delivered the opinion of the court:
Plаintiff, John Pródromos, brought this action in the circuit court of Cook County against defendant Howard Savings Bank (bank) for breach of an employment contract and for an accounting. Plaintiff also brought this action against defendants Althea Pródromos (Althea), Chadwick Pródromos (Chadwick) and Marilyn Prodromes (Marilyn) for tortious interference with an employment contract. The bank filed a motion to dismiss the breach of contract counts of plaintiffs six-count first
For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Plaintiff alleged in his first amended complaint that he owned 40% of the issued and outstanding voting stock of the bank, which was an Illinois financial institution chartered pursuant to the Illinois Savings Bank Act (205 ILCS 205/1002 (West 1996)). At the bank’s 1993 annual shareholders’ meeting, plaintiff, Althea, James Economos (Economos), Peter S. Sotos (Sotos), and Louis Sotreras (Sotreras) were elected to be the board of directors until the 1994 annual shareholders’ meeting.
On March 30, 1994, plaintiff, Sotreras and Economos were present at a regular monthly directors’ meeting. The minutes of that monthly meeting stated that it was called pursuаnt to notice and that Althea was not present. The minutes also reflected that each director present received a copy of employment contracts for plaintiff and Althea. Plaintiff did not take part in the discussion of the contracts and did not vote on them. Economos and Sotreras approved the contracts. The contract for plaintiff was not signed by the bank. Plaintiff, Economos and Sotreras signed the minutes of the meeting.
The 1994 annual meeting of the bank’s stockholders was held later the same day. The stockholders elected Althea, Chadwick, Marilyn, Donald Veverka, and Sotos to be the board of directors for the following year. The minutes of the annual stockholders’ meeting did not refer to the March 30 monthly board of directors meeting.
Plaintiffs employment was terminated without prior notice on November 15, 1994. Plaintiff alleged that he had performed all of the duties and obligations of chief executive officer that the employment contract required of him between March 30, 1994, and November 15, 1994. He did not receive the full monthly salary, as provided in the employment contract during that time.
The board of directors held a special meeting on April 28, 1994. Thе minutes of that meeting stated that the directors did not approve the minutes of the March 30 monthly directors’ meeting. The minutes of the April 28 meeting also stated “that all purported actions taken [during] the March 30, 1994 meeting, including the attempted approval of any employment contracts, *** are rejected and disavowed and are of no force and effect.” The minutes of the April 30 meeting approved the directors’ actions during the April 28 meeting.
In February 1995, the next annual shareholders’ meeting was held, and Althea, Chadwick, Marilyn and Georgia Revis were elected as directors. The minutеs of the meeting did not refer to the March 30 monthly directors’ meeting.
In its motion to dismiss, the bank asserted that the three-year employment contract that plaintiff attached to his complaint was not signed by the bank and therefore violated the Frauds Act. It also submitted that plaintiff did not perform his job basеd on a reasonable reliance of the contract, and that on April 30, 1994, the new board of directors repudiated the board’s actions of March 30, 1994. Furthermore, the bank alleged that the March 30 monthly directors’
ISSUES PRESENTED FOR REVIEW
On appeal, plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in granting defendants’ section 2 — 619 motions to dismiss and argues that: (1) the signed minutes of the Mаrch 30, 1994, board of directors meeting constituted a writing sufficient to remove the bar of the Frauds Act; (2) plaintiffs partial performance of the contract removed the bar of the Frauds Act; and (3) defendants failed to properly raise “affirmative matters” (that the March 30 directors’ meeting violated the bank’s bylaws and state regulations) within the scope of a section 2 — 619(a)(9) motion to dismiss.
OPINION
Plaintiff first contends on appeal that the signed minutes of the March 30 monthly directors’ meeting constituted a writing sufficient to remove the bar of the Frauds Act. Plaintiff argues that those minutes were executed by the direсtors pursuant to their statutory duty and authority, and that the minutes identified the exact employment contract involved and the parties to that contract.
We review section 2 — 619(a)(7) and (a)(9) motions to dismiss de nova, and the trial court, after reviewing all pleadings and supporting documents in the light most favоrable to the nonmoving party, should grant the motions if plaintiff can prove no set of facts to support a cause of action. In re Chicago Flood Litigation,
The Frauds Act states:
“No action shall be brought *** upon any agreement that is not to be performed within the space of one year from the making thereof, unless the promise or agreement upon which such action shall be brought or some memorandum or note thereof, shall be in writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or some other person thereunto by him lawfully authorized.” 740 ILCS 80/1 (West 1994).
In order to satisfy the Frauds Act, there must be a writing, not necessarily on a single piece of paper, that is signed by the party to be charged. Chapman v. Freeport Securities Co.,
In Chapman, the plaintiff, who was the president of Freeport Securities Company (Freeport), brought an action against the defendant, Freeport, for breach of an employment contract, and against two Freeport directors, Jack Chapman (Jack) and Marilyn Tibbits (Marilyn), for tortious interference with the employment contract. Chapman,
The trial court in Chapman decided that the employment contract existed and found for the plaintiff on his breach of contract claim. The appellate court in Chapman, reversing the trial court in part, found that the employment contract was barred by the Frauds Act. The appellate court noted that the contract was not signed by Freeport and that the minutes of the January 27 directors’ meeting were signed by Eckert, but not approved. Therefore, the appellate court held that the January 27 minutes were insufficient to constitute a writing to remove the bar of the Frauds Act. Chapman,
In the present case, we believe Chapman is controlling and find that plaintiffs employment contract was barred by the Frauds Act. Bеcause the bank did not sign the contract, plaintiff was required to show sufficient writings to remove the bar of the Frauds Act. The minutes of the March 30 monthly directors’ meeting stated that the directors reviewed a copy of plaintiffs employment contract and that Economos and Sotreras apрroved the contract. Those minutes were insufficient to remove the bar of the Frauds Act, because, like the July 10 minutes in Chapman, they did not refer to any essential terms of the contract, or even specifically to which contract they approved. The March 30 minutes in this case did not indicаte that the board reviewed the same proposed employment contract upon which plaintiff based his cause of action. Those minutes stated that the directors reviewed “employment contracts for John Pródromos and Althea Pródromos,” but the minutes did not refer to any specific compensation amounts or time periods in the contracts. Furthermore, similar to the facts in Chapman, the minutes of the March 30 meeting lacked the required approval. In fact, the board of directors later rejected and disavowed any proposed employment contraсt for plaintiff.
Plaintiff also submits that he tendered, and the bank accepted, his partial performance based on the contract. Therefore, plaintiff contends, he is entitled to compensation
In order tо remove the bar of the Frauds Act, partial performance must be such that it is impractical or impossible to place the parties in status quo, or to compensate the performing party for the value of the performance, so that any refusal to complete the engagement would constitute a fraud on the performing party. Mariani v. The School Directors of District 40,
In this case, plaintiff worked as president of the bank for eight months and received compensation, which plaintiff alleged was less than the salary provided for in the employment contract. Based on our review of the record, we disagree with plaintiff and do not find that any fraud was committed against him. As in Mariani, the fact that plaintiff wаs employed as president of the bank for eight months of a purported three-year term does not remove the bar of the Frauds Act.
Plaintiff’s final argument is that the trial court erred in granting defendants’ section 2 — 619 motion to dismiss the tortious interference with the contract count. To maintain such an aсtion, a plaintiff must plead and prove: “(1) the existence of a valid and enforceable contract between plaintiff and another; (2) defendant’s awareness of the contractual relationship; (3) defendant’s intentional and unjustified inducement of a breach of the contract; (4) a subsequent breach by the other, caused by defendant’s wrongful conduct; and (5) damages.” Schott v. Glover,
Furthermore, because we find that there was no valid enforceable employment contract, we do not address plaintiff’s argument that defendants failed to properly raise “affirmative matters” within the scope of a section 2 — 619(a)(9) motion to dismiss.
In light of the foregoing, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County.
Affirmed.
McNULTY, P.J., and COUSINS, J., concur.
