Respondents, California residents, brought this suit in a
California court for damages against petitioner State of Nevada and
others for injuries respondents sustained when a Nevada-owned
vehicle on official business collided on a California highway with
a vehicle occupied by respondents. After the California Supreme
Court, reversing the trial court, held Nevada amenable to suit in
the California courts, Nevada, on the basis of the Full Faith and
Credit Clause of the Federal Constitution, unsuccessfully invoked a
Nevada statute limiting to $25,000 any tort award against the State
pursuant to its statutory waiver of sovereign immunity. Following
trial, damages were awarded respondents for $1,150,000, and the
judgment in their favor was affirmed on appeal.
Held: A State is not constitutionally immune from suit
in the courts of another State. Pp.
440 U. S.
414-427.
(a) The doctrine that no sovereign may be sued in its own courts
without its consent does not support a claim of immunity in another
sovereign's courts. Pp.
440 U. S.
414-418.
(b) The need for constitutional protection against one State's
being sued in the courts of another State was not discussed by the
Framers, and nothing in Art. III authorizing the judicial power of
the United States or in the Eleventh Amendment limitation on that
power provides any basis, explicit or implicit, for this Court to
limit the judicial powers that California has exercised in this
case. Pp.
440 U. S.
418-421.
(c) The Full Faith and Credit Clause does not require a State to
apply another State's law in violation of its own legitimate public
policy.
Pacific Ins. Co. v. Industrial Accident Comm'n,
306 U. S. 493.
Here California, which has provided by statute for jurisdiction in
its courts over residents and nonresidents alike to allow those
negligently injured on its highways to secure full compensation for
their injuries in California courts, is not required to surrender
jurisdiction to Nevada or to limit respondents' recovery to the
$25,000 Nevada statutory maximum. Pp.
440 U. S.
421-424.
(d) The specific limitations that certain constitutional
provisions such as Art. I, § 8, and Art. IV, § 2, place upon the
sovereignty of the States do not imply that any one State's
immunity from suit in the courts of
Page 440 U. S. 411
another State is anything more than a matter of comity, and
nothing in the Constitution authorizes or obligates this Court to
frustrate California's policy of fully compensating those
negligently injured on its highways. Pp.
440 U. S.
424-427.
74 Cal. App. 3d
280, 141 Cal. Rptr. 439, affirmed.
STEVENS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BRENNAN, STEWART, WHITE, MARSHALL, and POWELL, JJ., joined.
BLACKMUN, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BURGER, C.J.,
and REHNQUIST, J., joined,
post, p.
440 U. S. 427.
REHNQUIST, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BURGER, C.J.,
joined,
post, p.
440 U. S.
432.
MR. JUSTICE STEVENS delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this tort action arising out of an automobile collision in
California, a California court has entered a judgment against the
State of Nevada that Nevada's own courts could not have entered. We
granted certiorari to decide whether federal law prohibits the
California courts from entering such a judgment or, indeed, from
asserting any jurisdiction over another sovereign State.
The respondents are California residents. They suffered severe
injuries in an automobile collision on a California highway on May
13, 1968. The driver of the other vehicle, an employee of the
University of Nevada, was killed in the collision. It is conceded
that he was driving a car owned by the State, that he was engaged
in official business, and that the University is an instrumentality
of the State itself.
Respondents filed this suit for damages in the Superior Court
for the city of San Francisco, naming the administrator
Page 440 U. S. 412
of the driver's estate, the University, and the State of Nevada
as defendants. Process was served on the State and the University
pursuant to the provisions of the California Vehicle Code
authorizing service of process on nonresident motorists. [
Footnote 1] The trial court granted a
motion to quash service on the State, but its order was reversed on
appeal. The California Supreme Court held, as a matter of
California law, that the State of Nevada was amenable to suit in
California courts, and remanded the case for trial.
Hall v.
University of Nevada, 8 Cal. 3d 522,
503 P.2d 1363. We denied certiorari. 414 U.S. 820.
On remand, Nevada filed a pretrial motion to limit the amount of
damages that might be recovered. A Nevada statute places a limit of
$25,000 on any award in a tort action against the State pursuant to
its statutory waiver of sovereign immunity. [
Footnote 2] Nevada argued that the Full Faith and
Credit
Page 440 U. S. 413
Clause of the United States Constitution [
Footnote 3] required the California courts to
enforce that statute. Nevada's motion was denied, and the case went
to trial.
The jury concluded that the Nevada driver was negligent and
awarded damages of $1,150,000. [
Footnote 4] The Superior Court entered judgment on the
verdict and the Court of Appeal affirmed. After the California
Supreme Court denied review,
Page 440 U. S. 414
the State of Nevada and its University successfully sought a
writ of certiorari. 436 U.S. 925.
Despite its importance, the question whether a State may claim
immunity from suit in the courts of another State has never been
addressed by this Court. The question is not expressly answered by
any provision of the Constitution; Nevada argues that it is
implicitly answered by reference to the common understanding that
no sovereign is amenable to suit without its consent -- an
understanding prevalent when the Constitution was framed and
repeatedly reflected in this Court's opinions. In order to
determine whether that understanding is embodied in the
Constitution, as Nevada claims, [
Footnote 5] it is necessary to consider (1) the source and
scope of the traditional doctrine of sovereign immunity; (2) the
impact of the doctrine on the framing of the Constitution; (3) the
Full Faith and Credit Clause; and (4) other aspects of the
Constitution that qualify the sovereignty of the several
States.
I
The doctrine of sovereign immunity is an amalgam of two quite
different concepts, one applicable to suits in the sovereign's own
courts and the other to suits in the courts of another
sovereign.
The immunity of a truly independent sovereign from suit in its
own courts has been enjoyed as a matter of absolute right for
centuries. Only the sovereign's own consent could qualify the
absolute character of that immunity.
The doctrine, as it developed at common law, had its origins in
the feudal system. Describing those origins, Pollock and Maitland
noted that no lord could be sued by a vassal in his
Page 440 U. S. 415
own court, but each petty lord was subject to suit in the courts
of a higher lord. Since the King was at the apex of the feudal
pyramid, there was no higher court in which he could be sued.
[
Footnote 6] The King's
immunity rested primarily on the structure of the feudal system,
and secondarily on a fiction that the King could do no wrong.
[
Footnote 7]
We must, of course, reject the fiction. It was rejected by the
colonists when they declared their independence from the Crown,
[
Footnote 8] and the record in
this case discloses an actual wrong committed by Nevada. But the
notion that immunity from suit is an attribute of sovereignty is
reflected in our cases.
Mr. Chief Justice Jay described sovereignty as the "right to
govern"; [
Footnote 9] that kind
of right would necessarily encompass the right to determine what
suits may be brought in the sovereign's own courts. Thus, Mr.
Justice Holmes explained sovereign
Page 440 U. S. 416
immunity as based "on the logical and practical ground that
there can be no legal right as against the authority that makes the
law on which the right depends." [
Footnote 10]
This explanation adequately supports the conclusion that no
sovereign may be sued in its own courts without its consent, but it
affords no support for a claim of immunity in another sovereign's
courts. Such a claim necessarily implicates the power and authority
of a second sovereign; its source must be found either in an
agreement, express or implied, between the two sovereigns, or in
the voluntary decision of the second to respect the dignity of the
first as a matter of comity.
This point was plainly stated by Mr. Chief Justice Marshall in
The Schooner Exchange v.
McFaddon, 7 Cranch 116, which held that an American
court could not assert jurisdiction over a vessel in which
Napoleon, the reigning Emperor of France, claimed a sovereign
right. In that case, the Chief Justice observed:
"The jurisdiction of courts is a branch of that which is
possessed by the nation as an independent sovereign power."
"The jurisdiction of the nation within its own territory is
necessarily exclusive and absolute. It is susceptible of no
limitation not imposed by itself. Any restriction upon it, deriving
validity from an external source, would imply a diminution of its
sovereignty to the extent of the restriction, and an investment of
that sovereignty to the same extent in that power which could
impose such restriction."
"All exceptions, therefore, to the full and complete power of a
nation within its own territories must be traced up to the consent
of the nation itself. They can flow from no other legitimate
source."
Id. at
11 U. S.
136.
Page 440 U. S. 417
After noting that the source of any immunity for the French
vessel must be found in American law, the Chief Justice interpreted
that law as recognizing the common usage among nations in which
every sovereign was understood to have waived its exclusive
territorial jurisdiction over visiting sovereigns, or their
representatives, in certain classes of cases. [
Footnote 11]
The opinion in
The Schooner Exchange makes clear that,
if California and Nevada were independent and completely sovereign
nations, Nevada's claim of immunity from suit in California's
courts would be answered by reference to the law of California.
[
Footnote 12] It is fair to
infer that, if the immunity defense Nevada asserts today had been
raised in 1812 when
The Schooner Exchange was decided, or
earlier when the Constitution was being framed, the defense would
have been sustained by the California courts. [
Footnote 13] By rejecting the defense in
Page 440 U. S. 418
this very case, however, the California courts have told us that
whatever California law may have been in the past, it no longer
extends immunity to Nevada as a matter of comity.
Nevada quite rightly does not ask us to review the California
courts' interpretation of California law. Rather, it argues that
California is not free, as a sovereign, to apply its own law, but
is bound instead by a federal rule of law implicit in the
Constitution that requires all of the States to adhere to the
sovereign immunity doctrine as it prevailed when the Constitution
was adopted. Unless such a federal rule exists, we, of course, have
no power to disturb the judgment of the California courts.
II
Unquestionably the doctrine of sovereign immunity was a matter
of importance in the early days of independence. [
Footnote 14] Many of the States were
heavily indebted as a result of the Revolutionary War. They were
vitally interested in the question whether the creation of a new
federal sovereign, with courts of its own, would automatically
subject them, like lower English lords, to suits in the courts of
the "higher" sovereign.
But the question whether one State might be subject to suit in
the courts of another State was apparently not a matter of concern
when the new Constitution was being drafted
Page 440 U. S. 419
and ratified. Regardless of whether the Framers were correct in
assuming, as presumably they did, that prevailing notions of comity
would provide adequate protection against the unlikely prospect of
an attempt by the courts of one State to assert jurisdiction over
another, the need for constitutional protection against that
contingency was not discussed.
The debate about the suability of the States focused on the
scope of the judicial power of the United States authorized by Art.
III. [
Footnote 15] In The
Federalist, Hamilton took the position that this authorization did
not extend to suits brought by an individual against a
nonconsenting State. [
Footnote
16] The contrary position was also advocated, [
Footnote 17] and actually prevailed in this
Court's decision in
Chisholm v.
Georgia, 2 Dall. 419.
Page 440 U. S. 420
The Chisholm decision led to the prompt adoption of the
Eleventh Amendment. [
Footnote
18] That Amendment places explicit limits on the powers of
federal courts to entertain suits against a State. [
Footnote 19]
The language used by the Court in cases construing these limits,
like the language used during the debates on ratification of the
Constitution, emphasized the widespread acceptance of the view that
a sovereign State is never amenable to suit without its consent.
[
Footnote 20] But all of
these cases, and all of the relevant debate, concerned questions of
federal court jurisdiction and the extent to which the States, by
ratifying the Constitution and creating federal courts, had
authorized suits
Page 440 U. S. 421
against themselves in those courts. These decisions do not
answer the question whether the Constitution places any limit on
the exercise of one's State's power to authorize its courts to
assert jurisdiction over another State. Nor does anything in Art.
III authorizing the judicial power of the United States, or in the
Eleventh Amendment limitation on that power, provide any basis,
explicit or implicit, for this Court to impose limits on the powers
of California exercised in this case. A mandate for federal court
enforcement of interstate comity must find its basis elsewhere in
the Constitution.
III
Nevada claims that the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the
Constitution requires California to respect the limitations on
Nevada's statutory waiver of its immunity from suit. That waiver
only gives Nevada's consent to suits in its own courts. Moreover,
even if the waiver is treated as a consent to be sued in
California, California must honor the condition attached to that
consent and limit respondents' recovery to $25,000, the maximum
allowable in an action in Nevada's courts.
The Full Faith and Credit Clause does require each State to give
effect to official acts of other States. A judgment entered in one
State must be respected in another provided that the first State
had jurisdiction over the parties and the subject matter. Moreover,
in certain limited situations, the courts of one State must apply
the statutory law of another State. Thus, in
Bradford Electric
Co. v. Clapper, 286 U. S. 145, the
Court held that a federal court sitting in New Hampshire was
required by the Constitution to apply Vermont law in an action
between a Vermont employee and a Vermont employer arising out of a
contract made in Vermont. [
Footnote 21] But this Court's
Page 440 U. S. 422
decision in
Pacific Insurance Co. v. Industrial Accident
Comm'n, 306 U. S. 493,
clearly establishes that the Full Faith and Credit Clause does not
require a State to apply another State's law in violation of its
own legitimate public policy. [
Footnote 22]
The question in
Pacific Insurance was whether the Full
Faith and Credit Clause precluded California from applying its own
workmen's compensation Act in the case of an injury suffered by a
Massachusetts employee of a Massachusetts employer while in
California in the course of his employment. Even though the
employer and employee had agreed to be bound by Massachusetts law,
this Court held that California was not precluded from applying its
own law imposing greater responsibilities on the employer. In doing
so, the Court reasoned:
"It has often been recognized by this Court that there are some
limitations upon the extent to which a state may be required by the
full faith and credit clause to enforce even the judgment of
another state in contravention of its own statutes or policy. . . .
And in the case of statutes, the extrastate effect of which
Congress has not prescribed, as it may under the constitutional
provision, we think the conclusion is unavoidable that the full
faith and credit clause does not require one state to substitute
for its own statute, applicable to persons and events within it,
the conflicting statute of another state, even though that statute
is of controlling force in the courts of
Page 440 U. S. 423
the state of its enactment with respect to the same persons and
events. . . . Although Massachusetts has an interest in
safeguarding the compensation of Massachusetts employees while
temporarily abroad in the course of their employment, and may adopt
that policy for itself, that could hardly be thought to support an
application of the full faith and credit clause which would
override the constitutional authority of another state to legislate
for the bodily safety and economic protection of employees injured
within it. Few matters could be deemed more appropriately the
concern of the state in which the injury occurs or more completely
within its power."
Id. at
306 U. S.
502-503.
The
Clapper case was distinguished on the ground
that
"there was nothing in the New Hampshire statute, the decisions
of its courts, or in the circumstances of the case to suggest that
reliance on the provisions of the Vermont statute, as a defense to
the New Hampshire suit, was obnoxious to the policy of New
Hampshire."
306 U.S. at
306 U. S. 504.
[
Footnote 23] In
Pacific
Insurance, on the other hand, California had its own scheme
governing compensation for injuries in the State, and the
California courts had found that the policy of that scheme would be
frustrated were it denied enforcement. "Full faith and credit,"
this Court concluded,
"does not here enable one state to legislate for the other or to
project its laws across
Page 440 U. S. 424
state lines so as to preclude the other from prescribing for
itself the legal consequences of acts within it."
Id. at
306 U. S.
504-505.
A similar conclusion is appropriate in this case. The interest
of California afforded such respect in the
Pacific
Insurance case was in providing for "the bodily safety and
economic protection of employees injured within it."
Id.
at
306 U. S. 503.
In this case, California's interest is the closely related and
equally substantial one of providing "full protection to those who
are injured on its highways through the negligence of both
residents and nonresidents." App. to Pet. for Cert. vii. To
effectuate this interest, California has provided by statute for
jurisdiction in its courts over residents and nonresidents alike to
allow those injured on its highways through the negligence of
others to secure full compensation for their injuries in the
California courts.
In further implementation of that policy, California has
unequivocally waived its own immunity from liability for the torts
committed by its own agents and authorized full recovery even
against the sovereign. As the California courts have found, to
require California either to surrender jurisdiction or to limit
respondents' recovery to the $25,000 maximum of the Nevada statute
would be obnoxious to its statutorily based policies of
jurisdiction over nonresident motorists and full recovery. The Full
Faith and Credit Clause does not require this result. [
Footnote 24]
IV
Even apart from the Full Faith and Credit Clause, Nevada argues
that the Constitution implicitly establishes a Union in which the
States are not free to treat each other as unfriendly
Page 440 U. S. 425
sovereigns, but must respect the sovereignty of one another.
While sovereign nations are free to levy discriminatory taxes on
the goods of other nations or to bar their entry altogether, the
States of the Union are not. [
Footnote 25] Nor are the States free to deny extradition
of a fugitive when a proper demand is made by the executive of
another State. [
Footnote 26]
And the citizens in each State are entitled to all privileges and
immunities of citizens in the several States. [
Footnote 27]
Each of these provisions places a specific limitation on the
sovereignty of the several States. Collectively, they demonstrate
that ours is not a union of 50 wholly independent sovereigns. But
these provisions do not imply that any one State's immunity from
suit in the courts of another State is anything other than a matter
of comity. Indeed, in view of the Tenth Amendment's reminder that
powers not delegated to the Federal Government nor prohibited to
the States are reserved to the States or to the people, [
Footnote 28] the existence of
express limitations on state sovereignty may equally imply that
caution should be exercised before concluding that unstated
limitations on state power were intended by the Framers.
In the past, this Court has presumed that the States intended to
adopt policies of broad comity toward one another. But this
presumption reflected an understanding of state policy, rather than
a constitutional command. As this Court stated in
Bank of
Augusta v. Earle, 13 Pet. 519,
38 U. S.
590:
"The intimate union of these states, as members of the same
great political family; the deep and vital interests
Page 440 U. S. 426
which bind them so closely together; should lead us, in the
absence of proof to the contrary, to presume a greater degree of
comity, and friendship, and kindness towards one another, than we
should be authorized to presume between foreign nations. And when
(as without doubt must occasionally happen) the interest or policy
of any state requires it to restrict the rule, it has but to
declare its will, and the legal presumption is at once at an
end."
In this case, California has "declared its will"; it has adopted
as its policy full compensation in its courts for injuries on its
highways resulting from the negligence of others, whether those
others be residents or nonresidents, agents of the State, or
private citizens. Nothing in the Federal Constitution authorizes or
obligates this Court to frustrate that policy out of enforced
respect for the sovereignty of Nevada. [
Footnote 29]
In this Nation, each sovereign governs only with the consent of
the governed. The people of Nevada have consented to a system in
which their State is subject only to limited liability in tort. But
the people of California, who have had no voice in Nevada's
decision, have adopted a different system. Each of these decisions
is equally entitled to our respect.
It may be wise policy, as a matter of harmonious interstate
relations, for States to accord each other immunity or to respect
any established limits on liability. They are free to do so. But if
a federal court were to hold, by inference from the structure of
our Constitution and nothing else, that California is not free in
this case to enforce its policy of full compensation, that holding
would constitute the real intrusion
Page 440 U. S. 427
on the sovereignty of the States -- and the power of the people
-- in our Union.
The judgment of the California Court of Appeal is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Section 17451 of the Code provides:
"The acceptance by a nonresident of the rights and privileges
conferred upon him by this code or any operation by himself or
agent of a motor vehicle anywhere within this state, or in the
event the nonresident is the owner of a motor vehicle then by the
operation of the vehicle anywhere within this state by any person
with his express or implied permission, is equivalent to an
appointment by the nonresident of the director or his successor in
office to be his true and lawful attorney upon whom may be served
all lawful processes in any action or proceeding against the
nonresident operator or nonresident owner growing out of any
accident or collision resulting from the operation of any motor
vehicle anywhere within this state by himself or agent, which
appointment shall also be irrevocable and binding upon his executor
or administrator."
Cal.Veh.Code Ann. § 17451 (West 1971).
An administrator of the decedent's estate was appointed in
California and was served personally.
[
Footnote 2]
Nev.Rev.Stat. § 41.035(1) as it existed in 1968, found in
official edition, 1965 Nev.Stats., p. 1414 (later amended by 1968
Nev. Stats., p. 44, 1973 Nev.Stats., p. 1532, and 1977 Nev.Stats.
pp. 985, 1539):
"No award for damages in an action sounding in tort brought
under section 2 may exceed the sum of $25,000 to or for the benefit
of any claimant. No such award may include any amount as exemplary
or punitive damages or as interest prior to judgment."
Nev.Rev.Stat. § 41.031 (1977):
"1. The State of Nevada hereby waives its immunity from
liability and action and hereby consents to have its liability
determined in accordance with the same rules of law as are applied
to civil actions against natural persons and corporations, except
as otherwise provided in NRS 41.032 to 41.038, inclusive, and
subsection 3 of this section, if the claimant complies with the
limitations of NRS 41.032 to 41.036, inclusive, or the limitations
of the NRS 41.010. The State of Nevada further waives the immunity
from liability and action of all political subdivisions of the
state, and their liability shall be determined in the same manner,
except as otherwise provided in NRS 41.032 to 41.038, inclusive,
and subsection 3 of this section, if the claimant complies with the
limitations of NRS 41.032 to 41.036, inclusive."
"2. An action may be brought under this section, in a court of
competent jurisdiction of this state, against the State of Nevada,
any agency of the state, or any political subdivision of the state.
In an action against the state or any agency of the state, the
State of Nevada shall be named as defendant, and the summons and a
copy of the complaint shall be served upon the secretary of
state."
[
Footnote 3]
Article IV, § 1, provides :
"Full Faith and Credit shall be given in each State to the
public Acts, Records, and judicial Proceedings of every other
State. And the Congress may by general Laws prescribe the Manner in
which such Act, Records and Proceedings shall be proved, and the
Effect thereof."
[
Footnote 4]
The evidence indicated that respondent John Hall, a minor at the
time of the accident, sustained severe head injuries resulting in
permanent brain damage which left him severely retarded and unable
to care for himself, and that respondent Patricia Hall, his mother,
suffered severe physical and emotional injuries.
[
Footnote 5]
No one claims that any federal statute places any relevant
restriction on California's jurisdiction or lends any support to
Nevada's claim of immunity. If there is a federal rule that
restricts California's exercise of jurisdiction in this case, that
restriction must be a part of the United States Constitution.
[
Footnote 6]
See 1 F. Pollock & F. Maitland, History of English
Law 518 (2d ed. 1899) ("He can not be compelled to answer in his
own court, but this is true of every petty lord of every petty
manor; that there happens to be in this world no court above his
court is, we may say, an accident"); Engdahl, Immunity and
Accountability for Positive Governmental Wrongs, 44 U.Colo.L.Rev.
1, 2-5 (1972).
[
Footnote 7]
See 1 W. Blackstone, Commentaries *246 ("The king,
moreover, is not only incapable of doing wrong, but even of
thinking wrong; he can never mean to do an improper thing"). In
fact, however, effective mechanisms developed early in England to
redress injuries resulting from the wrongs of the King.
See Jaffe, Suits Against Governments and Officers:
Sovereign Immunity, 77 Harv.L.Rev. 1, 3-5 (1963).
[
Footnote 8]
The Declaration of Independence proclaims:
"[T]hat whenever any form of government becomes destructive of
these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish
it, and to institute new government . . . and such is now the
necessity which constrains them to alter their former systems of
government. The history of the present King of Great Britain is a
history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct
object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over these
states."
See generally B. Bailyn, The Ideological Origins of the
American Revolution 198-229 (1967).
[
Footnote 9]
See Chisholm v.
Georgia, 2 Dall. 419,
2 U. S. 472.
[
Footnote 10]
See Kawananakoa v. Polblank, 205 U.
S. 349,
205 U. S.
353.
[
Footnote 11]
The opinion describes the exemption of the person of the
sovereign from arrest or detention in a foreign territory, the
immunity allowed to foreign ministers, and the passage of troops
through a country with its permission. 7 Cranch at
11 U. S.
137-140.
[
Footnote 12]
Were it an independent sovereign, Nevada might choose to
withdraw its money from California banks, or to readjust its own
rules as to California's amenability to suit in the Nevada courts.
And it might refuse to allow this judgment to be enforced in its
courts. But it could not, absent California's consent and absent
whatever protection is conferred by the United States Constitution,
invoke any higher authority to enforce rules of interstate comity
and to stop California from asserting jurisdiction. For to do so
would be wholly at odds with the sovereignty of California.
[
Footnote 13]
Such a defense was sustained in 1929 by the Supreme Court of
North Dakota in
Paulus v. South Dakota, 58 N.D. 643,
647-649, 227 N.W. 52, 54-55. The States' practice of waiving
sovereign immunity in their own courts is a relatively recent
development; it was only last year, for example, that Pennsylvania
concluded that the defense would no longer be recognized, at least
in certain circumstances, in that State.
See Mayle v.
Pennsylvania Dept. of Highways, 479 Pa. 382,
388 A.2d
709 (1978); 1978 Pa.Laws, Act. No.1978-152, to be codified as
42 Pa.Cons.Stat. §§ 5101, 5110. But as States have begun to waive
their rights to immunity in their own courts, it was only to be
expected that the privilege of immunity afforded to other States as
a matter of comity would be subject to question.
Similarly, as concern for redress of individual injuries has
enhanced, so too have moves toward the reappraisal of the practices
of sovereign nations according absolute immunity to foreign
sovereigns. The governing rule today, in many nations, is one of
restrictive, rather than absolute, immunity.
See 2B
Dept.State Bull. 984 (1952); Note, The Jurisdictional Immunity of
Foreign Sovereigns, 63 Yale L.J. 1148 (1954); Martiniak,
Hall
v. Nevada: State Court Jurisdiction Over Sister States v.
American State Sovereign Immunity, 63 Calif.L.Rev. 1144, 1155-1157
(1975).
[
Footnote 14]
See generally C. Jacobs, The Eleventh Amendment and
Sovereign Immunity 1-40 (1972).
[
Footnote 15]
Article III provides, in relevant part:
"Section 1. The judicial Power of the United States, shall be
vested in one supreme Court, and in such inferior Courts as the
Congress may from time to time ordain and establish. . . ."
"Section 2. The judicial Power shall extend to all Cases, in Law
and Equity, arising under this Constitution, the Laws of the United
States, and Treaties made, or which shall be made, under their
Authority . . . to Controversies to which the United States shall
be a Party; -- to Controversies between two or more States; --
between a State and Citizens of another State; -- between Citizens
of different States; -- between Citizens of the same State claiming
Lands under Grants of different States, and between a State, or the
Citizens thereof, and foreign States, Citizens or Subjects."
[
Footnote 16]
The Federalist No. 81, p. 508 (H. Lodge ed.1908) (A. Hamilton)
("It is inherent in the nature of sovereignty not to be amenable to
the suit of an individual without its consent");
see 3 J.
Elliot, Debates on the Federal Constitution 555 (1876) (John
Marshall) ("I hope that no gentleman will think that a state will
be called at the bar of the federal court. . . . The intent is to
enable states to recover claims of individual residing in other
states. I contend this construction is warranted by the words").
Id. at 533 (James Madison).
[
Footnote 17]
See 2
id. at 491 (James Wilson) ("When a
citizen has a controversy with another state, there ought to be a
tribunal where both parties may stand on a just and equal
footing"); Jacobs,
supra, n 14, at 40 ("[T]he legislative history of the
Constitution hardly warrants the conclusion drawn by some that
there was a general understanding, at the time of ratification,
that the states would retain their sovereign immunity").
[
Footnote 18]
See Hans v. Louisiana, 134 U. S.
1,
134 U. S. 11;
Monaco v. Mississippi, 292 U. S. 313,
292 U. S.
325.
[
Footnote 19]
The Eleventh Amendment provides:
"The Judicial power of the United States shall not be construed
to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted
against one of the United States by Citizens of another State, or
by Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State."
Even as so limited, however, the Eleventh Amendment has not
accorded the States absolute sovereign immunity in federal court
actions. The States are subject to suit by both their sister States
and the United States.
See, e.g., North Dakota v.
Minnesota, 263 U. S. 365,
263 U. S. 372;
United States v. Mississippi, 380 U.
S. 128,
380 U. S.
140-141. Further, prospective injunctive and declaratory
relief is available against States in suits in federal court in
which state officials are the nominal defendants.
See Ex parte
Young, 209 U. S. 123;
Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U. S. 651.
See generally Baker, Federalism and the Eleventh
Amendment, 48 U.Colo.L.Rev. 139 (1977).
[
Footnote 20]
See, e.g., Hans v. Louisiana, supra, at
134 U. S. 18
("The state courts have no power to entertain suits by individuals
against a state without its consent. Then how does the Circuit
Court, having only concurrent jurisdiction, acquire any such
power?");
Monaco v. Mississippi, supra at
292 U. S.
322-323 ("There is also the postulate that States of the
Union, still possessing attributes of sovereignty, shall be immune
from suits, without their consent, save where there has been
a
surrender of this immunity in the plan of the
convention'").
[
Footnote 21]
Mr. Justice Stone concurred in the
Clapper decision,
expressing the view that the result was supported by the conflict
of laws rule that a New Hampshire court could be expected to apply
in this situation, and that it was unnecessary to rely on the
Constitution to support the Court's judgment. He also made it clear
that the rule of the case did not encompass an action in which the
source of the relationship was not a Vermont contract between a
Vermont employer and a Vermont employee. 286 U.S. at
286 U. S.
163-165.
[
Footnote 22]
See also Alaska Packers Assn. v. Industrial Accident
Comm'n, 294 U. S. 532;
Bonaparte v. Tax Court, 104 U. S. 592
(holding that a law exempting certain bonds of the enacting State
from taxation did not apply extraterritorially by virtue of the
Full Faith and Credit Clause).
[
Footnote 23]
Mr. Justice Stone who had concurred separately in
Clapper,
see n 21,
supra, wrote for the Court in
Pacific Insurance.
After distinguishing
Clapper, he limited its holding to
its facts:
"The
Clapper case cannot be said to have decided more
than that a state statute applicable to employer and employee
within the state, which, by its terms, provides compensation for
the employee if he is injured in the course of his employment while
temporarily in another state, will be given full faith and credit
in the latter when not obnoxious to its policy."
306 U.S. at
306 U. S.
504.
[
Footnote 24]
California's exercise of jurisdiction in this case poses no
substantial threat to our constitutional system of cooperative
federalism. Suits involving traffic accidents occurring outside of
Nevada could hardly interfere with Nevada's capacity to fulfill its
own sovereign responsibilities. We have no occasion, in this case,
to consider whether different state policies, either of California
or of Nevada, might require a different analysis or a different
result.
[
Footnote 25]
See U.S.Const., Art. I, § 8.
[
Footnote 26]
Art. IV, § 2
[
Footnote 27]
Ibid.
[
Footnote 28]
The Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution
provides:
"The powers not delegated to the United States by the
Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to
the States respectively, or to the people."
[
Footnote 29]
Cf. Georgia v. Chattanooga, 264 U.
S. 472,
264 U. S. 480
("Land acquired by one State in another State is held subject to
the laws of the latter and to all the incidents of private
ownership. The proprietary right of the owning State does not
restrict or modify the power of eminent domain of the State wherein
the land is situated").
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR.
JUSTICE REHNQUIST join, dissenting.
The Court, in a plausible opinion, holds that the State of
Nevada is subject to an unconsented suit in a California state
court for damages in tort. This result at first glance does not
seem too unreasonable. One might well ask why Nevada, even though
it is a State, and even though it has not given its consent, should
not be responsible for the wrong its servant perpetrated on a
California highway. And one might also inquire how it is that, if
no provision of our national Constitution specifically prevents the
nonimmunity result, these tort action plaintiffs could be denied
their judgment.
But the Court paints with a very broad brush, and I am troubled
by the implications of its holding. Despite a fragile footnote
disclaimer,
ante at
440 U. S. 424
n. 24, the Court's basic and undeniable ruling is that what we have
always thought of as a "sovereign State" is now to be treated in
the courts of a sister State, once jurisdiction is obtained, just
as any other litigant. I fear the ultimate consequences of that
holding, and I suspect that the Court has opened the door to
avenues of liability and interstate retaliation that will prove
unsettling and upsetting for our federal system. Accordingly, I
dissent.
It is important to note that, at the time of the Constitutional
Convention, as the Court concedes, there was "widespread acceptance
of the view that a sovereign State is never amenable to suit
without its consent."
Ante at
440 U. S. 420.
The Court also acknowledges that "the notion that immunity from
suit is an attribute of sovereignty is reflected in our cases."
Ante at
440 U. S. 415.
Despite these concessions, the Court holds that the sovereign
immunity doctrine is a mere matter of "comity"
Page 440 U. S. 428
which a State is free to reject whenever its "policy" so
dictates.
Ante at
440 U. S. 426.
There is no limit to the breadth of the Court's rationale, which
goes beyond the approach taken by the California Court of Appeal in
this case. That court theorized that Nevada was not "sovereign" for
purposes of this case, because sovereignty ended at the
California-Nevada line:
"'When the sister state enters into activities in this state, it
is not exercising sovereign power over the citizens of this state
and is not entitled to the benefits of the sovereign immunity
doctrine as to those activities unless this state has conferred
immunity by law or as a matter of comity.'"
Hall v. University of Nevada, 74 Cal.App 3d 280, 284,
141 Cal. Rptr. 439, 441 (1977), quoting
Hall v. University of
Nevada, 8 Cal. 3d 522,
524, 503 P.2d 1363, 1364 (1972),
cert. denied, 414 U.S.
820 (1973). The California court, in other words, recognized that
sovereign States are immune from unconsented suit; it held only
that this rule failed in its application on the facts because
Nevada was not a "sovereign" when its agent entered California and
committed a tort there. Indeed, the court said flatly that
"
state sovereignty ends at the state boundary,'" 74 Cal. App.
3d at 284, 141 Cal. Rptr. at 441, again quoting Hall, 8
Cal. 3d at 525, 503 P.2d at 1365.
That reasoning finds no place in this Court's opinion. Rather,
the Court assumes that Nevada is "sovereign," but then concludes
that the sovereign immunity doctrine has no constitutional source.
Thus, it says, California can abolish the doctrine at will. By this
reasoning, Nevada's amenability to suit in California is not
conditioned on its agent's having committed a tortious act in
California. Since the Court finds no constitutional source for the
sovereign immunity doctrine, California, so far as the Federal
Constitution is concerned, is able and free to treat Nevada, and
any other State, just as it would treat any other litigant. The
Court's theory means that State A constitutionally can be sued by
an individual in
Page 440 U. S. 429
the courts of State B on any cause of action, provided only that
the plaintiff in State B obtains jurisdiction over State A
consistently with the Due Process Clause.
The Court, by its footnote 24,
ante at
440 U. S. 424,
purports to confine its holding to traffic accident torts committed
outside the defendant State, and perhaps even to traffic
"policies." Such facts, however, play absolutely no part in the
reasoning by which the Court reaches its conclusion. The Court says
merely that
"California has 'declared its will;' it has adopted as its
policy full compensation in its courts for injuries on its
highways. . . . Nothing in the Federal Constitution authorizes or
obligates this Court to frustrate that policy."
Ante at
440 U. S. 426.
There is no suggestion in this language that, if California had
adopted some other policy in some other area of the law, the result
would be any different. If, indeed, there is "[n]othing in the
Federal Constitution" that allows frustration of California's
policy, it is hard to see just how the Court could use a different
analysis or reach a different result in a different case.
The Court's expansive logic and broad holding -- that, so far as
the Constitution is concerned, State A can be sued in State B on
the same terms any other litigant can be sued -- will place severe
strains on our system of cooperative federalism. States in all
likelihood will retaliate against one another for respectively
abolishing the "sovereign immunity" doctrine. States' legal
officers will be required to defend suits in all other States.
States probably will decide to modify their tax collection and
revenue systems in order to avoid the collection of judgments. In
this very case, for example, Nevada evidently maintains cash
balances in California banks to facilitate the collection of sales
taxes from California corporations doing business in Nevada. Pet.
for Cert. 5. Under the Court's decision, Nevada will have strong
incentive to withdraw those balances and place them in Nevada banks
so as to insulate itself from California judgments. If
respondents
Page 440 U. S. 430
were forced to seek satisfaction of their judgment in Nevada,
that State, of course, might endeavor to refuse to enforce that
judgment, or enforce it only on Nevada's terms. The Court's
decision, thus, may force radical changes in the way States do
business with one another, and it imposes, as well, financial and
administrative burdens on the States themselves. I must agree with
the Court that, if the judgment of the California Court of Appeal
is to be reversed, a constitutional source for Nevada's sovereign
immunity must be found. I would find that source not in an express
provision of the Constitution but in a guarantee that is implied as
an essential component of federalism. The Court has had no
difficulty in implying the guarantee of freedom of association in
the First Amendment,
NAACP v. Button, 371 U.
S. 415,
371 U. S.
430-431 (1963);
Kusper v. Pontikes,
414 U. S. 51,
414 U. S. 56-57
(1973), and it has had no difficulty in implying a right of
interstate travel,
Shapiro v. Thompson, 394 U.
S. 618 (1969);
United States v. Guest,
383 U. S. 745
(1966). In the latter case, the Court observed,
id. at
383 U. S. 757:
"The constitutional right to travel from one State to another . . .
occupies a position fundamental to the concept of our Federal
Union." And although the right of interstate travel "finds no
explicit mention in the Constitution," the reason,
"it has been suggested, is that a right so elementary was
conceived from the beginning to be a necessary concomitant of the
stronger Union the Constitution created."
Id. at
383 U. S. 758.
Accordingly, the Court acknowledged the existence of this
constitutional right without finding it necessary "to ascribe the
source of this right . . . to a particular constitutional
provision."
Shapiro v. Thompson, 394 U.S. at
394 U. S. 630.
I have no difficulty in accepting the same argument for the
existence of a constitutional doctrine of interstate sovereign
immunity. The Court's acknowledgment, referred to above, that the
Framers must have assumed that States were immune
Page 440 U. S. 431
from suit in the courts of their sister States lends substantial
support. The only reason why this immunity did not receive specific
mention is that it was too obvious to deserve mention. The prompt
passage of the Eleventh Amendment nullifying the decision in
Chisholm v.
Georgia, 2 Dall. 419 (1793), is surely significant.
If the Framers were indeed concerned lest the States be haled
before the federal courts -- as the courts of a "
higher'
sovereign," ante at 440 U. S. 418
-- how much more must they have reprehended the notion of a State's
being haled before the courts of a sister State. The concept of
sovereign immunity prevailed at the time of the Constitutional
Convention. It is, for me, sufficiently fundamental to our federal
structure to have implicit constitutional dimension. Indeed, if the
Court means what it implies in its footnote 24 -- that some state policies might require a
different result -- it must be suggesting that there are some
federalism constraints on a State's amenability to suit in the
courts of another State If that is so, the only question is
whether the facts of this case are sufficient to call the implicit
constitutional right of sovereign immunity into play here. I would
answer that question in the affirmative.
Finally, it strikes me as somewhat curious that the Court
relegates to a passing footnote reference what apparently is the
only other appellate litigation in which the precise question
presented here was considered, and, indeed, in which the Court's
result was rejected.
Paulus v. South Dakota, 52 N.D. 84,
201 N.W. 867 (1924);
Paulus v. South Dakota, 58 N.D. 643,
227 N.W. 52 (1929). The plaintiff there was injured in a coal mine
operated in North Dakota by the State of South Dakota. He sued
South Dakota in a North Dakota state court. The Supreme Court of
North Dakota rejected the plaintiff's contention that South Dakota
"discards its sovereignty when it crosses the boundary line." 52
N.D. at 92, 201 N.W. at 870. It held that South Dakota was immune
from suit in the North Dakota courts;
Page 440 U. S. 432
"Therefore, in the absence of allegations as to the law of the
sister state showing a consent to be sued, the courts of this state
must necessarily regard a sovereign sister state as immune to the
same extent that this state would be immune in the absence of a
consenting statute."
58 N.D. at 647, 227 N.W. at 54. The court noted that, under the
Eleventh Amendment, no State could be sued in federal court by a
citizen of another State. "Much less," the court reasoned,
"would it be consistent with any sound conception of sovereignty
that a state might be haled into the courts of a sister sovereign
state at the will or behest of citizens or residents of the
latter."
Id. at 649, 227 N.W. at 55. The Supreme Court of
California purported to distinguish
Paulus (citing only
the first opinion in that litigation) on the ground that "the
plaintiff was a citizen of South Dakota."
Hall v. University of
Nevada, 8 Cal. 3d at 525, 503 P.2d at 1365. That court,
however, made no reference to the Supreme Court of North Dakota's
second opinion, and thus passed over the fact that the plaintiff
had amended his complaint to allege that he was a resident of North
Dakota. The North Dakota Supreme Court then held that that fact "in
nowise alter[ed]" its view of the immunity issue. 58 N.D. at 648,
227 N.W. at 54. Thus, the only authority that has been cited to us
or that we have found is directly opposed to the Court's
conclusion.
I would reverse the judgment of the California Court of Appeal,
and remit the plaintiffs-respondents to those remedies prescribed
by the statutes of Nevada.
MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE joins,
dissenting
Like my Brother BLACKMUN, I cannot agree with the majority that
there is no constitutional source for the sovereign immunity
asserted in this case by the State of Nevada. I think the Court's
decision today works a fundamental readjustment of interstate
relationships which is impossible to
Page 440 U. S. 433
reconcile not only with an "assumption" this and other courts
have entertained for almost 200 years, but also with express
holdings of this Court and the logic of the constitutional plan
itself.
Any document -- particularly a constitution -- is built on
certain postulates or assumptions; it draws on shared experience
and common understanding. On a certain level, that observation is
obvious. Concepts such as "State" and "Bill of Attainder" are not
defined in the Constitution, and demand external referents. But on
a more subtle plane, when the Constitution is ambiguous or silent
on a particular issue, this Court has often relied on notions of a
constitutional plan -- the implicit ordering of relationships
within the federal system necessary to make the Constitution a
workable governing charter and to give each provision within that
document the full effect intended by the Framers. The tacit
postulates yielded by that ordering are as much engrained in the
fabric of the document as its express provisions, because, without
them, the Constitution is denied force, and often meaning.
[
Footnote 2/1] Thus, in
McCulloch v.
Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316 (1819), Mr. Chief Justice
Marshall, writing for the Court, invalidated a state tax on a
federal instrumentality even though no express provision for
intergovernmental tax immunity can be found in
Page 440 U. S. 434
the Constitution. He relied on the notion that the power to tax
is the power to destroy, and that to concede the States such a
power would place at their mercy the Constitution's affirmative
grants of authority to the Federal Government -- a result the
Framers could not have intended. More recently, this Court
invalidated a federal minimum wage for state employees on the
ground that it threatened the States' "
ability to function
effectively in a federal system.'" National League of Cities v.
Usery, 426 U. S. 833,
426 U. S. 852
(1976), quoting Fry v. United States, 421 U.
S. 542, 421 U. S. 547
n. 7 (1975). The Court's literalism, therefore, cannot be
dispositive here, and we must examine further the understanding of
the Framers and the consequent doctrinal evolution of concepts of
state sovereignty. Article III, like virtually every other Article
of the Constitution, was inspired by the experience under the
Articles of Confederation. To speak of the "judicial Power" of the
United States under the Articles of Confederation is to invite
charges of pretense, for there was very little latitude for federal
resolution of disputes. The Confederation Congress could create
prize courts and courts for the adjudication of "high seas" crimes.
It could set up ad hoc and essentially powerless tribunals
to consider controversies between States and between individuals
who claimed lands under the grants of different States. [Footnote 2/2] But with respect to all other
disputes of interstate or international significance, the litigants
were left to the state courts and to the provincialism that proved
the bane of this country's earliest attempt at political
organization. One obvious attribute of Art. III in light of the
Confederation experience was the potential for a system of neutral
forums for the settlement of disputes between States and citizens
of different States. The theme recurs throughout the
Page 440 U. S. 435
ratification debates. For example, during the debates in North
Carolina, William Davie, a member of the Constitutional Convention,
observed:
"It has been equally ceded, by the strongest opposers to this
government, that the federal courts should have cognizance of
controversies between two or more states, between a state and the
citizens of another state, and between the citizens of the same
state claiming lands under the grant of different states. Its
jurisdiction in these cases is necessary to secure impartiality in
decisions, and preserve tranquility among the states. It is
impossible that there should be impartiality when a party affected
is to be judge."
"The security of impartiality is the principal reason for giving
up the ultimate decision of controversies between citizens of
different states."
4 J. Elliot, Debates on the Federal Constitution 159 (1876)
(hereinafter Elliot's Debates) .
As the Court observes, the matter of sovereign immunity was
indeed a subject of great importance in the early days of the
Republic. In fact, it received considerable attention in the years
immediately preceding the Constitutional Convention. In 1781, a
citizen of Pennsylvania brought suit in the Pennsylvania courts in
an effort to attach property belonging to Virginia that was located
in Philadelphia Harbor. The case raised such concerns throughout
the States that the Virginia delegation to the Confederation
Congress sought the suppression of the attachment order. The
Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas ultimately held that, by virtue
of its sovereign immunity, Virginia was immune from the processes
of Pennsylvania.
Nathan v. Virginia, 1 Dall. 77
(1781).
That experience undoubtedly left an impression -- particularly
on Virginians -- and throughout the debates on the Constitution,
fears were expressed that extending the judicial power of the
United States to controversies "between a state
Page 440 U. S. 436
and citizens of another state" would abrogate the States'
sovereign immunity. James Madison an John Marshall repeatedly
assured opponents of the Constitution, such as Patrick Henry, that
the sovereign immunity of the States was secure. [
Footnote 2/3] Alexander Hamilton, as Publius,
wrote:
"It is inherent in the nature of sovereignty not to be amenable
to the suit of an individual
without its consent. This is
the general sense and the general practice of mankind; and the
exemption, as one of the attributes of sovereignty, is now enjoyed
by the government of every State in the union. Unless, therefore,
there is a surrender of this immunity in the plan of the
convention, it will remain with the States, and the danger
intimated must be merely ideal."
The Federalist No. 81, p. 508 (H. Lodge ed.1908) (emphasis in
original).
In
Chisholm v.
Georgia, 2 Dall. 419 (1793), this Court
Page 440 U. S. 437
disagreed with the Madison-Marshall-Hamilton triumvirate, and
its judgment was, in turn, overruled by the Eleventh Amendment.
[
Footnote 2/4] By its terms, that
Amendment only deprives federal courts of jurisdiction where a
State is haled into court by citizens of another State or of a
foreign country. Yet it is equally clear that the States that
ratified the Eleventh Amendment thought that they were putting an
end to the possibility of individual States as unconsenting
defendants in foreign jurisdictions, for, as MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN
notes, they would have otherwise perversely foreclosed the neutral
federal forums, only to be left to defend suits in the courts of
other States. The Eleventh Amendment is thus built on the postulate
that States are not, absent their consent, amenable to suit in the
courts of sister States.
This, I think, explains why this Court, on a number of
occasions, has indicated that unconsenting States are not subject
to the jurisdiction of the courts of other States. In
Beers v.
Arkansas, 20 How. 527,
61 U. S. 529
(158), Mr. Chief Justice Taney observed in an opinion for the Court
that it
"is an established principle of jurisprudence in all civilized
nations that the sovereign cannot be sued in its own courts, or in
any other, without its consent and permission."
Some 25 years later, Mr. Justice Miller, again for the Court,
was even more explicit:
"It may be accepted as a point of departure unquestioned that
neither a State nor the United States can be sued as defendant in
any court in this country without their consent, except in the
limited class of cases in which a State may be made a party in the
Supreme Court of the United States by virtue of the original
jurisdiction conferred on this court by the Constitution."
"This principle is conceded in all the cases, and whenever it
can be clearly seen that the State is an indispensable
Page 440 U. S. 438
party to enable the court, according to the rules which govern
its procedure, to grant the relief sought, it will refuse to take
jurisdiction."
Cunningham v. Macon & Brunswick R. Co.,
109 U. S. 446,
109 U. S. 451
(1883). The most recent statement by this Court on the topic
appears to be that authored by Mr. Justice Black in
Western
Union Telegraph Co. v. Pennsylvania, 368 U. S.
71 (1961), which held that Western Union's due process
rights would be violated if Pennsylvania escheated Western Union's
unclaimed money orders. The Court found that conclusion compelled
by Pennsylvania's inability to provide Western Union with a forum
where all claims, including those of other States, could be
resolved. The Court noted that "[i]t is plain that Pennsylvania
courts, with no power to bring other States before them, cannot
give such hearings."
Id. at
368 U. S.
80.
When the State's constitutional right to sovereign immunity has
been described, it has been in expansive terms. In
Great
Northern Insurance Co. v. Read, 322 U. S.
47,
322 U. S. 51
(1944), the Court stated:
"Efforts to force, through suits against officials, performance
of promises by a state collide directly with the necessity that a
sovereign must be free from judicial compulsion in the carrying out
of its policies within the limits of the Constitution. . . . A
state's
freedom from litigation was established as a
constitutional right through the Eleventh Amendment."
(Emphasis added.) Although Mr. Justice Frankfurter disagreed
with the
Great Northern Insurance Co. majority on the
issue of consent, he was in complete agreement on the broad nature
of the right.
"The Eleventh Amendment has put state immunity from suit into
the Constitution. Therefore, it is not in the power of individuals
to bring any State into court -- the State's or that of the United
State,, except with its consent."
Id. at
322 U. S. 59
(dissenting opinion).
Page 440 U. S. 439
Presumably, the Court today dismisses all of this as dicta. Yet
these statements -- far better than the Court's literalism --
comport with the general approach to sovereign immunity questions
evinced in this Court's prior cases. Those cases have consistently
recognized that Art. III and the Eleventh Amendment are built on
important concepts of sovereignty that do not find expression in
the literal terms of those provisions, but which are of
constitutional dimension because their derogation would undermine
the logic of the constitutional scheme. In
Hans v.
Louisiana, 134 U. S. 1 (1890),
the Eleventh Amendment was found to bar federal court suits against
a State brought by its own citizens, despite the lack of any
reference to such suits in the Amendment itself. The Court found
this limit on the judicial power in the "established order of
things" -- an order that eschewed the
"anomalous result that, in cases arising under the Constitution
or laws of the United States, a State may be sued in the federal
courts by its own citizens, though it cannot be sued for a like
cause of action by the citizens of other States or of a foreign
state, and may be thus sued in the federal courts although not
allowing itself to be sued in its own courts."
Id. at
134 U. S. 10,
134 U. S. 14. The
anomaly lay in the availability of the neutral forum in cases where
there was some political check on parochialism -- suits against a
State by its own citizens -- and its unavailability in situations
where concerns of a biased tribunal were most acute -- suits
against a State by citizens of another State. The
Hans
Court, speaking through Mr. Justice Bradley, concluded:
"It is not necessary that we should enter upon an examination of
the reason or expediency of the rule which exempts a sovereign
State from prosecution in a court of justice at the suit of
individuals. . . . It is enough for us to declare its existence.
The legislative department of a State represents its polity and its
will, and is called upon by the highest demands of natural and
political law to preserve justice and judgment, and to
Page 440 U. S. 440
hold inviolate the public obligations. Any departure from this
rule, except for reasons most cogent (of which the legislature, and
not the courts, is the judge), never fails in the end to incur the
odium of the world and to bring lasting injury upon the State
itself. But to deprive the legislature of the power of judging what
the honor and safety of the State may require, even at the expense
of a temporary failure to discharge the public debts, would be
attended with greater evils than such failure can cause."
Id. at
134 U. S. 21.
Similarly, in
Monaco v. Mississippi, 292 U.
S. 313 (1934), this Court relied on precepts underlying,
but not explicit, in Art. III and the Eleventh Amendment to
conclude that this Court was without jurisdiction to entertain a
suit brought by the Principality of Monaco against the State of
Mississippi for payment on bonds issued by the State. On its face,
Art. III would suggest that such a suit could be entertained, and
such actions are not addressed by the terms of the Eleventh
Amendment. But Mr. Chief Justice Hughes, in
Monaco, did
not so limit his analysis, and held that the Court could not
entertain the suit without Mississippi's consent.
"Manifestly, we cannot rest with a mere literal application of
the words of § 2 of Article III, or assume that the letter of the
Eleventh Amendment exhausts the restrictions upon suits against
nonconsenting States.
Behind the words of the constitutional
provisions are postulates which limit and control. There is
the essential postulate that the controversies, as contemplated,
shall be found to be of a justiciable character. There is also the
postulate that States of the Union, still possessing attributes of
sovereignty, shall be immune from suits, without their consent,
save where there has been 'a surrender of this immunity in the plan
of the convention.' The Federalist No. 81. The question is whether
the plan of the Constitution involves the surrender of immunity
Page 440 U. S. 441
when the suit is brought against a State, without her consent,
by a foreign State."
Id. at
292 U. S.
322-323 (emphasis added). [
Footnote 2/5]
Likewise, I think here the Court should have been sensitive to
the constitutional plan and avoided a result that destroys the
logic of the Framers' careful allocation of responsibility among
the state and federal judiciaries, and makes nonsense of the effort
embodied in the Eleventh Amendment to preserve the doctrine of
sovereign immunity. MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN's references to the "right
to travel" cases is most telling. In the first such case,
Crandall v.
Nevada, 6 Wall. 35 (1868), the Court invalidated a
Nevada head tax on exit from the State, relying in large part on
McCulloch v.
Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316 (1819). The essential logic
of the opinion is that to admit such power would be to concede to
the States the ability to frustrate the exercise of authority
delegated to the Federal Government -- for example, the power to
transport armies and to maintain postal services. There is also the
theme that the power to obstruct totally the movements of people is
incompatible with the concept of one Nation. The Court admitted
that "no express provision of the Constitution" addressed the
problem, 6 Wall. at
73 U. S. 48, but
it concluded that the constitutional framework demanded that the
tax be proscribed lest it sap the logic and vitality of the express
provisions. [
Footnote 2/6]
Page 440 U. S. 442
The incompatibility of the majority's position in this case with
the constitutional plan is even more apparent than that in
Crandall. I would venture to say that it is much more
apparent than the incompatibility of the one-year residency
requirement imposed on Thompson as a precondition to receipt of
AFDC benefits. [
Footnote 2/7]
Despite the historical justification of federal courts as neutral
forums, now suits against unconsenting States by citizens of
different States can only be brought in the courts of other States.
That result is achieved because, in the effort to "protect" the
sovereignty of individual States, state legislators had the lack of
foresight to ratify the Eleventh Amendment. The State cannot even
remove the action to federal court, because it is not a citizen for
purposes of diversity jurisdiction.
Moor v. County of
Alameda, 411 U. S. 693,
411 U. S. 717
(1973);
Postal Telegraph Cable Co. v. Alabama,
155 U. S. 482,
155 U. S. 487
(1894). Ironically, and I think wrongly, the Court transforms what
it described as a constitutional right in
Edelman v.
Jordan, 415 U. S. 651,
415 U. S. 673
(1974), and
Great Northern Insurance Co. v. Read,
322 U. S. 47
(1944), into an albatross.
I join my Brother BLACKMUN's doubts about
footnote 24 of the majority opinion Where will
the Court find its principles of "cooperative federalism"? Despite
the historical justification of federal courts as neutral forums,
despite an understanding shared by the Framers and, for close to
200 years, expounded by some of the most respected Members of this
Court, and despite the fact that it is the operative postulate that
makes sense of the Eleventh Amendment, the Court concludes that the
rule that an unconsenting State is not subject to the jurisdiction
of the courts of a different State finds no support "explicit or
implicit" in the Constitution.
Ante at
440 U. S. 421.
If this clear guidance is not enough, I do not see how the Court's
suggestion that limits on state court jurisdiction may be found in
principles of "cooperative federalism" can be taken
Page 440 U. S. 443
seriously. Yet, given the ingenuity of our profession, pressure
for such limits will inevitably increase. Having shunned the
obvious, the Court is truly adrift on uncharted waters; the
ultimate balance struck in the name of "cooperative federalism" can
be only a series of unsatisfactory bailing operations in fact.
I am also concerned about the practical implications of this
decision. The federal system as expressed in the Constitution --
with the exception of representation in the House -- is built on
notions of state parity. No system is truly federal otherwise. This
decision cannot help but induce some "Balkanization" in state
relationships as States try to isolate assets from foreign
judgments and generally reduce their contacts with other
jurisdictions. That will work to the detriment of smaller States --
like Nevada -- who are more dependent on the facilities of a
dominant neighbor -- in this case, California.
The problem of enforcement of a judgment against a State creates
a host of additional difficulties. Assuming Nevada has no seizable
assets in California, can the plaintiff obtain enforcement of
California's judgment in Nevada courts? Can Nevada refuse to give
the California judgment "full faith and credit" because it is
against state policy? Can Nevada challenge the seizure of its
assets by California in this Court? If not, are the States
relegated to the choice between the gamesmanship and tests of
strength that characterize international disputes, on the one hand,
and the midnight seizure of assets associated with private debt
collection, on the other?
I think the Framers and our predecessors on this Court expressed
the appropriate limits on the doctrine of state sovereign immunity.
Since the California judgment under review transgresses those
limits, I respectfully dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Mr. Chief Justice Marshall captured this idea in
McCulloch v.
Maryland, 4 Wheat. 316,
17 U. S. 407
(1819):
"A constitution, to contain an accurate detail of all the
subdivisions of which its great powers will admit, and of all the
means by which they may be carried into execution, would partake of
the prolixity of a legal code, and could scarcely be embraced by
the human mind. It would probably never be understood by the
public. Its nature, therefore, requires, that only its great
outlines should be marked, its important objects designated, and
the minor ingredients which compose those objects be deduced from
the nature of the objects themselves."
This was the preface to the famous line: "In considering this
question, then, we must never forget, that it is
a
constitution we are expounding."
Ibid. (Emphasis in
original.)
[
Footnote 2/2]
J. Goebel, History of the Supreme Court of the United States:
Antecedents and Beginnings to 1801, pp. 143-195 (O. W. Holmes
Devise History 1971); C. Jacobs, The Eleventh Amendment and
Sovereign Immunity 9 (1972).
[
Footnote 2/3]
3 Elliot's Debates 533 (James Madison):
"[Federal court] jurisdiction in controversies between a state
and citizens of another state is much objected to, and perhaps
without reason. It is not in the power of individuals to call any
state into court. The only operation it can have is that, if a
state should wish to bring a suit against a citizen, it must be
brought before the federal court."
Id. at 555-556 (John Marshall):
"It is not rational to suppose that the sovereign power should
be dragged before a court. The intent is to enable states to
recover claims of individuals residing in other states. I contend
this construction is warranted by the words. But, say they, there
will be partiality in it if a state cannot be defendant -- if an
individual cannot proceed to obtain judgment against a state,
though he may be sued by a state. It is necessary to be so, and
cannot be avoided."
Although there were those other than opponents of the
Constitution who suggested that Art. III was an abrogation of state
sovereign immunity -- Edmund Randolph and James Wilson being the
most eminent -- this Court has consistently taken the views of
Madison, Marshall, and Hamilton as capturing the true intent of the
Framers.
See Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U.
S. 651,
415 U. S.
660-662, n. 9 (1974);
Monaco v. Mississippi,
292 U. S. 313,
292 U. S.
323-330 (1934);
Hans v. Louisiana, 134 U. S.
1,
134 U. S. 12-15
(1890).
[
Footnote 2/4]
The adverse reaction to
Chisholm was immediate,
widespread, and vociferous. 1 Goebel,
supra, 440
U.S. 410fn2/2|>n. 2, at 734-741.
[
Footnote 2/5]
These cases do not exhaust the contexts in which this Court has
invoked the constitutional plan to find a State was not amenable to
an unconsented suit despite the absence of express protection in
the Constitution.
See, e.g., Ex parte New York,
256 U. S. 490
(1921) (admiralty cases);
Smith v. Reeves, 178 U.
S. 436 (1900) (suits by federal corporations).
[
Footnote 2/6]
The Court appealed to the logic and structure of the
constitutional scheme because the case was decided before
ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, and therefore the Court
could not avail itself of the flexible analytical "tools" provided
by the Equal Protection Clause and the Due Process Clause.
[
Footnote 2/7]
Shapiro v. Thompson, 394 U. S. 618
(1969).