MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plаintiffs are eight elementary school students who, by their fathers, sued Officer Dale Long (“Officer Long”) in his individual capacity for an unreasonable search, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (“ § 1983”). Additionally, plaintiffs sued Officer Long for false imprisonment, invasion of privacy, assault, and battery. Officer Long moved for summary judgment on *885 plaintiffs’ claims. On March 6, 2001, this court granted Officer Long’s motion with respect to plaintiffs’ state law claims, but denied his motion with respect to plaintiffs’ § 1983 claim. 1 Plaintiffs did not file a cross-motion for summary judgment, but noted in their response to Long’s motion that there were no genuine issues of material fact and asserted the undisputed facts justified summary judgment in their favor. In the March 6th decision, this court sua sponte granted summary judgment against Officer Long on the issue of § 1983 liability. Officer Long now moves for reconsideration. 2
DISCUSSION
I. Appropriateness of sua sponte summary judgment
A court may relieve a party from final judgment or order for “mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect” or “any other reason justifying relief from the operation of the judgment.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b) (“Rule 60(b)”). Long contends his motion for reconsideration should be granted because he had insufficient notice that this court was considering summary judgment against him. It is true that a court may not grant summary judgment
sua sponte
unless the losing party has notice that the court is considering summary judgment and thе party has a fair opportunity to present evidence in opposition.
Acequia, Inc. v. Prudential Insurance Company of America,
In support of his contention that he had insufficient notice, Long cites numerous cases where courts were found to have improperly granted summary judgment
sua sponte.
However, these cases are factually distinguishable. The cases cited involve situations where
neither
party had moved for summary judgment or where the losing party was not given a chance to address the material facts.
See Simpson,
The only cited case that is factually similar supports granting summary judgment
sua sponte
for plaintiffs. In
Goldstein v. Fidelity and Guaranty Insurance Underwriters, Inc.,
one party filed a motion for summary judgment and the district court granted summary judgment in favor of the nonmoving party.
As in Goldstein, this court agreed with Officer Long that there were no issues of mаterial fact, but disagreed with his interpretation of the law. Therefore, summary judgment was entered against him. Officer Long had sufficient notice of this possibility because he argued there were no genuine issues of material fact and knew that if this court agreed with him about the facts and disagreed with him about the law, he risked a judgment in plaintiffs’ favor.
Officer Long further contends he should have had the opportunity to offer additional facts into evidence and provide more detailed responses to dispute plaintiffs’ statement of facts. This court disagrees. Officer Long had a sufficient opportunity to respond because this court rested its judgment solely on the law argued by Officer Long and facts which Officer Long consistently deemed as undisputed in his motion for summary judgment, his reply brief, his statement of facts, his response to рlaintiffs’ statement of facts, and his supplemental statement of facts.
See id
(losing party in a
sua sponte
summary judgment decision had necessary safeguards when no genuine issue of material fact existed);
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
Additionally, this court thoroughly evaluated Officer Long’s motion for reconsideration, which includes his additional facts, his more detailed responses to plaintiffs’ facts, and his description of further evidence he would like to provide. Viewed in the light most favorable to Officer Long, none of this еvidence would change the decision to grant summary judgment in plaintiffs’ favor. Accordingly, Officer Long’s contention that he had insufficient notice and was denied an opportunity to respond fails.
II. Analysis based on undisputed facts
A. Applicable search standard
Officer Long also challenges this court’s finding that summary judgment against him was appropriate on the merits. First, he offers additional facts and evidence in his motion for reconsideration, attempting to establish that the sеarch of the Marseilles students was not a police search. Officer Long contends this case should be governed by the less stringent standard used for school searches by school agents, rather than the probable cause standard used for police searches.
3
Student searches by school agents need only be (1) justified at the inception and (2) permissible in scope.
New Jersey v. T.L.O.,
B. First prong of T.L.O.
This court found in its March 6th ruling that Officer Long’s search was not justified at its inception because there was no individualized suspiciоn of the students who were searched. “A search is justified at its inception when there are reasonable grounds for suspecting that the search will turn up evidence that the student has violated or is violating the law or the rules of the school.”
Id.
It is undisputed that all 30 students in the class were searched. Instead, Officer Long disputes whether searching all 30 students is considered a blanket search. Specifically, he claims that individualized suspicion of a
group
of students is sufficient in the school setting. To support this proposition, Officer Long cites
Vernonia School District v. Acton,
Officer Long’s claim of individualized group suspicion is insufficient to establish the search was justified at its inception. While it may be true there was reasonable suspicion to believe that someone in the gym class had stolen money, there were no facts that enabled Officer Long to particularize which students in the class might possess the money. Courts have consistently found particular suspicion to be necessary, with exceptions not relevant to this case, for a search to be reasonable.
See e.g., Cornfield v. Consolidated High School District,
C. Second prong of T.L.O.
This court further found in its March 6th opinion that Officer Long’s search was not permissible in scope. A search is permissible when “the measures adopted are reasonably related to the objectives of the search and nоt excessively intrusive in light of the age and sex of the student and the nature of the infraction.”
Cornfield,
This court found that Officer Long’s level of intrusion was not justified by the object of the search, namely money. Officer Long contends that this court erred in distinguishing between searches for missing money and searches for drugs and weapons. In support of his argument, Officer Long cites
T.L.O.
However, there is an important distinction. In
T.L.O.,
it was held that courts should not decide whether some infractions are too trivial to justify a search.
This court based its summary judgment decision on the relationship between the intrusiveness of the search and the object of the search, not on a conclusion that preventing thefts was unnecessary for the preservation of order in plaintiffs’ school. Courts have distinguished between student strip searches for missing money and strip searches for more threatening items. These courts have found strip searches for missing money are unreasonable.
See e.g., Konop v. Northwestern Sch. Dist.,
III. Qualified immunity
Officer Long also disputes this court’s finding that he is not entitled to qualified immunity. The issue of whether qualified immunity attaches is a question of law for the court to decide.
Hughes v. Meyer,
It was established nearly sixteen years ago that the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition on unreasonable searches and seizures applies to student searches by school agents.
T.L.O.,
At the time of Officer Long’s search, there is no question that рlaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment rights were clearly established in the factual context of student searches by school agents.
See Singleton v. Board of Educ.,
Nevertheless, Officer Long asserts he is entitled to qualified immunity because there is no established law regarding (1) school locker room searches, (2) for missing money, (3) by a police officer acting upon the school’s request, 7 (4) when no criminal consequences would follow.
Offiсer Long’s focus on specific factual distinctions does not establish the uncertainty of the law in the school search context. Although the law must be clear in the particular factual context at issue for qualified immunity to be inapplicable, this does not mean a case scenario exactly like the one at hand must have been addressed by courts in the past. Such a rigid requirement would be equivalent to granting school agents absolute immunity and, thus, would swallow the qualified immunity rule. More general similarities are sufficient as long as they provide adequate warning that a particular behavior would be illegal.
Anderson,
In further support of his legal uncertainty contention, Officer Long cites several cases in which strip sеarches of students have been held to be legal. The facts in those cases are clearly distinguishable from the case at bar.
8
Moreover, the courts in those cases applied the same clear
T.L.O.
standard. They found the searches to be reasonable, after considering
all the circumstances
of the search.
See
CONCLUSION
Officer Long’s motion for reconsideration is denied.
Notes
. Judgment was entered in favor of the other defendants.
. Plaintiffs argue Officer Long’s motion for reconsideration must be struck as untimely, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e). Rule 59(e) provides that any motion to alter or amend a judgment must be filed no later than 10 days after entry of judgment. However, Fed. R.Civ.P. 6(a) provides that Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays should not be included in the 10 day total when a limitations period is less than 11 days. This rule also provides that the actual day judgment is entered should not be included in the 10 day total. Officer Long’s motion for reconsideration had to be filed by March 20, 2001. Officer Long filed his motion on the deadline. Additionally, Fed.R.Civ.P. 6(e) provides that when a party has the right to do some act after the service of a notice or other paрer upon the party by mail, three days shall be added to the prescribed period. Therefore, Officer Long actually had until March 23, 2001 to file this motion. His motion is timely.
. Officer Long admitted he believed he did not have probable cause to search the students. Motion For Reconsideration, Apdx. A at ¶ 7.
. It should be noted that the additional facts Officer Long supplied with his motion for reconsideration makes it more likely his search should be considered a police matter. Specifically, Officer Long offers evidence that he made the following statement to the students during the search: "At this point in time this is a school matter. Once the school bell rings and you guys are out of school after the end of the day it becomes a police matter. As long as this stays in the school, the school handles it. Once it becomеs a police matter after the bells ring and if I find out who did it and I’ve got proof of it I’ll refer you to probation.” Motion For Reconsideration, Apdx. A at ¶ 2.
. The lack of justification for Officer Long’s search is further supported by the fact that a suspicion-based search may have been possible. Officer Long never interviewed the students privately to see if they knew who took the money. The students might have been more willing to divulge information if they were not surrounded by their peers. In fact, it was later revealed that the students in the gym class suspected one particular boy was the thief.
See
Long’s Supplemental Facts at ¶ 2. Had Officer Long spoken to the students privately, the name of the suspected thief might have been revealed.
See Willis v. Anderson Community School Corp.,
. In addition, the fact that Officer Long stopped requesting the students to drop their pants when he started searching them in pairs adds further support to this court's conclusion that Officer Long was not focused on using the least intrusive means of finding the missing money. If requiring the students to lower their pants were necessary for Officer Long's search purposes, he would have consistently made this request.
. Officer Long asks this court to consider the fact that he is a police officer only when it is to his advantage. Throughout his summary judgment motions and his motion for reconsideration, Officer Long contends the
T.L.O.
standard is applicable because he was searching the students as an agent of the school. Because the outcome would not be different, this court has consistently applied the undisputed facts to the less stringent
T.L.O.
standard. This court considers Officer Long an agent of the school for purposes of the qualified immunity issue. The alternative would be to consider the law, on all issues in this case, from the standpoint that Officer Long searched the students as a police officer. Officer Long admits he did not have probable cause. Motion For Reсonsideration, Apdx. A. at ¶ 7. Probable cause is a requirement for a search when the special exception for school agents does not apply.
T.L.O.,
. The cases cited by Officer Long involved searches for drugs.
See Cornfield v. Consolidated High School District,
. Even if more factual similarities were required, Officer Long would not prevail. Since at least 1993 it has been clear that blanket strip searches of students are unconstitutional.
See Cornfield,
