ORDER
Plaintiff Gene Thompson, a member of Clio, Alabama’s city council, has brought this civil rights action against the city, its mayor, Bobby R. Cox, its police chief, Robert Ramsey, and police officers David Hin-son and Richard Johnson, claiming that the defendants violated federal and state law *1068 by physically seizing his tape recorder during one city council meeting and forcibly removing him from another. Thompson rests his federal claims on the first and fourth amendments to the United States Constitution, as enforced through 42 U.S. C.A. § 1983 (West 1981), and his state law claims on Alabama law. 1 The court has jurisdiction over Thompson’s federal claims under 28 U.S.C.A. §§ 1331 (West Supp. 1991) and 1343 (West Supp.1991) and over his state claims under the doctrine of pendent jurisdiction.
This cause is now before the court on defendants’ motion for summary judgment. For the reasons set forth below, the court concludes that the motion should be denied, except with respect to Thompson’s claim under the Alabama "open meetings” law, which is due to be dismissed.
I.
The facts in this case are brief, straightforward, and for the most part undisputed. Since 1988, when defendant Cox was elected mayor of Clio, he and Thompson, who was voted to the city council during the previous administration, have experienced political differences. Soon after Cox assumed office, Thompson began tape recording council proceedings because he did not trust the city clerk to keep accurately the minutes of these meetings. Cox initially voiced no objection to Thompson’s use of a cassette recorder. However, in February 1990, a citizen who had apparently listened to a portion of one of Thompson’s tapes appeared at city hall and complained bitterly and in harsh language to the city clerk about a water meter fee recently imposed by the council. This confrontation grew heated and the citizen agreed to leave only after the clerk displayed a gun.
Reacting to this incident and other information that Thompson “had used his tape recording to give various people around town false impressions,” and in order to prevent future “disturbances,” Cox decided that Thompson would no longer be permitted to tape record council sessions. Accordingly, at the April meeting, Cox informed Thompson that he could not keep his recorder in the council room. When Thompson refused to relinquish the device, Cox ordered defendant Police Chief Ramsey to confiscate temporarily Thompson’s recorder. Ramsey removed the tape recorder from the table where Thompson was seated and placed it outside the meeting room. Thompson remained in the room and retrieved the recorder after the session had ended.
Thompson claims that after this incident he contacted the offices of the Alabama attorney general, the League of Municipalities, and the Clio city attorney, and was told that he was entitled to tape record council sessions. At the subsequent May meeting of the council, Thompson again appeared with his audio recorder and was again told by Cox that he would not be permitted to record the meeting. When Thompson refused to part with the tape machine, protesting that it was his right to record the council’s proceedings, Cox instructed police officers Johnson and Hinson to seize the device. 2 At this point, the parties’ accounts of events diverge. According to defendants, Thompson chose to leave the meeting before Johnson and Hin-son could carry out Cox’s order, and the officers therefore neither removed the recorder nor used any force against Thompson. Thompson, on the other hand, contends that Johnson and Hinson physically removed him from the council room and *1069 thereby injured his arm, requiring him to seek medical treatment.
In August 1990, Thompson filed this lawsuit, alleging that defendants violated his rights under the fourth amendment to the United States Constitution by seizing his person and his cassette recorder. Thompson also included in his complaint state law claims of conversion, false arrest, assault and battery, and violation of Alabama’s “open meetings law.” 3 In February 1991, the court permitted Thompson to amend his complaint to add a claim that defendants have violated his right to freedom of speech, as guaranteed by the first amendment, by preventing him from recording council sessions. 4 Thompson seeks declaratory and injunctive relief as well as compensatory and punitive damages. Defendants have now moved for summary judgment on each count of Thompson’s complaint as amended. 5
II.
A. Summary Judgment Standard
Rule 56(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides that summary judgment is appropriate where “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and ... the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” A moving party can meet this standard, in a case in which the ultimate burden of persuasion at trial rests on the non-moving party, either by submitting affirmative evidence negating an essential element of the nonmovant’s claim, or by demonstrating that the non-moving party’s evidence itself is insufficient to establish an essential element of his claim. The movant may make this showing by deposing the non-moving party’s witnesses, by establishing the inadequacy of the documentary evidence or, if there is no evidence, by reviewing for the court the facts that exist to show why they do not support a judgment for the non-moving party. The movant need not present affidavits or new evidence of its own to meet its initial burden, but may premise its summary judgment motion on an attack on the opponent’s evidence.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Once the party seeking summary judgment has provided the requisite initial support for its motion, the burden shifts to the non-moving party to call evidence to the attention of the court sufficient to demonstrate a “genuine issue of material fact” as to each element which that party will have to prove at trial.
Id.
In resisting a motion for summary judgment, the non-movant may not rest on allegations in his pleadings, but must supply probative evidence such as affidavits, for example.
Anderson
*1070
v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
B. Federal Issues
In this section of its order, the court analyzes Thompson’s federal claims, defendants’ qualified immunity defense, and the issue of Clio’s municipal liability. The court construes Thompson’s complaint as presenting three federal claims: a first amendment claim directed at all defendants; 7 a fourth amendment property claim which names Cox, Ramsey, and the city; 8 and a fourth amendment force claim against all defendants except Ramsey. 9 i. First Amendment Claim
In responding to Thompson’s first amendment claim, defendants argue that the proscription on his use of a tape machine has little effect on his or the local public’s ability to obtain or communicate information about council meetings.
10
Nevertheless, the ban on Thompson’s tape recorder has some impact, however small or incidental, on how he is able to obtain access to and present such information, and as such regulates conduct protected by the first amendment.
See Texas v. Johnson,
Although such incidental or “time, place, or manner” restrictions on expressive conduct are permissible where supported by a sufficiently important governmental interest, this deferential standard applies only where the regulation is “justified without reference to the content of the regulated speech.”
11
City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc.,
Here, Mayor Cox did not adopt an across-the-board ban on tape recorders in council meetings; instead, he directed the ban solely at Thompson and his particular use of his recorder.
13
The defendants argue that the ban is nevertheless constitutional because Thompson employed recordings of council sessions to misinform and foment anger among local citizens. However, in
Boos,
the Supreme Court recently rejected as “content-based” a similar justification for a District of Columbia ordinance forbidding, near foreign embassies, displays tending to bring the foreign country’s government into “public odium” or “disrepute.” The Court acknowledged that in
Renton
it had found a zoning ordinance limiting operation of adult movie theaters to be content-neutral because the regulation was justified by the “secondary effects” of the presence of such theaters on surrounding neighborhoods.
14
Yet it went on to find that the display restriction at issue in
Boos
was content-based because the city’s defense of it — that it served “our international law obligation to shield diplomats from speech that offends their dignity” — focused on “[listeners’ reactions to” and the “adverse emotional impact” of such speech, which “are not the type of 'secondary effects’ we referred to in
Renton." Boos,
Moreover, even in cases where the Supreme Court has allowed content-based regulations of speech, it has been careful to insist that they do not involve “viewpoint discrimination” — in other words, that the regulation is “not ... affected by sympathy or hostility for the point of view being expressed by the communicator.”
Young v. American Mini Theatres, Inc.,
Because the recorder ban is content-based as well as viewpoint based, the state’s burden of justifying the policy is far more severe than in the case of a legitimate time, place, or manner regulation. “[C]ontent-based restrictions] on political speech ... must be subjected to the most exacting scrutiny,” and are constitutionally permissible only where “necessary to serve a compelling state interest” and “narrowly drawn to achieve that end.”
Boos v. Barry,
For these reasons and based on the evidence now before it, the court concludes that defendants have failed to demonstrate that they are entitled to a judgment as a matter of law on Thompson’s first amendment claim.
ii. Fourth Amendment Property Claim
Thompson next contends that his fourth amendment right of freedom from unreasonable seizures was violated when Ramsey, acting on Cox’s order, removed his tape recorder during the April council
*1073
session and placed it outside the room, where Thompson retrieved it after the meeting. Recent Supreme Court cases teach that, where a fourth amendment intrusion serves governmental needs beyond the traditional interest in law enforcement — in other words, purposes unrelated to criminal investigation — the constitutionality of a search or seizure should be judged according to a “reasonableness” standard.
See National Treasury Employees Union v. Von Raab,
Ramsey, the Clio police chief, acknowledges that he seized Thompson’s tape player for the same reason that Cox settled on the no-recorder policy: because Thompson had been replaying “misleading” recordings of council proceedings. 17 Since the court has already determined, in its analysis of Thompson’s first amendment claim, that such a “government interest” is not only illegitimate, but in fact is offensive to the first amendment, the court now finds that, on the present record, Ramsey’s physical removal of the machine was also “unreasonable” under the fourth amendment, In considering the defendants’ motion, this court notes that it has not discounted the possibility that certain fourth amendment injuries may be so trivial — particularly in cases involving seizures of property rather than physical harm to an individual — as to fall short of a federal constitutional deprivation, regardless of how unwarranted may have been the state action that inflicted the injury. 18 Here, however, the complete lack of justification for the seizure, coupled with the fact that it denied Thompson an important use of his property, leads the court to conclude that Ramsey's removal of Thompson’s tape recorder rose to the level of a violation of Thompson’s fourth amendment rights. Accordingly, defendants are also not entitled to a judgment as a matter of law on this claim.
iii. Fourth Amendment Force Claim
Thompson’s third and final federal claim also arises under the fourth amend *1074 ment. He contends that when the two police officers, Johnson and Hinson, grabbed his arm at the May meeting, such a use of force was excessive and unjustified, and thus constituted an unconstitutional “seizure” of his person. In support of this claim, Thompson has submitted his own affidavit in which he states that as a result of the officer’s actions, he “had to seek medical treatment for injury to my arm.” 19 Also before the court is an excerpt from Thompson’s deposition testimony, in which he indicates that a doctor who examined him the night of this incident gave him a sling and a brace for his arm which Thompson removed the following day, and that since that time, his arm “hurts once in a while.” 20
Like a seizure of property for purposes other than law enforcement, as discussed above, the constitutionality of any application of force against a citizen by a state official, in connection with a criminal investigation or otherwise, is judged under a fourth amendment “reasonableness” standard.
Graham v. Connor,
Again, however, because the court has already found that the defendants’ attempts to prevent Thompson from recording council proceedings served only an improper, unconstitutional government purpose, it also finds that, accepting Thompson’s evidence of injury to his arm, the physical force employed by Johnson and Hinson in effectuating this no-recorder policy was unreasonable. 21 Furthermore, the court finds that under Thompson’s account his injuries were more than trivial or nominal. 22 Accordingly, summary judgment in favor of defendants on this claim is also not merited. 23
*1075 iv. Qualified Immunity
a. First Amendment Claim
The individual defendants in this case have also pled the affirmative defense of qualified immunity as to Thompson’s claims against them in their individual capacities.
24
“ ‘[Government officials performing discretionary functions generally are shielded from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate the clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person should have known.’ ”
Nicholson v. Georgia Dep’t of Human Resources,
The Eleventh Circuit has adopted a two-step analysis for determining whether, given the facts of a particular case, a defendant is entitled to qualified immunity as a matter of law. First, the defendant public official must demonstrate that “he was acting within the scope of his discretionary authority when the allegedly wrongful acts occurred.”
Rich v. Dollar,
The individual defendants in this case— Cox, the mayor, Ramsey, the police chief, and police officers Johnson and Hinson— were performing duties within the scope of their respective discretionary authorities when they sought to prevent Thompson from tape recording the April and May council meetings.
See Hutton,
The court, therefore, must inquire next into whether the defendants’ treatment of Thompson “violated clearly established constitutional law.”
Dartland, v. Metropolitan Dade County,
As the court recognized in its discussion of the merits of Thompson’s first amendment claim, it is well established that while protected speech is subject to legitimate “time, place and manner” regulations by government, such restrictions must, among other requirements, be content-neutral.
See, e.g., Boos v. Barry,
First, the court finds that although, in April and May of 1990, there existed no Eleventh Circuit or United States Supreme Court case recognizing the first amendment implications of the use of tape recorders,
but see United States v. Yonkers Bd. of Educ.,
Second, the court also finds that a reasonable government official, in the position of any of the defendants, would have been aware that the admitted rationale for banning Thompson’s tape recorder — that he was “disturbing” local residents through “misleading” recordings of council meetings — was neither “content-neutral,” a “compelling state interest,” nor a sufficient justification for regulating protected speech under any other standard, according to clearly established first amendment law.
27
Again, although the unusual events that transpired in the city of Clio during April and May of 1990 do not correspond to the facts of any reported case, as the court recognized in its discussion of the merits of Thompson’s first amendment claim, it was the law of the land at the time this cause arose that government interference with speech which turns on or is motivated by “[[listeners’ reactions to” and the “adverse emotional impact” of such expression is categorically not content-neutral, and therefore may not be justified as an incidental or “time, place, or manner” restriction.
Boos v. Barry,
b. Fourth Amendment Claims
Whether government officials violate the fourth amendment in seizing an individual’s property or person depends on the reasonableness of the seizure.
See O’Connor v. Ortega,
In this case, however, as the court has already indicated, the government’s “interest” in confiscating Thompson’s tape recorder at the April meeting and using force against Thompson himself at the one in May — to prevent his purportedly “misleading” communication of council proceedings — was not only illegitimate but was itself offensive to the first amendment. For this reason, a reasonable public official would have clearly understood that both seizures were unreasonable under the fourth amendment, regardless of the nature or extent of each intrusion. In other words, because defendants’ actions served only an improper, unconstitutional purpose, such conduct was illegal according to a “bright-line standard” or “a priori judgment.”
This conclusion is consistent with the Eleventh Circuit’s holding in
Stewart v. Baldwin County Board of Education,
v. Municipal Liability
Even if Thompson is able to prove that the individual defendants in this case violated his first and fourth amendment rights, he may not sustain a claim against the city of Clio under § 1983 simply on the basis that these individuals were employed by or acting on behalf of the city.
30
Brown v. City of Fort Lauderdale,
In this case, the court initially is guided by § 11-43-52 of the Alabama Code of 1975, which provides that a city council itself is empowered to “determine the rules of its own proceedings.” There is no evidence that the Clio city council, the municipal policymaker in this case, affirmatively decided to ban Thompson’s tape recorder or to seize him or the machine when he refused to comply. However, this is not the end of the inquiry. The decision of a “subordinate” official, such as Mayor Cox in this case, may constitute final municipal policy under several scenarios, two of which are relevant here. First, government policymakers may delegate, in a broad sense, the authority they possess under state law over certain areas or issues to a lower official.
City of St. Louis v. Praprotnik,
Having considered the present record in this case, the court finds that, under both the delegation and ratification theories of municipal liability, Cox was the final policymaker with respect to regulations on the use of tape recorders during Clio city council meetings. First, Cox’s statements in his deposition and at the April meeting indicate that the council had transferred generally to him, as mayor and chair of the council,
*1080
the power to determine the rules and procedures that governed council sessions.
32
See Mandel,
C. State Law Issues
In this section of its order, the court analyzes Thompson’s conversion, assault and battery, and false arrest claims, as well as his allegations under the Alabama “open meetings” law.
i. Conversion
In response to Thompson’s state law claim that the seizure of his recorder at the April meeting constituted an illegal conversion, Cox and Ramsey argue they removed the machine from Thompson’s possession only for a short time and that they did not do so for their own use or benefit. However, these factors are not elements of an action for conversion under Alabama law. Rather, to sustain a claim for conversion, Thompson need demonstrate (1) “a wrongful detention or interference ... or an illegal use or misuse” by Cox and Ramsey (2) of or with property of which Thompson either was in actual possession or had a right to immediate possession, (3) “in exclusion or defiance” of his possessory rights.
Covington v. Exxon Co., U.S.A.,
ii. Assault and Battery
Thompson has presented evidence, in the form of his own affidavit and deposition testimony, that Johnson and Hinson, acting under Cox’s orders, physically removed him from the council room and thereby injured his arm, requiring him to seek medical treatment. Such evidence is sufficient to raise a genuine issue of fact as to defendants’ civil liability for assault and battery under Alabama law.
See Allen v. Walker,
iii. False Arrest
Thompson has also succeeded in raising a genuine issue of fact as to his claims against Cox, Hinson, and Johnson for false arrest, arising out of his removal from the council room at the May meeting. These defendants lacked a warrant, probable cause to believe a crime had been committed, or any other lawful justification for this seizure of Thompson’s person, one of the elements of false arrest or false imprisonment, as it is also known under Alabama law.
See Whitlow v. Bruno’s, Inc.,
iv. Alabama “Open Meetings” Law
Finally, Thompson contends that by preventing him from remaining at the May council meeting unless he relinquished his tape recorder, defendants violated Alabama’s “open meetings” or “sunshine” law. 1975 Code of Alabama § 13A-14-2. It is true that this statute, which by its terms forbids “executive or secret session^]” of any public body, including “municipal councils],” requires that Clio city council meetings be “open to the public,” of which Thompson is a member although he also sits on the council.
Dale v. Birmingham News Co.,
III.
Accordingly, it is the ORDER, JUDGMENT, and DECREE of the court:
(1) That the motion for summary judgment, filed by defendants Bobby R. Cox, David Hinson, Robert Ramsey, Richard Johnson, and the city of Clio on January 15, 1991, as amended on February 25, 1991, be and it is hereby granted as to plaintiff Gene Thompson’s claim under the Alabama “open meetings” law, 1975 Code of Alabama § 13A-14-2, but denied as to all of plaintiff Thompson’s other claims; and
(2) That plaintiff Thompson’s claim under 1975 Code of Alabama § 13A-14-2 be and it is hereby dismissed.
Notes
. Section 1983, in relevant part, provides:
Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State ... subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress.
. There is some evidence in the record that several of the parties, including Thompson, were speaking in a loud voice and using harsh language, including words such as "damn." However, it appears that the confrontation did not escalate to this level until Johnson and Hin-son had initiated efforts to confiscate the cassette player.
. The court construes this claim as referring to § 13A-14-2 of the 1975 Alabama Code, which prohibits municipal councils and other government bodies from meeting in "secret session.”
. Thompson contends that "[t]he taping of a public meeting on a personal tape recorder for later use or distribution as a personal recounting of the events of the public meeting ... is an exercise of free speech,” and charges defendants with adopting "a policy of prior restraint.” The court notes that Thompson has not alleged that he was retaliated against for — as opposed to simply denied — the exercise of his first amendment rights,
see Mount Healthy City Sch. Dist. v. Doyle,
.Although defendants contend that Thompson's prayer for prospective relief is now moot because he was permitted to tape record the one council meeting he has attended since May 1990, they have made clear their intention to prohibit Thompson from employing the recorder in the future if he “again begins misuse of the recordings to cause other trouble."
See
Defendants’ Brief in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment, at 11. In light of this declaration and defendants’ past actions, the court at this time cannot discount the credible threat that Thompson's tape recorder will again be banned in the future. Accordingly, Thompson has standing to seek injunctive relief.
See Virginia v. American Booksellers Ass'n, Inc.
. "If the evidence is merely colorable, or is not significantly probative, summary judgment may be granted,” and, furthermore, "[t]he mere existence of a scintilla of evidence in support of the plaintiffs position will be insufficient.”
Anderson,
. Thompson appears to challenge both the policy against his use of a recorder and the enforcement of this policy through the seizure of his tape player at the April meeting and his removal from the council room at the May session.
. Hinson and Johnson removed Thompson from the May meeting but were not involved in the confiscation of his recorder at the April meeting. Accordingly, they are also not defendants to Thompson’s state law conversion claim.
. Thompson contends that Johnson and Hinson hurt his arm while acting on Cox’s orders to confiscate his tape recorder or remove him from the room. The court also interprets Thompson’s state law assault and battery and false arrest claims as directed at these defendants.
. It is undisputed that meetings of the Clio city council are open to attendance by local residents, that minutes of these sessions are maintained and made available to the public, and that neither the mayor nor anyone else has ever sought to prevent Thompson from discussing council proceedings with fellow citizens.
. Defendants do not claim expanded authority to regulate Thompson’s first amendment activities simply because the Clio city council meets in a public forum. Individuals enjoy the full range of first amendment protections while on public property that the state has opened for expressive activity.
Perry Educ. Ass'n v. Perry Local Educators Ass'n,
. Indeed, there is perhaps no area of expression more deserving of constitutional protection and more fundamental to the democratic system of government whose vitality the first amendment was designed to safeguard, than communication by a political representative to his constituents.
See Brown v. Hartlage,
. Mayor Cox acknowledges in his deposition that he had not previously objected to Thompson’s recording council meetings for his "personal use,” but rather, that he banned Thompson from bringing the tape machine to these meetings specifically because he played these tapes for others. See defendants' Amendment to Submission in Support of Summary Judgment, filed February 25, 1991, Exhibit 1, at 23, 28. Moreover, Cox’s testimony reveals that he objected specifically to Thompson's use of such recordings rather than generally to the release of tapes of council sessions. For example, Cox stated he had not and would not apply the tape recorder ban to television stations that wished to videotape and broadcast portions of council meetings. See id. at 50.
.The ordinance in
Renton
was designed to "prevent crime, protect the city’s retail trade, maintain property values, and generally protect and preserve the quality of the city's neighborhoods, commercial districts, and the quality of urban life.”
.
See Texas v. Johnson,
Nor, of course, do defendants’ allegations that the tapes Thompson replayed were somehow inaccurate or incomplete lend any support to their position. It is well settled that the protections of the first amendment do not turn on the truth of an idea or belief.
New York Times v. Sullivan,
. Not only are defendants able to point to only one local citizen who was angered by Thompson’s recordings, but in addition, they have failed to demonstrate that the ensuing "disturbance" resulted from the information conveyed by Thompson rather than, for example, from the temperaments of the citizen and the city clerk who were involved in this confrontation; that the incident involved the kind of actual violence or lawbreaking necessary to justify restricting speech under the
Brandenburg
test; or that they lack other means of preventing public disturbances or violence far more effective and less restrictive of speech than the ban on Thompson’s cassette player.
See Johnson,
. In his deposition testimony, Ramsey indicated that he had been told of Thompson’s communication of false information about council proceedings through his recordings, and stated that the presence of Thompson’s tape machine at the April session was, as a result, "disrupting” the meeting by causing other council members to be hesitant to speak. Ramsey, of course, does not contend that this "disruption” — which he described as a state of "total silence” — fell within the ambit of the state’s disorderly conduct statute. See 1975 Code of Alabama § 13A-11-7. Nor does he argue that he removed Thompson’s tape machine on the order and by the authority of the mayor. See defendants’ Amendment to Submission in Support of Summary Judgment, filed February 25, 1991, Exhibit 5, at 9-14.
. There is some division among the circuit courts of appeal on this issue.
Compare Johnson v. Morel,
. See plaintiffs Response to Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment, filed February 11, 1991 (affidavit attached).
. See defendants’ Amendment to Submission in Support of Summary Judgment, filed February 25, 1991 (Exhibit 2, at 69, 86-87).
. Like Police Chief Ramsey, who removed Thompson’s recorder at the April meeting, Hin-son and Johnson justify their treatment of Thompson at the May session by reference to the “disturbance” that Thompson’s recordings were purportedly causing in the community and, as a result, among the council members. See defendants’ Amendment to Submission in Support of Summary Judgment, filed on February 25, 1991, Exhibit 3, at 10-12; id., Exhibit 4, at 8. In addition, however, Johnson, unlike Ramsey and Hinson, see id., Exhibit 5, at 16; Exhibit 4, at 20, also defends his actions against Thompson by reference to the mayor’s order to remove the recorder. See id., Exhibit 3, at 10. The court finds that such a justification is entitled to little weight in evaluating the reasonableness of Johnson’s conduct for the purposes of evaluating either the merits of Thompson’s fourth amendment claims or Johnson’s quali-fled immunity defense to these allegations. See section II(B)(iv) of the court's order. While law enforcement officers, like other government employees, may be said to act reasonably in simply "following orders” by their employers or supervisors as to certain job tasks, it is well settled that the authority of police to seize a citizen’s property or use force against his person is circumscribed by state and federal law, and may not be expanded simply by fiat. See 1975 Code of Alabama § 13A-3-27 (specifically defining situations in which peace officer may legally use physical force, and explicitly not authorizing use of force by officer against "innocent person whom he is not seeking to arrest or retain in custody”).
. See supra note 18.
. Although Cox did not specifically instruct the officers to use force, the evidence presently before the court suggests that Cox was aware Thompson would not voluntarily relinquish the machine and, therefore, that he anticipated that the officers would be required to use force in carrying out his order. Based on this and on the fact that defendants have not argued Cox’s *1075 lack of responsibility for the use of force in their summary judgment pleadings, the court specifically finds that Cox is not entitled to judgment on this claim as a matter of law.
.Qualified immunity is not available either to Cox, Ramsey, Johnson, and Hinson as to claims against them in their official capacities,
Kentucky v. Graham,
.
See also Malley v. Briggs,
. See section II(B)(v) of the court’s order.
. All the individual defendants understood that Thompson’s dissemination of recordings of council meetings and the resulting “disturbance" were the reason for the ban on his use of the recorder. See defendants’ Amendment to Submission in Support of Summary Judgment, filed February 25, 1991, Exhibit 1, at 21-23, 45, Exhibit 3, at 11-12, Exhibit 4, at 8, 11, Exhibit 5, at 9.
.
See
section II(B)(i) of the court's order. Several of the police defendants in this case justified their actions by likening Thompson’s use of a tape recorder at the April and May council meetings to disorderly conduct.
See
defendants’ Amendment to Submission in Support of Summary Judgment, filed February 25, 1991, Exhibit 3, at 10, Exhibit 4, at 12 and 20-21, Exhibit 5, at 10-12. However, the deposition
*1078
testimony of these officers demonstrates not only that Thompson was not disturbing the meeting in violation of state law,
see
1975 Code of Alabama § 13A-11-7, but also that the officers had a distinctly ««reasonable understanding of the scope of their authority under this statute. For example, Ramsey stated that the presence of Thompson’s tape machine was “disturbing the peace” by producing a situation of "total silence” at the May meeting,
see id.,
Exhibit 5, at 12, and Johnson was able to envision a situation in which even the use of a “pen” could cause a "disturbance,” permitting him to confiscate such a writing implement.
See id.,
Exhibit 4, at 21.
Compare Hutton v. Strickland,
. See also section II(B)(ii) and (iii) of the court’s order.
. The city raises the issue of municipal liability on summary judgment, albeit obliquely. See defendants’ Brief in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment, filed January 28, 1991, at 2-4.
. Where a plaintiff succeeds in proving a city policy based on the delegation of authority or the ratification of a particular decision by a final policymaker, he need not also prove that the challenged conduct was part of a sufficiently widespread or longstanding custom or practice.
See Brown,
. See defendants’ Amendment to Submission of Evidence in Support of Summary Judgment, filed February 25, 1991, Exhibit 1, at 14, 31. See also plaintiffs Motion to Strike, filed January 22, 1991, Exhibit (partial transcript of April, 1990 council meeting).
. See plaintiffs Motion to Strike, filed January 22, 1991, Exhibits (partial transcript of April, 1990 council meeting); defendants’ Amendment to Submission of Evidence in Support of Summary Judgment, filed February 25, 1991, Exhibit 2, at 55.
. Specifically, the court finds that Thompson has provided sufficient evidence on municipal liability as to all three of his federal claims against the city. Evidence as to the council’s ratification of the no-recorder policy is sufficient at this stage of the litigation to allow Thompson to proceed with his first amendment claim against the city, as this claim is based on the policy itself. Moreover, because the seizure of Thompson's recorder at the April meeting and the use of force to remove him from the May meeting simply constituted enforcement of the no-recorder policy, the present record also offers evidence of the city’s liability with regard to Thompson’s fourth amendment claims.
See City of Canton, Ohio v. Harris,
.Although the identification of a policymaker is a question for the trial judge, this court has not discovered any case that commands it be answered as a final matter at the summary judgment stage. Indeed, because this inquiry is often a “fact-sensitive one,”
Mandel,
. See plaintiffs Motion to Strike, filed January 22, 1991 (affidavit attached); plaintiff's Response to Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment, filed February 11, 1991 (affidavit attached).
. It is undisputed that Thompson would have been permitted to remain had he abided by this demand.
