delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff Mark A. McMahon appeals the dismissal of his complaint for breach of contract. He claims that the City of Chicago executed and then breached an oral contract with him to produce artwork for the “Riverwalk Gateway” project. We affirm.
Plaintiff has been a fine and commercial artist for 25 years. His work has been commissioned by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), Smithsonian Institution, O’Hare International Airport, State of Illinois and numerous corporations. In May 1998, Janet Attarian, an architect employed by the City of Chicago Department of Transportation (CDOT), met with plaintiff and asked him to prepare a proposal to produce a 225-feet-long by 9-feet-high ceramic tile mural for the walls of the “Riverwalk Gateway,” a tunnel beneath the Lake Shore Drive bridge across the Chicago River. Plaintiff submitted a proposal with a price of $317,521. On June 11, 1998, Attarian informed plaintiff that he had been awarded the contract at the quoted price and he should begin work immediately to meet the deadline of April 15, 1999. Attarian gave plaintiff a purchase order number, E—8—526. The next day, plaintiff sent an invoice for one-third of the fee to CDOT and referenced the purchase order number. According to the complaint, plaintiff began working “feverishly” on the project. Attarian assisted plaintiff with special arrangements for his preparation of art materials, including “access to a bridge tender’s facility so he could sketch from a unique vantage point.”
On June 22, 1998, CDOT sent a memorandum to Michael Lash, the curator of public art in the city’s department of cultural affairs. The memo was written by Attarian and signed by her supervisor, Stanley Kaderbek, the chief engineer and deputy commissioner of CDOT’s bureau of bridges and transit. The memo addressed both the Riverwalk Gateway project and a separate public art project unrelated to this case. The memo said CDOT had “decided that an artist [for the Riverwalk Gateway project] who specialized in representational art would be best” and “Mark McMahon was chosen because his style met all the required criteria.” The memo concluded:
“Since none of the artwork was part of the original scope of work[,] we presented our ideas and choice of artist[ ] to the Department of Planning, the Park District and the Mayor’s Office. All Departments gave their approval.
It is our hope to involve the public through our chosen artists, thereby allowing us to complete the project in a timely manner. It is our hope that both projects will be out for bid by the end of this month. I have enclosed drawings showing the scope of the projects and proposed areas for tile. Input fromyour Department is greatly appreciated, and if you have any suggestions I would be happy to discuss them with you.”
In early July 1998, CDOT instructed plaintiff to present his work to Michael Lash and the city’s public art committee (the committee). On July 24, 1998, the project advisory panel, a subcommittee of the public art committee, met to select an artist. Eight artists including plaintiff were considered. Lash told the panel that plaintiffs samples were more extensive than those of the other candidates because of an effort to circumvent the city’s official process for selecting art and “mainlining” the selection of plaintiff. Ultimately, artist Ellen Lanyon was selected for the Riverwalk Gateway project. Lash notified plaintiff that he had not been selected.
Plaintiff filed suit in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, alleging, inter alia, a violation of the Lanham Act (15 U.S.C. § 1125(a)(1) (1994)). In support of his federal claims, plaintiff obtained the depositions of Lash and Gilberto Quinones, a CDOT contract administrator. On October 6, 2000, the federal district court granted the city’s motion for summary judgment as to plaintiff’s claim under the Lanham Act and dismissed plaintiff’s remaining counts, declining to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over the state law claims.
On December 7, 2000, plaintiff filed a three-count complaint against the City of Chicago in the circuit court, alleging: (1) breach of contract; (2) deceptive business and trade practices; and (3) defamation and commercial disparagement. On March 22, 2001, the city filed a motion to dismiss the complaint under section 2—615 of the Illinois Code of Civil Procedure (the Code) (735 ILCS 5/2—615 (West 2000)) for failure to state a cause of action. Plaintiff filed a response to the city’s motion to dismiss, attaching selected pages from the Quinones deposition. Plaintiff claimed that the deposition provided a factual basis for his contention that some city officials were known to bypass the city purchasing agent and execute their own contracts. At a hearing on the city’s motion to dismiss, the trial court declined to consider the Quinones deposition, finding that it was not relevant to a section 2—615 motion. On October 17, 2001, the trial court granted the city’s motion to dismiss and gave plaintiff leave to replead a claim of equitable estoppel. Plaintiff declined to replead, and on January 17, 2002, the trial court entered a final order dismissing all plaintiffs claims.
On appeal, plaintiff asserts that his breach of contract claim should not have been dismissed under section 2—615 of the Code (735 ILCS 5/2—615 (West 2000)) because he sufficiently alleged the existence and breach of an oral contract.
A section 2—615 motion to dismiss attacks the sufficiency of a complaint on the basis that the plaintiff has not stated a cause of action upon which relief can be granted. Grund v. Donegan,
Purchasing and public works contracts with Illinois municipalities are governed by Article 8, division 10, of the Illinois Municipal Code, which consists of a municipal purchasing act applicable to cities with populations of 500,000 or more. 65 ILCS 5/8—10—1 et seq. (West 2000). The Illinois Muncipal Code substantially limits the contracting power of municipal employees:
“No department, office, institution, commission, board, agency or instrumentality of any such municipality, or any officer or employe[e] thereof, shall be empowered to execute any purchase order or contract [involving amounts in excess of $10,000] except as herein specifically authorized, but all such purchase orders or contracts shall be executed by the purchasing agent in conformity with [this statute].” 65 ILCS 5/8—10—18 (West 2000).
“Municipalities are limited to only those powers which are given to them by constitution and statute, and a municipality cannot be bound by a contract that does not comply with the prescribed conditions for the exercise of its power.” Ad-Ex, Inc. v. City of Chicago,
A prospective contractor who deals with a municipal corporation is presumed to know the limitations of the power of the city officials to enter into contracts. Ad-Ex,
In this case, plaintiff alleges that Attarian asked him for a proposal, told him he had been awarded the contract, gave him a purchase order number, wrote a memorandum under Kaderbek’s signature stating that certain city departments (none of which was the purchasing or procurement department) approved of CDOT’s choice of plaintiff, and arranged for plaintiff to gain access to restricted vantage points to work on his sketches. Plaintiff has not alleged that either Attarian or Kaderbek was a procurement officer or purchasing agent under the statute. Although plaintiff states that he was given a purchase order number, he does not allege that an authorized official expressly approved the purchase order or assigned the purchase order number. In fact, issuing purchase order numbers is not among the enumerated powers and duties of a municipal purchasing agent. See 65 ILCS 5/8—10—16 (West 2000); Chicago Municipal Code § 2—92— 010 (amended September 4, 2002).
To avoid the clear statutory requirements, plaintiff alleges that Kaderbek had actual or apparent authority to enter into the contract with him under the principles of agency law. Plaintiff contends that, because Attarian obtained a purchase order number, Kaderbek must have been authorized to enter into contracts. In framing this argument in his appellate brief, plaintiff states:
“The Purchasing Statutes do not grant absolute immunity from the entry of certain of its employees into well documented (as the case at bar) oral contracts — to bind the City. Courts must carefully consider the facts of each individual case, with an eye towards whether actual authority, implied authority or ratification arose during the transaction — all of which were ignored by the Court below. While the statutes limit the circumstances under which authority can arise, they do not eliminate the existence of authority altogether.” (Emphasis in original.)
Plaintiff uses principles of agency law to argue that Kaderbek was authorized to enter into the contract based on the theory of delegation, apparent authority, implied authority or ratification. Plaintiff supports his claim with the following arguments: the city is allowed to delegate its authority to contract (Chicago Food Management,
Plaintiff further develops the argument by making the following assertions: a showing of the authority of an agent is unnecessary to state a cause of action for breach of contract (Latex Glove Co. v. Gruen,
Plaintiffs reliance on principles of delegation, apparent authority, implied authority, ratification and agency law is misplaced within the municipal law context. As the city points out, implied contracts are not recognized in cases involving municipalities: a contract cannot be implied if the statutory method of executing a municipal contract has not been followed. Roemheld,
Here, under both state statutes and city ordinances, only the city’s procurement officer or purchasing agent has the authority to contract. Plaintiff has not alleged that the authority to contract had been expressly delegated. Instead he alleges, without factual support, that Kaderbek must have had implied authority. This fails because implied authority results in ultra vires, unenforceable contracts. Lindahl,
In pleading that agency law controls, plaintiff further supports his contentions with statements from the Quinones deposition. However, the Quinones deposition cannot be used by plaintiff to state this
Plaintiff raises a fairness argument, asking this court not to immunize the city from liability for its informal contracts because the city must be held to standards of honesty and fair dealing. We do not see how honesty and fair dealing are promoted by holding the city to unauthorized informal agreements. The municipal purchasing statute circumscribes municipal contracting. It guards against “ ‘favoritism, improvidence, extravagance, fraud and corruption, [and helps] to secure the best work or supplies at the lowest price practicable.’ ” Smith v. F.W.D. Corp.,
Plaintiff argues that he alleged the existence and breach of a contract because the Lash deposition reveals that funds for his artwork were appropriated by the city. Because the Illinois Municipal Code provides that a contract is unenforceable if there is no appropriation for the expenditure at issue (65 ILCS 5/8—1—7 (West 2000)), plaintiff concludes that a contract with an appropriation must be enforceable. We cannot address this argument because the Lash deposition is unavailable to plaintiff for the same reason that precludes consideration of the Quinones deposition. Plaintiff has not factually pled that an allocation was made to fund his project. That deficiency aside, plaintiff cites no legal authority for his contention that an otherwise invalid contract becomes enforceable if an appropriation has been made. The argument is waived. Avery v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.,
Plaintiff contends that the city has not shown that oral contracts are void ab initio. But the city was not required to make such a showing. The contract is void, not because it was oral but because it did not comply with statutes and ordinances requiring only designated officials to execute contracts.
Finally, plaintiff argues that his contract could have been valid even though competitive bidding did not occur because section 8—10—4 of the Illinois Municipal Code allows contracts requiring a “high degree of professional skill where the ability or fitness of the individual plays an important part” to be executed without competitive bids. 65 ILCS 5/8—10—4 (West 2000). The city responds that this is yet another reason that the contract was invalid, citing section 8—10—3, which provides that all purchase
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
BURKE and GARCIA, JJ., concur.
