Thе opinion and judgment issued by this Court on January 6, 2000, are withdrawn, and the following opinion is substituted in lieu thereof.
Appellants Tsumi, Inc. and Cheryl Eck-hom 1 appeal the district court’s order granting a plea to the jurisdiction filed by appellee Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. 2 In a single issue, Tsumi contends *60 that the district court erred in granting the Department’s plea to the jurisdiction because the Department cоnsented to suit and waived its sovereign immunity from suit. We affirm the district court’s order.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
From 1993 through 1997, Tsumi and the Department operated under an oral agreement for the development, layout, production, and marketing of the Department’s mail-order gift catalogs. Many of the items included in the catalogs were developed or supplied by Tsumi. For years 1995 and 1996, Tsumi designed the layout, developed the products, and supplied an average of over 85% of the products for four catalogs. Tsumi acknowledges that it was fully compensated for these goods and services. According to its first amended petition, Tsumi “tendered performance of services and performed fully and repeatedly throughout the contractual relationship with Defendant.” At some point in 1997, Tsumi began work on the Department’s 1997 Christmas catalog. In its petition, 3 Tsumi alleges that plaintiffs “have performed their obligations under the contract by, among other things, designing catalog layout and developing products therefor.” They further allege that the Department repudiated the contract and failed to pay for unspecified services.
Tsumi brought suit against the Department for claims based on a breach of the alleged oral contract, defamation, fraud, and misappropriation. The Department filed a plea to the jurisdiction asserting that its sovereign immunity from suit deprived thе trial court of jurisdiction. The trial court agreed and dismissed Tsumi’s claims for lack of jurisdiction. On appeal, Tsumi challenges in a single issue the dismissal of its petition on the ground that the Department waived immunity from suit. 4
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Because the determination of subject matter jurisdiction is a question of law, we review that determination
de novo. See Mayhew v. Town of Sunnyvale,
The plaintiff bears the burden of alleging facts affirmatively showing that the district court has subject matter jurisdiction.
See Texas Ass’n of Business v. Texas Air Control Bd.,
*61
Unless the face of the petition affirmatively demonstrates a lack of jurisdiction, the district court must liberally construe the allegations in favor of jurisdiction.
See Peek v. Equipment Serv. Co.,
DISCUSSION
Sovereign Immunity
Sovereign immunity consists of two basic principles of law: immunity from liability and immunity from suit. Unless waived, the stаte has immunity from liability.
5
Immunity from liability does not affect a court’s jurisdiction to hear a case.
See Davis v. City of San Antonio,
Tsumi acknowledges that it did not seek legislative permission to sue. Appellants also do not contend that statutory authority exists that would constitute consent for them to bring their lawsuit. Relying upon
Federal Sign
and this Court s decision in
Aer-Aerotron, Inc. v. Texas Department of Transportation,
Federal Sign
In analyzing whether a state entity waives immunity in a contractual dispute
by conduct,
we turn first to
Federal Sign.
In that case, Texas Southern University (“TSU”) accepted Federal Sign’s bid to construct and deliver basketball scoreboards to TSU.
See
starting from the premise that “sovereign immunity, unless waived, protects the State of Texas, its agencies and its officials from lawsuits for damagеs, absent legislative consent to sue the State,” id. at 405, Justice Baker, writing for the majority of *62 the court, stated: “[A] private citizen must have legislative consent to sue the State on a breach of contract claim. The act of contracting does not waive the State’s immunity from suit.” Id. at 408. Deferring instead to the legislature, the court concluded that “it is the Legislature’s province to modify sovereign immunity if it is inclined to do so and therefore [we] refuse Federal Sign’s invitation to undertake the task.” Id. at 409. The court held “that sovereign immunity from suit without legislative consent applies to contract claims against the State.” Id. at 412.
In an oft-cited footnote, however, the court further observed that “[t]here may be other circumstances where the State may waive its immunity by conduct other than simply executing a contract so that it is not always immune from suit when it contracts.” Id. at 408 n. 1 (emphasis added). Despite Federal Sign’s allegations of waiver by TSU’s conduct in repudiating the contract seven months into the project, the court declined to find waiver. In a concurring opinion, four members of the court suggested that a different result might have pertained if: (i) Federal Sign had installed the scoreboards that were the subject of the contract and TSU, the state entity, refused to pay the agreed price, (ii) TSU had accepted the scoreboards, acknowledged that Federal Sign had fully complied with the contract but refused to pаy as agreed upon, or (iii) TSU refused to pay to force Federal Sign to make a concession on another contract. See id. at 412. The concurring justices further stated: “[T]oday’s decision does not hold that the State is always immune from suit for breach of contract absent legislative consent; it holds only that the mere execution of а contract for goods and services, without more, does not waive immunity from suit.” Id. at 413. Thus, the court left for another day the decision on the type of conduct by which a State may waive its immunity.
Appellants acknowledge that the simple act of entering into a contract is not sufficient to waive immunity. Appellants further recognize that while the supreme court has addressed the possibility of waiver by conduct of the state entity, that court has yet to find it in a decided case. They direct us, instead, to the decisions of three courts of appeals, including this one, that have abrogated sovereign immunity in contract cases involving agencies. 6
In
Aer-Aerotron,
pursuant to a competitive bidding process аnd a written contract with the Texas Department of Transportation, Aerotron supplied 75 base-station radios and 50 remote-control radios for a total contract amount of $468,550.
See
This Court interpreted Federal Sign to mean that “only the legislature can gener *63 ally pronounce that the mere act of signing a contract abrogates the State’s immunity from suit, but an entity of the State may waive its immunity with regard to a particular contract if warranted by its conduct.” Id. at 691. The Court applied its interpretation of Federal Sign to the facts of Aer-Aerotron and concluded that the Department by its conduct waived its immunity from suit for breach of contract. See id. at 692. The Court stated:
The Department did more than sign this contract. Its actions over a period of two and a half years fully implicated it in the performance of the contract: the Department approved the radios after testing the samples; it twice extended the term of the contract; it more than trebled the number of radio units ordered throughout the contract term; it accepted Aerotron’s technical services; and it acknowledged its financial obligations by twice promising to pay the balance due to Aerotron. Aerotron filled the ever-increasing orders, made morе than nine modifications that were not required under the contract specifications, helped the Department install equipment in all districts, and stationed a technician in Texas to monitor the operation of its equipment for the Department.
Id. at 691-92.
In
IT-Davy,
the contractor alleged in its pleadings that it fully performed the contract and еven executed additional work at the express request of the Commission, that the Commission accepted this work, and that the Commission failed to pay for the accepted services.
See
Drawing on the three hypothetieals in the concurring opinion of Federal Sign, Tsumi contends on appeal that it has alleged that the Department engaged in conduct here sufficient to waive its immunity: “Precisely such full performance, delivery of goods and services, and repeatеd acceptance of all benefits and performance occurred in [this] case.” Even taking the allegations of Tsumi’s petition as true and construing the pleadings in a liberal fashion as we are constrained to do, we conclude that the allegations contained in the petition fail to allege facts sufficient to sustain jurisdiсtion.
*64 Tsumi’s Allegations in the Petition
In the present case, Tsumi alleges that it has operated since 1993 under an oral contract with the Department. 10 In its brief on appeal, Tsumi contends that the duration of the contract between Tsumi and the Department was for a period of “around four years.” Appellants acknowledge that they were fully compensated for their services through 1996. Other than an allegation that the parties entered into a contract for work on the 1997 Christmas catalog and that appellants performed their obligations under the contract by “designing Catalog layout and developing products therefor,” none of the terms of the oral contract are set fоrth in the petition. The dispute, then, turns on the conduct of the parties in 1997. But on this matter, the petition is entirely silent.
Thus, Tsumi alleges that it “began” the development, layout, and marketing of the 1997 catalog, and that it entered into “several agreements with third-party vendors” for the marketing and operation of the catalog. Without specifying a time period or whether any goods or services were actually delivered and accepted, they then allege that the Department “untimely indicated” an unwillingness to complete the production and marketing of the catalog. Unlike Aerotron, Tsumi has not alleged that it completed performance on the 1997 catalog and thаt the Department refused to pay the agreed price. Nor is there any allegation that the Department accepted goods and services, acknowledged that Tsumi had fully complied with the contract, and then refused to pay as agreed upon. Accordingly, we overrule appellant’s issue.
CONCLUSION
We conclude that appellants did not allege waiver by conduct sufficient to invoke the district court’s jurisdiction. Having overruled appellant’s issue on appeal, we affirm the district court’s order granting the Department’s plea to the jurisdiction.
Notes
. For convenience, we will refer to Tsumi, Inc. and Cheryl Eckhom, Tsumi’s majority owner, collectively as "Tsumi” or "appellants.”
. Parks and Wildlife Foundation of Texas, Inc. filed a separate plеa to the jurisdiction, but it withdrew its plea; therefore, the district *60 court’s order concerned only the Department’s plea.
. Tsumi’s original petition was filed on December 21, 1998. The Department filed its original answer and plea to the jurisdiction on January 15, 1999. Tsumi filed its First Amended Petition on March 9, 1999. A hearing was held on the Department’s plea to the jurisdiction on March 10, and on March 12, the district court sustained the plea and dismissеd the case for want of jurisdiction. Tsu-mi did not seek to further amend its petition at the hearing or thereafter and does not contend on appeal that it was denied that opportunity.
. Tsumi challenges only the dismissal of the contract claim.
.
See Federal Sign v. Texas S. Univ.,
. See Texas Natural Resource Conservation Comm'n v. IT-Davy,
. In
Little-Tex,
this Court described the acceptance of benefits and waiver of immunity as akin to the doctrine of estoppel. The Court stated: "We believe receipt and acceptance by the State of a benefit from a contracting party is wholly inconsistent with the State’s using its immunity from suit to shield itself from a legal obligation to pay for the value of the benefit. Indeed, such a scenario arguably produces a manifest injustice that cannot in good conscience be tolerated.”
. In
Araserve,
the plaintiff company contracted to provide and did deliver $122,778.50 in food and services that TSU requested but refused to рay for.
See
.In
Obayashi,
Alamo Community College District entered into a contract with Obayashi Corporation for construction relating to a drainage project at the San Antonio College campus.
See
. The parties agree that any contract between the parties was oral and was not the result of a competitive bidding process. Tsu-mi alleges in its petition that the agreement remained oral because the Department wanted to avoid "bidding the job out.” The legality or enforceability of an oral contract with the State is not before the Court.
See
Tex. Gov't Code Ann. § 2155.063 (West 2000) (requiring competitive bidding for the purchase of or contract for goods or services).
*69
See Coleman,
Further, in reversing the court of appeals’ in
Cain,
the supreme court stated, "A complaint that a landowner failed to provide adequate security against criminal conduct is ordinarily a premises liability claim.... Cain asserts that defendants’ failure to provide adequate security measures created an unreasonable risk of harm that defendants knew or should have known about and yet failed to correct. This is a premises liability claim .”
Cain,
Thompson’s claim that Cain should control over Coleman is unpersuasive. Likewise unpersuasive is her attempt to distinguish Coleman from the case at bar by arguing that the Coleman landlord’s access to the leased premises was significantly more limited than in our case.
