Plaintiff appeals from a judgment of the? District Court dismissing its suit for damages for alleged breach of contract by the-City of Chicago on the ground that the complaint did not state a cause of action. Briefly the essential averments of the complaint: were that a valid binding contract existed between plaintiff and the city by virtue of" three certain ordinances of May 16, 1934,. December 27, 1937, and June 21, 1945, duly accepted by plaintiff, providing that the-number of licensed taxicabs in Chicago should not exceed 3000 unless the License-Commission of the city should, after hearing duly called and had, find that public convenience and necessity required additional1 cabs, and that defendant had broken this, contract by enactment of two ordinances on-February 6 and March 1, 1948, wherein the city had directed that the number of" licensed taxicabs be increased by 950. •These ordinances, said plaintiff, violated its - contract under the ordinances first mentioned in that they were not preceded by any' finding that public necessity and convenience necessitated additional cabs. Therefore, plaintiff averred, it had been damaged in various respects in an amount exceeding; $3 million.
A more detailed statement of certain» pertinent facts appears in Yellow Cab Co..
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v. City of Chicago,
By the cited decision it is established in Illinois that the contract ordinances of 1934, 1937 and 1945 were breached by defendant’s enactment of an ordinance of 1946, which increased the number of licensed cabs substantially without complying with the terms and provisions of the ordinance contracts, similarly to those of 1948. Thus the question before the District Court and before us on appeal is whether, for such breach of contract, the city, a municipal corporation organized under the statutes of the state of Illinois, is legally liable to plaintiff in an action ex contractu for the damages accruing from such breach, a question which, under Erie R. R. Co. v. Tompkins,
It is settled law in Illinois that enforcement of illegal ordinances may be enjoined. City of Quincy v. Bull,
Thus it is apparent that the Supreme Court of Illinois adheres to the well-nigh traditional distinction between acts done in a governmental as distinguished from a proprietary capacity, and between those done in a public as distinguished from a private or ■corporate capacity. The reason for such adherence, notwithstanding the difficulty of stating a definite rule which may be generally applied, is the public danger that in this class of cases liability of the municipality would impose upon the taxpayers damages which might prove so onerous as to destroy, the municipality itself. In other words, the real basis of the rule in Illinois grows out of a public policy which forbids that the municipality, an arm of the sovereign government, be subjected to liability in damages
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of this sort. Miralago Corp. v. Village Kenilworth,
However, though this rule clearly denies liability for tortuous acts or omissions in the exercise of governmental powers, we find no decision in the state which has considered in any degree the precise question involved in the case presented here, namely: whether the immunity of a municipality from liability for tortuous act growing out of its governmental functions applies likewise to an action brought to recover damages for breach of contract arising also out of the exercise of the municipality’s governmental functions, as do the ordinances in question. Respective counsel have directed our attention to no Illinois case and our own research has disclosed none answering this specific inquiry.
Plaintiff has cited the case of Chalstran v. Board of Education,
It is not our role-to attempt to make the substantive law-for Illinois. It is, rather, our limited function to ascertain, what that law is and to give it effect in our decisions. In Railroad Commission of Texas v. Pullman Co.,
Plaintiff also contends that, on the basis of the averments of its complaint, it was entitled to a declaratory judgment that the ordinances of 1948 are null and void in that they .impair the obligation of plaintiff’s contract in violation of Article I, Section 10, of the Constitution of the United States and Article II, Section 14, of the Constitution of the State of Illinois, S.H.A., and that the District Court erred in failing to find that the complaint stated a cause of action of which it had jurisdiction by virtue of the provisions of the Declaratory Judgments Act, 28 U.S.C.A. § 2201. Defendant, on the other hand, maintains that declaratory relief is not warranted in a case such as this, where, as it asserts, the adjudication of invalidity with respect to the 1948 ordinances was sought merely as an incident to the establishment of plaintiff’s claim for damages for breach of the contract ordinances.
In the light of the decision of the Supreme Court of Illinois, in Yellow Cab Co. v. City of Chicago,
The discretion of a court to entertain a suit for declaratory judgment is; a “judicial discretion” which must find -its-basis in sound reason, Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. Quarles, 4 Cir.,
In the case at bar, it is obvious that a decree declaring invalid the ordinances of February 6 and March 1, 1948, would not settle the controversy between the plaintiff and the City, for, in the absence of an authoritative statement of the law of Illinois with respect to the liability of a municipal corporation for damages for breach of contracts entered into by such body in its governmental as distinguished from its proprietary capacity, the ultimate question of plaintiff’s right to recover money damages cannot be resolved. Consequently, in view of the authorities cited, it seems clear that this case, as it now stands, is not one in which the declaratory relief prayed for should be granted, for it is obvious that an adjudication of invalidity of the 1948 ordinances is sought not as an end in itself but as an essential element in plaintiff’s claim for damages for breach of contract. To grant such relief here would be to ignore the established prohibitions of the use of the Declaratory Judgments Act as a dévice for piecemeal trials of controversies.
An additional reason for declining to entertain jurisdiction in order merely to invalidate the ordinances is to be found in the decision of the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit in Whisler v. City of West Plains,
We conclude that the refusal of the trial court to grant declaratory relief was not improper but entirely justified by the facts and circumstances of this case.
Accordingly, in view of our conclusions, the judgment of the District Court dismissing the suit is vacated and the cause remanded to that court with directions to retain jurisdiction, without further proceeding, until the parties can obtain from the state courts an authoritative decision as to whether, in Illinois, under the facts of this case the city is liable for damages in an action ex contractu.
