A stockholder in a corporation has a remedy in chancery against
the directors, to prevent them from doing acts which would amount
to a violation of the charter or to prevent any misapplication of
their capital or profits which might lessen the value of the
shares, if the acts intended to be done amount to what is called in
law a breach of trust or duty.
So also a stockholder has a remedy against individuals, in
whatever character they profess to act, if the subject of complaint
is an imputed violation of a corporate franchise or the denial of a
right growing out of it for which there is not an adequate remedy
at law.
Therefore where the directors of a bank refused to take the
proper measures to resist the collection of a tax which they
themselves believed to have been imposed upon them in violation of
their charter, this refusal amounted to what is termed in law a
breach of trust, a stockholder had a right to file a bill in
chancery asking for such a remedy as the case might require.
If the stockholder be a resident of another state than that in
which the bank and persons attempting to violate its charter or
commit a breach of trust or duty have their domicile, he may file
his bill in the courts of the United States. He has this right
under the Constitution and laws of the United States.
The rights and duties of this Court examined and explained as an
ultimate tribunal to determine whether laws enacted by Congress, or
by state legislatures or decisions of state courts are in conflict
with the Constitution of the United States.
Where the State of Ohio chartered a bank in 1845, in which
charter was stipulated the amount of tax which the bank should pay,
in lieu of all taxes to which said company or the stockholders
thereof, on account of stock owned therein, would otherwise be
subject; and in 1852, the legislature passed an act levying taxes
upon the bank to a greater amount and founded upon a different
principle. This act is in conflict with the Constitution of the
United States, as impairing the obligation of a contract, and
therefore void.
The fact, that the people of the state had, in 1851, adopted a
new constitution, in which it was declared that taxes should be
imposed upon banks in the mode which the act of 1852 purported to
carry out, cannot release the state from the obligations and duties
imposed -- upon it by the Constitution of the United States.
The case of
Piqua Branch of the State Bank
of Ohio v. Knoop, 16 How. 369, again affirmed.
The circumstances of the case are fully stated in the opinion of
the Court.
Page 59 U. S. 336
MR. JUSTICE WAYNE delivered the opinion of the Court.
It must often happen under such a government as that of the
United States that constitutional questions will be brought to this
Court for decision demanding extended investigation and its most
careful judgment.
This is one of that kind, but fortunately it involves no new
principles nor any assertion of judicial action which has not been
repeatedly declared to be within the constitutional and legislative
jurisdiction of the courts of the United States and by way of
appeal or by writ of error, as the case may be, within that of the
Supreme Court.
It is a suit in chancery which was brought by John M. Woolsey,
in the
Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Ohio,
seeking to enjoin the collection of a tax assessed by the State of
Ohio on the Commercial Branch Bank of Cleveland, a branch of the
State Bank of Ohio. He makes George C. Dodge, the tax collector,
the directors of the bank, and the bank itself defendants.
Woolsey avers that he is a citizen of the State of Connecticut,
that he is the owner of thirty shares in the Branch Bank of
Cleveland, that Dodge and the other defendants are all citizens of
the State of Ohio, and that the Commercial Bank of Cleveland, is a
corporation, and was made such as a branch of the State Bank of
Ohio by an act of the general assembly of that state passed the
24th of February, 1845, entitled "An act to incorporate the State
Bank of Ohio and other banking companies." He alleges that the
Commercial Bank has in all things complied with the requirements of
its charter, and that, by the
Page 59 U. S. 337
60th section of the act, it is declared that each banking
company organized under it and complying with its provisions,
shall, semiannually, on the 1st of May and 1st of November of each
year, those being the days for declaring dividends, set off to the
State of Ohio six percent on the profits, deducting therefrom the
expenses and ascertained losses of the company, for six months next
preceding each dividend day; and that the sums so set off shall be
in lieu of all taxes to which said company, or the stockholders
thereof, on account of stock owned therein, would otherwise be
subject; and that the cashier of such company shall, within ten
days thereafter, inform the auditor of the State of Ohio of the
amount set off, and shall pay the same to the treasurer of the
state on the order of the auditor.
It is averred that the Bank of Cleveland had at all times
complied with the requirements of the act. That, in the year 1853,
it set off to the state six percent on the two semiannual dividends
which had been made in that year, on the first day of May and the
first day of November, which amounted in the aggregate to the sum
of $3,206 65/100. That the same had been notified to the auditor,
and that the bank had always been ready to pay the same when
demanded. The complainant then avers that three years before
bringing his suit, having full confidence that the State of Ohio
would observe good faith towards the bank, in respect to its
franchises and privileges conferred upon it by the act of
incorporation, and that it would adhere with fidelity to the rule
of taxation provided for in the charter, he had purchased thirty
shares of the capital stock of the bank, and that he was then the
owner of the same. He further states, after he had made such
purchases, that on the 17th of June, 1851, a draft of a new
constitution had been submitted to the electors of the state for
their acceptance or rejection, which, if accepted by a majority of
the electors who should vote, was to take effect as the
Constitution of the state, on the 1st of September, 1851. It is
admitted that it was accepted, that it became and now is the
Constitution of the State of Ohio. It is provided in sections two
and three of the 12th article of that constitution, that laws shall
be passed, taxing by an uniform rule, all moneys, credits,
investments in bonds, stock, joint stock companies, or otherwise;
and that the general assembly shall provide by law for taxing the
notes and bills discounted or purchased, money loaned, and all
other property, effects, or dues whatever, without deduction, of
all banks now existing, or hereafter created, and of all bankers,
so that all property employed in banking shall always bear a burden
of taxation equal to that imposed on the property of individuals.
And in the 4th section of the 13th article of the Constitution of
1851, it is further declared
Page 59 U. S. 338
that the property of corporations now existing, or hereafter
created, shall be subject to taxation, as the property of
individuals.
It appears also by the bill, that the General Assembly of the
State of Ohio passed an act on the 13th of April, 1852, for the
assessment and taxation of all property in the state, and for
levying taxes on the same according to its true value in money, in
which it is declared to be the duty of the president and cashier of
every bank, or banking company,
"that shall have been, or may hereafter be, incorporated by the
laws of the state, and having the right to issue bills for
circulation as money, to make and return, under oath, to the
auditor of the county in which such banks may be, in the month of
May, annually, a written statement containing, first, the average
amount of notes and bills discounted or purchased, which amount
shall include all the loans or discounts, whether originally made,
or renewed during the year, or at any time previous; whether made
on bills of exchange, notes, bonds, mortgages, or other evidence of
indebtedness, at their actual cost value in money; whether due
previous to, during, or after the period aforesaid, and on which
said banking company has, at any time, recovered or received, or is
entitled to receive, any profit or other consideration whatever,
either in the shape of interest, discount, exchange, or otherwise;
and secondly, the average amount of all other moneys, effects, or
dues of every description, belonging to such bank, or banking
company, loaned, invested, or otherwise used or employed, with a
view to profit, or upon which such bank, or banking company
receives, or is entitled to receive, interest."
The act then makes it the duty of the auditors, in the counties
in which a bank or banking companies may be, to receive from them
returns of notes and bills discounted, and all other moneys and
effects or dues, as provided for in the 19th section of the act, to
enter the same for taxation upon the grand duplicate of the
property of the county, and upon the city duplicate for city taxes,
in cases where the city tax is not returned upon the grand
duplicate, but is collected by city officers; which amounts so
returned and entered shall be taxed for the same purposes and to
the same extent that personal property is, or may be taxed, in the
place where such bank or banking company is situated. It is then
averred that the president and cashier of the Commercial Bank of
Cleveland, fearing the penalty imposed by the act for a refusal or
neglect to make a return according to the act, did, in the month of
May, in the year 1852, make a return, protesting against the right
of the state to assess a tax upon the bank, other than that which
was provided for, in the charter of its incorporation of the 24th
February, 1845. But it appears
Page 59 U. S. 339
that the return so coerced from the president and directors of
the bank had been assessed by the auditor, for the tax of 1852, at
$10,197 55/100, exceeding by $7,526 72/100 the amount of tax for
which the bank was liable under its charter, which George C. Dodge,
as collector of taxes, seized and collected by distress on its
moneys. It is also shown by the bill, that there has been another
entry of taxation against the bank for the year 1853, of $14,771
87/100, exceeding the sum to which it is liable under its charter
by $11,665 22/100 for that year.
It is against the collection of this tax that John M. Woolsey,
as a stockholder in the bank, has brought this suit, claiming an
exemption from it as a stockholder upon the ground that the act of
the General assembly of the State of Ohio, and the tax assessed
under it upon the bank, are in violation of the 10th section of the
1st article of the Constitution of the United States, which
declares that no state shall pass any law impairing the obligation
of contracts. And he seeks the aid of the circuit court to enjoin
Dodge, the defendant, from collecting the same from the bank, as
collector of taxes, as he had threatened to do by distress, and as
he had done for the assessed tax for the year 1852.
The complainant gives a further aspect to his suit which it is
also proper to notice. It is if the taxes are permitted to be
assessed and collected from the bank under the Act of the 13th of
April, 1852, it will virtually destroy and annul the contract
between the state and the bank in respect to the tax which the
state imposed upon it by the charter of its incorporation in lieu
of all other taxes upon the bank or the stockholders thereof on
account of stock owned therein; that his stock will be thereby
lessened in value, his dividends diminished; and that the tax is so
onerous upon the bank that it will compel a suspension and final
cessation of its business. He finally declares that as a
stockholder, on his own behalf, he had requested the directors of
the bank to take measures, by suit or otherwise, to assert the
franchises of the bank against the collection of what he believes
to be an unconstitutional tax, and that they had refused to do
so.
To this bill the defendant, George C. Dodge, filed an answer.
The other defendants did not answer. He admits the material
allegations of the bill, except the allegation that the tax law of
April 13, 1852, is unconstitutional; says that the act is in
conformity with the Constitution of Ohio, which took effect
September 1, 1851, and that it is in harmony with the Constitution
of the United States. He denies that any application was made by
Woolsey to the directors of the bank, to take measures, by suit or
otherwise, to prevent the collection of the tax, and
Page 59 U. S. 340
insists that this averment was inserted merely for the purpose
of giving color to a proceeding in chancery. That the complainant
would not have sustained an irreparable injury even if he had, as
treasurer, proceeded to distain for the tax; for that the bank
would have had a remedy at law against him for all damages which
might have been sustained in consequence of such distress, as he is
worth, at a reasonable estimate, eighty thousand dollars after the
payment of all his debts. And he insists that the complainant had
not exhibited such a case as entitled him to the interposition of a
court of equity. To this answer a general replication was filed.
But it was agreed by the counsel in the cause, that the complainant
had, by his attorney, addressed a letter to the Commercial Bank of
Cleveland, to institute proper proceedings to prevent the
collection of the tax by Dodge, in the same manner as had been done
by the attorney of a stockholder in the Canal Bank of Cleveland,
for a tax assessed upon it under the same act, and that the action
of the board of the Commercial Bank, in answer to Woolsey's
application, was the same as had been given by the directors of the
Canal Bank. That resolution was in these words:
"Resolved, that we fully concur in the views expressed in said
letter as to the illegality of the tax therein named, and believe
it to be in no way binding upon the bank; but, in consideration of
the many obstacles in the way of testing the law in the courts of
the state, we cannot consent to take the action which we are called
upon to take, but must leave the said Kleman to pursue such
measures as he may deem best in the premises."
Upon the foregoing pleadings and admission, the circuit court
rendered a final decree for the complainant, perpetually enjoining
the treasurer against the collection of the tax, under the act of
the 13th February, 1852, and subjecting the defendant, Dodge, to
the payment of the costs of the suit. From that decision the
defendant, Dodge, has appealed to this Court.
His counsel have relied upon the following points to sustain the
appeal:
1. The complainant does not show himself to be entitled to
relief in a court of chancery, because the charter of the bank
provides, that its affairs shall be managed by a board of
directors, and that they are not amenable to the stockholders for
an error of judgment merely. And that in order to make them so, it
should have been averred that they were in collusion with the tax
collector in their refusal to take legal steps to test the validity
of the tax.
2. It was urged that this suit had been improperly brought in
the circuit Court of the United States for the District of Ohio,
because it is a contrivance to create a jurisdiction, where
none
Page 59 U. S. 341
fairly exists, by substituting an individual stockholder in
place of the Commercial Bank as complainant, and making the
directors defendants; the stockholder being made complainant,
because he is a citizen of the State of Connecticut, and the
directors being made defendants to give countenance to his
suit.
3d. It was said, if the foregoing points were not available to
defeat the action, that it might be contended that the defendant
was in the discharge of his official duty when interrupted by the
mandate of the circuit court, and that the tax had been properly
assessed by a law of the state, in conformity with its
constitution, of the 1st September, 1851.
We will consider the points in their order. The first
comprehends two propositions, namely; that courts of equity have no
jurisdiction over corporations, as such, at the suit of a
stockholder for violations of charters, and none for the errors of
judgment of those who manage their business ordinarily.
There has been a conflict of judicial authority in both. Still,
it has been found necessary, for prevention of injuries for which
common law courts were inadequate, to entertain in equity such a
jurisdiction in the progressive development of the powers and
effects of private corporations upon all the business and interests
of society.
It is now no longer doubted, either in England or the United
States, that courts of equity, in both, have a jurisdiction over
corporations, at the instance of one or more of their members; to
apply preventive remedies by injunction, to restrain those who
administer them from doing acts which would amount to a violation
of charters, or to prevent any misapplication of their capitals or
profits, which might result in lessening the dividends of
stockholders, or the value of their shares, as either may be
protected by the franchises of a corporation, if the acts intended
to be done create what is in the law denominated a breach of trust.
And the jurisdiction extends to inquire into, and to enjoin, as the
case may require that to be done, any proceedings by individuals,
in whatever character they may profess to act, if the subject of
complaint is an imputed violation of a corporate franchise, or the
denial of a right growing out of it, for which there is not an
adequate remedy at law. 2 Russ. & Mylne Ch.,
Cunliffe v.
Manchester & Bolton Canal Company, 480,
n.;
Ware v. Grand Junction Water Company, 2 Russ. & Mylne
470;
Bagshaw v. Eastern Counties Railway Company, 7 Hare
Ch. 114; Angell & Ames, 4th ed. 424, and the other cases there
cited.
It was ruled in the case of
Cunliffe v. Manchester &
Bolton Canal Company, 2 Russ. & Mylne Ch. 481, that where
the legal remedy against a corporation is inadequate, a court
of
Page 59 U. S. 342
equity will interfere, and that there were cases in which a bill
in equity will lie against a corporation by one of its members.
"It is a breach of trust towards a shareholder in a joint stock
incorporated company, established for certain definite purposes
prescribed by its character, if the funds or credit of the company
are, without his consent, diverted from such purpose, though the
misapplication be sanctioned by the votes of a majority, and
therefore he may file a bill in equity against the company in his
own behalf, to restrain the company by injunction from any such
diversion or misapplication."
In the case of
Ware v. Grand Junction Water Company, 2
Russell & Mylne, a bill filed by a member of the company
against it, Lord Brougham said:
"It is said this is an attempt on the part of the company to do
acts which they are not empowered to do by the acts of parliament
[meaning the charter of the company]; so far I restrain them by
injunction. . . . Indeed, an investment in the stock of a
corporation must by everyone be considered a wild speculation if it
exposed the owners of the stock to all sorts of risk in support of
plausible projects not set forth and authorized by the act of
incorporation, and which may possibly lead to extraordinary
losses."
The same jurisdiction was invoked and applied in the case of
Bagshaw v. Eastern Counties Railway Company; so also in
Coleman v. Same Company, 10 Beavan Ch. 1. It appeared in
that case that the directors of the company, for the purpose of
increasing their traffic, proposed to guarantee certain profits and
to secure the capital of an intended steam packet company, which
was to act in connection with the railway. It was held such a
transaction was not within the scope of their powers, and they were
restrained by injunction. And in the second place, that in such a
case one of the shareholders in the railway company was entitled to
sue in behalf of himself and all the other shareholders except the
directors, who were defendants, although some of the shareholders
had taken shares in the steam packet company. It was contended in
this case that the corporation might pledge without limit the funds
of the company for the encouragement of other transactions, however
various and extensive, provided the object of that liability was to
increase the traffic upon the railway and thereby increase the
traffic to the shareholders. But the Master of the Rolls, Lord
Langdale, said "there was no authority for anything of that
kind."
But further, it is not only illegal for a corporation to apply
its capital to objects not contemplated by its charter, but also to
apply its profits. And therefore a shareholder may maintain a bill
in equity against the directors and compel the company to refund
any of the profits thus improperly applied. It is an improper
Page 59 U. S. 343
application for a railway company to invest the profits of the
company in the purchase of shares in another company. The dividend
says Lord Langdale in
Solamons v. Laing, 14 Jurist for
December, 1850, which belongs to the shareholders, and is divisible
among them, may be applied severally as their own property; but the
company itself or the directors, or any number of shareholders, at
a meeting or otherwise, have no right to dispose of his shares of
the general dividends, which belong to the particular shareholder,
in any manner contrary to the will, or without the consent or
authority of, that particular shareholder. We do not mean to say
that the jurisdiction in equity over corporations at the suit of a
shareholder has not been contested. The cases cited in this
argument show it to have been otherwise; but when the case of
Hodges v. New England Screw Company was cited against it
-- we may say the best argued and judicially considered case which
we know upon the point -- both upon the original hearing and
rehearing of that cause, the counsel could not have been aware of
the fact that, upon the rehearing of it, the learned court, which
had decided that courts of equity have no jurisdiction over
corporations as such at the suit of a stockholder for violations of
charter, reviewed and recalled that conclusion. The language of the
court is:
"We have thought it our duty to review in this general form this
new and unsettled jurisdiction and to say, in view of the novelty
and importance of the subject and the additional light which has
been thrown upon it since the trial, we consider the jurisdiction
of this Court over corporations for breaches of charter, at the
suit of shareholders, and how far it shall be extended, and subject
to what limits, is still an open question in this Court. 1 Rhode
Island Reports 312 -- rehearing of the case September term,
1853."
The result of the cases is well stated in Angell & Ames,
paragraphs 391, 393.
"In cases where the legal remedy against a corporation is
inadequate, a court of equity will interfere is well settled, and
there are cases in which a bill in equity will lie against a
corporation by one of its members. . . . Though the result of the
authorities clearly is that in a corporation, when acting within
the scope of and in obedience to the provisions of its
constitution, the will of the majority, duly expressed at a legally
constituted meeting, must govern; yet beyond the limits of the act
of incorporation, the will of the majority cannot make an act
valid, and the powers of a court of equity may be put in motion at
the instance of a single shareholder if he can show that the
corporation are employing their statutory powers for the
accomplishment of purposes not within the scope of their
institution. Yet it is to be observed that there is an
important
Page 59 U. S. 344
distinction between this class of cases and those in which there
is no breach of trust, but only error and misapprehension or simple
negligence on the part of the directors.
*"
We have then the rule and its limitation. It is contended that
this case is within the limitation, or that the directors of the
Commercial Bank of Cleveland, in their action in respect to the tax
assessed upon it, under the act of April 18, 1852, and in their
refusal to take proper measures for testing its validity, have
committed an "error of judgment merely."
It is obvious, from the rule, that the circumstances of each
case must determine the jurisdiction of a court of equity to give
the relief sought. That the pleadings must be relied upon to
collect what they are, to ascertain in what character, and to what
end a shareholder invokes the interposition of a court of equity,
on account of the mismanagement of a board of directors. Whether
such acts are out of or beyond the limits of the act of
incorporation, either of commission contrary thereto, or of
negligence in not doing what it may be their chartered duty to
do.
This brings us to the inquiry, as to what the directors have
done in this case, and what they refused to do upon the application
of their co-corporator, John M. Woolsey. After a full statement of
his case, comprehending all of his rights and theirs also, alleging
in his bill that his object was to test the validity of a tax upon
the ground that it was unconstitutional, because it impaired the
obligation of a contract made by the State of Ohio
Page 59 U. S. 345
with the Commercial Bank of Cleveland, and the stockholders
thereof; he represents in his own behalf, as a stockholder, that he
had applied to the directors, requesting them to take measures, by
suit or otherwise, to prevent the collection of the tax by the
treasurer, and that they refused to do so, accompanying, however,
their refusal with the declaration that they fully concurred with
Woolsey in his views as to the illegality of the tax; that they
believed it in no way binding upon the bank, but that, in
consideration of the many obstacles in the way of resisting the
collection of the tax in the courts of the state, they could not
consent to take legal measures for testing it. Besides this
refusal, the papers in the case disclose the fact that the
directors had previously made two protests against the
constitutionality of the tax, because it was repugnant to the
Constitution of the United States, and to that of Ohio also, both
concluding with a resolution that they would not, as then advised,
pay the tax, unless compelled by law to do so, and that they were
determined to rely upon the constitutional and legal rights of the
bank under its charter. Now in our view, the refusal upon the part
of the directors, by their own showing, partakes more of disregard
of duty, than of an error of judgment. It was a nonperformance of a
confessed official obligation, amounting to what the law considers
a breach of trust, though it may not involve intentional moral
delinquency. It was a mistake, it is true, of what their duty
required from them, according to their own sense of it, but, being
a duty by their own confession, their refusal was an act outside of
the obligation which the charter imposed upon them to protect what
they conscientiously believed to be the franchises of the bank. A
sense of duty and conduct contrary to it, is not "an error of
judgment merely," and cannot be so called in any case. It amounted
to an illegal application of the profits due to the stockholders of
the bank, into which a court of equity will inquire to prevent its
being made.
Thinking, as we do, that the action of the board of directors
was not "an error of judgment merely" but a breach of duty, it is
our opinion that they were properly made parties to the bill, and
that the jurisdiction of a court of equity reaches such a case to
give such a remedy as its circumstances may require. This
conclusion makes it unnecessary for us to notice further the point
made by the counsel that the suit should have been brought in the
name of the corporation, in support of which they cited the case of
Bank of the United States v. Osborn. The obvious
difference between this case and that is that the Bank of the
United States brought a bill in the circuit Court of the United
States for the District of Ohio, to resist a tax assessed under an
act of that state, and executed by its auditor, and here the
Page 59 U. S. 346
directors of the Commercial Bank of Cleveland, by refusing to do
what they had declared it to be their duty to do, have forced one
of its corporators, in self-defense, to sue. If the directors had
done so in a state court of Ohio, and put their case upon the
unconstitutionality of the tax act, because it impaired the
obligation of a contract, and had the decision been against such
claim, the judgment of the state court could have been reexamined,
in that particular, in the Supreme Court of the United States,
under the same authority or jurisdiction by which it reversed the
judgment of the Supreme Court of Ohio, in the case of
Piqua Branch of State Bank of
Ohio v. Knoop, 16 How. 369.
But it was said in the argument, that this suit had been
improperly brought in the circuit court of the United States,
because it was a contrivance by Woolsey, or between him and the
directors of the bank, to give that court jurisdiction, on account
of their residence and citizenship being in different states. That
the subject matter of the suit was within the exclusive
jurisdiction of the state courts, and that, if the jurisdiction in
the courts of the United States was sustained, it would make
inoperative to a great extent the 7th Amendment of the Constitution
of the United States and the 16th section of the Judiciary act of
1789, this last being a declaratory act, settling the law, as to
cases of equity jurisdiction, in the nature of a proviso,
limitation, or exception to its exercise. And further, that it
would make the judiciary of the United States paramount to that of
the individual states, and the legislative and executive
departments of the federal government paramount to the same
departments of the individual states.
We first remark as to the imputation of contrivance, that it is
the assertion of a fact which does not appear in the case, one
which the defendants should have proved if they meant to rely upon
it to abate or defeat the complainant's suit, and that, not having
done so, as they might have attempted to do, we cannot presume its
existence. Mr. Woolsey's right, as a citizen of the State of
Connecticut, to sue citizens of the State of Ohio in the courts of
the United States for that state cannot be questioned. The papers
in the case also show, that the directors and himself occupy
antagonist grounds in respect to the controversy which their
refusal to sue forced him to take in defense of his rights as a
shareholder in the bank. Nor can the counsel for the defendant
assume the existence of such a fact in the argument of their case
in this Court, in the absence of any attempt on their part to prove
it in the circuit court.
We remark, as to the subject matter of the suit being within the
exclusive jurisdiction of the state courts, that the courts of
Page 59 U. S. 347
the United States and the courts of the states have concurrent
jurisdiction in all cases between citizens of different states,
whatever may be the matter in controversy, if it be one for
judicial cognizance. Such is the Constitution of the United States,
and the legislation to Congress "in pursuance thereof." And when it
was urged that the jurisdiction of the case belonged exclusively to
the state courts of Ohio, under the 7th Article of the amendments
to the Constitution, and the 16th section of the Judiciary Act of
1789 was invoked to sustain the position, it seems it was forgotten
that this Court and other courts of the United States had
repeatedly decided that the equity jurisdiction of the courts of
the United States is independent of the local law of any state, and
is the same in nature and extent as the equity jurisdiction of
England, from which it is derived, and that it is no objection to
this jurisdiction, that there is a remedy under the local law.
Gordon v. Hobart, 2 Sumner C.C. 401.
It was also said by both of the counsel for the defendant, and
argued with some zeal, that if the court sustained the jurisdiction
in this case, it would be difficult to determine whether anything
and how much of state sovereignty may hereafter exist. We shall
give to this observation our particular consideration, regretting
that it should be necessary, but not doubting that such a
jurisdiction exists at the suit of a shareholder, and that the
appellate jurisdiction of this Court may be exercised in the
matter, not only without taking away any of the rights of the
states, but, by doing so, giving additional securities for their
preservation, to the great benefit of the people of the United
States. If it does not exist and was not exercised, we should
indeed have a very imperfect national government, altogether
unworthy of the wisdom and foresight of those who framed it;
incompetent, too, to secure for the future those advantages
hitherto secured by it to the people of the United States, and
which were in their contemplation, when, by their conventions in
the several states, the constitution was ratified.
Impelled then by a sense of duty to the constitution, and the
administration of so much of it as has been assigned to the
judiciary, we proceed with the discussion.
The departments of the government are legislative, executive,
and judicial. They are co ordinate in degree to the extent of the
powers delegated to each of them. Each, in the exercise of its
powers, is independent of the other, but all, rightfully done by
either, is binding upon the others. The constitution is supreme
over all of them, because the people who ratified it have made it
so; consequently, anything which may be done unauthorized by it is
unlawful. But it is not only over the departments of
Page 59 U. S. 348
the government that the constitution is supreme. It is so, to
the extent of its delegated powers, over all who made themselves
parties to it; states as well as persons, within whose concessions
of sovereign powers yielded by the people of the states, when they
accepted the constitution in their conventions. Nor does its
supremacy end there. It is supreme over the people of the United
States, aggregately and in their separate sovereignties, because
they have excluded themselves from any direct or immediate agency
in making amendments to it, and have directed that amendments
should be made representatively for them, by the Congress of the
United States, when two-thirds of both houses shall propose them;
or where the legislatures of two-thirds of the several states shall
call a convention for proposing amendments, which, in either case,
become valid, to all intents and purposes, as a part of the
constitution, when ratified by the legislatures of three-fourths of
the several states, or by conventions in three-fourths of them, as
one or the other mode of ratification may be proposed by Congress.
The same article declares that no amendment, which might be made
prior to the year 1808, should, in any manner, affect the first and
fourth clauses in the ninth section of the first article, and that
no state, without its consent, shall be deprived of its equal
suffrage in the senate. The first being a temporary disability to
amend, and the other two permanent and unalterable exceptions to
the power of amendment.
Now whether such a supremacy of the Constitution, with its
limitations in the particulars just mentioned, and with the further
restriction laid by the people upon themselves, and for themselves,
as to the modes of amendment, be right or wrong politically, no one
can deny that the Constitution is supreme, as has been stated, and
that the statement is in exact conformity with it.
Further, the Constitution is not only supreme in the sense we
have said it was, for the people in the ratification of it have
chosen to add that
"This Constitution and the laws of the United States which shall
be made in pursuance thereof; and all treaties made, or which shall
be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be the
supreme law of the land, and the judges in every state shall be
bound thereby, anything in the constitution or laws of any state to
the contrary notwithstanding."
And, in that connection, to make its supremacy more complete,
impressive, and practical, that there should be no escape from its
operation, and that is binding force upon the states and the
members of Congress should be unmistakable, it is declared that
"The senators and representatives before mentioned, and the
members of the state legislatures, and all executive and judicial
officers, both of the United States and of
Page 59 U. S. 349
the several states, shall be bound by an oath or affirmation to
support this Constitution."
Having stated, not by way of argument or inference, but in the
words of the Constitution, the particulars in which it is declared
to be supreme, we proceed to show that it contains an interpreter,
or has given directions for determining what is its meaning and
operation, what "laws are made in pursuance thereof," and to fix
the meaning of treaties which had been made, or which shall be
made, under the authority of the United States, when either the
Constitution, the laws of Congress, or a treaty, are brought
judicially in question, in which a state, or a citizen of the
United States, or a foreigner, shall claim rights before the courts
of the United States, or in the courts of the states, either under
the Constitution or the laws of the United States, or from a
treaty.
All legislative powers in the Constitution are vested in a
Congress of the United States, which shall consist of a senate and
house of representatives. Then stating of whom the house shall be
composed, how they shall be chosen by the people of the several
states, the qualification of electors, the age of representatives,
the time of their citizenship, and their inhabitancy in the state
in which they shall be chosen; how representatives and direct taxes
shall be apportioned, how the senate shall be composed, with sundry
other provisions relating to the house and the senate, the powers
of Congress are enumerated affirmatively. The 9th section then
declares what the Congress shall not have power to do, and it is
followed by the 10th, consisting of three paragraphs, all of them
prohibitions upon the states from doing the particulars expressed
in them.
Our first suggestion now is, as all the legislative powers are
concessions of sovereignty from the people of the states, and the
prohibitions upon them in the 10th section are likewise so, both
raise an obligation upon the states not to legislate upon either;
each, however, conferring rights, according to what may be the
constitutional legislation of Congress upon the first; and the
second giving rights of equal force, without legislation in respect
to such of them as execute themselves, on account of their being
prohibitions of what the states shall not do. For instance, no
legislation by Congress is wanted to make more binding upon the
states what they have bound themselves in absolute terms not to do.
As where it is said
"No state shall enter into any treaty, alliance, or
confederation, grant letters of marque and reprisal, coin money,
emit bills of credit, make anything but gold and silver coin a
tender in payment of debts, pass any bill of attainder,
ex post
facto law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts, or
grant any title of nobility. "
Page 59 U. S. 350
Our next suggestion is that the grants of legislative powers,
and the negation of the exercise of other powers by the states,
some of them being declarations that they would not legislate upon
those matters which had been exclusively given up for the
legislation of Congress, do not imply that the states would be
willfully disregardful of the obligations solemnly placed upon them
by their people, but that there might be interferences from their
legislation in some of those particulars, either with the
Constitution, or between their enactments and those of Congress.
But this apprehension not without cause was founded upon the
legislation of some of the states during the continuance of the
articles of confederation, affecting the rights and interests of
persons in their contracts, from which they could get no relief,
unless it was granted by the same state legislatures which passed
the acts. This suggested the necessity, or rather made it obvious,
that our national union would be incomplete and altogether
insufficient for the great ends contemplated, unless a
constitutional arbiter was provided to give certainty and
uniformity, in all of the states, to the interpretation of the
Constitution and the legislation of Congress; with powers also to
declare judicially what acts of the legislatures of the states
might be in conflict with either. Had this not been done, there
would have been no mutuality of constitutional obligation between
the states, either in respect to the Constitution or the laws of
Congress, and each of them would have determined for itself the
operation of both, either by legislation or judicial action. In
either way, exempting itself and its citizens from engagements
which it had not made by itself, but in common with other states of
the union, equally sovereign; by which they bound their
sovereignties to each other, that neither of them should assume to
settle a principle or interest for itself, in a matter which was
the common interest of all of them. Such is certainly the common
sense view of the people, when any number of them enter into a
contract for their mutual benefit, in the same proportions of
interest. In such a case, neither should assume the right to bind
his compeers by his judgment, as to the stipulations of their
contract. If one of them did so, any other of them might call in
the aid of the law to settle their differences, and its judgment
would terminate the controversy. It must not be said that the
illustration is inappropriate, because individuals have no other
mode to settle their disputes, and that states and nations, from
their equal sovereignty, have no tribunal to terminate
authoritatively their differences, each having the right to judge
and do so for itself.
But ours is not such a government. The states, or rather the
people forming it, though sovereign as to the powers not
delegated
Page 59 U. S. 351
to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it
to the states, are not independent of each other, in respect to the
powers ceded in the Constitution.
Their union, by the Constitution, was made by each of them
conceding portions of their equal sovereignties for all of them,
and it acts upon the states conjunctively and separately, and in
the same manner upon their citizens, aggregately in some things,
and in others individually, in many of their relations of business,
and also upon their civil conduct, so far as their obedience to the
laws of Congress is concerned.
In such a union, the states are bound by all of those principles
of justice which bind individuals to their contracts. They are
bound by their mutual acquiescence in the powers of the
Constitution, that neither of them should be the judge, or should
be allowed to be the final judge of the powers of the Constitution,
or of the interpretation of the laws of Congress. This is not so,
because their sovereignty is impaired; but the exercise of it is
diminished in quantity, because they have, in certain respects, put
restraints upon that exercise, in virtue of voluntary engagements.
Vattel, Ch. 1, section 10
We will now give two illustrations -- one from the Constitution,
and the other from one of the cases decided in this Court, upon a
tax act of the State of Ohio -- to show that the framers of the
Constitution, and the conventions which ratified it, were fully
aware of the necessity for and meant to make a department of it, to
which was to be confided the final decision judicially of the
powers of that instrument, the conformity of laws with it, which
either Congress or the legislatures of the states may enact, and to
review the judgments of the state courts, in which a right is
decided against, which has been claimed in virtue of the
Constitution or the laws of Congress.
The third clause of the 2d section of the 1st article of the
Constitution is,
"that representatives and direct taxes shall be apportioned
among the several states, according to their respective numbers,
which shall be determined by adding to the whole number of free
persons, including those bound to service for a term of years, and
excluding Indians not taxed, three fifths of all other
persons."
We will suppose that Congress shall again impose a direct tax,
and that a citizen liable to assessment should dispute its
application to a kind of his property, alleging it not to be a
direct tax, in the sense of that provision of the Constitution; and
that he should apply to a state court for relief from an execution
which had been levied upon his property for its collection, making
the United States collector of the tax a party to his suit; and
that the court should enjoin him from further proceedings to
collect the tax. It is plain, if such a judgment was final,
Page 59 U. S. 352
and could not be reviewed by any other court, or by the Supreme
Court of the United States, in virtue of its appellate
jurisdiction, as that has been given by the act of Congress, the
result would be, that the citizens of the state in which the
judgment was given, would be exempted from the payment of a tax
which had been intended by Congress to be apportioned upon the
property of all of the citizens of the United States, in conformity
with the Constitution. This would practically defeat the rule of
apportionment if it was acquiesced in by the government of the
United States, and the constitutional collection of the tax could
not be made in any state according to the act. We do not mean that
the officers of the United States could not collect the tax in
those states in which no such judgment had been given; but if the
judgment could not be reviewed, that the constitutional rule for
the imposition of direct taxes could not be executed by any
legislation of Congress which a state legislature or a state court
might not say was unconstitutional. We should not then have a more
perfect union than we had under the Articles of Confederation. Each
state then paid the requisition of Congress, when it pleased to do
so. Had it been continued, the union would be more feeble for all
national purposes than it had been. Then the states only disregard
their obligations to suit their convenience. Had it not been
corrected, as it has been done in the Constitution, we have no
reason to believe that there would not be like results, or that the
courts of the states would not be resorted to, to determine the
constitutionality of taxes laid by Congress. This was certainly not
meant by the framers of the Constitution, nor can its disallowance
be brought under the 10th article of its amendments, which
declares
"that 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."
The illustration given, and its results, have been drawn from
the Constitution of the United States, also from what might be the
action of the state legislatures and state courts, which could not
be prevented unless the Supreme Court of the United States had the
power to review the action of the state courts upon a matter
exclusively of national interest, made so by the legislation of
Congress.
Hitherto, no such case as we have supposed has happened, but a
reference to the case of
Hylton v. United
States, 3 Dall. 171, in which an attempt was made
to test the constitutionality of a tax assessed by the United
States, will show that a case of the kind is not unlikely to occur,
when Congress shall impose a tax apportioning representation and
direct taxation; or, under the general declaration in the 8th
section of the 1st Article of the
Page 59 U. S. 353
Constitution, that "Congress shall have power to lay and collect
taxes, duties, imposts, and excises, but that all duties shall be
uniform throughout the United States." Let it be understood, too,
that the power is not only to impose duties and taxes, but to
collect them, and from the power to collect must necessarily be
inferred the disability of the legislatures of the states, or of
the courts of the states, in any way to interfere with its
execution, as that may be directed by Congress. If the courts of
the states, or their legislatures, could finally determine against
the constitutionality of a tax laid by Congress, there would be no
certainty or uniformity of taxation upon the citizens of the United
States, or of the apportionment of representation and direct
taxation according to the Constitution.
Other illustrations of the propriety and necessity for a
judicial tribunal of the United States to settle such questions
finally, might be made from other clauses of the Constitution. We
will, however, cite but one of them in addition to such as have
been already mentioned. It is the power of Congress to regulate
commerce, and we refer to the case of
Brown v. State of
Maryland, as an instance of the attempt of that state to lay a
tax upon imports, which this Court pronounced to be
unconstitutional.
We will now give other illustrations, in which the rights of
property are involved, to show the cautious wisdom of that
provision of the Constitution which secures to the citizens of the
different states a right to sue in the courts of the United States
and to claim either in them or in the courts of the states the
protection either of the Constitution or of the laws of
Congress.
The Legislature of Ohio passed an act in 1803, incorporating the
proprietors of the half-million of acres of land south of Lake Erie
called the "Sufferers' Land." This act required the appointment of
directors, who were authorized to extinguish the Indian title, to
survey the land into townships, or otherwise make partition among
the owners; and, among other things provided,
"that, to defray all necessary expenses of the company in
purchasing and extinguishing the Indian claim of title to the land,
surveying, locating, and making partition, and all other necessary
expenses of said company, power is hereby vested in the said
directors, and their successors in office, to levy a tax or taxes
on said land, and enforce the collection thereof."
It was also provided that the directors should have power and
authority to do whatever it shall appear to them to be necessary
and proper to be done for the well ordering and interest of the
proprietors, not contrary to the laws of the state. Subsequently,
the Legislature of Ohio imposed a tax upon these lands as a part of
the revenue to be raised for the state. The directors assessed a
tax upon
Page 59 U. S. 354
the share of each proprietor, to pay the tax to the state. A
sale of a part of the land was made for that purpose, and the
question subsequently raised in the Circuit Court of the United
States for the District of Ohio, in a suit at the instance of the
heirs of one of the proprietors whose land had been sold, was,
whether the sale conveyed a title to the land to the purchaser. It
was determined by this Court that it did not, because the directors
had not power to make an assessment upon the lands to pay the state
tax, and that the tax, as laid by the state, had been done in
violation of the corporate powers given to the directors. In this
case, the plaintiffs sought protection against the tax laid by
Ohio, and acquiesced in by the directors of the corporation,
because that tax was contrary to the contract which the state had
made with the corporation for the benefit of the proprietors of the
land. The state, without being a party to the record, was
interested in the question. It was a suit between citizens of
different states, brought by the plaintiffs in the United States
Circuit Court for Ohio; and the motive for seeking that tribunal
was that his rights might be tried in one not subject either to
state or local influences. It placed both parties upon an equality,
in fact and in appearances; and whatever might have been the
result, neither could complain of the disinterestedness of the
court which adjudged their rights.
Beatty v.
Lessee of Knowles, 4 Pet. 152.
The foundation of the right of citizens of different states to
sue each other in the courts of the United States is not an
unworthy jealousy of the impartiality of the state tribunals. It
has a higher aim and purpose. It is to make the people think and
feel, though residing in different states of the Union, that their
relations to each other were protected by the strictest justice,
administered in courts independent of all local control or
connection with the subject matter of the controversy between the
parties to a suit.
Men unite in civil society, expecting to enjoy peaceably what
belongs to them, and that they may regain it by the law when
wrongfully withheld. That can only be accomplished by good laws,
with suitable provisions for the establishment of courts of
justice, and for the enforcement of their decisions. The right to
establish them flows from the same source which determines the
extent of the legislative and executive powers of government.
Experience has shown that the object cannot be attained without a
supreme tribunal, as one of the departments of the government, with
defined powers in its organic structure, and the mode for
exercising them to be provided legislatively. This has been done in
the Constitution of the United States. Its framers were well aware
of their responsibilities to secure justice to the people,
Page 59 U. S. 355
and well knew, as the object of all trials in courts was to
determine the suits between citizens, that it could not be done
satisfactorily to them, unless they had the privilege to appeal
from the first tribunal which had jurisdiction of a suit to another
which should have authority to pronounce definitively upon its
merits. Vattel, 9th chapter, on justice and polity. Without such a
court, the citizens of each state could not have enjoyed all the
privileges and immunities of citizens in the several states, as
they were intended to be secured by the second section of the 4th
Article of the Constitution. Nor would the judicial power have been
extended in fact to
"all cases in law and equity arising under the Constitution, the
laws of the United States, and treaties made or which shall be made
under their authority, to all cases affecting ambassadors and other
public ministers and consuls; to all cases of admiralty and
maritime jurisdiction; to controversies to which the United States
shall be a party; to controversies between two or more states; to
those between citizens of different states, or between citizens of
the same state, claiming lands under grants of different states,
and between a state and the citizens thereof and foreign states,
citizens or subjects."
Article 3d, section 1st.
Without the Supreme Court as it has been constitutionally and
legislatively constituted, neither the Constitution nor the laws of
Congress passed in pursuance of it, nor treaties would be in
practice or in fact the supreme law of the land, and the injunction
that the judges in every state should be bound thereby, anything in
the Constitution or laws of any state to the contrary
notwithstanding, would be useless if the judges of state courts, in
any one of the states could finally determine what was the meaning
and operation of the Constitution and laws of Congress or the
extent of the obligation of treaties.
But let it be remembered, that the appellate jurisdiction of the
Supreme Court, as it is, is one of perfect equality between the
states and the United States. It acts upon the Constitution and
laws of both, in the same way, to the same extent, for the same
purposes, and with the same final result. Neither the dignity nor
the independence of either are lessened by its organization or
action.
The same electors choose the members of the house of
representatives who choose the members of the most popular branch
of the state legislatures. The Senators of the United States are
chosen by the legislatures of the states. The senate and house of
representatives of the United States exercise their legislative
powers independently of each other, their concurrence being
necessary to pass laws. The states are represented in the one, the
people in the other and in both. But as it was thought that
Page 59 U. S. 356
they and the state legislatures might pass laws conflicting with
the letter or the spirit of the Constitution under which they
legislated, it became necessary to make a judicial department for
the United States, with a jurisdiction best suited to preserve
harmony between the states, severally and collectively, with the
national government, and which would give the people of all of the
states that confidence and security under it anticipated by them
when they announced
"That we, the people of the United States, in order to form a
more perfect union, establish justice and domestic tranquility,
provide for the common defense, and promote the general welfare,
and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity
do ordain this Constitution for the United States."
Without a judicial department, just such as it is, neither the
powers of the Constitution nor the purposes for which they were
given could have been attained.
We do not know a case more appropriate to show the necessity for
such a jurisdiction than that before us.
A citizen of the United States, residing in Connecticut, having
a large pecuniary interest in a bank in Ohio, with a board of
directors opposed, in fact, to the only course which could be taken
to test the constitutional validity of a law of that state bearing
upon the franchises of their corporation, is told by the directors
that though they fully concur with him in believing the tax law of
Ohio unconstitutional and in no way binding upon the bank, they
will not institute legal proceedings to prevent the collection of
the tax "in consideration of the many obstacles in the way of
resisting the tax in the state courts." Without partaking,
ourselves, in their uncertainty of relief in the courts of Ohio, it
must be admitted their declaration was calculated to diminish this
suitor's confidence in such a result, and to induce him to resort
to the only other tribunal which there was to take cognizance of
his cause. Besides, it was not his interest alone which would be
affected by the result. Hundreds, citizens of the State of Ohio and
citizens of other states, are concerned in the question. Millions
of money in that state, and millions upon millions of banking
capital in the other states, are to be affected by its judicial
decision; all depending upon the assertion, in opposition to the
claim of the complainant, that a new constitution of a state
supersedes every legislative enactment touching its own internal
policy, and bearing upon the interest of persons, which may have
been the subject of legislation under a preceding constitution. In
the words of the counsel for the defendant, that all such
legislation must give way when found to contravene the will of the
sovereign people, subsequently expressed in a new state
constitution. The assertion may be met and confuted, without
further argument, by what
Page 59 U. S. 357
was said by Mr. Madison, in the 43d number of The Federalist,
upon the 6th Article of the Constitution, which is:
"All debts and engagements entered into before the adoption of
this Constitution, shall be as valid against the United States
under this Constitution as under the confederation."
His remark is,
"This can only be considered as a declaratory proposition, and
may have been inserted, among other reasons, for the satisfaction
of foreign creditors, who cannot be strangers to the pretended
doctrine, that a change in the political form of civil society has
the magical effect of dissolving its moral obligations."
And here we will cite another passage from the writings of that
great statesman, and venerated man by every citizen of the United
States who knows how much his political wisdom contributed to the
establishment of our American popular institutions. He says, in the
22d number of The Federalist:
"A circumstance which shows the defects of the confederation
remains to be mentioned -- the want of a judiciary power. Laws are
a dead letter without courts to expound and define their true
meaning and operation. The treaties of the United States, to have
any force at all, must be considered as a part of the law of the
land. Their true import, as regards individuals, must, like all
other laws, be ascertained by judicial determinations. To produce
uniformity in these determinations, they ought to be submitted to a
supreme tribunal, and this tribunal ought to be instituted under
the same authorities which form the treaties themselves. These
ingredients are both indispensable. If there is in each state a
court of final jurisdiction, there may be as many different final
determinations on the same point as there are courts. There are
endless diversities in the opinions of men. We often see not only
different courts, but the judges of the same court, differing from
each other. To avoid the confusion which would unavoidably result
from the contradictory decisions of a number of independent
judicatures, all nations have found it necessary to establish one
tribunal paramount to the rest, possessing a general
superintendence, and authorized to settle and declare in the last
resort a uniform rule of civil justice. This is the more necessary
where the frame of the government is so compounded that the laws of
the whole are in danger of being contravened by the laws of the
parts. In this case, if the particular tribunals are invested with
a right of ultimate decision, besides the contradictions to be
expected from difference of opinion, there will be much to fear
from the bias of local views and prejudices, and from the
interference of local institutions. As often as such an
interference should happen, there would be reason to apprehend that
the provisions of the particular laws might be preferred to those
of the general laws,
Page 59 U. S. 358
from the deference which men in office naturally look up to that
authority to which they owe their official existence."
Hitherto we have shown from the Constitution itself that the
framers of it meant to provide a jurisdiction for its final
interpretation, and for the laws passed by Congress, to give them
an equal operation in all of the states.
But there are considerations out of the Constitution which
contribute to show it, which we will briefly mention. Without such
a judicial tribunal there are no means provided by which the
conflicting legislation of the states with the Constitution and the
laws of Congress may be terminated, so as to give to either a
national operation in each of the states. In such an event no means
have been provided for an amicable accommodation; none for a
compromise; none for mediation; none for arbitration; none for a
Congress of the states as a mode of conciliation. The consequence
of which would be a permanent diversity of the operation of the
Constitution in the states, as well in matters exclusively of
public concern as in those which secure individual rights.
Fortunately it is not so. A supreme tribunal has been provided,
which has hitherto, by its decisions, settled all differences which
have arisen between the authorities of the states and those of the
United States. The legislation under which its appellate power is
exercised has been of sixty-seven years' duration, without any
countenanced attempt to repeal it. It is rather late to question
it; and in continuing to exercise it, this Court complies with the
decisions of its predecessors, believing, after the fullest
examination, that its appellate jurisdiction is given in conformity
with the Constitution.
The last position taken by the counsel for the defendant, now
the appellant here, is that George C. Dodge was in the discharge of
his official duty as treasurer of Cuyahoga County, in the State of
Ohio, when interrupted by the mandate of the circuit court; that
the tax in his hands for collection against the bank was regularly
assessed under a valid law of the state, passed April 18, 1852, in
conformity with the requisitions of the Constitution, adopted June
17, 1851, which took effect 1st September, 1851.
It was admitted, in the argument of it, that the only difference
between this case and that of
Piqua Branch of State of Ohio
v. Knoop, 16 How. 369, is that the latter was a
claim for a tax under a law of Ohio, of March 21, 1851, under the
former Constitution of Ohio, of 1802, and that the tax now claimed
is assessed under the Act of April 18, 1852, under the new
Constitution of Ohio.
Both acts, in effect, are the same in their operation upon the
charter of the bank, as that was passed by the General Assembly
Page 59 U. S. 359
of Ohio, in the year 1845. Each of them is intended to collect,
by way of tax, a larger sum than the bank was liable to pay, under
the charter of 1845. This is admitted. It is not denied, the record
shows that the tax assessed for the year 1853 exceeds the sum to
which it was liable, under its charter, $11,565 22/100. The tax
assessed is $14,771 87/100. The tax which it would have paid, under
the act of 1845, would have been $3,206 65/100.
The fact raises the question whether the tax now claimed has not
been assessed in violation of the 10th section of the 1st article
of the Constitution, which declares that no state shall pass any
law impairing the obligation of contracts.
The law of 1845 was an agreement with the bank,
quasi-ex
contractu, and also an agreement separately with the
shareholders,
quasi-ex contractu, that neither the bank as
such nor the shareholders as such should be liable to any other tax
larger than that which was to be levied under the 60th section of
the act of 1845.
That 60th section is
"that each banking company under the act, on accepting thereof
and complying with its provisions, shall semiannually, on the days
designated for declaring dividends, set off to the state six
percent on the profits, deducting therefrom the expenses and
ascertained losses of the company for the six months next
preceding, which sum or amount so set off shall be in lieu of all
taxes to which the company, or the stockholders therein, would
otherwise be subject. The sum so set off to be paid to the
treasurer, on the order of the auditor of the state."
The act under which the tax of 1853 has been assessed is:
"That the president and cashier of every bank and banking
company that shall have been, or may hereafter be, incorporated by
the laws of this state, and having the right to issue bills of
circulation as money, shall make and return, under oath, to the
auditor of the county in which such bank or banking company may be
situated, in the month of May annually, a written statement
containing, first, the average amount of notes and bills discounted
or purchased, which amount shall include all the loans or
discounts, whether originally made or renewed during the year
aforesaid, or at any previous time, whether made on bills of
exchange, notes, bonds, or mortgages, or any other evidence of
indebtedness, at their actual cost value in money, whether due
previous to, during, or after the period aforesaid, and on which
such banking company has at any time reserved or received, or is
entitled to receive, any profit or other consideration whatever;
and secondly, the average amount of all other moneys, effects, or
dues of every description belonging to the bank or banking company,
loaned, invested, or otherwise used with a view to profit, or upon
which the bank &c., receives, or is entitled to receive,
interest. "
Page 59 U. S. 360
The two acts have been put in connection, that the difference
between the modes of taxation may be more obvious, and it will be
readily seen, that the second is not intended to tax the profits of
the bank, but its entire business, capital, circulation, credits,
and debts due to it, being professed to be intended to equalize the
tax to be paid by the bank with that required to be paid upon
personal property. A careful examination of the two acts and of the
tabular returns annexed to this opinion, will prove that such
equality of taxation has not been attained. It will show that the
bank is taxed more than three times the number of mills upon the
dollars that is assessed upon personal property, whatever may be
comprehended under that denomination by the act of the 13th April,
1852. But if it did not, it could make no difference in our
conclusion. For the tax to be paid by the bank under the Act of 24
February, 1824, is a legislative contract, equally operative upon
the state and upon the bank, and the stockholders of the bank,
until the expiration of its charter, which will be in 1866. No
critical examination of the words,
"that on the days designated for declaring dividends, to-wit, on
the first Monday in May and November of each year, the bank shall
set off to the said State of Ohio six percent on the profits,
deducting therefrom the expenses and ascertained losses of said
company for six months next preceding each dividend day, and that
the sums or amounts so set off shall be in lieu of all taxes to
which said company or the stockholders thereof on account of stock
owned therein would otherwise be subject,"
could make them more exact in meaning than they are. The words
"would otherwise be subject" relate to the legislative power to
tax, and is a relinquishment of it, binding upon that legislature
which passed the act, and upon succeeding legislatures as a
contract not to tax the bank during its continuance with more than
six percent upon its semiannual profits. A change of Constitution
cannot release a state from contracts made under a Constitution
which permits them to be made. The inquiry is, is the contract
permitted by the existing Constitution? If so, and that cannot be
denied in this case, the sovereignty which ratified it in 1802 was
the same sovereignty which made the Constitution of 1851, neither
having more power than the other to impair a contract made by the
state legislature with individuals. The moral obligations never
die. If broken by states and nations, though the terms of reproach
are not the same with which we are accustomed to designate the
faithlessness of individuals, the violation of justice is not the
less.
This case is coincident with that of the
Piqua
Branch of the State Bank of Ohio v. Knoop, 16 How.
369, decided by this
Page 59 U. S. 361
Court in the year 1853. It rules this in every particular; and
to the opinion then given we have nothing to add, nor anything to
take away.
We affirm the decree of the circuit court, and direct a
mandate accordingly.
MR. JUSTICE CATRON, MR. JUSTICE DANIEL, and MR. JUSTICE CAMPBELL
dissented.
* So it has been repeatedly decided that a private corporation
may be sued at law by one of its own members. The text upon this
subject is so well expressed, with authorities to support it, that
we will extract the paragraph 390 from Angell & Ames
entire.
"A private corporation may be sued by one of its own members.
This point came directly before the court in the State of South
Carolina in an action of assumpsit against the Catawba Company. The
plea in abatement was that the plaintiff himself was a member of
that company, and therefore could maintain no action against it in
his individual capacity. The court, after hearing argument,
overruled the plea as containing principles subversive of justice,
and they moreover said that the point had been settled by two
former cases, wherein certain officers were allowed to maintain
actions for their salaries due by the company. In this respect, the
cases of incorporated companies are entirely dissimilar from those
of ordinary co-partnerships, or unincorporated joint stock
companies. In the former, the individual members of the company are
entirely distinct from the artificial body endowed with corporate
powers. A member of a corporation who is a creditor has the same
right as any other creditor to secure the payment of his demands by
attachment or by levy upon the property of the corporation,
although he may be personally liable by statute to satisfy other
judgments against the corporation. An action was maintained against
a corporation on a bond securing a certain sum to the plaintiff, a
member of the corporation, the member being deemed by the court a
stranger.
Pierce & Partridge, 3 Met.Mass. 44; so of
notes and bonds, accounts and rights to dividends. Hill v.
Manchester & Salford Waterworks,
5 Adol. & Ellis
866; Dunston v. Imperial Glass Company,
3 B. & Adol.
125; Geer v. School District, 6 Vt. 187;
Methodist
Episcopal Society, 18
id. 405;
Rogers v. Danby
Universalist Society, 19
id. 187."
"
(No. 1)"
Statement of the Commercial Branch Bank, Cleveland, made
to
the Auditor of Cuyahoga County, May 25, 1853
1st. The average amount of notes and bills
discounted and purchased by the Commercial Branch
Bank of Cleveland, including all loans or discounts
whether made or renewed during the year, from May
1st, 1852, to May 1st, 1853, inclusive, is. . . . . . .
$582,735
2d. The average amount of all other moneys,
effects, or dues of every description belonging to
said Commercial Branch Bank, loaned, invested, or
otherwise used or employed with a view to profit,
or upon which said bank received, or was entitled
to receive, interest during the above period, was . . .
88,714
--------
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . $671,449
========
W. A. OTIS,
President
F. P. HANDY,
Cashier
"STATE OF OHIO,
Cuyahoga county, ss."
"CLEVELAND, May 25, 1853"
"Personally appeared William A. Otis, President, and Freeman P.
Handy, Cashier of the Commercial Branch Bank of Cleveland, and made
oath that the aforesaid statement is true and correct, according to
their best knowledge and belief."
"Before me, witness my hand."
"JOHN T. NEWTON,
Notary Public"
"The following resolutions have been adopted by the directors of
this bank:"
"
Resolved, That in the opinion of the directors of the
Commercial Branch Bank of Cleveland, that the act for the
assessment and taxation of all property in this state, and for
levying taxes thereon according to its true value in money, passed
April 13, 1852, so far as it imposes a tax on this bank or banking
company, or the listing or valuing of its property different from
that required by its charter, without the consent of the
corporators, is unconstitutional and void, and is also repugnant to
the Constitution of the State of Ohio -- which declares that all
laws shall be passed taxing by uniform rule all investments in
stock or otherwise, and that property employed in banking shall
bear a burden of taxation equal to that imposed on the property of
individuals; and, again -- that the property of corporations now
existing or hereafter created, shall be forever subject to taxation
the same as the property of individuals, and therefore creates no
legal liability against this bank, and that this bank will not, as
at present advised, pay such additional tax unless compelled by
law, and hereby enters its protest against its imposition and
collection."
"
Resolved, That the cashier attach a copy of these
resolutions, signed by the president and cashier of this bank, to
the return of this bank, made under said law. Also file a copy so
attested with the treasurer of this county, and transmit a like
copy to the
Page 59 U. S. 362
auditor of state, as an evidence of the dissent of this bank
from all the provisions of said law, and its determination to rely
upon the Constitution and legal rights of this bank under its
charter."
"F. P. HANDY,
Cashier"
"W. A. OTIS,
President"
"COMMERCIAL BRANCH BANK,
Cleveland, May 25, 1853"
"AUDITOR'S OFFICE, CUYAHOGA COUNTY"
"Cleveland, February 22, 1856"
"I hereby certify, that the foregoing is a true copy of the
statement of the Commercial Branch Bank, made to the Auditor of
Cuyahoga County, May 25, 1853."
"WILLIAM FULLER,
County Auditor"
"
(No. 2)"
"AUDITOR'S OFFICE, CUYAHOGA COUNTY"
"Cleveland, February, 22, 1856"
"I hereby certify, that there was entered upon the tax duplicate
of this county, for the year 1853, for taxation, in the name of the
Commercial Branch Bank of Cleveland, the sum of six hundred
seventy-one thousand four hundred and forty-nine dollars, in
accordance with the statement of said bank, made to the auditor of
said county, May 25, 1853."
"And that the amount of taxes assessed thereon in said year, for
state, county, city, and road purposes, is fourteen thousand seven
hundred and seventy-one dollars eighty-seven cents and seven mills
($14,771 87 7), as follows."
"WILLIAM FULLER,
County Auditor"
image:a
MR. JUSTICE CAMPBELL dissenting.
The following case is made upon the record of this cause:
The Commercial Bank of Cleveland, Ohio, was organized in 1845,
according to the Act of the General Assembly of February, 1845, for
the incorporation of the State Bank of Ohio and other companies,
with a capital which was increased in 1848 to $175,000, and placed
under the management of five directors.
From its organization until 1851 the taxes of the bank were
determined by the 60th section of the act aforesaid, which required
the banks semiannually to set off to the state six percent of the
net profits for the six months next preceding, and the sum so set
off the act declared should be "in lieu of all taxes
Page 59 U. S. 363
to which such company or the stockholders thereof on account of
stock owned therein would otherwise be subject." In the year 1851,
the general assembly of Ohio altered this rule of taxation, and
required that the capital stock, surplus and contingent funds of
the banks should be listed for taxation at their money value, and
should be assessed for the same purposes and to the same extent
that personal property might be in the place of their location.
During the same year the people of Ohio, in the mode prescribed
in their fundamental law, adopted a new constitution. One of the
articles art. 12, § 3 requires
"the General Assembly to provide by law for taxing the notes and
bills discounted or purchased, and all other property, effects,
dues of every description without deduction of all banks now
existing or hereafter created, and of all bankers, so that all
property employed in banking shall always bear a burden of taxation
equal to that imposed on the property of individuals."
In 1852, the General Assembly fulfilled this direction by a law
which required the banks to disclose the average amount of all
bills, notes discounted or purchased, and the average amount of
their moneys, dues and effects, so as to afford a basis for
taxation; and by the same act taxes were directed to be laid upon
these amounts without deduction.
The directors, stockholders, and officers of this bank have
disputed the validity of these changes in the rule of taxation, as
violating a right derived by contract, obligatory on the state, and
contained in the 60th section of the act first mentioned, and no
voluntary obedience has been rendered to them; but, on the
contrary, the successive measures taken for the collection of these
taxes have met with opposition from the corporation, and submission
has always been accompanied with a protest on the part of the
directors, in which their determination was expressed to rely upon
the constitutional and legal rights of the bank.
The taxes for the year 1852 were collected in current bank
bills, and the packages were prepared and placed within the reach
of the treasurer, who held the duplicate for collection, by the
officers of the bank, and immediately after they were assigned by
the bank to one Deshler, who replevied the same by a writ from the
Circuit Court of the United States for Ohio, and thus made a case
which subsequently came to this Court.
Deshler v.
Dodge, 16 How. 622.
In December, 1853, some five days before the taxes were payable,
John M. Woolsey, a stockholder of the bank for thirty shares, at
the par value of $100 each, addressed the directors of the bank a
letter, requiring them "to institute the proper legal proceedings
to prevent the collection" of the assessment for that
Page 59 U. S. 364
year, averring that the bank was not bound to pay them. The
board of directors replied,
"that they considered the tax to have been illegally assessed,
but in consideration of the many obstacles in the way of resisting
said tax in the courts of Ohio they could not take the action they
were called upon in the letter to take,"
but must leave to Mr. Woolsey to take such a course as he might
be advised. It sufficiently appears that the treasurer is able to
pay any damages which the bank might sustain, and no evidence
exists of any indisposition of the directors to meet all the
obligations of their station, except what is found in the letter I
have described.
This bill was filed by Woolsey, as a stockholder of the bank,
against the Treasurer of the County of Cuyahoga, the five directors
of the bank, and the corporation itself, alleging his apprehensions
that the treasurer would proceed to make the collection of the
excess above the tax due under the 60th section, and that it would
impair the credit of the bank, invade its franchise, and ultimately
compel its dissolution; and that the directors had refused to take
measures to prevent its collection, on his requisition, and prays
for an injunction on the officer to restrain his further
proceedings. The circuit court affirmed the bill so as to restrain
the collection of all taxes assessed upon the bank, except such as
were laid under the act of 1845.
The first inquiry that arises is has this Court a jurisdiction
of the parties to the suit? The case is one of a stockholder of a
corporation, bringing the corporation before the courts of United
States to redress a corporate wrong in which both are similarly
interested. The early decisions of this Court on this question
would be conclusive against the bill. They require that the
plaintiff should be from a state different from all the individual
members of the corporation. The Chief Justice said, that invisible,
intangible, and artificial being, that mere legal entity -- a
corporation aggregate -- is certainly not a citizen; and
consequently cannot sue or be sued in the courts of the United
States, unless the rights of the members in this respect can be
exercised in their corporate name. 5 Cranch
9
U. S. 57,
9 U. S. 61, 78
[argument of counsel -- omitted];
19 U. S. 6 Wheat.
450;
39 U. S. 14 Pet.
60.
These cases required that the citizenship of all the corporators
should appears on the record, so that the court might be sure that
the controversy had arisen between citizens of different states, or
citizens of a state and foreign states, citizens or subjects. In
Marshall v. Baltimore &
Ohio Railroad Co., 16 How. 314, the Court relaxed
its strictness in reference to this averment, and was satisfied by
an allegation of the habitat of the corporation, but still
intimated that the national character of the corporators
Page 59 U. S. 365
was an essential subject of inquiry in a question of
jurisdiction. The Court says:
"The persons who act under these faculties and use the corporate
name, may be justly presumed to be resident in the state which is
the necessary habitat of the corporation, and where alone they can
be made subject to suit, and should be estopped in equity from
averring a different domicile as against those who are compelled to
seek them there, and nowhere else."
And again: "The presumption arising from the habitat of a
corporation being conclusive of those who use the corporate name
and exercise the faculties of it."
This case is one of a corporator suing the corporation of which
he is a member, and is the first instance of such a case in the
court. He cannot aver, against the manifest truth, that all the
corporators, himself included, are of a different state from
himself, to give the court jurisdiction upon the principle of the
earlier cases. And if the doctrine of an equitable estoppel can be
applied to a subject where facts, and not arbitrary presumptions,
were the only objects of consideration; and if, indeed, the
character of the corporation, as a matter of law, is to be assumed
to be that of the situs of the corporation, then all the
corporators, plaintiffs as well as defendants, stand upon this
record as citizens of the same state, and this suit cannot be
maintained. But if no inquiry into the citizenship of stockholders
may be made; if a foreign stockholder, upon the real or affected
indifference of a board of directors, or on some imaginary or
actual obstacle to relief, arising in the state of opinion in the
courts of the state, can draw questions of equitable cognizance
into the courts of the United States, in which corporate rights are
involved, or evils are threatened or inflicted on corporate
property, making the corporation and its managers parties, then a
very compendious method of bringing into the courts of the United
States all questions in which these artificial beings are concerned
has been invented, and the most morbid appetite for jurisdiction
among all their various members will be gratified, and upon a class
of cases where grave doubts exist whether those who made the
Constitution ever intended to confer any jurisdiction whatever. Nor
can this jurisdiction be supported by affirming that the
corporation is not a necessary party to the bill. The subject of
the bill is the title of the corporation to an exemption under the
act of incorporation, and its object is the protection of corporate
franchises and property. The being of the corporation is charged to
be an issue involved in the prayer for relief, and the inaction of
the directors affords the motive for the suit.
The conduct of the directors was determined in the course of
their duty as the governing body of the corporation, under the law
of their organization. Their measures and judgments were
Page 59 U. S. 366
the acts of the corporation. Whether these were conclusive upon
the corporators, or whether they might be impeached at the suit of
a single dissenting shareholder; whether the relations between the
state and the corporation were to be settled in a suit between them
or in this suit, are the matters in issue, and the corporation was
an essential party to their adjudication. The principle of the bill
is that in declining to take effective measures of prevention --
that is, refusing to apply for an injunction -- the directors
abdicated their controlling powers, and any stockholder became
entitled to intervene for the interests of himself and his
associates. The decree in this cause is not a decree for the relief
of this corporator, but is a decree for the corporation, and does
not differ from a decree proper to a case of the corporation
against the treasurer. It is clear, therefore, that the corporation
was a necessary party to the bill, and so are the adjudged cases.
Bagshaw v. East. Union R. Co., 7 Hare 114;
Cunningham
v. Pell, 5 Paige 607;
Rumney v. Monce, Finch 334,
336; 1 Danl.Ch.Pr. 251;
Charles. Ins. & T. Co. v.
Sebring, 5 Rich.Eq. 342.
The case is one between a corporator and the corporation, and
the jurisdiction cannot be affirmed unless the court is prepared to
answer the question whether a mere legal entity, an artificial
person, invisible, intangible, can be a citizen of the United
States in the sense in which that word is used in the Constitution;
and relying upon the case of
Marshall v. Baltimore & Ohio
Railroad Company, with a long list of antecessors, I am forced
to conclude that it cannot be.
The court has assumed this jurisdiction, and I am therefore
called to inquire whether a court of chancery can take cognizance
of the bill? The act of incorporation of the bank charges the board
of directors with the care of the corporate affairs, subject to an
annual responsibility to the stockholders. The principle of a court
of chancery is, to decline any interference with the discretion of
such directors, or to regulate their conduct or management in
respect to the duties committed to them.
The business of that court is to redress grievances illegally
inflicted or threatened, not to supply the prudence, knowledge, or
forecast requisite to successful corporate management. The facts of
this case involve, in my opinion, merely a question of discretion
in the performance of an official duty. In 1852, the taxes were
withdrawn from the Treasurer of Cuyahoga County, by an assignee of
the bank, and were never passed into the state treasury. The
Supreme Court of Ohio, subsequently to this, pronounced the taxes
to be legally assessed upon these banks, and that there was no
contract between the state and the banks, and there was no
exemption from the tax by anything apparent
Page 59 U. S. 367
in the act of 1845. Some of these judgments were pending in this
Court upon writs of error then undecided, no judgment having been
given contrary to that of the authorities, legislative, executive,
and judicial, as well as by the people of Ohio. It was under these
conditions that this stockholder, who purchased stock after the
controversy had arisen in Ohio, some five days before the taxes
were payable, addressed the directors of the Commercial Bank to
take preventive measures -- that is, I suppose, to file a bill for
an injunction instantly -- and, upon their suggestion of
difficulties, proceeds to take charge of the corporate rights of
the bank by this suit, in the circuit court of the United States.
The directors were elected annually; they were, collectively,
owners of one tenth of the stock of the bank, and no evidence is
shown that any other stockholder supposed that "preventive
measures," under the circumstances, could be sustained. There is no
charge of fraud, collusion, neglect of duty, or of indifference by
the directors save this omission to take some undefined "preventive
measures," which the plaintiff affected to suppose might be
proper.
I understand the rule of chancery in reference to such a case to
be that no suit can be maintained by an individual stockholder for
a wrong done or threatened to such a corporation unless it appears
that the plaintiff has no means of procuring a suit to be
instituted in the name of the corporation, and that the rule is
universal, applicable, as well to the cases where the acts which
afford the ground for complaint were either such as a majority
might sanction, or whether it belonged to the category of those
acts by which no stockholder could be bound except by his own
consent. This principle has the highest sanction in the decisions
of that court.
Foss v. Harbottle, 2 Hare 461,
aff'd, 1 Phil. 790; 2 Phil. 740; 7 Hare 130. The principle
is an obvious consequence from the relations between the officers
and members of a chartered corporation and the corporation itself.
These are explained in
Smith v. Hurd, 12 Met. 371. The
court said:
"There is no legal privity, relation, or immediate connection
between the holders of shares in a bank in their individual
capacity, on the one side, and the directors of the bank, on the
other. The directors are not the bailers, the factors, agents, or
trustees of such individual stockholders. The bank is a corporation
and body politic having a separate existence, as a distinct person
in law, in whom the whole stock and property of the bank are
vested, and to whom all agents, debtors, officers, and servants,
are responsible for all contracts, express or implied, made in
reference to such capital and for all torts and injuries
diminishing or impairing it."
The corporation, therefore, must vindicate its own wrongs and
assert its own rights in the modes pointed out by law.
Page 59 U. S. 368
I do not say that a court of chancery will never permit an
individual stockholder to come before it to assert a right of the
corporation in which he is a shareholder where there is an obstacle
of such a nature that the name of the corporation cannot be
employed before legitimate tribunals in their regular modes of
proceeding, but the burden is thrown upon the plaintiff to
establish the existence of an urgent necessity for such a suit.
The consideration of analogous cases will strengthen this
conclusion -- cases where courts of chancery are more free to
intervene, from the fiduciary relations between the parties and the
extent of its general jurisdiction over them. Such are cases of
danger to the interests of a creditor of an estate from the
collusion of an executor with the debtor of the estate or the
insolvency of the executor, or where an executor wrongfully fails
to make a settlement with a surviving partner and a residuary
legatee seeks one entire settlement of the estate against the
executor and partner, or where a decedent in his life has
fraudulently conveyed assets and his executor is estopped to impute
fraud, and there are creditors, or where the managers of a joint
stock company have been guilty of fraud, illegality, waste, and
their stockholders desire relief. In all these cases, the court of
chancery will suffer a party remotely interested to institute the
suit which his trustee or other representative should have brought,
and will grant the relief on that suit which would have been
appropriate to the case of him who should have commenced it. Sir
John Romilly, in a late case belonging to one of these categories,
says:
"To support such a bill as this, it is not sufficient to prove
that it may be an unpleasant duty to the executors and trustees to
take the necessary steps for protecting the property entrusted to
them. It is not sufficient to show that it will be for their
interests not to take such steps. It is necessary to show that they
prefer their own interests to their duty and that they intend to
neglect the performance of the obligation incidental to the office
imposed upon them and which they assumed to perform, or, as said in
Travis v. Mylne, that a substantial impediment to the
prosecution by the executors of the rights of the parties
interested in the estate against the surviving partner exists."
Stainton v. Carron Co., 23 L. & Eq. 315;
Travis
v. Milne, 9 Hare 141;
Hersey v. Veazie, 11 Shep. 1;
Colquitt v. Howard, 11 Geo. 556.
These cases afford no support to this suit. The Cleveland Bank
has betrayed no purpose to abandon its corporate duty. The
interests and obligations of the directors coincide to support its
pretensions. There is no supineness in their past conduct nor
indifference to the existing peril. The evidence, at the most,
convicts them only of a present disinclination to commence
suits
Page 59 U. S. 369
which were likely to be unproductive at the request of a single
shareholder. The answer shows that the taxes for 1852 had not been
recovered by the state, but had been retaken by an assignee of the
bank. Nor does the correspondence show that the directors had
decided to abandon the contest. The case here does not at all
fulfill the conditions on which the interposition of a shareholder
is allowable.
Elmslie v. McAulay, 3 Bro.C.C. 224, 1 Phil.
790;
Law v. Law, 2 Coll. 41;
Walker v. Trott, 4
Ed.Ch. 38.
But the evidence does not allow me to conclude that any
impediment whatever existed to a suit in the name of the
corporation from any disposition of the directors to resist the
claims of the state. Their protest appears at every successive
stage of the action of the fiscal officers. This suit is evidently
maintained with their consent; there has been no appearance either
by the directors or the corporation, but they abide the case of the
stockholder. The decree is for the benefit of the corporation. The
question then is can a corporation belonging to a state, and whose
officers are citizens, upon some hope or assurance that the
opinions of the courts of the United States are more favorable to
their pretensions, by any combination, contrivance, or agreement
with a nonresident shareholder devolve upon him the right to seek
for the redress of corporate grievances which are the subjects of
equitable cognizance in the courts of the United States by a suit
in his own name. In my opinion, there should be but one answer to
the question.
I come now to the merits of the case made by the bill.
In the suit of
Piqua Bank v.
Knoop, 16 How. 369, I gave the opinion that the act
of February, 1845, did not contain a contract obligatory between
the State of Ohio and the banking corporations which might be
originated by it in reference to the rule of taxation to be applied
to their capital or business. That the act imposed no limit upon
the power of the general assembly of the state, but that the rate
of taxation established in that act was alterable at their
pleasure. To that opinion I now adhere.
But assuming a contract to be collected from the indeterminate
expressions of the 60th section of the act, as interpreted by its
general objects and the supposed policy of the state, the question
is presented what consequence did the reconstitution of the
political system of the state by the people in 1851, and their
direction to the legislature to adopt equality as the rule of
assessment of taxes upon corporate property, accomplish to the
claims of these corporations?
Certainly no greater question -- none involving a more elemental
or important principle -- has ever been submitted to a judicial
Page 59 U. S. 370
tribunal. It involves the operation and efficiency of the
fundamental principles on which the American constitutions have
been supposed to rest.
The proposition of this confederacy of some fifty banking
corporations, having one-fortieth of the property of the state, is
that by the law of their organization for the whole term of their
corporate being, there exists no power in the government nor people
of Ohio to impair the concessions contained in the act of 1845,
particularly that determining the amount of their contribution to
the public revenue. This proposition does not depend for its truth
upon the limitation of time imposed upon the corporate existence of
the banks. It would not affect the proposition if the charters were
for a century or in perpetuity. Nor does the proposition derive
strength from the fact that the statute applies only to banking
corporations, or corporations confined to a single form of
commercial dealing. The proposition would have had the same degree
of accuracy if the act had been universal, applicable to all
private corporations, whether for manufactures, trade, intercourse,
mining, morals, or religion. It is said by a competent authority
that in the State of Massachusetts there are near twenty-five
hundred trading corporations, and that more than seven-tenths of
the real and personal property of that state is held by
corporations. The proportion between the property of corporations
and individuals is greater there than in other states, but the
property held by corporations in other states is large enough to
awaken the most earnest attention. A concession of the kind
contained in this act by a careless or a corrupt legislature for a
term or in perpetuity would impair in many states their resources
to an alarming extent.
Writers upon the condition of the Turkish empire say that
three-fourths of the landed property of the empire is held in
mortmain, as vakuf by mosques or charitable institutions, for their
own use or in trust for their owners. This property ceases to
contribute to the public revenues except in a specific form of
certain objectionable taxes on produce, and is inalienable. If held
in trust, it is exempt from forced sales and confiscations, and, on
the death of the owner without children, passes to the mosque or
other charitable trustee. In that empire, the ecclesiastical and
judicial is the dominant interest, for the Ulemas are both priests
and lawyers, just as the corporate moneyed interest is dominant in
Ohio, and in either country that interest claims exemption from the
usual burdens and ordinary legislation of the state. The judgment
of this Court would establish the permanent existence of such an
incubus upon the resources and growth of that country, if that
interest should have taken their privileges in the form of a
contract and had such a constitution as ours. Yet the
Page 59 U. S. 371
first step for the regeneration of Turkey, according to the
wisest statesmanship, is to abolish the vakuf.
Bentham, treating upon constitutional provisions in favor of
contracts, says:
"If all contracts were to be observed, all misdeeds would be to
be committed, for there is no misdeed the committal of which may
not be made the subject of a contract; and to establish in favor of
themselves, or of any other person or persons, an absolute
despotism, a set of legislators would have no more to do than to
enter into any engagement -- say with a foreign despot, say with a
member of their own community -- for this purpose."
And were this to happen, should it be that a state of this Union
had become the victim of vicious legislation, its property
alienated, its powers of taxation renounced in favor of chartered
associations, and the resources of the body politic cut off, what
remedy has the people against the misgovernment? Under the
doctrines of this Court, none is to be found in the government and
none exists in the inherent powers of the people if the wrong has
taken the form of a contract. The most deliberate and solemn acts
of the people would not serve to redress the injustice, and the
overreaching speculator upon the facility or corruption of their
legislature would be protected by the powers of this Court in the
profits of his bargain. Where would the people find a remedy? Let
the case before us form an illustration. Congress cannot limit the
term nor abolish the privileges of these corporations; they are
corporations of Ohio, and beyond her limits they have no legal
existence; they live in the contemplation of her laws and dwell in
the place of their creation.
38 U. S. 13
Pet. 512;
57 U. S. 16 How.
314. Nor can Congress enlarge the subjects for state taxation nor
interfere in the support of the state government. They could not
empower the state to collect taxes from these corporations. Were
the resources of the state oppressed with the burden of a Turkish
vakuf, Congress could not afford relief.
The faculties of the judicial department are even more fatal to
the state than the impotence of Congress. The courts cannot look to
the corruption, the blindness, nor mischievous effects of state
legislation to determine its binding operation.
Fletcher v.
Peck, 6 Cranch 87. The court, therefore, becomes
the patron of such legislation by furnishing motives of
incalculable power to the corporations to stimulate it and
affording stability and security to the successful effort. Where,
then, is the remedy for the people? They have none in their state
government nor in themselves, and the federal government is
enlisted by their adversary. It may be that an amendment of the
Constitution of the United States, by the proposal of two-thirds of
Congress and the ratification of the legislatures of three-fourths
of the states,
Page 59 U. S. 372
might enable the people of Ohio to assess taxes for the support
of their government upon terms of equality among her citizens.
The first observation to be made upon this is that these
extraordinary pretensions of corporations are not unfamiliar to an
inquirer into their nature and history. The steady aim of the most
thoroughly organized and powerful of the corporate establishments
of Europe has ever been to place themselves under the protection of
an external authority, superior to the government and people where
they dwell -- an authority sufficiently powerful to shield them
from responsibility and to secure their privileges from question. I
do not refer to the claim of kings to passive obedience under a
divine title. Ecclesiastical corporations, acknowledging the
supremacy of the Pope, afford a case parallel to that before us. I
find their principles compendiously declared in an allocution of a
minister of Rome to the court of Sardinia in reference to taxes on
church property there. I find that
"religious corporations, forming a portion of the ecclesiastical
family at large, are by their very nature under the guardianship
and authority of the church, and consequently no measure or laws
can be adopted with respect to them except by the spiritual power
or through its agency, especially in what touches their existence
or their conduct in the institutions to which they respectively
belong; nor can any other rule be recognized, even in matters that
concern their property. It is, in truth, beyond dispute that the
property possessed by ecclesiastical or religious foundations
belongs to the general category of property of the church and
constitutes a true and proper portion of its patrimony. In
consequence whereof, as the property of the church is inviolable,
so are the possessions of such foundations."
Nor was the doctrine of the inviolableness of contracts foreign
to these controversies. The sagacious and far-sighted members of
the ecclesiastical interests fortified themselves with concordats,
and these concordats were affirmed to be "contracts," and, like
these, "entail obligations," and "if the bond of a bargain is to be
respected in private life," so they declared "it is sacred and
inviolable in the life of states." A slight change of expression
will demonstrate that the principle of corporate policy, the
dictate of corporate ambition, which has predominated in the
contests in Europe, leading to desolating wars, is the same which
this Court is required to sanction in favor of corporations in the
United States. The allocution of the Ohio banks to this Court may
be thus stated:
"That the charters of incorporation granted by the state
governments are in their essence and nature 'contracts,' which
'entail obligations;' that consequently they are finally under the
guardianship and protection of the judiciary establishment of the
United States; that no acts of the state
Page 59 U. S. 373
legislature which conferred them, in whatever touches their
existence, methods of proceeding, or corporate privilege, are
binding on them; that, as the state legislatures are agents of the
people, whatever they have done in these respects is obligatory
upon them, and irrevocable by them, in any form of their action, or
in the exercise of any of their sovereign authority; and as the
judiciary establishment of the Union is charged with the duty of
holding the states and people to their limited orbits, and to
afford redress for violated contracts, and to prevent serious
resulting damage; and as these corporations cannot sue in the
courts of the United States, it is the duty of the court to suffer
the corporate wrongs to be redressed in the suit and at the
solicitation of any of their stockholders who can appear therefor
the state of opinion in the state courts will not allow the hope of
redress from them."
The allowance of this plea interposes this Court between these
corporations and the government and people of Ohio, to which they
owe their existence and by whose laws they derive all their
faculties. It will establish on the soil of every state a caste
made up of combinations of men for the most part under the most
favorable conditions in society, who will habitually look beyond
the institutions and the authorities of the state to the central
government for the strength and support necessary to maintain them
in the enjoyment of their special privileges and exemptions. The
consequence will be a new element of alienation and discord between
the different classes of society and the introduction of a fresh
cause of disturbance in our distracted political and social system.
In the end, the doctrine of this decision may lead to a violent
overturn of the whole system of corporate combinations.
Having thus examined the proportions of the doctrine contained
in the judgment of the Court, I oppose to it a deliberate and
earnest dissent.
And, first, as to the claim made for the court to be the final
arbiter of these questions of political power, I can imagine no
pretension more likely to be fatal to the Constitution of the court
itself. If this Court is to have an office so transcendent as to
decide finally the powers of the people over persons and things
within the state, a much closer connection and a much more direct
responsibility of its members to the people is a necessary
condition for the safety of the popular rights. Justice Woodbury,
in
Luther v.
Borden, 7 How. 52, has exposed this danger with
great discrimination and force. He said:
"Another evil, alarming and little foreseen, involved in
regarding these as questions for the final arbitrament of judges
would be that in such an event, all political privileges and rights
would in a dispute
Page 59 U. S. 374
among the people depend on our decision finally. We would
possess the power to decide against them, as well as for them, and
under a prejudiced or arbitrary judiciary, the public liberties or
popular privileges might thus be much perverted, if not entirely
prostrated. And if the people, in the distribution of powers under
the Constitution, should ever think of making judges supreme
arbiters in political controversies, when not selected by nor
amenable to them nor at liberty to follow the various
considerations that belong to political questions in their
judgments, they will dethrone themselves and lose one of their
invaluable birthrights -- building up in this way slowly but surely
a new sovereign power in this republic in most respects
irresponsible, unchangeable for life, and one, in theory at least,
more dangerous than the worst elective monarchy in the worst of
times."
The inquiry recurs have the people of Ohio deposited with this
tribunal the authority to overrule their own judgment upon the
extent of their own powers over institutions created by their own
government and commorant within the state? The fundamental
principle of American Constitutions, it seems to me, is that to the
people of the several states belongs the resolution of all
questions, whether of regulation, compact, or punitive justice,
arising out of the action of their municipal government upon their
citizens or depending upon their Constitutions and laws, and are
judges of the validity of all acts done by their municipal
authorities in the exercise of their sovereign rights, in either
case without responsibility or control from any department of the
federal government. This I understand to be the import of the
municipal sovereignty of the people within the state.
In 1802, the inhabitants of Ohio were released from their
pupilage to the federal authority, placed in full possession of
their rights to self-government, and were invited to adapt their
institutions to the federal system, of which the state, when
formed, was authorized to become a member.
The people of Ohio, by their state constitution, reserved to
themselves "complete power" to "alter, reform, and abolish their
government;" "to petition for redress of grievances," and to
"recur, as often as might be necessary, to the first principles of
government." It was by a constitution adopted according to
established forms and expressive of the sovereign will of the body
politic that the rule of taxation complained of in this suit was
prescribed.
The inquiry arises to what did the authority of the people
extend? It was their right to ameliorate every vicious institution
and to do whatever an enlightened statesmanship might
Page 59 U. S. 375
prescribe for the advancement of their own happiness, and for
this end persons and things in the state was submitted to their
authority. A material distinction has always been acknowledged to
exist as to the degrees of the authority that a people could
legitimately exert over persons and corporations. Individuals are
not the creatures of the state, but constitute it. They come into
society with rights, which cannot be invaded without injustice. But
corporations derive their existence from the society, are the
offspring of transitory conditions of the state, and, with
faculties for good in such conditions, combine durable dispositions
for evil. They display a love of power, a preference for corporate
interests to moral or political principles or public duties, and an
antagonism to individual freedom which have marked them as objects
of jealousy in every epoch of their history. Therefore the power
has been exercised in all civilized states to limit their
privileges or to suppress their existence under the exigencies
either of public policy or political necessity.
Sir James McIntosh says:
"Property is indeed, in some sense, created by act of the public
will, but it is by one of those fundamental acts which constitute
society. Theory proves it to be essential to the social state.
Experience proves that it has, in some degree, existed in every age
and nation of the world. But those public acts which form and endow
corporations are subsequent and subordinate. They are only ordinary
expedients of legislation. The property of individuals is
established on a general principle which seems coeval with civil
society itself. But bodies are instruments fabricated by the
legislature for a specific purpose, which ought to be preserved
while they are beneficial, amended when they are impaired, and
rejected when they become useless or injurious."
Vind.Gal. 48, note.
Who in the United States is to determine when the public
interests demand the suppression of bodies whose existence or modes
or action are contrary to the well being of the state?
If the powers of the people of a state are inadequate to this
object, then their grave and solemn declarations of their rights
and their authority over their governments and of the ends for
which their governments and the institutions of their governments
were framed, and the responsibility of rulers and magistrates to
themselves, are nothing but "great swelling words of vanity."
But not only is the jurisdiction of Ohio "complete" over the
public institutions of her government, but the subject matter upon
which their will was expressed in their constitution was
independently of their control over the corporations, one over
which their jurisdiction was plenary. They declared in what
Page 59 U. S. 376
manner property held within the state by these artificial bodies
should contribute to the public support in the form of regular and
apportioned taxation. When the Constitution of the United States
was before the people of the states for their ratification, they
were told that, with the exception of duties on exports and
imports, the states retained "an independent and uncontrollable
authority" to "raise their own revenue in the most absolute and
unqualified sense," and that any attempt on the part of the federal
government to abridge them in the exercise of it would be "a
violent assumption of power unwarranted by any clause of the
Constitution." Fed. 163, by Hamilton. And the opinions of this
Court are filled with disclaimers on the same subject.
17 U. S. 4
Wheat. 429.
The true principle therefore would seem to be that if there was
any conflict in the tax laws of the state and a supposed contract
of its legislative or executive agents with one of its citizens, it
would be for the state to harmonize the two upon principles of
general equity; but in no condition of facts for the judiciary
department to interfere with state affairs by writs of replevin or
injunction. The acknowledgment of such a power would be to
establish the alarming doctrine that the empire of Ohio and the
remaining states of the Union over their revenues is not to be
found in their people, but in the numerical majority of the judges
of the court.
In the opinion I gave in the case of the Piqua Bank, I exhibited
evidence that the care of the public domain, whether consisting of
crown lands or of taxes on property, belonged to the sovereign
power of the state, and that improvident alienations by the Crown
were, from time to time, set aside by the parliament of Great
Britain under the dictates of a public policy. Twelve acts of
parliament are cited by Sir William Davenant of this character, and
having this object. Davenant, Grants and Res. 244.
A similar condition existed in France. The kings were bound by
their coronation oath "to maintain and preserve the public domain
with all their power," and it was an inviolable maxim that it could
not be alienated except in specified cases determined in the
fundamental laws of the monarchy. This legal result was declared by
the national assembly in 1790, to the effect that the public
domain, with all its accretions, belonged to the nation; that this
property is the most perfect that can be imagined, since their
exists no superior power that can restrain or modify it; that the
power to alienate -- the essential attribute of property -- exists
in the nation; that every appropriation of the public domain is
essentially revocable if made without the consent of the nation;
that it preserves over the property alienated
Page 59 U. S. 377
the same right and authority as if it had remained under its
control; and that this principle was one which no lapse of time nor
legal formality could evade. All grants, therefore, of the public
rights, and especially those partaking of the nature of taxes, or
subsidies, such as fines, confiscations, and stamps, were revoked
because the subject was not alienable. 8 Merlin tit. Dom.Pub.; 1
Proud., Dom.Pub. 62.
If the power to review the illegal or improvident acts of a
monarch, by which "the domain and patrimony of the Crown" (one of
the principal sinews of the state, as they are termed in the
ordinances) was dilapidated or impoverished, in the nearly absolute
monarchies of Europe, was reserved to the nation, it would seem to
follow that in the American states, where so little has been
conceded to the government and whose "complete power" to amend or
abrogate is so distinctly reserved that no inference nor
implication can arise, that the same has been relinquished or
abdicated. My conclusion is that the Constitution of Ohio, whether
it is to be regarded as the expression of the sovereign will of the
people that the extraordinary exemptions granted to these
corporations, by which they contribute unequally to the public
support, is contrary to the genius of their institutions, or
whether they are inconsistent with a just apportionment of the
public burdens, or whether, as a declaration of the exigency of the
state, requiring an additional contribution from them to its
revenue, or a judgment of condemnation of the former government for
an abuse of the powers it enjoyed, that it is above and beyond the
supervision or control of the judiciary department of this
government.
Nor does the opinion that this department can exert such an
empire over the people of Ohio derive support, in my opinion, from
the clause in the Constitution on the subject of the obligation of
contracts, nor the decision of this Court upon that clause of the
Constitution.
That the people of the states should have released their powers
over the artificial bodies which originate under the legislation of
their representatives, or over the improvident charges or
concessions imposed by them upon its revenues, or over the acts of
their own functionaries, is not to be assumed. Such a surrender was
not essential to any policy of the Union nor required by any
confederate obligation. Such an abandonment could have served no
other interest than that of the corporations or individuals who
might profit by the legislative acts themselves. Combinations of
classes in society, united by the bond of a corporate spirit for
the accumulation of power, influence, or wealth by the control of
intercourse or trade or the spiritual or moral concerns of society,
unquestionably desire limitations upon the sovereignty
Page 59 U. S. 378
of the people and the existence of an authority upon which they
can repose in security and confidence. But the framers of the
Constitution were imbued with no desire to call into existence such
combinations nor dread of the sovereignty of the people. They
denied to Congress the power to create, 3 Mad.Deb. 1576, and the
most salutary jealousy was expressed in reference to them. The
people of the states, during the existence of the confederation,
suffered from the violation of private property by their
governments. In reconstituting their political system, they
abstained from delegating to the United States the powers to emit
bills of credit; to make anything but gold and silver a tender in
the payment of debts; to pass any bill of attainder or
ex post
facto law, or law to impair the obligation of contracts,
except so far as necessary to a uniform law of bankruptcy; while
they protected property from unreasonable searches and seizures and
the title from detriment except in the due course of legal
proceeding.
The state governments were prohibited from any corresponding
legislation, either by their federal or state constitutions.
The power to interfere with private contracts is one of the most
delicate and difficult in its exercise of any belonging to the
social system, and one which there is constant temptation to abuse.
That its exercise is sometimes necessary is proved by the history
of every civilized state. Its judicious exercise constitutes the
titles of Solon and Sully to fame, and has been vindicated by the
most enlightened statesmen. But the people reserved to themselves
to determine the exigencies which should call it into existence.
The prohibition is a limitation upon the ordinary government, and
not upon the popular sovereignty. In
Fletcher v.
Peck, 6 Cranch 87, the Chief Justice doubted
whether the repeal of a grant, issued under a legislative act by
the executive of a state, was within the competence of the
legislative authority, and notices the distinction between acts of
legislation and sovereignty, and treats the clause of the
Constitution under consideration as an inhibition on legislation.
In
Dartmouth College v.
Woodward, 4 Wheat. 518, 553 [argument of counsel
omitted], Mr. Webster presents the distinction with prominence in
his argument. He says:
"It is not too much to assert that the Legislature of New
Hampshire would not have been competent to pass the acts in
question and make them binding on the plaintiff without their
assent, even if there had been in the Constitution of the United
States, or of New Hampshire, no special restriction on their power,
because these acts are not the exercise of a power properly
legislative. . . . The British Parliament could not have annulled
or revoked this grant as an ordinary act of legislation. If it had
done it at all, it could only have been in virtue of that sovereign
power
Page 59 U. S. 379
called omnipotent, which does not belong to any legislature of
the United States. The Legislature of New Hampshire has the same
power over the charter which belonged to the King who granted it,
and no more. By the law of England, the power to grant corporations
is a part of the royal prerogative. By the revolution, this power
may be considered as having devolved on the legislature of the
state, and it has been accordingly exercised by the legislature.
But the King cannot abolish a corporation, or new-model it, or
alter its powers, without its assent. . . ."
Chief Justice Marshall, in describing the jurisdiction of the
Court over such contracts, says it belongs to it "the duty of
protecting from legislative violation those contracts which the
Constitution of the country has placed beyond legislative control."
And in defining the object and extent of the prohibition, he
says:
"Before the formation of the Constitution, a course of
legislation had prevailed in many if not in all the states which
weakened the confidence of man in man and embarrassed all
transactions between individuals by dispensing with a faithful
performance of engagements. To correct this mischief by restraining
the power which produced it, the state legislatures were forbidden
to pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts -- that is,
of contracts respecting property under which some individual could
claim a right to something beneficial to himself."
These selections from opinions delivered in this Court which
have carried the prerogative jurisdiction of the Court to its
farthest limit, and portions of which are not easily reconciled
with a long series of cases subsequently decided,
Satterlee
v. Matthewson, 2 Pet. 380;
Charles
River Bridge, 11 Pet. 420;
West River
Bridge v. Dix, 6 How. 507;
49 U. S. 8 How.
569,
51 U. S. 10 How.
511, show with clearness that this Court has not, till now,
impugned the sovereignty of the people of a state over these
artificial bodies called into existence by their own
legislatures.
I have thus given the reasons for the opinion that the
Constitution of Ohio and the acts of her government, done by its
special authority and direction, are valid dispositions. It is no
part of my jurisdiction to inquire whether these public acts of the
people and the state were just or equitable. Those questions belong
entirely to themselves.
It may be that the people may abuse the powers with which they
are invested, and, even in correcting the abuses of their
government, may not in every case act with wisdom and
circumspection.
But for my part, when I consider the justice, moderation, the
restraints upon arbitrary power, the stability of social order, the
security of personal rights, and general harmony which existed in
the country before the sovereignty of governments was asserted,
Page 59 U. S. 380
and when the sovereignty of the people was a living and
operative principle, and governments were administered subject to
the limitations and with reference to the specific ends for which
they were organized, and their members recognized their
responsibility and dependence, I feel no anxiety nor apprehension
in leaving to the people of Ohio a "complete power" over their
government, and all the institutions and establishments in has
called into existence. My conclusion is that the decree of the
Circuit Court of Ohio erroneous, and that the judgment of this
Court should be to reverse that decree and to dismiss the bill of
the plaintiff.
MR. JUSTICE DANIEL:
I concur entirely in the preceding opinion of my brother
CAMPBELL.
MR. JUSTICE CATRON:
I also dissent, and concur with the conclusions of the opinion
just read.