The transfer of the appeal to this court eliminates those enumerations of error attacking the constitutionality of Ga. L. 1976, p. 452, apparently on the ground that the record does not show they were properly raised in the trial court.
Under the law as it existed on December 4, 1975, "the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia is a person in law, able to sue and be sued, and ... it does not have sovereign immunity in a suit for breach of the express terms of a contract which it is authorized to and has entered
into.” Busbee v. University Professors,
By Ga. L. 1976, p. 452, effective March 18,1976 (Code Ann. § 32-101.1) the legislature enacted the following: "The applicability of the doctrine of'sovereign immunity’ to the Board of Regents of the University System of *473 Georgia is hereby reaffirmed, except to the extent that the General Assembly of Georgia may hereafter expressly provide. As used in this section the term 'Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia’ shall include the 'Regents of the University System of Georgia.’ ” This suit was filed February 18, 1977, after the Act took effect.
That Act also struck down a part of a prior Act giving to the predecessor of the Board of Regents (and thus impliedly to the board) the right to sue and be sued, under the authority of which the
Busbee
case had held that a waiver of sovereign immunity existed. Subsequently to this legislative innovation, this court in
Goolsby v. Regents of the University System,
While what has been said above disposes of the exact issue (whether the Board of Regents may refuse to pay an indebtedness on which it is contractually obligated on the ground of sovereign immunity), it should be further pointed out that with the passage of a constitutional amendment (Code § 2-3401) ratified Nov. 5, 1974, empowering the legislature to create a State Court of Claims to take care of such disputes, and with the continued inaction of the legislature from that time to this to act upon this constitutional authorization, the result
*474
has been to achieve for the doctrine of immunity in Georgia a constitutional status and also an impregnable defense.
Clark v. State of Ga.,
In plain English this means that a citizen of Georgia who contracts with the state or one of its governmental subdivisions may find that contract not worth the paper it is written on unless the political subdivision concerned in its infinite benevolence sees fit to honor its obligations, or unless there is an express waiver of sovereign immunity incorporated in the document. This view of the power of states has a long and elevated history; it was the basis of the divine right of kings and as such has frequently been referred to as a part of our common law heritage. It is nevertheless not a position adopted by this country at the time of the War of Independence, and it is not a position widely adopted in our sister states today. That the doctrine of governmental immunity from suit is currently in general disfavor, see 62 ALR2d 1211 (18) and cits., including Taylor v. N. J. Highway Authority,
4. Notwithstanding the fact that we have held the
*475
defense of sovereign immunity good as against the contractual obligation, we must consider the further action of the trial court in dismissing the petition on this ground. "Under the Civil Practice Act ... a motion to dismiss a complaint for failure to state a claim should not be granted unless the averments in the complaint disclose with certainty that the plaintiff would not be entitled to relief under any state of facts that could be proved in support of the claim.”
Harper v. DeFreitas,
The same law was applied in
Elbert County v. Brown,
This constitutional right has been recognized throughout the history of our state jurisprudence and as recently as
City of Rome v. Turk,
We accordingly conclude that although the plaintiff cannot bring an action against the Board of Regents based on its contract with that body to furnish it labor and materials for a public building, nevertheless, the defendant cannot accept and retain such property without allowing the plaintiff just and adequate compensation. Since we cannot at this stage say that the plaintiff could in no event recover under the pleadings in the record before us, the dismissal of the complaint is reversed.
Judgment reversed.
