This appeal presents us with the question of the constitutionality of an ordinance requiring all speakers, demonstrators, and entertainers to obtain a permit before making use of the public parks.
Under former section 20.08.010 of the Portland City Code, it was unlawful for any person “to conduct or participate in any organized entertainment, demonstration, or public gathering, or to make any address, in a park” without a written permit issued by the Parks Commissioner. Unaware of this ordinance, and lacking the required permit, *1202 members of the local chapter of Physicians for Social Responsibility staged a small, peaceful anti-nuclear protest, involving six to eight people, in Portland’s Waterfront Park. Dr. Charles Grossman carried a sign in the protest and was arrested and handcuffed by Portland police officers. He subsequently sued the City of Portland (“the City”) and the primary arresting officer under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that the arrest violated his First Amendment right to free speech. We agree, and reverse in part the district court’s grant of summary judgment to defendants.
I.
During the Portland Rose Festival in June of 1990, the USS New Jersey, a navy ship equipped with nuclear weapons, was stationed in Portland Harbor adjacent to Waterfront Park. Members of the local chapter of Physicians for Social Responsibility decided to demonstrate in Waterfront Park in opposition to the presence of nuclear weapons in the harbor. A small group planned the protest a few days in advance, but did not attempt to obtain a permit for use of the park since they did not believe that one was required. Dr. Grossman, a doctor and a member of Physicians for Social Responsibility, participated in the protest.
As Dr. Grossman describes the relevant events:
I was standing silently with several other doctors and a few others with a sign in my hand saying “Rose Festival is a fun time, we don’t need nuclear weapons.” About 2:30 P.M., 3 or 4 policemen approached and asked us to leave. I asked why and was told that we have no right to stand in a city park carrying a sign. I then asked what ordinance said we had no such right. I was told by one officer we were violating an ordinance, and I do not recall if he quoted a number. I put my sign down and said “O.K. I am not carrying a sign.” His response was that if I did not leave within 30 seconds I would be forcibly removed. I said we were creating no disturbance and again asked why such a confrontation was necessary. I took out my pen and paper and asked him for his name and number. While I was writing my two arms were forcibly seized, forced behind my back and handcuffs were applied. I was walked out of the park area, about 30 feet, to a Police car.
At the time Dr. Grossman was arrested, the Portland Rose Festival Association held an exclusive permit for use of Waterfront Park. Officer Todd Davis, the primary arresting officer, knew of the grant of exclusive rights to the Rose Festival adherents, and was aware that the members of Physicians for Social Responsibility were demonstrating without having obtained the City’s permission in advance. His characterization of the events differs from Dr. Grossman’s principally in that he asserts that prior to the arrest Dr. Grossman “became argumentative” with him and refused to leave the park voluntarily.
The arresting officers drove Dr. Grossman to the police command post, and cited him for violating PCC 20.12.030 and 20.12.240. PCC 20.12.030, now amended, prohibited persons from attaching signs or other objects to park property. 1 PCC 20.12.240 prohibits persons from refusing to obey a reasonable directive of a police officer. 2 As the penalty for his conduct, Dr. Grossman was issued an exclusion order prohibiting him from returning to Waterfront Park for thirty days.
Dr. Grossman appealed the exclusion order. The City’s Code Hearing Officer, pursuant to a stipulation by the City Attorney’s *1203 Office, concluded that PCC 20.12.030 did not prohibit Dr. Grossman from carrying a sign in the park. 3 Accordingly, the order was pronounced void.
Dr. Grossman subsequently filed this § 1983 action in state court against the City and Officer Davis. Claiming that his arrest in Waterfront Park violated his rights of free speech and assembly under the First Amendment, he requested damages for injuries allegedly suffered during the arrest, as well as punitive damages. 4 The defendants removed the ease to federal district court. There they argued that Dr. Grossman’s arrest was valid under former PCC 20.08.010 (“section 010”), which bars persons from, among other things, participating in an “organized ... demonstration” in a public park without a permit. 5 After several months during which discovery was conducted, the district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment in May 1992. 6
In explaining its judgment, the court adopted a somewhat unusual approach to the legal issues. It did not reach the question whether section 010 was unconstitutional, but instead rested its holding solely on the fact that under that section the arresting officers had probable cause to make the arrest. It then reasoned that because probable cause to arrest existed, the officers’ actions were “privileged” and both the City and Officer Davis were protected from liability.
Dr. Grossman timely appeals to this court.
II.
The district court relied upon
City of Los Angeles v. Heller,
Heller
holds that when a person sues under § 1983 for an allegedly unconstitutional arrest the city cannot be held hable absent a constitutional violation by the arresting officer. The specific constitutional violations alleged in
Heller
were that the arrest was made without probable cause and with unreasonable force.
Heller,
Here, in contrast, Dr. Grossman’s constitutional claim does not stem from an absence of probable cause to arrest, but from the alleged uneonstitutionahty of the ordinance justifying the arrest. Therefore, a finding of probable cause under the ordinance in no way renders the arrest “privileged,” or immunizes the defendants from liability. Instead, if the ordinance is unconstitutional, Dr.
*1204
Grossman suffered constitutional injury despite the ordinance’s applicability to his conduct.
See Gerritsen v. City of Los Angeles,
The key issue in the present case, as in Gerritsen, is whether the city ordinance is unconstitutional. The district court was fundamentally mistaken in not considering this issue. In fact, the only way that the district court could have correctly avoided deciding the constitutionality of section 010 would have been to find that the ordinance did not cover Dr. Grossman’s conduct or that Davis was not acting pursuant to its authority in making the arrest. The district court’s finding of probable cause under section 010, rather than precluding an investigation into the ordinance’s constitutionality, as the court ruled, had precisely the opposite effect: it required that the court evaluate the ordinance’s constitutionality.
III.
It is indisputable that Dr. Grossman and the other members of Physicians for Social Responsibility were exercising their First Amendment rights by demonstrating against the presence of nuclear weapons in Portland harbor. The City argues, however, that the right to demonstrate in Waterfront Park is subject to limitation by virtue of its authority to protect “the safety and convenience” of park users, and that section 010 constituted a constitutional exercise of that authority.
Section 010 provided that:
It is unlawful for any person to conduct or participate in any organized entertainment, demonstration, or public gathering, or to make any address, in a park without the written permission of the [Parks Commissioner].
To obtain a permit, a person was required to file a written application with the Parks Commissioner describing the details of the planned event, and the Commission then had seven days within which either to grant or deny the permit. PCC 20.08.020. Thus, irrespective of the Commissioner’s decision on the merits of the permit application, persons wanting to engage in the activities enumerated in the ordinance faced the burden of applying for a permit with the Commissioner and of waiting for up to seven days for his response. The ordinance thus required potential speakers, demonstrators and entertainers to plan their activities well in advance, precluding such persons from using the parks for more spontaneous First Amendment activity.
A.
At the outset, we emphasize that as a “prior restraint” on the exercise of First Amendment rights, section 010 comes to this court “bearing a heavy presumption against its constitutional validity.”
Vance v. Universal Amusement Co., Inc.
Another significant consideration is that section 010 restricted access to the public parks, the “quintessential public forums.”
Perry Education Ass’n v. Perry Local Educators’ Ass’n,
B.
Nonetheless, as the City suggests, certain restrictions on speech in the public parks are valid. Specifically, a municipality may issue reasonable regulations governing the time, place or manner of speech.
See, e.g., Ward v. Rock Against Racism,
The requirement of narrow tailoring means that a time, place or manner restriction on First Amendment activity may not “burden substantially more speech than is necessary to further the government’s legitimate interests.”
Ward,
Although we sympathize with the City’s concern for the safety and convenience of park users, we cannot agree that this concern could justify the broad sweep of section 010 and the substantial restrictions it imposed. As we emphasized in
Rosen,
and reiterated in
City of Richmond,
advance notice provisions such as that subsumed within section 010’s permit requirement “drastically burden free speech.”
Rosen,
Some type of permit requirement
may
be justified in the case of large groups, where the burden placed on park facilities and the possibility of interference with other park users is more substantial.
See Rosen,
In fact, the language of section 010 was extremely broad. It prevented persons from “mak[ing] any address” or participating in any organized entertainment, demonstration, or public gathering in the park without a permit. While the City places great emphasis on the ordinance’s use of the term “organized,” we find its reliance on that term unpersuasive. Like the District of Columbia Circuit in
Turner,
which invalidated a Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) regulation requiring a permit for engaging in “free speech activities” in the Washington, D.C. subway — specifically, “the organized exercise of rights and privileges which deal with political, religious, or social matters and are non-commercial” (
Although — in contrast to the general prohibition on organized free speech activities at issue in Turner — section 010 enumerated a specific list of prohibited activities, its scope was similarly broad. Like the WMATA regulation, section 010 might have prohibited Dr. Grossman and his companions from standing silently wearing T-shirts critical of nuclear weapons, as well as from carrying signs. Or, it might have applied if he had been “making an address” about nuclear weapons to his companions, or even if he were merely standing silently by in his capacity as a member of an “organized” audience while someone else spoke. In practical effect, therefore, section 010 suffered from the same defect as the WMATA regulation: it burdened at least as broad a range of protected speech.
In addition, the City’s stated interests and the burden that the park ordinance imposed *1207 on speech do not sufficiently match. Consider this: if Dr. Grossman and his companions had been standing in a group in the park after meeting unexpectedly, and had been discussing gardening, or the Portland Trailblazers, the doctor would not have been arrested. "While the addition of signs — or T-shirts, or an “address” — would have occasioned the application of section 010, the distinctions are absolutely empty in terms of the ordinance’s stated goals. A group of 100 family members and friends could have had a noisy picnic in the park secure in the knowledge that they would be unimpeded by law enforcement officers, while Dr. Grossman’s small group silently carrying signs or wearing T-shirts would have been classified as law-breakers and subject to forcible removal by armed police. It is when persons gathered in order to speak that the ordinance was most readily triggered. In short, the ordinance did not simply burden speech; it discriminated against speech. 12 Rather than being narrowly tailored to protect speech, as it should have been, it was tailored so as to preclude speech.
In this respect, section 010 suffered by comparison with the permit provision covering use of the City’s public streets. In contrast with the per se rule described in section 010, the street ordinance imposes a permit requirement only “when City services are required because the event interferes with normal vehicular or pedestrian traffic.” PCC 16.60.020(A). Because it links the permit requirement to its practical justification — thus excluding conduct that poses no risk to the City’s interests — and because it does not single out speech-related activities for coverage, the street ordinance is much more narrowly tailored. Other cities have park ordinances that contain similar language.
13
Given that such limiting provisions are possible, we see no justification for the overly broad sweep of section 010.
See City of Richmond,
Finally, section 010’s lack of narrow tailoring is particularly conspicuous in the present case. Although the City contends that Dr. Grossman, by demonstrating without a permit at the same time that another organization was conducting a permitted event, “was participating in exactly the type of problematic conduct that [section 010 was] ... designed to address,” we simply cannot agree that six to eight people carrying signs in a public park constituted enough of a threat to the safety and convenience of park users— even the adherents of the Rose Festival — to justify the restrictions imposed on their speech here.
Because section 010 “restrict[ed] a substantial quantity of speech that [did] not impede [the City’s] permissible goals,” it is
*1208
unconstitutional.
See Turner,
IV.
Although we conclude that the district court erred in granting summary judgment for the defendants on the ground that Dr. Grossman suffered no constitutional injury, we must also consider whether the district court’s judgment can be upheld on any other ground urged by any of the parties.
See Jackson v. Southern California Gas Co.,
The doctrine of qualified immunity shields public officials performing discretionary functions from personal liability under certain circumstances.
See Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Although the standard set forth in Harlow and Anderson always represents our ultimate inquiry in every qualified immunity case, it is of course neither a mechanical nor an inflexible test. As with many general legal standards, its application varies depending on the type of case we are addressing. In classes of cases in which we have considered it helpful to do so, we have divided the Harlow/Anderson inquiry into various two-part 14 or three-part 15 tests. In other types of cases, we have straightforwardly conducted the Harlow/Anderson inquiry, without any need for mediating doctrines or additional multi-pronged tests. 16
We believe that the various two- and three-part
tests
which we have occasionally employed in qualified immunity cases would not be of any particular value in applying the
Harlow/Anderson
test here. Moreover, we note that in our immunity determination in this case we must be sensitive to certain considerations which are not present
*1209
in all qualified immunity cases. Unlike in many such eases, here the allegedly unconstitutional action undertaken by the individual defendant consists solely of the enforcement of an ordinance which was duly enacted by the city council. As Chief Justice Warren explained in
Pierson v. Bay,
A policeman’s lot is not so unhappy that he must choose between being charged with dereliction of duty if he does not arrest when he has probable cause, and being mulcted in damages if he does. Although the matter is not entirely free from doubt, the same consideration would seem to require excusing him from liability for acting under a statute that he reasonably believed to be valid but that was later held unconstitutional, on its face or as applied.
Id.
at 555,
Moreover, when a city council has duly enacted an ordinance, police officers on the street are ordinarily entitled to rely on the assumption that the council members have considered the views of legal counsel and concluded that the ordinance is a valid and constitutional exercise of authority. Courts have accordingly held that the existence of a statute or ordinance authorizing particular conduct is a factor which militates in favor of the conclusion that a reasonable official would find that conduct constitutional.
19
See, e.g., Evers v. County of Custer,
As with most legal matters, there are no absolutes here. On the one hand, an officer who acts in reliance on a duly-enacted statute or ordinance is ordinarily entitled to qualified immunity. 20 On the other, as historical events such as the Holocaust and the My Lai massacre demonstrate, individuals cannot always be held immune for the results of their official conduct simply because they were enforcing policies or orders promulgated by those with superior authority. Where a statute authorizes official conduct which is patently violative of fundamental constitutional principles, an officer who enforces that statute is not entitled to qualified immunity. *1210 Similarly, an officer who unlawfully enforces an ordinance in a particularly egregious manner, or in a manner which a reasonable officer would recognize exceeds the bounds of the ordinance, will not be entitled to immunity even if there is no clear case law declaring the ordinance or the officer’s particular conduct unconstitutional. See Chew, 27 at 1449-50. In the end, however, an officer who reasonably relies on the legislature’s determination that a statute is constitutional should be shielded from personal liability.
Applying these principles, we conclude that Davis’s actions in arresting Dr. Grossman pursuant to section 010 were “objectively] legally] reasonable[ ].”
Harlow,
Accordingly, we conclude that Davis is entitled to qualified immunity and affirm the judgment in his favor only.
V.
We therefore affirm in part and reverse in part the district court’s judgment, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. The ordinance was poorly drafted, although its caption — “Advertising and Decorative Devices” — should have signaled that it was inapplicable to Dr. Grossman’s conduct. It provided, in relevant part, that: "[i]t is unlawful for any person to place or carry any sign ... of any kind whatever ... on any of the vases, statues, bridges, or monuments in any park.” PCC 20.-12.030 (amended 1990). In its revised form, the ordinance is still inapplicable to Dr. Grossman's conduct, but its language is much clearer. It now provides, in part, that "[o]n any tree ... or other structure in any park, it is unlawful for any person to place any ... sign ... of any kind.” and it specifically declares that "nothing in this Section shall prohibit the carrying of signs in the parks.” PCC 20.12.030(a) & (c).
. Before this court, the City does not rely on PCC 20.12.240 in seeking to uphold Dr. Grossman's arrest.
. Three weeks later, PCC 20.12.030 was amended and its language clarified; now its scope even more clearly coincides with the City Attorney's interpretation of it. See discussion supra note 1.
. Although Dr. Grossman states in his complaint that Officer Davis “assaulted” him, he does not assert an independent excessive force claim. Instead, his claimed right to compensation is based entirely on the fact that the damages he suffered were a "direct and proximate result” of the First Amendment violation.
. Section 010 also has been amended since the time of the Grossman affair. It now prohibits persons from participating in “any organized event” in the park without a permit. See PCC 20.08.010. So it goes. See Vonnegut, Slaughterhouse-Five passim (1966).
. In granting summary judgment, the district court summarily adopted a magistrate’s findings and recommendation. All further discussion of the district court's judgment, therefore, will be based on the magistrate's more extended analysis.
. There is no doubt that under the provisions of section 010 the arresting officers had probable cause to arrest Dr. Grossman. Dr. Grossman agrees that he and the other members of Physicians for Social Responsibility were conducting an "organized demonstration" in Waterfront Park without a permit, and uncontroverted evidence shows that the arresting officers were aware of their lack of a permit. In these circumstances, it is clear that under the terms of the ordinance “at the moment of arrest, the facts and circumstances known to the arresting officers [were] 'sufficient to warrant a prudent man in believing that the [arrestee] had committed or was committing an offense.'"
United States v. Lindsey,
. While our tradition of the parks as a forum for public debate may have always rested in part on economic concerns, this factor is increasingly significant now, when the extremely rich have an enormous variety of privately-owned media through which to reach the public, and political careers can be launched by the mere fact that the putative candidate has a fortune to spend on advertising. At present, more democratic means of communication — demonstrations in parks, bumper stickers, signs in the windows of homes — must be jealously protected.
Cf. Ladue,
•— U.S. at-■,
. We note that the permit requirement imposed by section 010, similar to the advance notice requirement at issue in
Rosen,
actually "lies somewhere between the classic prior restraint cases in which speech is totally prohibited, and the classic ‘time, place, and manner’ cases in which the time, location, or volume of speech are regulated.”
Rosen,
Under one well-known line of cases involving challenges to permit requirements, the reviewing court looks behind the requirement itself to the criteria, or lack of criteria, guiding city officials in determining whether to issue a permit.
See, e.g., Shuttlesworth v. City of Birmingham,
. Because both parties agree that the ordinance is content neutral, we do not examine that prong. As to the “significant government interest” requirement contained in the second prong, the City’s stated interest in protecting the safety and convenience of park users may be sufficient.
See Ward,
. Similarly, quoting PCC 20.08.020(c), the City states that section 010 "is directed toward specific forms of conduct that 'create a substantial burden in maintaining and policing the park facility or maintaining normal quiet in the area adjacent to or near the park.’ ”
.
Cf. A Quaker Action Group v. Morton,
Moreover, each of the ordinance's enumerated activities clearly involve speech. As the Supreme Court recognized in
Morton,
a "public gathering,” is an occasion for speech; a "demonstration" or an “address” is, by definition, speech; and so is “entertainment,” despite its more frivolous connotations.
See Ward,
. Since only the Portland park ordinance is before us in this case, we express no view as to the constitutional validity of any other city's ordinance; we do note, however, that many other cities have park ordinances that appear much more narrowly tailored than section 010.
See, e.g.,
Fullerton, Ca., Municipal Code § 9.12.440 (park permit required if "the event is of a type which is or has been attended throughout the United States by gatherings of more than one hundred fifty teenage or older people”); Palm Springs, Ca., Ordinances § 11.44.040 (park permit required for event of "fifty or more persons"); San Francisco Park Code § 7.03(b) (park permit required for certain events involving 50 or more persons at the same time within an area circumscribed by a 500-foot radius);
cf.
Burbank Municipal Code § 29-1702 (no parade permit required for "any event which the Chief of Police determines is unlikely to constitute a substantial or unreasonable hazard or impediment to the normal flow of traffic”);
see also Turner,
.
See, e.g., Palmer v. Sanderson,
.
See, e.g., Hamilton v. Endell,
.
See, e.g., Figueroa v. United States,
.
See Harlow,
. In addition to the concerns expressed by Chief Justice Warren in
Pierson,
there is an additional reason why local law enforcement officers enforcing a duly promulgated city ordinance should ordinarily be entitled to immunity. As the Court explained in
Harlow,
the various doctrines of official immunity are the result of a balancing of two important interests: the interest in the “vindication of constitutional guarantees,” and the interest in avoiding the social costs that inhere in imposing personal liability on public officials.
See Harlow,
. We do not deal here with an ordinance which has fallen into desuetude. An officer enforcing such an enactment is not necessarily entitled to rely on the assumption that it continues to be consistent with the current state of constitutional law. See generally Calabresi, A Common Law for the Age of Statutes 1-15 (1982) (discussing "the problem of legal obsolescence”). Similarly, an officer who enforces a statute in an arbitrary or discriminatory manner is not entitled to presume that his conduct is constitutional simply because the statute exists.
. Cf. Chew v. Gates,
