Office of the Attorney General — State of Texas John Cornyn The Honorable Pete P. Gallego Chair, Committee on General Investigating Texas House of Representatives P.O. Box 2910 Austin, Texas 78768-2910
Re: Authority of the mayor and city manager of a home-rule city to bind the city to a lease agreement, and related questions (RQ-0092-JC)
Dear Representative Gallego:
You ask whether a city mayor or city manager operating outside the scope of his or her prescribed authority may bind the city to a lease agreement. We conclude that as a general rule a city mayor or city manager operating outside the scope of his or her prescribed authority may not bind the city with respect to governmental functions. Under some circumstances, however, the unauthorized acts of city officials may bind or estop the city, even in the exercise of a governmental function. Whether there is a basis for estoppel against the city in any particular case requires the investigation and resolution of fact questions, which cannot be done in an attorney general opinion.
You inform us that the City of Eagle Pass is building an international bridge between Texas and Mexico under a "Presidential Permit" issued by the United States Department of State. See Letter from Honorable Pete P. Gallego, Chair, Committee on General Investigations, Texas House of Representatives, to Honorable John Cornyn, Texas Attorney General (July 23, 1999) (on file with Opinion Committee) [hereinafter "Request Letter"]. Section
You have provided us with a copy of the federal permit authorizing construction of the international bridge as well as correspondence relevant to the construction of the bridge. We do not know whether all of these documents are part of the contract, and in any case, we cannot construe a contract in the opinion process. See Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
1. Can a city mayor or city manager operating outside the scope of prescribed authority bind the city to a lease agreement?
2. If a mayor or city employee acting without the requisite authority made an agreement to provide free facilities to a government agency at an international bridge built by the city, is such an agreement valid and enforceable even if the agreement was neither authorized, entered into nor ratified by the City's governing body?
Request Letter, supra, at 2. Because your questions raise the same legal issues, we will address them together.
The city argues that authority to enter into agreements is vested in the city council and that no individual city council member or city employee may obligate the city unless the city council authorizes that person to do so or ratifies the action after it is taken. See id. This view is consistent with the general rule on contractual authority of city officers. When the governmental power of a municipality is vested in a city council or other governing body, a contract must ordinarily be authorized or ratified by the governing body for it to bind the municipality, and an officer or employee of a city, absent express authority, cannot bind the city. See Brazos River Auth. v. City of Graham,
Bridge construction and maintenance are governmental rather than proprietary functions of a municipality. Tex. Civ. Prac. Rem. Code Ann. §
A city in the exercise of its governmental powers cannot as a rule be estopped by its officials' unauthorized or negligent acts. See Bowman v. Lumberton Indep. Sch. Dist.,
Second, the governing body of a unit of local government may be estopped by the action of a subordinate officer or employee, even absent express authority, "if the evidence clearly indicates that the subordinate officer's act was done with the knowledge of the governing body and was so closely related to the expressed will of the governing body as to constitute his act that of the board or commission itself." Bowman,
In answer to your questions, we conclude that as a general rule, the mayor or city manager of a city cannot, absent express authority, bind the city to a lease agreement if the city council has exclusive authority to enter into leases. However, the city may be estopped by the unauthorized actions of city officials in the exercise of a governmental function if necessary to prevent manifest injustice, and if there is no interference with the exercise of its governmental functions, or "if the evidence clearly indicates that the subordinate officer's act was done with the knowledge of the governing body and was so closely related to the expressed will of the governing body as to constitute his act that of the board or commission itself."Bowman,
Yours very truly,
JOHN CORNYN Attorney General of Texas
ANDY TAYLOR First Assistant Attorney General
CLARK KENT ERVIN Deputy Attorney General — General Counsel
ELIZABETH ROBINSON Chair, Opinion Committee
Susan L. Garrison Assistant Attorney General — Opinion Committee
