1. The doctrine that, except where Congress has provided, the
United States cannot be sued examined and reaffirmed.
2. That doctrine has no application to officers and agents of
the United States who, when as such holding for public uses
possession of property, are sued therefor by a person claiming to
be the owner thereof or entitled thereto, but the lawfulness of
that possession and the right or title of the United States to the
property may, by a court of competent jurisdiction, be the subject
matter of inquiry and adjudged accordingly.
3. The constitutional provisions that no person shall be
deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law,
nor private property taken for public use without just
compensation, relate to those rights whose protection is peculiarly
within the province of the judicial branch of the government. Cases
examined which show that the courts extend protection when the
rights of property are unlawfully invaded by public officers.
4. In ejectment, the title relied on by the defense was a
certificate of sale of the demanded premises to the United States
by the commissioners under the act of Congress for the collection
of direct taxes. The certificate was impeached on the ground of the
refusal of the commissioners to permit the owner to pay the tax,
with interest and costs, before the day of sale, by an agent or in
any other way than by payment in person.
Held that when
the commissioners had established a uniform rule that they would
receive such taxes from no one but the owner in person, it avoids
such sale and a tender is unnecessary, since it would be of no
avail.
5.
Bennett v.
Hunter, 9 Wall. 324,
Tacey v.
Irwin, 18
id. 549, and
Atwood v.
Weems, 99 U. S. 183,
reexamined and the principle they establish held to apply to a
purchase at such a tax sale by the United States as well as by a
private person.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
These are two writs of error to the same judgment, one
prosecuted by the United States
eo nomine and the other by
the
Page 106 U. S. 197
Attorney General of the United States in the names of Frederick
Kaufman and Richard. P. Strong, the defendants against whom
judgment was rendered in the circuit court.
The action was originally commenced in the Circuit Court for the
County of Alexandria, in the State of Virginia, by the present
defendant in error, against Kaufman and Strong and a great number
of others in the names of the real parties under which the
pleadings to recover possession of a parcel of land of about 1,100
acres, known as the Arlington estate. It was an action of ejectment
in the form prescribed by the statutes of Virginia, under which the
pleadings are in the names of the real parties plaintiff and
defendant.
As soon as the declaration was filed in that court, the case was
removed into the circuit court of the United States by writ of
certiorari, where all the subsequent proceedings took place. It was
tried by a jury, and during the progress of the trial an order was
made at the request of the plaintiff dismissing the suit as to all
of the defendants except Kaufman and Strong. Against each of these
a judgment was rendered for separate parcels of the land in
controversy, namely against Kaufman for about two hundred acres of
it, constituting the national cemetery and included within its
walls, and against Strong for the remainder of the tract, except
seventeen acres in the possession of Maria Syphax.
As the United States was not a party to the suit below, and,
while defending the action by its proper law officers, expressly
declined to submit itself as a defendant to the jurisdiction of the
court, there may exist some doubt whether it has a right to
prosecute the writ of error in its own name; but as the judgment
against Kaufman and Strong is here on their writ of error, and as
under that writ all the questions are raised which can be raised
under the other, their writ being prosecuted in the interest of the
United States, and argued here by the Solicitor General, the point
is immaterial, and the question has not been mooted.
The first step taken in the case after it came into the circuit
court of the United States was the filing in the clerk's office of
that court of the following paper by the Attorney General:
Page 106 U. S. 198
"George W. C. Lee"
"v. In ejectment"
"Frederick Kaufman, R. P. Strong,"
"and others"
"And now comes the Attorney General of the United States and
suggests to the court and gives it to understand and be informed
(appearing only for the purpose of this motion) that the property
in controversy in this suit has been for more than ten years and
now is held, occupied, and possessed by the United States, through
its officers and agents, charged in behalf of the government of the
United States with the control of the property, and who are in the
actual possession thereof, as public property of the United States,
for public uses, in the exercise of their sovereign and
constitutional powers, as a military station, and as a national
cemetery established for the burial of deceased soldiers and
sailors, and known and designated as the 'Arlington Cemetery,' and
for the uses and purposes set forth in the certificate of sale, a
copy of which, as stated and prepared by the plaintiff, and which
is a true copy thereof, is annexed hereto and filed herewith, under
claim of title, as appears by the said certificate of sale, and
which was executed, delivered, and recorded as therein
appears."
"Wherefore, without submitting the rights of the government of
the United States to the jurisdiction of the court, but
respectfully insisting that the court has no jurisdiction of the
subject in controversy, he moves that the declaration in said suit
be set aside and all the proceedings be stayed and dismissed, and
for such other order as may be proper in the premises."
"CHAS. DEVENS"
"
Atty.Gen. U.S."
The plaintiff demurred to this suggestion, and on hearing the
demurrer was sustained. The case was thereupon tried before a jury
on the general issue pleaded by defendants Kaufman and Strong, in
the course of which the question raised by this suggestion of the
Attorney General was again presented to the court by prayers for
instruction, which were rejected and exceptions taken.
The plaintiff offered evidence establishing title in himself by
the will of his grandfather, George Washington Parke Custis, who
devised the Arlington estate to his daughter, the wife of Gen.
Robert E. Lee, for life, and after her death to the
Page 106 U. S. 199
plaintiff. This, with the long possession under that title, made
a
prima facie right of recovery in plaintiff. The title
relied on by defendants was a tax sale certificate made by the
commissioners appointed under the Act of Congress of June 7, 1862,
"for the collection of direct taxes in the insurrectionary
districts within the United States," as amended by the Act of
February 6, 1863. At this sale, the land was bid in by said
commissioners for the United States, and a certificate of that fact
was given by these commissioners and introduced on the trial as
evidence by defendants. If this sale was a valid sale and the
certificate conveyed a valid title, then the title of plaintiff was
thereby divested, and he could not recover. If the proceedings
evidenced by the tax sale did not transfer the title of the
property to the United States, then it remained in the plaintiff,
and, so far as the question of title was concerned, his recovery
was a rightful one.
We have then two questions presented to the court and jury
below, and the same questions arise in this Court on the
record:
1. Could any action be maintained against the defendants for the
possession of the land in controversy under the circumstances of
the relation of that possession to the United States, however clear
the legal right to that possession might be in plaintiff?
2. If such an action could be maintained, was the
prima
facie title of plaintiff divested by the tax sale and the
certificate given by the commissioners?
It is believed that no division of opinion exists among the
members of this Court on the proposition that the rulings of law
under which the latter question was submitted by the court to the
jury was sound, and that the jury were authorized to find, as they
evidently did find, that the tax certificate and the sale which it
recited did not divest the plaintiff of his title to the
property.
For this reason, we will consider first the assignment of errors
on that subject.
No substantial objection is seen on the face of the certificate
to its validity, and none has been seriously urged. It was admitted
in evidence by the court, and unless impeached by
Page 106 U. S. 200
extrinsic evidence offered by the plaintiff, it defeated his
title.
When this tax sale was made, the Act of February 6, 1863, which
amended the original Act of June 7, 1862, by substituting a new
section seven for that of the former, was in force. It declares
that the certificate of the commissioners given to the purchaser at
such sale
"shall be received in all courts and places as
prima
facie evidence of the regularity and validity of said sale and
of the title of the said purchaser or purchasers under the
same,"
and that it
"shall only be affected as evidence of the regularity and
validity of sale by establishing the fact that said property was
not subject to taxes, or that the taxes had been paid previous to
sale, or that the property had been redeemed according to the
provisions of this act."
It is in reference to the clause which permits the certificate
to be impeached by showing that the taxes had been paid previous to
sale that the plaintiff in the present case introduced
evidence.
This Court has in a series of cases established the proposition
that where the commissioners refused to receive such taxes, their
action in thus preventing payment was the equivalent of payment in
its effect upon the certificate of sale.
Bennett v.
Hunter, 9 Wall. 326;
Taxey v.
Irwin, 18 Wall. 549;
Atwood v. Weems,
99 U. S. 183.
There are exceptions to the ruling of the court on the admission
of evidence, and instructions to the jury given and refused on this
subject, which are made the foundation of several assignments of
error.
All that is necessary to be considered in this matter is
presented in the instructions granted and refused. The point in
issue is fairly raised by the following, given at the request of
plaintiff, and against the objection of defendants:
"If the jury believe from the evidence that the commissioners,
prior to January 11, 1864, established, announced, and uniformly
followed a general rule under which they refused to receive on
property which had been advertised for sale from anyone but the
owner or a party in interest, in person, when offered, the amount
chargeable upon said property by virtue of the said acts of
Congress, then said rule dispensed with the
Page 106 U. S. 201
necessity of a tender, and in the absence of proof to the
contrary, the law presumes that said amount would have been paid,
and the court instructs the jury that, upon such a state of facts,
the sale of the property in controversy, made on the eleventh day
of January, 1864, was unauthorized, and conferred no title on the
purchaser,"
and by instructions six and seven, given at the request of
defendants, in the following language:
"6th. The burden of proof is upon the plaintiff to establish the
fact that the tax commissioners, before the sale of this property,
made a general rule not to receive taxes except from the owner in
person after the advertisement and before the sale, and if the jury
believe that only two such instances occurred before the sale of
this property, and if there is no evidence that the other two
commissioners, or either of them, ever acted under such rule or
practice, except Commissioner Hawxhurst, or that they or either of
them ever concurred in such action before the sale of this
property, then the said two instances in which Mr. Hawxhurst alone
acted do not establish the said practice by the board of
commissioners before the sale of this property in a sufficient
manner to render the certificate of sale of this property
invalid."
"7th. In order to establish a general practice or rule of the
board of commissioners not to receive taxes except from the owner
in person, after advertisement and before sale, before the date of
the sale of the property in controversy, the jury must find from
evidence produced on this trial that a majority of such board
adopted such practice or rule or concurred therein before the date
of the sale of this property, and, in the absence of proof to the
contrary, the law presumes that a majority of such board did not
adopt such practice or rule or concur therein before such
date."
We think these presented correctly to the jury the principle
established by the cases in this Court above referred to -- that
is, that the commissioners themselves, having established and acted
upon a rule that payment of the taxes after advertisement would be
received from no one but the owner of the land appearing in person
to pay them -- that if offered by his tenant, his agent, or his
attorney in fact duly appointed, it would be rejected, it would be
an idle ceremony for any of these to make
Page 106 U. S. 202
the offer, and an actual tender by such persons, as it would
certainly not be accepted, need not be made. That the
commissioners, having in the execution of the law acted upon a rule
which deprived the owner of the land of an important right -- a
right which went to the root of the matter, a right which has in no
instance known to us, or cited by counsel, been refused to a
taxpayer -- the sale made under such circumstances is invalid, as
much so as if the tax had been actually paid or tendered. The
proposition is thus expressed by this Court at its last term in the
case of
Hills v. Albany Exchange Bank, 105 U.
S. 319, as the result of the cases above cited:
"It is a general rule that when the tender or performance of an
act is necessary to the establishment of any right against another
party, this tender or offer to perform is waived or becomes
unnecessary when it is reasonably certain that the offer will be
refused."
The application of these decisions to the case before us is
denied by counsel on two grounds. The first of these is that the
case of
Bennett v. Hunter was decided on the language of
the act of 1862, and that due attention was not given to the
peculiar language of the substituted section seven of the act of
1863, which says that
"When the owner of the land shall not on or before the day of
sale appear in person before said board of commissioners and pay
the amount of the tax, with ten percent interest thereon, with the
costs of advertising the same, or request the same to be struck off
to a purchaser for a less sum than two-thirds of the assessed value
of said several lots or parcels of ground, the said commissioners
shall be authorized at said sale to bid off the same for the United
States at a sum not exceeding two-thirds of the assessed value
thereof."
It is argued from this that no right to pay the tax under this
statute existed except by the owner in person.
The reply to this is that in the cases of
Bennett v.
Hunter and
Taxey v. Irwin, the sales that were under
consideration are clearly shown by the reports to have been made
after the act of 1863, and it is believed that no sale for taxes
was made under the original tax law until after that amendment was
passed, and that all the officers charged with the duty of
collecting that tax were aware of the language of the new seventh
section. It is quite apparent from the opinion of Chief Justice
Page 106 U. S. 203
Chase, who spoke for the Court in the case of
Bennett v.
Hunter and who was Secretary of the Treasury when both
statutes were enacted, that he understood well that he was deciding
the very question raised by the requirement to appear in person in
the latter act, and intended to decide that notwithstanding this,
the owner had a right to pay the tax before sale by an agent or a
friend.
Besides, there was no other provision of either the act of 1862
or the amendment of 1863 which gave the owner the right to pay at
all between the advertisement and the sale. The third section of
the original act gave the right to pay for sixty days after the tax
commissioners had fixed the amount of the tax, and no longer, and
the seventh section of that act, as well as its substitute of 1863,
gave the right to redeem after the sale was made.
It is clear, therefore, that
Bennett v. Hunter, Taxey v.
Irwin, and
Atwood v. Weems were decisions construing
the substituted seventh section of 1863.
In the case of
Turner v.
Smith, 14 Wall. 553, this Court, in construing the
change in the language of the seventh section, held that its object
was to authorize the United States, by its commissioner, to bid
more than the tax and costs, which they could not do before, and to
limit them to two-thirds of its value, and that after the amount of
costs and tax had been bid, the United States should not bid
against a purchaser named by the owner. It was probably in
reference to this that the act required the personal presence of
the owner before the commissioners to name a purchaser against whom
the United States should not compete after it was secured by a bid
which covered the tax, interest, and costs.
The other point raised is that the right to pay the taxes
between the advertisement and day of sale in any other mode than by
personal appearance of the owner before the commissioners did not
exist in cases where the United States became the purchaser. As it
could never be known until the day of sale whether the United
States would become the purchaser or not, it would seem that the
duty of the commissioners to receive the taxes was to be exercised
without reference to the possibility of the land being struck off
to the United States.
Page 106 U. S. 204
In the case of
Cooley v.
O'Connor, 12 Wall. 391, it was held that the act
contemplated that a certificate of sale should be given when the
United States became the purchaser, as in other cases, and no
reason is shown why that certificate should have any greater effect
as evidence of title than in the case of a private purchaser, nor
why it should not be subject to the same rules in determining its
validity, nor why the payment or tender of the tax, interest, and
costs, should not be made by an agent in the one case as in the
other.
It is proper to observe that there was evidence, uncontradicted,
to show that Mr. Fendall appeared before the commissioners in due
time and offered on the part of Mrs. Lee, in whom the title then
was, to pay the taxes, interest, and costs, and was told that the
commissioners could receive the money from no one but the owner of
the land in person.
In all this matter we do not see any error in the rulings of the
court, nor any reason to doubt that the jury were justified in
finding that the United States acquired no title under tax sale
proceedings.
In approaching the other question which we are called on to
decide, it is proper to make a clear statement of what it is.
The counsel for plaintiffs in error and in behalf of the United
States assert the proposition that though it has been ascertained
by the verdict of the jury, in which no error is found, that the
plaintiff has the title to the land in controversy, and that what
is set up in behalf of the United States is no title at all, the
court can render no judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the
defendants in the action because the latter hold the property as
officers and agents of the United States, and it is appropriated to
lawful public uses.
This proposition rests on the principle that the United States
cannot be lawfully sued without its consent in any case, and that
no action can be maintained against any individual without such
consent, where the judgment must depend on the right of the United
States to property held by such persons as officers or agents for
the government.
The first branch of this proposition is conceded to be the
established law of this country and of this Court at the present
day; the second, as a necessary or proper deduction from the first,
is denied.
Page 106 U. S. 205
In order to decide whether the inference is justified from what
is conceded, it is necessary to ascertain, if we can, on what
principle the exemption of the United States from a suit by one of
its citizens is founded, and what limitations surround this
exemption. In this, as in most other cases of like character, it
will be found that the doctrine is derived from the laws and
practices of our English ancestors, and while it is beyond question
that from the time of Edward the First until now, the King of
England was not suable in the courts of that country except where
his consent had been given on petition of right, it is a matter of
great uncertainty whether prior to that time he was not suable in
his own courts and in his kingly character as other persons were.
We have the authority of Chief Baron Comyns, 1 Dig. 132, Action C
1, and 6 Dig. 67, Prerogative, and of the Mirror of Justices, c. 1
sec. 3, and c. 5, sec. 1, that such was the law, and of Bracton and
Lord Holt, that the King never was suable of common right. It is
certain, however, that after the establishment of the petition of
right about that time as the appropriate manner of seeking relief
where the ascertainment of the parties' rights required a suit
against the King, no attempt has been made to sue the King in any
court except as allowed on such petition. It is believed that this
petition of right, as it has been practiced and observed in the
administration of justice in England, has been as efficient in
securing the rights of suitors against the Crown in all cases
appropriate to judicial proceedings as that which the law affords
in legal controversies between the subjects of the King among
themselves.
"If the mode of proceeding to enforce it be formal and
ceremonious, it is nevertheless a practical and efficient remedy
for the invasion by the sovereign power of individual rights."
United States v.
O'Keefe, 11 Wall. 178.
There is in this country, however, no such thing as the petition
of right, as there is no such thing as a kingly head to the nation
or to any of the states which compose it. There is vested in no
officer or body the authority to consent that the state shall be
sued except in the lawmaking power, which may give such consent on
the terms it may choose to impose.
The
Davis, 10 Wall. 15. Congress has created a court in
which it
Page 106 U. S. 206
has authorized suits to be brought against the United States,
but has limited such suits to those arising on contract, with a few
unimportant exceptions.
What were the reasons which forbid that the King should be sued
in his own court, and how do these reasons apply to the political
body corporate which we call the United States of America? As
regards the King, one reason given by the old judges was the
absurdity of the King's sending a writ to himself to command the
King to appear in the King's court. No such reason exists in our
government, as process runs in the name of the President and may be
served on the Attorney General, as was done in the case of
Chisholm v.
Georgia, 2 Dall. 419. Nor can it be said that the
dignity of the government is degraded by appearing as a defendant
in the courts of its own creation, because it is constantly
appearing as a party in such courts and submitting its rights as
against the citizens to their judgment.
Mr. Justice Gray, of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, in an
able and learned opinion which exhausts the sources of information
on this subject, says:
"The broader reason is that it would be inconsistent with the
very idea of supreme executive power and would endanger the
performance of the public duties of the sovereign to subject him to
repeated suits as a matter of right at the will of any citizen and
to submit to the judicial tribunals the control and disposition of
his public property, his instruments and means of carrying on his
government in war and in peace, and the money in his Treasury."
Briggs v. The Light Boats, 11 Allen 162. As we have no
person in this government who exercises supreme executive power or
performs the public duties of a sovereign, it is difficult to see
on what solid foundation of principle the exemption from liability
to suit rests. It seems most probable that it has been adopted in
our courts as a part of the general doctrine of publicists that the
supreme power in every state, wherever it may reside, shall not be
compelled, by process of courts of its own creation, to defend
itself from assaults in those courts.
It is obvious that in our system of jurisprudence, the principle
is as applicable to each of the states as it is to the United
States, except in those cases where by the Constitution a state
Page 106 U. S. 207
of the Union may be sued in this Court.
Railroad Co. v.
Tennessee, 101 U. S. 337;
Railroad Company v. Alabama, 101 U.
S. 832.
That the doctrine met with a doubtful reception in the early
history of this Court may be seen from the opinions of two of its
Justices in the case of
Chisholm v. Georgia, where Mr.
Justice Wilson, a member of the convention which framed our
Constitution, after a learned examination of the laws of England
and other states and kingdoms, sums up the result by saying: "We
see nothing against, but much in favor of, the jurisdiction of this
Court over the State of Georgia, a party to this cause." Mr. Chief
Justice Jay also considered the question as affected by the
difference between a republican state like ours and a personal
sovereign, and held that there is no reason why a state should not
be sued, though doubting whether the United States would be subject
to the same rule.
The first recognition of the general doctrine by this Court is
to be found in the case of
Cohens v.
Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264.
The terms in which Chief Justice Marshall there gives assent to
the principle does not add much to its force. "The counsel for the
defendant," he says, "has laid down the general proposition that a
sovereign independent state is not suable except by its own
consent." This general proposition, he adds, will not be
controverted. And while the exemption of the United States and of
the several states from being subjected as defendants to ordinary
actions in the courts has since that time been repeatedly asserted
here, the principle has never been discussed or the reasons for it
given, but it has always been treated as an established doctrine.
United States v.
Clarke, 8 Pet. 436;
United
States v. McLemore, 4 How. 286;
Hill v.
United States, 9 How. 386;
Nations v.
Johnson, 24 How. 195;
The
Siren, 7 Wall. 152;
The
Davis, 10 Wall. 15. On the other hand, while
acceding to the general proposition that in no court can the United
States be sued directly by original process as a defendant, there
is abundant evidence in the decisions of this Court that the
doctrine, if not absolutely limited to cases in which the United
States are made defendants by name, is not permitted to interfere
with the judicial
Page 106 U. S. 208
enforcement of the established rights of plaintiffs when the
United States is not a defendant or a necessary party to the
suit.
But little weight can be given to the decisions of the English
courts on this branch of the subject, for two reasons:
1. In all cases where the title to property came into
controversy between the Crown and a subject, whether held in right
of the person who was King or as representative of the nation, the
petition of right presented a judicial remedy -- a remedy which
this Court, on full examination in a case which required it, held
to be practical and efficient. There has been, therefore, no
necessity for suing the officers or servants of the King who held
possession of such property, when the issue could be made with the
King himself as defendant.
2. Another reason of much greater weight is found in the vast
difference in the essential character of the two governments as
regards the source and the depositaries of power.
Notwithstanding the progress which has been made since the days
of the Stuarts in stripping the Crown of its powers and
prerogatives, it remains true today that the monarch is looked upon
with too much reverence to be subjected to the demands of the law
as ordinary persons are, and the King-loving nation would be
shocked at the spectacle of their queen's being turned out of her
pleasure garden by a writ of ejectment against the gardener. The
Crown remains the fountain of honor, and the surroundings which
give dignity and majesty to its possessor are cherished and
enforced all the more strictly because of the loss of real power in
the government. It is not to be expected, therefore, that the
courts will permit their process to disturb the possession of the
Crown by acting on its officers or agents.
Under our system, the people, who are there called subjects, are
the sovereign. Their rights, whether collective or individual, are
not bound to give way to a sentiment of loyalty to the person of
the monarch. The citizen here knows no person, however near to
those in power or however powerful himself, to whom he need yield
the rights which the law secures to him when it is well
administered. When he, in one of the courts of competent
jurisdiction, has established his right to property,
Page 106 U. S. 209
there is no reason why deference to any person, natural or
artificial, not even the United States, should prevent him from
using the means which the law gives him for the protection and
enforcement of that right.
Another class of cases in the English courts in which attempts
have been made to subject the public ships and other property of
foreign and independent nations found within English territory to
their jurisdiction, is also inapplicable to this case, for both by
the English courts and ours it has been uniformly held that these
were questions the decisions of which, as they might involve war or
peace, must be primarily dealt with by those departments of the
government which had the power to adjust them by negotiation or to
enforce the rights of the citizen by war. In such cases, the
judicial department of this government follows the action of the
political branch, and will not embarrass the latter by assuming an
antagonistic jurisdiction. Such were the cases of
The
Exchange v. McFaddon, 7 Cranch 116;
Luther v.
Borden, 7 How. 42;
Georgia
v. Stanton, 6 Wall. 75.
The earliest case in this Court in which the true rule is laid
down, and which, bearing a close analogy to the one before us,
seems decisive of it, is that of the
United
States v. Peters, 5 Cranch 115. In an admiralty
proceeding commenced before the formation of the Constitution and
which afterwards came into the District Court of the United States
for Pennsylvania, that court, after full hearing, had decided that
the libellants were entitled to the proceeds of the sale of a
vessel condemned as prize of war, which had come to the possession
of David Rittenhouse, as Treasurer of the State of Pennsylvania.
The district judge had declined to issue any process to enforce his
decree against the representatives of Rittenhouse on the ground
that the funds were held as the property of that state, and that as
the state could not be subjected to judicial process, neither could
the officer who held the money in her right. The analogy to the
case before us will be seen when it is further stated that the
examination of the case and the decree of the court had passed upon
this claim of the state to the money, which had been fully
presented, and had decided that the libellants and not the state
were legally entitled to it. In that case, as in this, it was
argued that the suit was in reality against the state. But on an
application for a writ
Page 106 U. S. 210
of mandamus to compel the judge of the district court to proceed
in the execution of his decree, it was granted. In delivering the
opinion, Mr. Chief Justice Marshall said:
"The state cannot be made a defendant to a suit brought by an
individual, but it remains the duty of the courts of the United
States to decide all cases brought before them by citizens of one
state against citizens of a different state when a state is not
necessarily a defendant. In this case, the suit was not instituted
against the state or its treasurer, but against the executrixes of
David Rittenhouse for the proceeds of a vessel condemned in the
court of admiralty which were admitted to be in their possession.
If these proceeds had been the actual property of Pennsylvania,
however wrongfully acquired, the disclosure of that fact would have
presented a case on which it was unnecessary to give an opinion;
but it certainly can never be alleged that a mere suggestion of
title in a state to property in possession of an individual must
arrest the proceedings of the court and prevent their looking into
the suggestion and examining the validity of the title."
The case before us is a suit against Strong and Kaufman, as
individuals, to recover possession of property. The suggestion was
made that it was the property of the United States, and that the
court, without inquiring into the truth of this suggestion, should
proceed no further, and in this case, as in that, after a judicial
inquiry had made it clear that the property belonged to plaintiff
and not to the United States, we are still asked to forbid the
court below to proceed further, and to reverse and set aside what
it has done, and thus refuse to perform the duty of deciding suits
properly brought before us by citizens of the United States.
It may be said -- in fact it is said -- that the present case
differs from the one in 5 Cranch because the officers who are sued
assert no personal possession, but are holding as the mere agents
of the United States, while the executors of Rittenhouse held the
money until a better right was established. But the very next case
in this Court of a similar character,
Meigs v.
McClung's Lessee, 9 Cranch 11, shows that this
distinction was not recognized as sound. The property sued for in
that case was land on which the United States had a garrison
erected at a cost of
Page 106 U. S. 211
$30,000, and the defendants were the military officers in
possession, and the very question now in issue was raised by these
officers, who, according to the bill of exceptions, insisted that
the action could not be maintained against them
"because the land was occupied by the United States troops, and
the defendants as officers of the United States, for the benefit of
the United States, and by their direction."
They further insisted, says the bill of exceptions, that the
United States had a right by the Constitution to appropriate the
property of the individual citizen. The court below overruled these
objections and held that, the title being in plaintiff, he might
recover, and that "if the land was private property, the United
States could not have intended to deprive the individual of it
without making him compensation therefor."
Although the judgment of the circuit court was in favor of the
plaintiff, and its result was to turn the soldiers and officers out
of possession and deliver it to plaintiff, Mr. Chief Justice
Marshall concludes his opinion in this emphatic language:
"This Court is unanimously and clearly of opinion that the
circuit court committed no error in instructing the jury that the
Indian title was extinguished to the land in controversy,
and
that the plaintiff below might sustain his action."
We are unable to discover any difference whatever in regard to
the objection we are now considering between this case and the one
before us.
Impressed by the force of this argument, counsel say that the
question of the objection arising out of the possession of the
United States was not considered in that case because it was not
urged in argument by counsel. But it is manifest that it was so set
out in the bill of exceptions and so much relied on in the court
below that it could not have escaped the attention of the court and
of the eminent man who had, only six years before, delivered the
opinion in the case of the
United States v. Peters. Nor
could the case have been decided as it was if the doctrine now
contended for be sound, since the effect of the judgment was to
dispossess the United States of an occupied garrison by the
judgment against the officers in charge of it.
In
Wilcox v.
Jackson, 13 Pet. 498, the contest was over a fort
of the United States which had been in its continued possession
Page 106 U. S. 212
for over thirty years and was so occupied when the suit was
brought against its officers to dispossess them. The case came from
the Supreme Court of Illinois to this Court on writ of error, and
the judgment in favor of the plaintiff was reversed. The question
now under consideration was not passed upon directly by this Court.
But a long examination of the question whether the plaintiff had
proved title in himself, and a decision that while the state courts
of Illinois held a certificate of purchase from the United States
to be a legal title under her statute, that statute was invalid,
might all have been avoided by the simple declaration that, the
United States being in possession of the property as a fort, no
action at law against its officers could be maintained. But no such
proposition was advanced by counsel on either side, or considered
by the Court.
There is a very satisfactory reason for this.
United States
v. Peters, Meigs v. McClung, and
Osborn v. Bank of United
States had all involved the same question, and in the first
and last of these cases the principle was fully discussed, and in
the other necessarily decided in the negative. And in
Governor of Georgia v.
Madrazo, 1 Pet. 110, the Court had referred to
these cases and again asserted the principle, quoting the language
of them. Counsel were not justified in asking the Court to
reconsider it while most of the judges were still on the bench,
including the Chief Justice, who had made those decisions.
Osborn v. Bank of United
States, 9 Wheat. 738, is a leading case, remarkable
in many respects, and in none more than in those resembling the one
before us. The case was this: the State of Ohio having levied a tax
upon the branch of the Bank of the United States located in that
state which the bank refused to pay, Osborn, Auditor of the State
of Ohio, was about to proceed to collect said tax by a seizure of
the money of the bank in its vaults, and an amended bill alleged
that he had so seized $100,000, and while aware that an injunction
had been issued by the circuit court of the United States on the
prayer of the bank, the money so seized had been delivered to the
treasurer of the state, Curry, and afterwards came to the
possession of Sullivan, who had succeeded Curry as treasurer. Both
Curry and Sullivan were made defendants as well as Osborn and his
assistant, Harper.
Page 106 U. S. 213
One of the objections pressed with pertinacity all through the
case to the jurisdiction of the Court was the conceded fact that
the State of Ohio, though not made a defendant to the bill, was the
real party in interest. That all the parties sued were her officers
-- her auditor, her treasurer, and their agents -- concerning acts
done in their official character, and in obedience to her laws. It
was conceded that the state could not be sued, and it was earnestly
argued there as here that what could not be done directly could not
be done by suing her officers. And it was insisted that while the
state could not be brought before the court, it was a necessary
party to the relief sought -- namely the return of the money and
obedience to the injunction -- and that the bill must be
dismissed.
A few citations from the opinion of Mr. Chief Justice Marshall
will show the views entertained by the Court on the question thus
raised. At page
22 U. S. 842 of
the long report of the case, he says:
"If the State of Ohio could have been made a party defendant, it
can scarcely be denied that this would be a strong case for an
injunction. The objection is that, as the real party cannot be
brought before the court, a suit cannot be sustained against the
agents of that party, and cases have been cited to show that a
court of chancery will not make a decree unless all those who are
substantially interested be made parties to the suit. This is
certainly true where it is in the power of the plaintiff to make
them parties, but if the person who is the real principal, the
person who is the true source of the mischief, by whose power and
for whose advantage it is done, be himself above the law, be exempt
from all judicial process, it would be subversive of the best
established principles to say that the laws could not afford the
same remedies against the agent employed in doing the wrong which
they would afford against him could his principal be joined in the
suit."
In another place he says:
"The process is substantially, though not in form, against the
state, . . . and the direct interest of the state in the suit as
brought is admitted, and had it been in the power of the bank to
make it a party, perhaps no decree ought to have been pronounced in
the cause until the state was before the court. But this was not in
the power of
Page 106 U. S. 214
the bank, . . . and the very difficult question is to be decided
whether in such a case the court may act upon agents employed by
the state and on the property in their hands."
In answering this question, he says:
"A denial of jurisdiction forbids all inquiry into the nature of
the case. It applies to cases perfectly clear in themselves; to
cases where the government is in the exercise of its best
established and most essential powers, as well as to those which
may be deemed questionable. It asserts that the agents of a state,
alleging the authority of a law void in itself because repugnant to
the Constitution, may arrest the execution of any law in the United
States."
Again:
"The bank contends that in all cases in which jurisdiction
depends on the character of the party, reference is made to the
party on the record, not to one who may be interested, but is not
shown by the record to be a party. . . . If this question were to
be determined on the authority of English decisions, it is believed
that no case can be adduced where any person can be considered as a
party who is not made so in the record."
Again:
"In cases where a state is a party on the record, the question
of jurisdiction is decided by inspection. If jurisdiction depend
not on this plain fact, but on the interest of the state, what rule
has the Constitution given by which this interest is to be
measured? If no rule is given, is it to be settled by the court? If
so, the curious anomaly is presented of a court examining the whole
testimony of a cause, inquiring into and deciding on the extent of
a state's interest, without having a right to exercise any
jurisdiction in the case. Can this inquiry be made without the
exercise of jurisdiction?"
The decree of the circuit court ordering a restitution of the
money was affirmed.
Grisar v.
McDowell, 6 Wall. 363, was an action in the circuit
court against General McDowell to recover possession of property
held by him as an officer of the United States which had been set
apart and reserved for military purposes. Though this was set up by
him as part of his defense, it does not appear that in the argument
of counsel for the government or in the opinion of the Court any
importance was attached to this circumstance, but the opinion of
MR. JUSTICE FIELD in this Court examines the case elaborately on
the question whether
Page 106 U. S. 215
plaintiff or the government had the title to the land. If the
doctrine now contended for is sound, the case should have proceeded
no further on the suggestion, not denied, that the property was
held for public use by a military officer under orders from the
President.
Brown v.
Huger, 21 How. 305, is of a precisely similar
character, for the possession of the military arsenal at Harper's
Ferry, in which, while the fact of its possession by the United
States was set out in the bill of exceptions, no attention is given
to that fact in the opinion of this Court, which consists of an
elaborate examination of plaintiff's title, held to be
insufficient.
These decisions have never been overruled. On the contrary, as
late as the case of
Davis v. Gray,
16 Wall. 203, the case of
Osborn v. Bank of the United
States is cited with approval as establishing these among
other propositions:
"Where the state is concerned, the state should be a made a
party if it can be done. That it cannot be done is a sufficient
reason for the omission to do it, and the court may proceed to
decree against the officers of the state in all respects as if the
state were a party to the record. In deciding who are parties to
the suit, the court will not look beyond the record. Making a state
officer a party does not make the state a party,
although her
law may have prompted his action, and the state may stand behind
him as a real party in interest. A state can be made a party
only by shaping the bill expressly with that view, as where
individuals or corporations are intended to be put in that relation
to the case."
Though not prepared to say now that the court can proceed
against the officer in "all respects" as if the state were a party,
this may be taken as intimating in a general way the views of the
court at that time.
The Siren, 7
Wall. 152, and
The Davis, 10
Wall. 15, are instances where the Court has held that property of
the United States may be dealt with by subjecting it to maritime
liens where this can be done without making the United States a
party.
This examination of the cases in this Court establishes clearly
this result: that the proposition that when an individual is
Page 106 U. S. 216
sued in regard to property which he holds as officer or agent of
the United States, his possession cannot be disturbed when that
fact is brought to the attention of the court, has been overruled
and denied in every case where it has been necessary to decide it,
and that in many others where the record shows that the case as
tried below actually and clearly presented that defense, it was
neither urged by counsel nor considered by the Court here, though
if it had been a good defense, it would have avoided the necessity
of a long inquiry into plaintiff's title and of other perplexing
questions, and have quickly disposed of the case. And we see no
escape from the conclusion that during all this period, the Court
has held the principle to be unsound, and in the class of cases
like the present, represented by
Wilcox v. Jackson, Brown v.
Huger, and
Grisar v. McDowell, it was not thought
necessary to reexamine a proposition so often and so clearly
overruled in previous well considered decisions.
It is true that there are expressions in the opinion of the
Court in the case of
Carr v. United States, 98 U. S.
433, which are relied on by counsel with much confidence
as asserting a different doctrine.
That was a case in which the United States had filed a bill in
the Circuit Court for the District of California to quiet title to
the land on which a marine hospital had been built. To rebut the
evidence of title offered by the plaintiffs, the defendant had
relied on certain judgments rendered in the state courts in which
the unsuccessful parties set up title in the United States, under
which they claimed. It appeared that the person who was district
attorney of the United States had defended these actions, and the
question under discussion was whether the United States was
estopped by the proceedings so as to be unable to sustain the suit
to quiet title. After stating the general doctrine that the United
States cannot be sued without her consent and the further
proposition that no such consent can be given except by Congress,
which is a sufficient reason why they cannot be concluded by an
action to which they are not parties, the learned Justice who
delivered the opinion proceeded to make some remarks as to cases in
which actions would or would not lie against officers of the
government
Page 106 U. S. 217
in relation to property of the United States in their
possession. As these remarks were not necessary to the decision of
that point then in question, as the action was equally inconclusive
against the United States whether the persons sued were officers of
the government or not, these remarks, if they have the meaning
which counsel attribute to them, must rest for their weight as
authority on the high character of the judge who delivered them,
and not on that of the Court which decided the case. That the
United States are not bound by a judgment to which they are not
parties, and that no officer of the government can, by defending a
suit against private persons, conclude the United States by the
judgment in such case was sufficient to decide that case, and was
all that was decided.
The fact that the property which is the subject of this
controversy is devoted to public uses is strongly urged as a reason
why those who are so using it under the authority of the United
States shall not be sued for its possession even by one who proves
a clear title to that possession. In this connection, many cases of
imaginary evils have been suggested if the contrary doctrine should
prevail. Among these are a supposed seizure of vessels of war,
invasions of forts and arsenals of the United States. Hypothetical
cases of great evils may be suggested by a particularly fruitful
imagination in regard to almost every law upon which depends the
rights of the individual or of the government, and if the existence
of laws is to depend upon their capacity to withstand such
criticism, the whole fabric of the law must fail.
The cases already cited of
Meigs v. McClung, Wilcox v.
Jackson, Georgia v. Madrazo, Grisar v. McDowell, Brown v.
Huger, and
Osborn v. Bank of the United States
necessarily involved this question, for the property recovered by
the plaintiff in the case of
Meigs v. McClung was a
garrison and barracks then in use for such purposes by the officers
of the United States who were sued. In the case of
Wilcox v.
Jackson, an action was brought to recover, among other things,
a fort which had been in the occupation of the United States for
thirty years, and which was then occupied by an officer of the Army
of the United States and his command. In the case of
Osborn v.
Bank of the United States, the
Page 106 U. S. 218
money sued for and recovered by the final decree of this Court
was money claimed by the State of Ohio as part of its public funds
and devoted by the laws of that state to public uses in all the
exigencies of the public service, so that the authorities we have
examined, if they are worth anything, meet this objection as they
meet the others which we have considered.
The objection is also inconsistent with the principle involved
in the last two clauses of Article V of the amendments to the
Constitution of the United States, whose language is:
"That no person . . . shall be deprived of life, liberty, or
property without due process of law, nor shall private property be
taken for public use without just compensation."
Conceding that the property in controversy in this case is
devoted to a proper public use and that this has been done by those
having authority to establish a cemetery and a fort, the verdict of
the jury finds that it is and was the private property of the
plaintiff, and was taken without any process of law and without any
compensation. Undoubtedly those provisions of the Constitution are
of that character which it is intended the courts shall enforce
when cases involving their operation and effect are brought before
them. The instances in which the life and liberty of the citizen
have been protected by the judicial writ of habeas corpus are too
familiar to need citation, and many of these cases -- indeed almost
all of them -- are those in which life or liberty was invaded by
persons assuming to act under the authority of the government.
Ex Parte
Milligan, 4 Wall. 2.
If this constitutional provision is a sufficient authority for
the court to interfere to rescue a prisoner from the hands of those
holding him under the asserted authority of the government, what
reason is there that the same courts shall not give remedy to the
citizen whose property has been seized without due process of law
and devoted to public use without just compensation?
Looking at the question upon principle and apart from the
authority of adjudged cases, we think it still clearer that this
branch of the defense cannot be maintained. It seems to be opposed
to all the principles upon which the rights of the citizen, when
brought in collision with the acts of the government,
Page 106 U. S. 219
must be determined. In such cases, there is no safety for the
citizen except in the protection of the judicial tribunals for
rights which have been invaded by the officers of the government
professing to act in its name. There remains to him but the
alternative of resistance, which may amount to crime. The position
assumed here is that however clear his rights, no remedy can be
afforded to him when it is seen that his opponent is an officer of
the United States claiming to act under its authority, for, as
Chief Justice Marshall says, to examine whether this authority is
rightfully assumed is the exercise of jurisdiction, and must lead
to the decision of the merits of the question. The objection of the
plaintiffs in error necessarily forbids any inquiry into the truth
of the assumption that the parties setting up such authority are
lawfully possessed of it, for the argument is that the formal
suggestion of the existence of such authority forbids any inquiry
into the truth of the suggestion.
But why should not the truth of the suggestion and the
lawfulness of the authority be made the subject of judicial
investigation?
In the case supposed, the court has before it a plaintiff
capable of suing, a defendant who has no personal exemption from
suit, and a cause of action cognizable in the court -- a case
within the meaning of that term as employed in the Constitution and
defined by the decisions of this Court. It is to be presumed in
favor of the jurisdiction of the court that the plaintiff may be
able to prove the right which he asserts in his declaration.
What is that right as established by the verdict of the jury in
this case? It is the right to the possession of the homestead of
plaintiff -- a right to recover that which has been taken from him
by force and violence and detained by the strong hand. This right
being clearly established, we are told that the court can proceed
no further because it appears that certain military officers,
acting under the orders of the President, have seized this estate
and converted one part of it into a military fort and another into
a cemetery.
It is not pretended, as the case now stands, that the President
had any lawful authority to do this or that the legislative
Page 106 U. S. 220
body could give him any such authority except upon payment of
just compensation. The defense stands here solely upon the absolute
immunity from judicial inquiry of everyone who asserts authority
from the executive branch of the government, however clear it may
be made that the executive possessed no such power. Not only that
no such power is given, but that it is absolutely prohibited, both
to the executive and the legislative, to deprive anyone of life,
liberty, or property without due process of law or to take private
property without just compensation.
These provisions for the security of the rights of the citizen
stand in the Constitution in the same connection and upon the same
ground as they regard his liberty and his property. It cannot be
denied that both were intended to be enforced by the judiciary as
one of the departments of the government established by that
Constitution. As we have already said, the writ of habeas corpus
has been often used to defend the liberty of the citizen, and even
his life, against the assertion of unlawful authority on the part
of the executive and the legislative branches of the government.
See Ex Parte
Milligan, 4 Wall. 2,
Kilbourn v. Thompson,
103 U. S. 168.
No man in this country is so high that he is above the law. No
officer of the law may set that law at defiance with impunity. All
the officers of the government, from the highest to the lowest, are
creatures of the law and are bound to obey it. It is the only
supreme power in our system of government, and every man who by
accepting office participates in its functions is only the more
strongly bound to submit to that supremacy and to observe the
limitations which it imposes upon the exercise of the authority
which it gives.
Courts of justice are established not only to decide upon the
controverted rights of the citizens as against each other, but also
upon rights in controversy between them and the government, and the
docket of this Court is crowded with controversies of the latter
class.
Shall it be said, in the face of all this and of the
acknowledged right of the judiciary to decide in proper cases
statutes which have been passed by both branches of Congress and
approved by the President to be unconstitutional, that the
Page 106 U. S. 221
courts cannot give remedy when the citizen has been deprived of
his property by force, his estate seized and converted to the use
of the government without any lawful authority, without any process
of law, and without any compensation, because the President has
ordered it and his officers are in possession?
If such be the law of this country, it sanctions a tyranny which
has no existence in the monarchies of Europe nor in any other
government which has a just claim to well regulated liberty and the
protection of personal rights.
It cannot be, then, that when in a suit between two citizens for
the ownership of real estate, one of them has established his right
to the possession of the property according to all the forms of
judicial procedure, and by the verdict of a jury and the judgment
of the court, the wrongful possessor can say successfully to the
court, "Stop, here; I hold by order of the President, and the
progress of justice must be stayed." That though the nature of the
controversy is one peculiarly appropriate to the judicial function,
though the United States is no party to the suit, though one of the
three great branches of the government to which by the Constitution
this duty has been assigned has declared its judgment after a fair
trial, the unsuccessful party can interpose an absolute veto upon
that judgment by the production of an order of the Secretary of War
which that officer had no more authority to make than the humblest
private citizen.
The evils supposed to grow out of the possible interference of
judicial action with the exercise of powers of the government
essential to some of its most important operations will be seen to
be small indeed compared to this evil, and much diminished, if they
do not wholly disappear, upon a recurrence to a few
considerations.
One of these of no little significance is that during the
existence of the government for now nearly a century under the
present Constitution, with this principle and the practice under it
well established, no injury from it has come to that government.
During this time, at least two wars so serious as to call into
exercise all the powers and all the resources of the government
have been conducted to a successful issue. One of these was a great
civil war, such as the world has seldom
Page 106 U. S. 222
known, which strained the powers of the national government to
their utmost tension. In the course of this war, persons hostile to
the Union did not hesitate to invoke the powers of the courts for
their protection as citizens in order to cripple the exercise of
the authority necessary to put down the rebellion, yet no improper
interference with the exercise of that authority was permitted or
attempted by the courts.
State of Mississippi v.
Johnson, 4 Wall. 475;
Georgia v.
Stanton, 6 Wall. 50;
State of
Georgia v. Grant, 6 Wall. 241;
Ex Parte
Tarble, 13 Wall. 397.
Another consideration is that since the United States cannot be
made a defendant to a suit concerning its property, and no judgment
in any suit against an individual who has possession or control of
such property can bind or conclude the government, as is decided by
this Court in the case of
Carr v. United States, already
referred to, the government is always at liberty, notwithstanding
any such judgment, to avail itself of all the remedies which the
law allows to every person, natural or artificial, for the
vindication and assertion of its rights. Hence, taking the present
case as an illustration, the United States may proceed by a bill in
chancery to quiet its title, in aid of which, if a proper case is
made, a writ of injunction may be obtained. Or it may bring an
action of ejectment in which, on a direct issue between the United
States as plaintiff and the present plaintiff as defendant, the
title of the United States could be judicially determined. Or if
satisfied that its title has been shown to be invalid and it still
desires to use the property or any part of it for the purposes to
which it is now devoted, it may purchase such property by fair
negotiation or condemn it by a judicial proceeding in which a just
compensation shall be ascertained and paid according to the
Constitution.
If it be said that the proposition here established may subject
the property, the officers of the United States, and the
performance of their indispensable functions to hostile proceedings
in the state courts, the answer is that no case can arise in a
state court where the interests, the property, the rights, or the
authority of the federal government may come in question which
cannot be removed into a court of the United States
Page 106 U. S. 223
under existing laws. In all cases, therefore, where such
questions can arise, they are to be decided, at the option of the
parties representing the United States, in courts which are the
creation of the federal government.
The slightest consideration of the nature, the character, the
organization, and the powers of these courts will dispel any fear
of serious injury to the government at their hands.
While by the Constitution, the judicial department is recognized
as one of the three great branches among which all the powers and
functions of the government are distributed, it is inherently the
weakest of them all. Dependent as its courts are for the
enforcement of their judgments upon officers appointed by the
executive and removable at his pleasure, with no patronage and no
control of purse or sword, their power and influence rests solely
upon the public sense of the necessity for the existence of a
tribunal to which all may appeal for the assertion and protection
of rights guaranteed by the Constitution and by the laws of the
land, and on the confidence reposed in the soundness of their
decisions and the purity of their motives.
From such a tribunal, no well founded fear can be entertained of
injustice to the government or purpose to obstruct or diminish its
just authority.
The circuit court was competent to decide the issues in this
case before the parties that were before it. In the principles on
which these issues were decided no error has been found, and its
judgment is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, with whom concurred MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE,
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, and MR. JUSTICE WOODS, dissenting.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, dissenting.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, MR. JUSTICE WOODS, and
myself are unable to concur in the judgment of the majority of the
Court. The case so deeply affects the sovereignty of the United
States and its relations to the citizen that it is fit to announce
the grounds of our dissent.
Page 106 U. S. 224
The action is ejectment, originally brought by George W. P. C.
Lee against Frederick Kaufman and Richard P. Strong in a court of
the State of Virginia to recover possession of a tract of land
known as Arlington, of which the plaintiff alleged that he was
seized in fee.
The whole tract, having been advertised for sale for nonpayment
of direct taxes lawfully assessed upon it and having been selected
for government use for war, military, charitable, and educational
purposes by the President of the United States under the power
conferred on him by the Act of Congress of February 6, 1863, c. 21,
was accordingly in 1864 bid off to the United States at the sale,
and for many years has been, and now is, held and occupied by the
United States, through Kaufman and Strong in charge thereof, under
the certificate of sale of the tax commissioners and for the
purposes aforesaid, and also under orders of the Secretary of War,
part of it for a military station and the rest as a national
cemetery for the burial of deceased soldiers and sailors. These
facts were made to appear at three stages of the case:
First. They were stated in a petition filed by Kaufman
and Strong in the state court for the removal of the case into the
circuit court of the United States under sec. 643 of the Revised
Statutes on the ground that the defendants were officers of the
United States and holding the land by title derived from officers
of the United States acting under a revenue law of the United
States, the validity of which was affected. That petition was
granted and the case removed accordingly.
Second. They were stated in a suggestion and motion,
filed by the Attorney General in the circuit court of the United
States before trial, protesting against the jurisdiction of the
court and moving for a stay of proceedings, which was demurred to
by the plaintiff and overruled by the court.
Third. They were proved by the evidence produced by
each party at the trial, and were assumed in the instructions given
as well as in those requested. One of the instructions requested by
the defendants was as follows:
"If the jury believe from the evidence that the United States is
in the possession of the property in controversy through its
officers and agents charged with the control of the same; that the
defendants
Page 106 U. S. 225
occupy the same only as such officers and agents, in obedience
to orders of the War Department of the United States, and making no
claim of right to the title or possession thereof except as such
officers; that the United States is using the same as a national
cemetery for the burial of deceased soldiers and as a fort and
reserve connected therewith, claiming the title thereto under the
certificate of sale proved in this cause, then the verdict must be
for the defendants."
The court refused this instruction, and gave the following:
"If the jury believe from the evidence that at the institution
of this suit, the premises in controversy were, or that any part
thereof was, under the charge and in the occupation or possession
of the defendants Strong and Kaufman, or either of them, under the
direction of the government of the United States or of any
department or officer thereof, then such occupation or possession
is sufficient to enable the plaintiff to maintain his action
against them respectively for the premises so occupied or possessed
by them respectively."
The court submitted the case to the jury under further
instructions which permitted them to find for the plaintiff upon
the ground that the certificate of sale for taxes was invalid as
against him and had vested no legal title in the United States. The
jury returned a verdict, upon which judgment was rendered, that the
plaintiff recover possession of the premises partly against Kaufman
and partly against Strong. Writs of error were sued out by the
United States and by Kaufman and Strong, and the case has been
argued upon both these writs of error.
This is not an action of trespass to recover damages only, nor
is it an action to recover property violently and suddenly wrested
from the owner by officers of the government without its directions
and without color of title in the government, but it is brought to
recover possession of land which the United States have for years
held and still hold for military and other public purposes,
claiming title under a certificate of sale for direct taxes, which
is declared by the act of Congress of June 7, 1862, c. 98 sec. 7,
to be
prima facie evidence of the regularity and validity
of the sale and of the title of the purchaser, and which has been
defined by this Court as a "public act which is
Page 106 U. S. 226
the equivalent of office found."
Bennett v.
Hunter, 9 Wall. 326,
76 U. S.
336.
The principles upon which we are of opinion that the court below
had no authority to try the question of the validity of the title
of the United States in this action, and that this Court has
therefore no authority to pass upon that question, may be briefly
stated.
The sovereign is not liable to be sued in any judicial tribunal
without its consent. The sovereign cannot hold property except by
agents. To maintain an action for the recovery of possession of
property held by the sovereign through its agents, not claiming any
title or right in themselves, but only as the representatives of
the sovereign and in its behalf, is to maintain an action to
recover possession of the property against the sovereign, and to
invade such possession of the agents by execution or other judicial
process is to invade the possession of the sovereign and to violate
the fundamental maxim that the sovereign cannot be sued.
That maxim is not limited to a monarchy, but is of equal force
in a republic. In the one as in the other, it is essential to the
common defense and general welfare that the sovereign should not
without its consent be dispossessed by judicial process of forts,
arsenals, military posts, and ships of war necessary to guard the
national existence against insurrection and invasion, of custom
houses and revenue cutters employed in the collection of the
revenue, or of lighthouses and lightships, established for the
security of commerce with foreign nations and among the different
parts of the country.
These principles appear to us to be axioms of public law which
would need no reference to authorities in their support were it not
for the exceeding importance and interest of the case, the great
ability with which it has been argued, and the difference of
opinion that has been manifested as to the extent and application
of the precedents.
The exemption of the United States from being impleaded without
their consent is, as has often been affirmed by this Court, as
absolute as that of the Crown of England or any other sovereign. In
Cohens v.
Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264,
19 U. S. 411,
Chief Justice Marshall said: "The universally received opinion is
that
Page 106 U. S. 227
no suit can be commenced or prosecuted against the United
States." In
Beers v.
Arkansas, 20 How. 527,
61 U. S. 529,
Chief Justice Taney said:
"It is an established principle of jurisprudence in all
civilized nations that the sovereign cannot be sued in its own
courts or in any other without its consent and permission, but it
may, if it thinks proper, waive this privilege and permit itself to
be made a defendant in a suit by individuals or by another state.
And as this permission is altogether voluntary on the part of the
sovereignty, it follows that it may prescribe the terms and
conditions on which it consents to be sued and the manner in which
the suit shall be conducted, and may withdraw its consent whenever
it may suppose that justice to the public requires it."
In the same spirit, Mr. Justice Davis, delivering the judgment
of the court in
Nichols v. United
States, 7 Wall. 122,
74 U. S. 126,
said:
"Every government has an inherent right to protect itself
against suits, and if in the liberality of legislation they are
permitted, it is only on such terms and conditions as are
prescribed by statute. The principle is fundamental, applies to
every sovereign power, and but for the protection which it affords,
the government would be unable to perform the various duties for
which it was created."
See also United States v.
Clarke, 8 Pet. 436,
33 U. S. 444;
Cary v.
Curtis, 3 How. 236,
44 U. S. 245,
44 U. S. 256;
United States v.
McLemore, 4 How. 286,
45 U. S. 289;
Hill v. United
States, 9 How. 386,
50 U. S. 389;
Reeside v.
Walker, 11 How. 272,
52 U. S. 290;
De Groot v. United
States, 5 Wall. 419,
72 U. S. 431;
United States v.
Eckford, 6 Wall. 484,
73 U. S. 488;
The Siren, 7
Wall. 152,
74 U. S. 154;
The Davis, 10
Wall. 15,
77 U. S. 20;
United States v.
O'Keefe, 11 Wall. 178;
Case v.
Terrell, 11 Wall. 199,
78 U. S. 201;
Carr v. United States, 98 U. S. 433,
98 U. S. 437;
United States v. Thompson, 98 U. S.
486,
98 U. S. 489;
Railroad Company v. Tennessee, 101 U.
S. 337;
Railroad Company v. Alabama,
101 U. S. 832.
The English authorities from the earliest to the latest times
show that no action can be maintained to recover the title or
possession of land held by the Crown by its officers or servants,
and leave no doubt that in a case like the one before us, the
proceedings would be stayed at the suggestion of the Attorney
General in behalf of the Crown.
Our citations will be confined to the time since Magna Charta
declared that no man should be taken or imprisoned,
Page 106 U. S. 228
or be disseized of his freehold or liberties or free customs, or
be outlawed or exiled or in any way destroyed, or be passed upon or
condemned, but by the lawful judgment of his peers or by the law of
the land -- which is the origin of the provision, embodied in the
Fifth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, that no
man shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due
process of law.
The earliest authority to be referred to is Bracton, who wrote
in the reign of Henry III, and who, in the famous passage of his
first book, affirms that the King ought not to be subject to man,
but to God and to the law, because the law makes the King, and
therefore the King should ascribe to the law what the law ascribes
to him -- namely dominion and power -- for there is no King where
reigns will and not law.
Ipse autem rex non debet esse sub
homine, sed sub Deo et sub lege, quia lex facit regem. Attribuat
igitur rex legi, quod lex attribuit ei, videlicet, dominium et
potestatem, non est enim rex, ubi dominatur voluntas et non
lex. Bract. 5
b.
Yet no one states more strongly than Bracton the exemption of
the King from being sued without his consent in such a case as
this, for he says that one who has been disseized by the King, or
by his bailiffs in his name,
per dominum regem vel ballivos
suos nomine suo, or, as he elsewhere says, whom the King, or
anyone in his behalf or in his name,
aliquis pro eo vel nomine
suo, has ejected, cannot, even if the disseizing be manifest,
prosecute an assize to recover possession of the land without the
King's consent, but must await his pleasure whether the assize
shall proceed or not,
expectanda crit voluntas domini regis
quod procedat assisa vel non procedat. Bract. 168
b,
171
b, 212
a.
Lord Coke tells us that before the statute of Westminster I (3
Edw. I.), c. 24, if an officer of the King, by mere color of his
office, and not by the King's command, disseized a man of his
freehold, the only remedy was by petition to the King, and that it
was to relieve against this evil that the statute enacted that no
escheator, sheriff, or other bailiff of the King, "by color of his
office, without special warrant or commandment or authority certain
pertaining to his office," should disseize any man of his freehold,
and that, if he should do so,
Page 106 U. S. 229
the disseizee might at his election proceed either by petition
to the King or by assize of novel disseizing at the common law, and
the officer should pay double damages to the plaintiff and a heavy
fine to the King for doing injury in his name to the subject. 2
Inst. 206, 207. But when the entry of the officer was by the King's
command, though without authority of law, that statute had no
application.
Accordingly, in Staunford's Exposition of the King's
Prerogative, c. 22, it is laid down:
"Petition is all the remedy the subject hath when the King
seizeth his land or taketh away his goods from him, having no title
by order of his laws so to do, in which case the subject for his
remedy is driven to sue unto his sovereign lord by way of petition;
for other remedy hath he not."
Staunf.Prerog. fol. 72
b.
"Also, whereas the King doth enter upon me, having no title by
matter of record or otherwise, and put me out, and detains the
possession from me, that I cannot have it again by entry without
suit, I have then no remedy but only by petition. But if I be
suffered to enter, my entry is lawful, and no intrusion. Or if the
King grant over the lands to a stranger, then is my petition
determined, and I may now enter or have my assize by order of the
common law against the said stranger, being the King's patentee. .
. . When his Highness seizeth by his absolute power contrary to the
order of his laws, although I have no remedy against him for it but
by petition for the dignity's sake of his person, yet when the
cause is removed and a common person hath the possession, then is
my assize revived, for now the patentee entereth by his own wrong
and intrusion, and not by any title that the King giveth him, for
the King had never title nor possession to give in that case."
Folio 74
b.
In the reign of Elizabeth, it was resolved by all the judges of
England that
"When the King was seized of any estate of inheritance or
freehold by any matter of record, be his title by matter of record
judicial or ministerial, or by conveyance of record, or by matter
in fact and found by office of record, he who has right could not
by the common law have any traverse upon which he was to have
amoveas manum, but was put to his petition of right (in
nature of his real action which he could
Page 106 U. S. 230
not have against the King, because the King by his writ cannot
command himself) to be restored to his freehold and
inheritance,"
unless indeed the right of the party aggrieved appeared by the
same record, in which case he might by
monstrans de droit
obtain an
amoveas manum. Sadlers' Case, 4 Rep.
54
b, 55
a.
Lord Hale enumerates, among the relative prerogatives of the
Crown, the prerogative "of his possessions: that no man can enter
upon him, but is driven to his suit by petition." Hale, Analysis of
the Law, sec. 9.
The law laid down in the early authorities is stated in the same
way in the Digest of Chief Baron Comyns, written in the first half
of the last century, and in Chitty on the Prerogatives of the
Crown, published in 1820, and Mr. Chitty treats the action of
ejectment as equivalent in this aspect to the ancient form of
proceeding by assize. Com.Dig. Prerogative, D 78;
Chit.Dig.Prerogative 339-343, and note
c.
In
The Queen v. Powell, 1 Q.B. 352;
S.C. 4
Per. & Dav. 719, a writ of mandamus to admit to a copyhold
tenement of a manor belonging to the Crown having been directed to
the steward alone, it was contended for the prosecutor that a
previous decision, requiring the writ to be directed to the lord of
the manor as well as to the steward, applied only to cases where
the lord of the manor was a subject, and that inasmuch as there
could be no mandamus to the sovereign, the writ must go against the
steward alone. But Lord Denman, with the concurrence of Justices
Littledale, Williams, and Coleridge, quashed the writ of mandamus
and, after observing that doubtless there could be no mandamus to
the sovereign, but that the interests of the Crown were to be as
much guarded as those of the subject, said:
"And if the interests of the Crown cannot so effectually be
protected by a writ against the steward alone, it is a very strong
reason to show that such a writ cannot be sustained. Indeed, if it
were allowed, it is not certain of being effectual, for if the
advisers of the Crown were of opinion that its interests might be
affected, and were to advise the sovereign either to order the
steward not to admit the prosecutor of the mandamus or to revoke
the appointment of the steward, this court could not grant an
attachment against
Page 106 U. S. 231
the steward, and then the party does not get admitted. And
indeed, if we were to allow a mandamus to the steward alone and the
writ were obeyed, the property of the Crown would be affected
indirectly by the mandamus to the steward alone, when it cannot be
affected directly by making the sovereign a party to the mandamus.
. . . But in the case where there is a complaint on the part of a
subject against the Crown in any matter whatever, the course is to
proceed by petition of right, or else by
monstrans de
droit or traverse of office, as the case may require. These
proceedings have been recognized and acknowledged for many
centuries. Such proceedings are now very much out of use, and few
instances in modern times have occurred where they have been
resorted to, but still they are what must be resorted to if any
dispute arises. They are probably expensive and tedious, but these
considerations are not sufficient for our dispensing with them. We
have no more authority, for the sake of convenience, to lay them
aside and introduce writs or other proceedings which are usually
adopted between subject and subject, among which these writs of
mandamus are to be reckoned, than to introduce writs and other
proceedings, now solely used in cases of prerogative, in causes
between subject and subject."
In
Queen v. Commissioners of the Treasury, L.R. 7 Q.B.
387, 394, in which the court refused to grant a writ of mandamus to
the Lords Commissioners of the Treasury to pay over money in their
hands as servants of the Crown, Lord Chief Justice Cockburn said
that it did not follow, because the prosecutor had no remedy except
that of applying by petition to the Crown or by petition to
Parliament, that the court could issue a writ of mandamus, and
added:
"I take it, with reference to that jurisdiction, we must start
with this unquestionable principle, that when a duty has to be
performed (if I may use that expression) by the Crown, this Court
cannot claim even in appearance to have any power to command the
Crown; the thing is out of the question. Over the sovereign we can
have no power. In like manner, where the parties are acting as
servants of the Crown and are amenable to the Crown, whose servants
they are, they are not amenable to us in the exercise of our
prerogative jurisdiction. "
Page 106 U. S. 232
In
Doe v. Roe, 8 M. & W. 579;
S.C. Hurlst.
& W. 159, which was an action of ejectment for a house and
lands adjoining Hurst Castle, the declaration had been served upon
one Watson and upon the Board of Ordnance. On motion of the
Attorney General in behalf of the Crown, supported by affidavits
that the castle was an hereditary possession of the Crown of
England and that the premises sought to be recovered were in
possession of the Crown, by Watson, who had been placed, by
authority of the board of ordnance, as master gunner in charge of
the defenses of the castle, which commanded the passage of the
Needles, the Court of Exchequer ordered the declaration to be set
aside and all further proceedings stayed. It was contended for the
plaintiff that technically the action was trespass against Roe, and
that the argument on the other side would go the length of showing
that in any case where the defendant in ejectment made an affidavit
that the title of the Crown came into question, the plaintiff would
have no resource but in his petition of right. Whereupon the court
made these observations:
"Lord Abinger, C.B. The real question is can an ejectment be
tried the effect of which may be to turn the Crown out of
possession? Alderson, B. The declaration is served on a person
occupying as the servant of the Crown; this case is not like the
case put of lands held under the woods and forests; the present
difficulty only arises when, supposing the plaintiff to succeed,
the Crown would be turned out of possession."
Hurlst. & W. 160. At the close of the argument, Lord Abinger
said:
"It is quite clear the court could not issue any process to turn
the Crown out of possession, and the only doubt I had was whether
this property was not, by the operation of the act of Parliament,
in the possession not of the Crown, but of the board of ordnance.
But on looking more fully into the act, my doubt is entirely
removed."
Baron Alderson said: "I am of the same opinion. No ejectment can
be maintained against the Crown to turn the Crown out of possession
by the authority of the Crown itself." And Baron Rolfe (afterwards
Lord Chancellor Cranworth) added:
"The question may be tested thus: suppose there were no trial,
but judgment went against the casual ejector, then there would
Page 106 U. S. 233
only be a writ to turn the Crown out of possession, which
clearly cannot be."
8 Mee. & W. 582-583.
The same rule, as well as the essential distinction in actions
brought against a servant of the Crown holding possession in behalf
of the Crown, between an action of trespass to recover damages,
which might be suffered to proceed (although the Crown might have
it removed for that purpose into the Court of Exchequer), and an
action of ejectment to recover possession of the land itself, which
must be absolutely stayed on motion of the Attorney General, is
clearly recognized in two cases of trespass to recover damages
against officers of the Crown, removed upon application of the
Attorney General into the Office of Pleas of the Exchequer for
trial.
Cawthorne v. Campbell, 1 Anstr. 205, 215;
Attorney General v. Hallett, 15 Mee. & W. 97.
In
Cawthorne v. Campbell, Chief Baron Eyre, speaking of
a case, decided in 1710, of an ejectment brought in the Court of
Queen's Bench for lands which were part of the Queen's estate,
said:
"There was an application to this Court to stay the proceedings,
and the parties were heard upon it. The Attorney General attended,
and after the hearing it was put off for a day or two. At length,
the entry is that an injunction issued
pro domino regina.
So that the action was not removed, but simply an injunction went
to stay the proceedings. And I think I can see why that was; if the
action had been removed, the question could not have been tried,
even in the Office of Pleas, because you cannot try the Queen's
title in an ejectment. The Queen was in possession; her hands must
be removed by some other course of proceeding than an ejectment,
and therefore it was fruitless to think of removing it, and it
remained under an injunction."
So in
Attorney General v. Hallett, a case of trespass
quare clausum fregit, in which the defendant pleaded that
the Queen was seized in right of her crown of the
locus in
quo, Chief Baron Pollock said:
"The action of ejectment is
prima facie an action
merely between subject and subject, and relates to land, yet the
prerogative of the Crown applies to that, and if the interest of
the Crown is concerned, an action of ejectment may be removed into
this court. It may be said, however,
Page 106 U. S. 234
that that does not amount to an authority, because the action
does not go on; the reason of that is that in this court, an action
of ejectment will not lie against the Crown. The party must proceed
by a petition of right. In an action of ejectment, we remove it,
although we thereby actually extinguish the action, and therefore
that is rather an
a fortiori argument for removing this
cause, which is sought to be removed for the express purpose of
going on with it."
Barons Parke, Alderson, and Platt concurred, and Baron Platt
clearly distinguished the case of a defendant holding possession in
behalf of the Crown from that of a defendant claiming a right in
himself only, though under a grant from the Crown, saying:
"If the Queen herself is in possession, no subject can maintain
ejectment against her; the only mode of proceeding is by petition
of right. If the subject is in possession, claiming a right under
the Crown, then the ejectment may be maintained; but at the
suggestion of the Attorney General, the proceeding would be brought
into this Court."
There is a close analogy between these cases and the case at
bar. Any action, personal or real, against officers of the
sovereign who justify under a revenue law may be removed in England
into the Court of Exchequer, and under the acts of Congress into
the circuit court of the United States. If it is an action of tort
to recover damages only, it may there proceed to trial. But if it
is an action to recover possession of land, which is in fact held
by the sovereign through its officers and agents, and that fact is
in due form made known to the court, the proceedings must be
stayed.
An action of ejectment brought, as this was, under the Code of
Virginia of 1873, c. 131, affects the title to land more than the
action of ejectment in England. By that code, the action may not
only be brought as before, but it is also made a substitute for the
writ of right and all other real actions. Sects. 1, 2, 38. It must
be brought by and in the name of a person having a subsisting
interest in the premises and a right to recover the premises or the
possession thereof and against the person actually occupying the
premises, or, if they are not occupied, against some person
exercising acts of ownership therein, or claiming title thereto or
some interest therein.
Page 106 U. S. 235
Secs. 4-6. The only plea allowed is the general issue that the
defendant is not guilty of unlawfully withholding the premises
claimed. Sec. 13. The declaration must describe the premises with
such certainty that from the description possession can be
delivered, and it must state, and the verdict must find, whether
the plaintiff's estate is in fee, or for life and whose life, or
for years, and the duration of the term. Secs. 8, 9, 27. Judgment
for the plaintiff is that he recover the possession of the premises
according to the verdict, if there is one, or, if on default or
demurrer, according to the description in the declaration. Sec. 29.
Several judgments may be recovered against several defendants
occupying distinct parcels of the land. Sec. 17. And the judgment
is conclusive as to the title or right of possession, established
in the action, upon the party against whom it is rendered, and all
persons claiming under him by title accruing after the commencement
of the action. Sec. 35. The principle that no sovereign can be sued
without its consent applies equally to foreign sovereigns and to
the sovereign of the country in which the suit is brought. The
exemption of the sovereign is not less regarded by its own courts
than by the courts of other sovereigns. To repeat the words of
Chief Justice Taney already quoted:
"It is an established principle of jurisprudence in all
civilized nations that the sovereign cannot be sued in its own
courts or in any other without its consent and permission."
In the leading case of
The Exchange,
7 Cranch 116, the exemption of a foreign sovereign from being sued
in our courts was held to protect one of his public armed vessels
from being libeled here in a court of admiralty by citizens of the
United States, to whom she had belonged and from whom she had been
forcibly taken in a foreign port by his order. The district
attorney of the United States having filed a suggestion, verified
by affidavit, that she was a public armed vessel of the Emperor of
the French, and actually employed in his service at the time of
entering our ports, the circuit court, disregarding the suggestion,
entered a decree for the libellants. But upon appeal taken by the
attorney of the United States, this Court, without any inquiry into
the title, reversed the decree
Page 106 U. S. 236
and dismissed the libel, and Chief Justice Marshall, in
delivering judgment, said: "There seems to be a necessity for
admitting that the fact might be disclosed to the court by the
suggestion of the attorney for the United States."
In
Vavasseur v. Krupp, 9 Ch.D. 351, the Mikado of
Japan, a sovereign prince, bought in Germany shells, made there,
but said to be infringements of an English patent. They were
brought to England in order to be put on board a ship of war
belonging to the Mikado, and the patentee obtained an injunction
against the agents of the Mikado and the persons in whose custody
the shells were, restraining them from removing the shells. The
Mikado then applied to be and was made a defendant in the suit. An
order was made by Sir George Jessel, Master of the Rolls, and
affirmed by the Court of Appeal, that notwithstanding the
injunction, the Mikado should be at liberty to remove the shells.
Lord Justice James said:
"I am of opinion that this attempt on the part of the plaintiff
to interfere with the right of a foreign sovereign to deal with his
public property is one of the boldest I have ever heard of as made
in any court in this country."
And, after stating the contention of the plaintiff that the
shells were in the possession of persons in England who were minded
to make and did make a use of them inconsistent with his patent, he
further said:
"If they were doing so, then they are liable in an action for
damages, and the plaintiff may recover any damages that he may be
entitled to. But that does not interfere with the right of the
sovereign of Japan, who now asks to be allowed to take his
property."
Lord Justice Brett said:
"The goods were the property of the Mikado. They were his
property as a sovereign; they were the property of his country, and
therefore he is in the position of a foreign sovereign having
property here. . . . If it is an infringement of the patent by the
Mikado, you cannot sue him for that infringement. If it is an
infringement by the agents, you may sue the agents for that
infringement, but then it is the agents whom you sue. . . . The
Mikado has a perfect right to have these goods; no court in this
country can properly prevent him from having goods which are the
public property of his own country."
In the case of
The Parlement Belge, 5 P.D. 197, the
Court
Page 106 U. S. 237
of Appeal held that an unarmed packet belonging to the King of
the Belgians and in the hands of officers commissioned by him, and
employed in carrying mails and also in carrying merchandise and
passengers for hire, was not liable to be seized in a suit
in
rem to recover damages for a collision. Lord Justice Brett, in
a considered judgment, stated the real question to be
"whether every part of the public property of every sovereign
authority in use for national purposes is not as much exempt from
the jurisdiction of every court as is the person of every
sovereign,"
and after reviewing many American as well as English cases,
announced the conclusion of the court thus:
"As a consequence of the absolute independence of every
sovereign authority and of the international comity which induces
every sovereign state to respect the independence of every other
sovereign state, each and every one declines to exercise by means
of any of its courts any of its territorial jurisdiction over the
person of any sovereign or ambassador of any other state, or over
the public property of any state which is destined to its public
use, or over the property of any ambassador, though such sovereign,
ambassador, or property be within its territory and therefore, but
for the common agreement, subject to its jurisdiction. This
proposition would determine the first question in the present case
in favor of the protest, even if an action
in rem were
held to be a proceeding solely against property, and not a
procedure directly or indirectly impleading the owner of the
property to answer to the judgment of the court. But we cannot
allow it to be supposed that in our opinion the owner of the
property is not indirectly impleaded."
After stating the mode of procedure in courts of admiralty, he
continued:
"To implead an independent sovereign in such a way is to call
upon him to sacrifice either his property or his independence. To
place him in that position is a breach of the principle upon which
his immunity from jurisdiction rests. We think that he cannot be so
indirectly impleaded, any more than he could be directly impleaded.
The case is, upon this consideration of it, brought within the
general rule that a sovereign authority cannot be personally
impleaded in any court."
It was argued at the bar that the petition of right in
England
Page 106 U. S. 238
was in effect a suit against the Crown. But the petition of
right could never be maintained except after an application to the
King and his consented grant. The sovereign thus retained the power
of determining in advance in every case whether it was consistent
with the public interests to allow the suit to be brought and tried
in the ordinary courts of justice. The petition might be presented
either to the King in person or in Parliament, and if sued in
Parliament, it might be enacted and pass as an act of Parliament.
Staunf.Prerog. 72
b; Chit.Prerog. 346. The old form of
proceeding by petition of right to the King was so tedious and
expensive that it fell into disuse, and there is hardly an instance
in which it was resorted to in England between the settlement of
the colonies and the declaration of independence, or for half a
century afterwards.
Clayton v. Attorney General, 1 Coop.
temp. Cott. 97, 120;
Queen v. Powell, 1 Q.B. 353,
363, and 4 Per. & Dav. 719, 723, above quoted;
Canterbury
v. Attorney General, 1 Phillips 306, 327;
De Bode's
Case, 8 Q.B. 208, 273. The granting of the royal consent as a
matter of course is but of very modern introduction in England.
Eastern Archipelago Co. v. Queen, 2 El. & Bl. 856,
914. And the statute of 23 and 24 Vict. c. 34, simplifying and
regulating the proceedings, makes it the duty of the Secretary of
State for the Home Department to lay the petition before the Queen
for her consideration, and to give her his advice upon it, and if
upon his advice she refuses to grant her fiat, the suppliant is
without remedy.
Irwin v. Grey, 3 F. & F. 635, 637;
Tobin v. Queen, 14 C.B. (N.S.) 505, 521; 16 C.B. (N.S.)
310, 368. In
United States v.
O'Keefe, 11 Wall. 178,
78 U. S. 184,
in which it was held that British subjects were included in the Act
of Congress of July 27, 1868, c. 276, allowing suits for the
proceeds of captured and abandoned property to be brought in the
Court of Claims
"by aliens who are citizens or subjects of any government which
accords to citizens of the United States the right to prosecute
claims against such government in its courts,"
this Court, speaking of the English petition of right said:
"It is easy to see that cases might arise, involving political
considerations in which it would be eminently proper for the
sovereign to withhold his permission."
The English remedies of petition of right,
monstrans de
droit,
Page 106 U. S. 239
and traverse of office, were never introduced into this country
as a part of our common law; but in the American colonies and
states, claims upon the government were commonly made by petition
to the legislature. The inadequacy or the want of those remedies is
no reason for maintaining a suit against the sovereign, in a form
which is usual between private citizens, but which has not been
expressly granted to them as against the sovereign.
Queen v.
Powell, above quoted;
Gibbons v. United
States, 8 Wall. 269.
In particular classes of cases, indeed, Congress has authorized
suits in equity to be brought against the United States -- as, for
instance, in cases of delinquent receivers of public money against
whom a warrant of distress has been issued, in cases of proprietors
of land taken and sold to make certain improvements in the City of
Washington (in which the bill is spoken of as "in the nature of a
petition of right") and in claims to share in the money received
from Mexico under the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.
See United
States v. Nourse, 6 Pet. 470, and
34
U. S. 9 Pet. 8;
Murray v. Hoboken Land
Co., 18 How. 272,
59 U. S. 284;
Van Ness v.
Washington, 4 Pet. 232,
29 U. S.
276-277;
Clark v.
Clark, 17 How. 315,
58 U. S. 320.
So it has often authorized suits to be brought against the United
States to confirm claims, under grants from foreign governments, to
lands since ceded to the United States. But in such a suit, Chief
Justice Marshall said:
"As the United States are not suable of common right, the party
who institutes such suit must bring his case within the authority
of some act of Congress, or the court cannot exercise jurisdiction
over it."
United States v.
Clarke, 8 Pet. 436,
33 U. S.
444.
For more than sixty years after the adoption of the
Constitution, no general provision was made by law for determining
claims against the United States, and in every act concerning the
Court of Claims, Congress has defined the classes of claims which
might be made, the conditions on which they might be presented, the
forms of proceeding, and the effect to be given to the awards. The
Act of February 24, 1855, c. 122, which first established that
court, required an act of Congress to carry out each award. The Act
of March 3, 1863, c. 92, which dispensed with that requirement,
authorized the sums due by the judgments of the Court of Claims,
after presentation of a copy
Page 106 U. S. 240
thereof to the Secretary of the Treasury and his estimate of an
appropriation therefor, to be paid out of any general appropriation
made by law for the satisfaction of private claims. Even under this
act, the Court of Claims had so little of the nature of a judicial
tribunal that this Court declined to entertain appeals from its
decisions, although the statute expressly gave such an appeal.
Gordon v. United
States, 2 Wall. 561;
S.C. 5 Amer.Law Reg.
(N.S.) 111. It is only since the Act of March 17, 1866, c. 19, has
repealed the provision which by necessary implication authorized
the Secretary of the Treasury to revise the decisions of the Court
of Claims, and of this Court on appeal, that this Court has
considered and determined such appeals.
Under the existing statutes, the principal classes of demands
submitted to the determination of the Court of Claims are claims
founded on laws of Congress, on regulations of the executive
departments, and on contracts expressed or implied, and claims
referred to the court by Congress. Rev.Stat. sec. 1059. The
proceeding by petition to Congress and reference by Congress to the
Court of Claims presents the nearest analogy that our law affords
to the petition of right. No act of Congress has conferred upon
that court or upon any other tribunal general jurisdiction of suits
against the United States to recover possession of real property or
to redress a tort. And the act of Congress of June 11, 1864, c. 117
(reenacted in sec. 3753 of the Revised Statutes), authorizing the
Secretary of the Treasury to direct a stipulation, to the extent of
the value of the interest of the United States, to be entered into
for the discharge of any property owned or held by the United
States, or in which the United States have or claim an interest,
which has been seized or attached in any judicial proceeding under
the laws of a state, expressly provides
"That nothing herein contained shall be considered as
recognizing or conceding any right to enforce by seizure, arrest,
attachment, or any judicial process, any claim against any property
of the United States, or against any property held, owned, or
employed by the United States, or by any department thereof, for
any public use, or as waiving any objection to any proceeding
instituted to enforce any such claim. "
Page 106 U. S. 241
In
Gibbons v. United
States, 8 Wall. 269, which was an attempt to
maintain in the Court of Claims a suit against the government as
upon an implied contract for unauthorized acts of its officers
which were in themselves torts, the Court said: "The supposition
that the government will not pay its debts, or will not do justice,
is not to be indulged," and, after stating the reasons against the
maintenance of the suit, concluded:
"These reflections admonish us to be cautious that we do not
permit the decisions of this Court to become authority for the
righting in the Court of Claims of all wrongs done to individuals
by the officers of the general government, though they may have
been committed while serving that government and in the belief that
it was for its interest. In such cases, where it is proper for the
nation to furnish a remedy, Congress has wisely reserved the matter
for its own determination. In
Langford v. United States,
101 U. S.
341, the remarks just quoted were repeated and were
applied to the case of a suit for the use and occupation of land
which the United States, under a claim of title, had, through its
Indian agents, taken possession of and since held by force and
against the will of the rightful owner."
If it is proper that the United States should allow themselves
to be sued in such a case as this, public policy requires that it
should rest with Congress to define the mode of proceeding, the
conditions on which it may be maintained, and the manner in which
the decision shall be enforced -- none of which can be done if the
citizen has an absolute right to maintain the action.
If the plaintiff is entitled to judgment, it can only be upon
the ground that the United States are not a party to the record and
have no such relation to the action that their possession of the
land demanded will prevent judgment against the defendants of
record. If those defendants alone are to be held to be parties or
interested, the plaintiff is entitled as of right to immediate
execution as well as to judgment, and the court has no discretion
to stay an execution between private parties on considerations of
the interests of the public.
To maintain this action independently of any legislation by
Congress is to declare that the exemption of the United States from
being impleaded without their consent does not embrace
Page 106 U. S. 242
lands held by a disputed title; to defeat the exemption from
judicial process in the very cases in which it is of the utmost
importance to the public that it should be upheld, and to compel
the United States to submit to the determination of courts and
juries the validity of their title to any land held and used for
military, naval, commercial, revenue, or police purposes.
The decision of this Court and the reasoning of the several
judges in the case of
Chisholm v.
Georgia, 2 Dall. 419, in which a majority of the
Court held that under the Constitution as originally adopted, a
suit could be maintained in this Court against a state by a citizen
of another state, do not appear to us to furnish much aid in the
determination of this case, for several reasons: 1st, each of the
judges who mentioned the subject declined to affirm that the United
States could be sued, 2 Dall.
2 U. S. 430,
2 U. S. 469,
2 U. S. 478; 2d,
the decision was based on a construction of the words of the
Constitution conferring jurisdiction of suits between "a state and
citizens of another state;" 3d, that construction was set aside by
the Eleventh Amendment of the Constitution, which declares that
"The judicial power of the United States shall not be construed
to extend to any suit in law or equity commenced or prosecuted
against one of the United States by citizens of another state, or
by citizens or subjects of any foreign state."
2 Dall.
2 U.S. 480,
note;
Hollingsworth v.
Virginia, 3 Dall. 378.
In those cases in which judgments have since been rendered by
this Court against individuals concerning money or property in
which a state had an interest, either the money was in the personal
possession of the defendants and not in the possession of the state
or the suit was to restrain the defendants by injunction from doing
acts in violation of the Constitution of the United States. Within
one or both of these classes fall the cases of
United
States v. Peters, 5 Cranch 115;
Osborn v.
Bank of United States, 9 Wheat. 738;
Davis v. Gray,
16 Wall. 203, and
Board of Liquidation v. McComb,
92 U. S. 531.
In
United States v.
Peters, 5 Cranch 115, in which a writ of mandamus
was ordered to a district court of the United States sitting in
admiralty to issue an attachment against the executrixes of David
Rittenhouse to enforce obedience to a decree
Page 106 U. S. 243
of that court for the payment of money (although Rittenhouse had
been Treasurer of the State of Pennsylvania, and the legislature of
that state had directed its Attorney General to sue the executrixes
for the recovery of the money, and the governor to protect them
against any process of the federal courts), the judgment of this
Court, as stated by Chief Justice Marshall, went upon the ground
that it was apparent that Rittenhouse held the money in his own
right, and that
"the suit was not instituted against the state or its treasurer,
but against the executrixes of David Rittenhouse, for the proceeds
of a vessel condemned in the court of admiralty, which were
admitted to be in their possession. If these proceeds had been the
actual property of Pennsylvania, however wrongfully acquired, the
disclosure of that fact would have presented a case on which it is
unnecessary to give an opinion; but it certainly can never be
alleged that a mere suggestion of title in a state to property, in
possession of an individual, must arrest the proceedings of the
court, and prevent their looking into the suggestion, and examining
the validity of the title."
The Chief Justice stated the conclusion of the Court as
follows:
"Since, then, the State of Pennsylvania had neither possession
of nor right to the property on which the sentence of the district
court was pronounced, and since the suit was neither commenced nor
prosecuted against that state, there remains no pretext for the
allegation that the case is within that amendment of the
Constitution which has been cited, and consequently the State of
Pennsylvania can possess no constitutional right to resist the
legal process which may be directed in this cause."
The Chief Justice thus carefully avoided expressing an opinion
upon a case in which the money sued for was in the possession of
the state, or "the actual property of the state, however wrongfully
acquired," and his remark upon the effect of a mere suggestion of
title in the state in a suit to recover "property in possession of
an individual" -- as well as his similar remark in
Osborn v.
Bank of United States, 9 Wheat. 738,
22 U. S. 870,
as to the effect of a suggestion of title in a foreign sovereign
under like circumstances -- can have no application where it is in
due form pleaded or suggested, and satisfactorily
Page 106 U. S. 244
proved or admitted, that the property is in the possession of
the state or the sovereign under claim and color of title, though
that possession is necessarily held in its behalf by its officers
or servants, as appears by his own judgment in the case of
The
Exchange as well as by the cases in the Court of Exchequer
before cited.
In
Osborn v. Bank of United
States, 9 Wheat. 738, the bill was originally filed
by the Bank of the United States against the auditor of the State
of Ohio and a collector employed by him to prevent them from
levying a tax imposed by the legislature of that state in violation
of the Constitution of the United States upon the property of the
bank, and they, after the service of the subpoena, forcibly took
from the plaintiff's office the amount of the tax in money and paid
it over to the treasurer of the state, who received it with notice
of these facts and kept it apart from other money belonging to the
state so that, in the view taken by the Court, it had never come
into the possession of the state, but could have been recovered
from the treasurer in an action of detinue. 9 Wheat.
22 U. S.
833-836,
22 U. S. 854,
22 U. S. 858.
By an amendment of the bill, the treasurer was made a defendant.
Such were the facts upon which the Court, by one of Chief Justice
Marshall's most elaborate judgments, in which the case was admitted
to be one of great difficulty, ordered the defendants to restore
the money, and held that the fact that the state was not, and could
not be, without its consent, made a defendant, afforded no
objection to granting such relief.
The dictum of the learned justice who delivered the opinion in
Davis v. Gray,
16 Wall. 203,
83 U. S. 220,
that in
Osborn v. Bank of United States it was decided
that in cases in which a state is concerned,
"that it cannot be made a party is a sufficient reason for the
omission to do it, and the court may proceed to decree against the
officers of the state in all respects as if the state were a party
to the record"
overstates the decision in
Osborn's case; goes beyond
what was required for the decision of
Davis v. Gray, in
which the object of the suit and the whole effect of the decree
were to prevent the governor and the Commissioner of the General
Land Office of the State of Texas from signing patents for lands of
which the plaintiff had the
Page 106 U. S. 245
title under a previous grant from the state, and, as the state
cannot hold money or property otherwise than by its officers and
agents, would, if understood as laying down a universal rule,
practically nullify the Eleventh Amendment of the Constitution.
In
Board of Liquidation v. McComb, 92 U. S.
531, in which an injunction was granted to restrain the
board of liquidation, consisting of the governor and other
officers, of the State of Louisiana from issuing or using, in
violation of a previous contract of the state with the plaintiff,
bonds of the state in their hands, the Court said that the
objections to proceeding by injunction were
"first that it is in effect proceeding against the state itself,
and secondly, that it interferes with the official discretion
vested in the officers. It is conceded that neither of these things
can be done. A state, without its consent, cannot be sued by an
individual, and a court cannot substitute its own discretion for
that of executive officers in matters belonging to the proper
jurisdiction of the latter."
And the ground upon which the bill in that case, as well as in
the previous cases of
Osborn v. Bank of United States and
Davis v. Gray was sustained, was defined to be that when a
plain official duty, requiring no exercise of discretion, is
threatened to be violated by some positive official act, any person
who will sustain personal injury thereby for which adequate
compensation cannot be had at law may have an injunction to prevent
it, notwithstanding the officer pleads the authority of an
unconstitutional, and therefore void, law for the violation of his
duty.
The case of
The Governor of Georgia v.
Madrazo, 1 Pet. 110, does not appear to us to have
any important bearing, except as tending to illustrate the
distinction between the possession of the state by its agents, and
the possession of the agents in their own right. The decision was
that where negro slaves were illegally taken from the owner on the
high seas and afterwards sold to a stranger who, without the
privity of the owner, imported them into the United States in
violation of the Act of Congress of March 2, 1807, c. 22, and they
were here seized by an officer of the customs of the United States
and delivered to an agent appointed by the Governor of the State of
Georgia in conformity with the act of Congress, and some
Page 106 U. S. 246
of them sold by order of the governor of the state, and the
money obtained at the sale was, in the words of Chief Justice
Marshall, "actually in the treasury of the state, mixed up with its
general funds," and the rest of the slaves remained in the hands of
the agent of the state, "in possession of the government," a libel
in admiralty by the owner to recover possession of the money and
slaves, though not brought against the state by name, but against
the governor in his official capacity, was a suit against the
state, and therefore, by reason of the Eleventh Amendment of the
Constitution, could not be maintained.
See also Ex Parte
Madrazzo, 7 Pet. 627.
In the case, on which the plaintiff principally relies, of
Meigs v.
McClung, 9 Cranch 11, in which a circuit court of
the United States, and this Court on writ of error, gave judgment
for the plaintiff in an action of ejectment for land held by the
defendants as officers and under the authority of the United
States, the full statement of their position in the bill of
exceptions, on page
13 U. S. 13 of
the report, clearly shows that the fact that they so held the land
was not set up in defense, except as supplemental to the position
that the legal title to the land was in the United States, and it
does not appear to have been mentioned in argument. No objection to
the exercise of jurisdiction was made by the defendants or by the
United States or noticed by the Court. That the Court understood
the United States to desire a decision upon the merits is further
apparent from Chief Justice Marshall's summary toward the close of
the opinion:
"The land is certainly the property of the plaintiff below, and
the United States cannot have intended to deprive him of it by
violence and without compensation."
Had the decision covered the question of jurisdiction, the Chief
Justice would hardly have omitted to refer to it in
Osborn v.
Bank of United States, above stated.
In
Wilcox v.
Jackson, 13 Pet. 498; in
Brown v.
Huger, 21 How. 305, and in
Grisar v.
McDowell, 6 Wall. 363 -- which were also actions of
ejectment against officers of the United States -- the judgments
were in favor of the defendants on the merits, no suggestion that
the United States were so interested that the action could not be
maintained was made by counsel or passed upon by this Court, and
that the Court has not hitherto understood
Page 106 U. S. 247
any such question to be settled by any or all of those cases is
clearly shown by its more recent judgments.
In the case of
The Siren, 7
Wall. 152, the Court said:
"It is a familiar doctrine of the common law that the sovereign
cannot be sued in his own courts without his consent. The doctrine
rests upon reasons of public policy, the inconvenience and danger
which would follow from any different rule. It is obvious that the
public service would be hindered and the public safety endangered
if the supreme authority could be subjected to suit at the instance
of every citizen and consequently controlled in the use and
disposition of the means required for the proper administration of
the government. The exemption from direct suit is therefore without
exception. This doctrine of the common law is equally applicable to
the supreme authority of the nation, the United States. They cannot
be subjected to legal proceedings at law or in equity without their
consent, and whoever institutes such proceedings must bring his
case within the authority of some act of Congress. Such is the
language of this Court in
United States v. Clarke,
8 Pet. 444. The same exemption from judicial process extends to the
property of the United States, and for the same reasons. As justly
observed by the learned judge who tried this case, there is no
distinction between suits against the government directly and suits
against its property."
In the case of
The Davis, 10
Wall 15, the Court, stating the doctrine somewhat less broadly, yet
affirmed the proposition as clearly established by authority
that
"no suit
in rem can be maintained against the property
of the United States when it would be necessary to take such
property out of the possession of the government by any writ or
process of the court,"
and, in discussing the question, what constitutes a possession
which protects the property from the process of the court,
said:
"We are speaking now of a possession which can only be changed
under process of the court by bringing the officer of the court
into collision with the officer of the government, if the latter
should choose to resist. The possession of the government can only
exist through some of its officers, using that phrase in the sense
of any person charged on behalf of the government with
Page 106 U. S. 248
the control of the property, coupled with its actual possession.
This, we think, is a sufficiently liberal definition of the
possession of the property by the government to prevent any
unseemly conflict between the court and the other departments of
the government, and which is consistent with the principle which
exempts the government from suit and its possession from
disturbance by virtue of judicial process."
In
The Siren, a claim for damages against a prize ship
for a collision on her way from the place of capture to the port of
adjudication was allowed out of the proceeds of her sale upon
condemnation, because the government was the actor in the suit to
have her condemned. In
The Davis, a claim was allowed for
salvage of goods belonging to the United States in the hands of the
master of a private vessel as a common carrier, because his
possession was not the possession of the United States and the
United States could only obtain the goods by coming into court as
claimant and actor. Each of those cases, as was pointed out in
Case v.
Terrell, 11 Wall. 199,
78 U. S. 201,
was decided upon the ground that
"the government came into court of its own volition to assert
its claim to the property, and could only do so on condition of
recognizing the superior rights of others."
In
Carr v. United States, 98 U. S.
433, in which it was decided that judgments in ejectment
against officers of the government, in possession in its behalf of
lands held for a marine hospital, did not bind nor estop the United
States, it was said in the opinion of the Court:
"We consider it to be a fundamental principle that the
government cannot be sued except by its own consent, and certainly
no state can pass a law which would have any validity for making
the government suable in its courts. It is conceded in
The
Siren, 7 Wall. 152, and in
The
Davis, 10 Wall. 15, that without an act of
Congress, no direct proceeding can be instituted against the
government or its property. And in the latter case it is justly
observed that"
"the possession of the government can only exist through its
officers, using that phrase in the sense of any person charged on
behalf of the government with the control of the property, coupled
with actual possession. If a proceeding would lie against the
officers as individuals in the case of a marine
Page 106 U. S. 249
hospital, it might be instituted with equal facility and right
in reference to a post office or a custom house, a prison or a
fortification. In some cases (perhaps it was so in the present
case), it might not be apparent until after suit brought that the
possession attempted to be assailed was that of the government, but
when this is made apparent by the pleadings or the proofs, the
jurisdiction of the court ought to cease. Otherwise the government
could always be compelled to come into court and litigate with
private parties in defense of its property."
The view on which this Court appears to have constantly acted,
which reconciles all its decisions, and is in accord with the
English authorities, is this: the objection to the exercise of
jurisdiction over the sovereign or his property in an action in
which he is not a party to the record is in the nature of a
personal objection, which, if not suggested by the sovereign, may
be presumed not to be intended to be insisted upon. If ejectment is
brought by one citizen against another, the court
prima
facie has jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the
parties, and if no objection is interposed in behalf of the
sovereign, proceeds to judgment between the parties before it. If
the property is in the possession of the defendants, and not of the
sovereign, an informal suggestion that it belongs to the sovereign
will not defeat the action. But if the sovereign, in proper form
and by sufficient proof, makes known to the court that he insists
upon his exemption from suit and that the property sued for is held
by the nominal defendants exclusively for him and on his behalf as
public property, the right of the plaintiff to prosecute the suit
and the authority of the court to exercise jurisdiction over it
cease, and all further proceedings must be stayed.
In the case at bar, the United States interposed in the most
solemn and appropriate manner. The Attorney General, before the
trial, following the course approved by this Court in the case of
The Exchange, and by the Court of Exchequer in the case of
Doe v. Roe and other cases already referred to, filed a
suggestion and motion in writing in which, appearing only for this
purpose, he states that the land has been for more than ten years
and still is held, occupied, and possessed by the United States,
through their officers and agents charged in behalf of
Page 106 U. S. 250
the government of the United States with the control of the
property and who are in the actual possession thereof, as public
property of the United States for public uses, in the exercise of
their sovereign and constitutional powers, as a military station,
and as a national cemetery established for the burial of deceased
soldiers and sailors, known as the Arlington Cemetery, and for war,
military, charitable, and educational purposes, as set forth in the
certificate of sale of the land for nonpayment of direct taxes
lawfully assessed thereon, a copy of which is annexed to the
suggestion. Wherefore, without submitting the rights of the
government of the United States to the jurisdiction of the court,
but insisting that the court has no jurisdiction of the subject in
controversy, he moves that the declaration may be set aside and all
the proceedings be stayed and dismissed, and for such other order
as may be proper. The plaintiff, by demurring to this suggestion,
admitted the truth of the facts stated by the Attorney General.
After these facts had been thus formally brought to the notice
of the court by the chief law officer of the United States and had
been admitted by the plaintiff, we are of opinion that the court
had no authority to proceed to trial and judgment, because the
suit, which had been commenced against the individual defendants,
was thenceforth prosecuted against the United States; because in
ejectment, as in other actions at law, a court has no authority to
render a judgment on which it has no power to issue execution;
because, as was directly adjudged in
Carr v. United
States, 98 U. S. 433, above
cited, no judgment against the defendants can bind or estop the
United States; because the possession of the defendants is in fact
and in law the possession of the United States, and the defendants
may at any moment be displaced and removed by the executive, and
other custodians appointed and installed in their stead; because to
issue an execution against them would be to issue an execution
against the United States, and to turn the United States out of
possession of land held by the United States, under claim of title
and color of right for public purposes, and because to maintain a
suit which has that object and that result is to violate the
fundamental principle that the sovereign cannot be sued without its
consent, and to encroach
Page 106 U. S. 251
upon the powers entrusted by the Constitution to the legislative
and executive departments of the government.
The court having no authority to proceed with the suit, the
judgment afterwards rendered for the plaintiff was erroneous. The
United States, having the right to interpose and having interposed
in due form, had an equal right to sue out a writ of error to make
their interposition effectual. This is plainly shown by the case of
The
Exchange, 7 Cranch 120,
11 U. S. 147,
before cited. It follows that upon the writ of error sued out by
the United States, the judgment below should be reversed and the
case remanded with directions to set aside the verdict and to
dismiss the action.
As to Kaufman and Strong, the court erred in compelling them to
proceed to trial after the interposition of the United States and
in declining to instruct the jury, as they requested, that if the
United States, through their officers and agents charged with the
control of the same, were in the possession of the property in
controversy, using it as a national cemetery for the burial of
deceased soldiers and as a fort and military reservation, claiming
title under the certificate of sale proved in the case, and the
defendants occupied the same only as such officers and agents, in
obedience to orders of the War Department of the United States and
making no claim of right to the title or possession except as such
officers, the verdict must be for the defendants. Judgment of
reversal should therefore also be entered upon the writ of error
sued out by them.
Being of opinion, for the reasons above set forth, that the
question of the validity of the title under which the United
States, through their officers and agents, hold the land, cannot be
tried and determined in this action, we of course express no
opinion upon that branch of the case.