The State of Illinois had an unfortunate experience with plaintiff’s newly-installed flush valves in Stateville prison. Whether rightly or not, the prison authorities concluded that plaintiff’s valves, and not the prison plumbing system, were at fault and requested the state purchasing agency to specify another manufacturer’s valves for the next rehabilitation project at the prison. The purchasing agency did so. Plaintiff then brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, seeking to enjoin the state agency from specifying the competitor’s valves. After an evidentiary hearing on the cause of the problems at Stateville and the merits of the competing flush valves, the district court issued a preliminary injunction as requested by the plaintiff. We reverse.
We believe the principles that govern this case are those declared in
Perkins v. Lukens Steel Co.,
Like private individuals and businesses, the Government enjoys the unrestricted power ... to determine those with whom it will deal, and to fix the terms and conditions upon which it will make needed purchases.
Id.
at 127,
The rationale of
Board of Regents v. Roth,
Nor does plaintiff’s equal protection claim have merit. Plaintiff has cited no case, and we are aware of none, holding or suggesting that the exercise by a state of a consumer’s choice between competing products denies the disappointed supplier equal protection of the laws. Even assuming that the doctrine of
Perkins
v.
Lukens Steel Co., supra,
leaves some room for an equal protection argument in a procurement context, the plaintiff would be required to establish more than that the purchasing decision is wrong or unjustifiable on the merits. At least in the absence of an invidious and “discriminatory design to favor one individual . . . over another,”
Snowden v. Hughes,
Plaintiff having failed to show a probability of ultimate success, the preliminary injunction order is reversed. The mandate shall issue forthwith.
Notes
The allegation that the selection of the competitor’s valves “has no rational basis in any engineering, architectural, or other standard” and “is wholly arbitrary, capricious and without reasonable justification” is insufficient. The state may base its purchasing decisions on whimsical, arbitrary, or idiosyncratic criteria without implicating the equal protection clause.
