Micki Ann Ramie brought a civil rights action, 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1982), against the City of Hedwig Village, Rex White, William Rush, and Jimmy Jones for violating her constitutional right to privacy. After the district court directed a verdict in favor of Jones, the jury awarded Ramie $122,000, and the district court awarded her $43,-607.85 for attorney’s fees and costs, see 42 U.S.C. § 1988 (1982). The City, White, and Rush appeal. Holding that no constitutional right was violated, we reverse.
White, a sergeant on the City’s police force, received a complaint from a citizen that a man dressed as a woman, representing himself as an undercover city police officer, had assaulted her son. White’s investigation led him to Ramie. Ramie, a female, suffers from congenital adrenal hy-perplasa, a condition that causes her to overproduce male hormones, giving her certain male secondary sex characteristics such as a deep voice and facial hair.
At the request of White, Ramie voluntarily appeared at the police headquarters for *492 questioning. What occurred during the questioning was hotly contested at trial. According to Ramie, the questioning lasted approximately an hour and fifteen minutes, during which White and Rush repeatedly questioned and harassed her about her gender, threatened to send her to the penitentiary if she did not admit she was a man and act and dress accordingly, and asked whether she believed in Jesus Christ. According to White and Rush, the questioning lasted about twenty minutes. During the interview, they questioned Ramie about her sex to determine her identity and inquired about her religious beliefs only after she had indicated that her present lifestyle bothered her. White and Rush, although with hindsight they confessed that they may have committed some indiscretions, denied that they threatened or harassed Ramie.
On appeal, the City, White, and Rush first argue that there was no evidence to support a finding that Ramie’s constitutional right to privacy was violated. 1 Ramie argues that evidence of White and Rush questioning her about her gender and religious beliefs supported the jury’s finding.
The Constitution protects individuals against invasion of their privacy by the government.
See Whalen v. Roe,
To determine whether the questioning amounted to a violation of Ramie’s right to privacy, this court must decide whether the invasion of privacy proved by Ramie outweighs the government’s legitimate interests.
See id.,
An undercurrent running through this case, both at trial and on appeal, is that White’s and Rush’s manner in asking the questions violated her constitutional right to privacy. Ramie, however, cites no case to support the proposition that asking otherwise proper questions in an abusive and harassing manner amounts to an unconstitutional invasion of privacy. That abusive and harassing police questioning does not violate the constitutional right to privacy does not mean that persons so treated are without legal rights. Confessions obtained through coercive tactics are, of course, inadmissible. State tort remedies may also be available.
Because we hold that Ramie failed to prove that her constitutional right to privacy was invaded, we reverse and need not reach the remaining issues raised by the City, White, and Rush. Because there was considerable confusion at trial as to what is required to establish municipal liability under section 1983, however, we address that matter briefly.
In
Monell v. Department of Social Services,
The latest writing by the Supreme Court is
City of Oklahoma City v. Tuttle,
— U.S. -,
To establish the City’s liability, Ramie proved only her own interrogation and elicited testimony from Jones, the police chief, that it was within the police force’s policy to ask suspects their gender and that, although there was no policy on discussing religion with suspects, he saw nothing wrong with White and Rush bringing up the subject. Ramie also introduced evidence of a civil rights judgment rendered *494 against White for false imprisonment and cruel and unusual punishment.
Under City of Oklahoma City and Monell, the above evidence was insufficient to establish the City’s liability. Assuming that the police chief was delegated policy-making authority, there was no policy or custom attributable to him that was at all objectionable. Isolated events are not sufficient to establish custom. The testimony of a city official might display a culpable attitude or an approval of unconstitutional conduct, but the testimony could not prove a policy by “ratification” — as has been argued here.
Because Ramie failed to introduce sufficient evidence to prove a violation of her right to privacy, the judgment is REVERSED.
Notes
. Ramie argues that White and Rush waived any claim of insufficiency of the evidence by failing to move for a directed verdict at the close of all the evidence.
See Wells v. Hico Indep. School Dist.,
