
,arguendo,
that the warrant was not a valid arrest warrant, the аrrest still was constitutional. A warrantless arrest can be made on the basis of probable cause. Probable cause exists when the "totality of 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. Wadley, 59
F.3d 510, 512 (5th Cir.1995). A court considers the expertise and experience of the law enforcement officials when considering what a "reasonable pеrson" would have concluded.
United States v. Garcia,
Appellees had probable cause to effectuate a warrantless arrest. Appellees had received specific information from a reliable informant regarding Appellant's alleged criminal activity. As stated in the affidavit from the warrant application, the informant was familiar with the drug allegedly possessed by Appellant. The informant had seen Appellant possessing the illegal drug within the previous forty-eight hours. And, the informant gave Appellees a description of the Appellant and where he lived. Appellees were able to verify that Appellant lived and worked where the informant had stated and that Appellant was the man seen by the informant with illegal drugs.
Gates,
. Appellant also appears to argue that the second search of the Suburban was unconstitutional because the vehicle was not parked within the curtilage of his apartment. We need not malte a curtilage determination. The automobile exception applies where a "car [is] parked in an apartment complex parking lot.”
United States v. Williams,
.
See United States v. Breza,
. We note that the district court's failure to come to a conclusion as to whether a constitutional violation occurred may constitute error in and of itself.
Siegert v. Gilley,
