A State cannot, without its consent, be sued in a Circuit Court
for the United States by one of its own citizens upon a suggestion
that the case is one that arises under the Constitution and laws of
the United States.
Chisholm v.
Georgia, 2 Dall. 419, questioned.
While a State cannot be compelled by suit to perform its
contracts, any attempt on its part to violate property or rights
acquired under its contracts may be judicially resisted, and any
law impairing the obligation of contracts under which such property
or rights are held is void, and powerless to affect their
enjoyment.
This is an action brought in the Circuit Court of the United
States, in December, 1884, against the State of Louisiana, by Hans,
a citizen of that State, to recover the amount of certain coupons
annexed to bonds of the State, issued under the provisions of an
act of the legislature approved January 24, 1874. The bonds are
known and designated as the "consolidated bonds of the State of
Louisiana," and the coupons sued on are for interest which accrued
January 1, 1880. The grounds of the action are stated in the
petition as follows:
"Your petitioner avers that, by the issue of said bonds and
Page 134 U. S. 2
coupons, said State contracted with and agreed to pay the bearer
thereof the principal sum of said bonds forty years from the date
thereof, to-wit, the 1st day of January, 1874, and to pay the
interest thereon represented by coupons as aforesaid, including the
coupons held by your petitioner, semiannually upon the maturity of
said coupons; and said legislature, by an act approved January 24,
1874, proposed an amendment to the constitution of said State,
which was afterwards duly adopted, and is as follows, to-wit:"
" No. 1. The issue of consolidated bonds, authorized by the
general assembly of the State at its regular session in the year
1874 is hereby declared to create a valid contract between the
State and each and every holder of said bonds, which the State
shall by no means and in no wise impair. The said bonds shall be a
valid obligation of the State in favor of any holder thereof, and
no court shall enjoin the payment of the principal or interest
thereof or the levy and collection of the tax therefor. To secure
such levy, collection, and payment, the judicial power shall be
exercised when necessary. The tax required for the payment of the
principal and interest of said bonds shall be assessed and
collected each and every year until the bonds shall be paid,
principal and interest, and the proceeds shall be paid by the
treasurer of the State to the holders of said bonds as the
principal and interest of the same shall fall due, and no further
legislation or appropriation shall be requisite for the said
assessment, and collection and for such payment from the
treasury."
"And petitioner further avers that, notwithstanding said solemn
compact with the holders of said bonds, said State hath refused and
still refuses to pay said coupons held by petitioner, and by its
constitution, adopted in 1879, ordained as follows:"
" That the coupons of said consolidated bonds falling due the
1st of January, 1880, be, and the same is hereby, remitted, and any
interest taxes collected to meet said coupons are hereby
transferred to defray the expenses of the State government;"
"and by article 257 of said constitution also prescribed that
'the constitution of this State, adopted in 1868, and all
amendments thereto, is declared
Page 134 U. S. 3
to be superseded by this constitution;' and said State thereby
undertook to repudiate her contract obligations aforesaid, and to
prohibit her officers and agents executing the same, and said State
claims that, by said provisions of said constitution, she is
relieved from the obligations of her aforesaid contract, and from
the payment of said coupons held by petitioner, and so refuses
payment thereof, and has prohibited her officers and agents making
such payment. Petitioner also avers that taxes for the payment of
the interest upon said bonds due January 1, 1880, were levied,
assessed, and collected, but said State unlawfully and wrongfully
diverted the money so collected, and appropriated the same to
payment of the general expenses of the State, and has made no other
provision for the payment of said interest. Petitioner also avers
that said provisions of said constitution are in contravention of
said contract, and their adoption was an active violation thereof,
and that said State thereby sought to impair the validity thereof
with your petitioner, in violation of Article 1, Section 10, of the
Constitution of the United States, and the effect so given to said
State constitution does impair said contract. Wherefore petitioner
prays that the State of Louisiana be cited to answer this demand,
and that after due proceedings she be condemned to pay your
petitioner said sum of ($87,500) eighty-seven thousand five hundred
dollars, with legal interest from January 1, 1880, until paid, and
all costs of suit; and petitioner prays for general relief."
A citation being issued directed to the State, and served upon
the governor thereof, the attorney general of the State filed an
exception, of which the following is a copy, to-wit:
"Now comes defendant, by the attorney general, and excepts to
plaintiff's suit, on the ground that this Court is without
jurisdiction
ratione personae. Plaintiff cannot sue the
State without its permission; the constitution and laws do not give
this honorable Court jurisdiction of a suit against the State; and
its jurisdiction is respectfully declined."
"Wherefore respondent prays to be hence dismissed, with costs,
and for general relief. "
Page 134 U. S. 4
By the judgment of the court, this exception was sustained, and
the suit was dismissed.
See Hans v. Louisiana, 24 Fed.Rep.
55.
Page 134 U. S. 9
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, after stating the case as above, delivered
the opinion of the Court.
The question is presented whether a State can be sued in a
Circuit Court of the United States by one of its own citizens upon
a suggestion that the case is one that arises under the
constitution or laws of the United States.
The ground taken is that, under the Constitution, as well as
under the act of Congress passed to carry it into effect, a case is
within the jurisdiction of the federal courts, without regard to
the character of the parties, if it arises under the Constitution
or laws of the United States, or, which is the same thing, if it
necessarily involves a question under said Constitution or laws.
The language relied on is that clause of the 3d article of the
Constitution which declares that
"the judicial power of the United States shall extend to all
cases in law and equity arising under this Constitution, the laws
of the United States, and treaties made, or which shall be made,
under their authority;"
and the corresponding clause of the act conferring jurisdiction
upon the Circuit Court which, as found in the act of March 3, 1875,
is as follows, to-wit:
"That the Circuit Courts of the United States shall have
original cognizance, concurrent with the courts of the several
States, of all suits of a civil nature, at common law or in equity,
. . . arising under the Constitution or laws of the United States,
or treaties made, or which shall be made, under their
authority."
It is said that these jurisdictional clauses make no exception
arising from the character of the parties, and therefore that a
State can claim no exemption from suit if the case is really one
arising under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United
States. It is conceded that, where the jurisdiction depends alone
upon the character of the parties, a controversy between a State
and its own
Page 134 U. S. 10
citizens is not embraced within it; but it is contended that,
though jurisdiction does not exist on that ground, it nevertheless
does exist if the case itself is one which necessarily involves a
federal question; and, with regard to ordinary parties, this is
undoubtedly true. The question now to be decided is whether it is
true where one of the parties is a State, and is sued as a
defendant by one of its own citizens.
That a State cannot be sued by a citizen of another State, or of
a foreign state, on the mere ground that the case is one arising
under the Constitution or laws of the United States, is clearly
established by the decisions of this Court in several recent cases.
Louisiana v. Jumel, 107 U. S. 711;
Hagood v. Southern, 117 U. S. 52;
In re Ayers, 123 U. S. 443.
Those were cases arising under the Constitution of the United
States, upon laws complained of as impairing the obligation of
contracts, one of which was the constitutional amendment of
Louisiana, complained of in the present case. Relief was sought
against State officers who professed to act in obedience to those
laws. This Court held that the suits were virtually against the
States themselves, and were consequently violative of the Eleventh
Amendment of the Constitution, and could not be maintained. It was
not denied that they presented cases arising under the
Constitution; but, notwithstanding that, they were held to be
prohibited by the amendment referred to.
In the present case, the plaintiff in error contends that he,
being a citizen of Louisiana, is not embarrassed by the obstacle of
the Eleventh Amendment inasmuch as that Amendment only prohibits
suits against a State which are brought by the citizens of another
State, or by citizens or subjects of a foreign state. It is true
the Amendment does so read, and, if there were no other reason or
ground for abating his suit, it might be maintainable; and then we
should have this anomalous result, that, in cases arising under the
Constitution or laws of the United States, a State may be sued in
the federal courts by its own citizens, though it cannot be sued
for a like cause of action by the citizens of other States, or of a
foreign state; and may be thus sued in the federal courts, although
not allowing itself to be sued in its own courts. If this is the
necessary
Page 134 U. S. 11
consequence of the language of the Constitution and the law, the
result is no less startling and unexpected than was the original
decision of this Court, that, under the language of the
Constitution and of the Judiciary Act of 1789, a State was liable
to be sued by a citizen of another State or of a foreign country.
That decision was made in the case of
Chisholm v.
Georgia, 2 Dall. 419, and created such a shock of
surprise throughout the country that, at the first meeting of
Congress thereafter, the Eleventh Amendment to the Constitution was
almost unanimously proposed, and was in due course adopted by the
legislatures of the States. This amendment, expressing the will of
the ultimate sovereignty of the whole country, superior to all
legislatures and all courts, actually reversed the decision of the
Supreme Court. It did not, in terms, prohibit suits by individuals
against the States, but declared that the Constitution should not
be construed to import any power to authorize the bringing of such
suits. The language of the Amendment is that
"[t]he 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."
The Supreme Court had construed the judicial power as extending
to such a suit, and its decision was thus overruled. The Court
itself so understood the effect of the Amendment, for, after its
adoption, Attorney General Lee, in the case of
Hollingsworth v.
Virginia, 3 Dall. 378, submitted this question to
the Court
"whether the Amendment did or did not supersede all suits
depending, as well as prevent the institution of new suits, against
any one of the United States by citizens of another State."
Tilghman and Rawle argued in the negative, contending that the
jurisdiction of the Court was unimpaired in relation to all suits
instituted previously to the adoption of the Amendment. But on the
succeeding day, the Court delivered an unanimous opinion
"that, the Amendment being constitutionally adopted, there could
not be exercised any jurisdiction, in any case, past or future, in
which a State was sued by the citizens of another State, or by
citizens or subjects of any foreign state. "
Page 134 U. S. 12
This view of the force and meaning of the Amendment is
important. It shows that, on this question of the suability of the
States by individuals, the highest authority of this country was in
accord rather with the minority than with the majority of the Court
in the decision of the case of
Chisholm v. Georgia, and
this fact lends additional interest to the able opinion of Mr.
Justice Iredell on that occasion. The other justices were more
swayed by a close observance of the letter of the Constitution,
without regard to former experience and usage; and because the
letter said that the judicial power shall extend to controversies
"between a State and citizens of another State;" and "between a
State and foreign states, citizens or subjects," they felt
constrained to see in this language a power to enable the
individual citizens of one State, or of a foreign state, to sue
another State of the Union in the federal courts. Justice Iredell,
on the contrary, contended that it was not the intention to create
new and unheard of remedies by subjecting sovereign States to
actions at the suit of individuals (which he conclusively showed
was never done before), but only, by proper legislation, to invest
the federal courts with jurisdiction to hear and determine
controversies and cases, between the parties designated, that were
properly susceptible of litigation in courts. Looking back from our
present standpoint at the decision in
Chisholm v. Georgia,
we do not greatly wonder at the effect which it had upon the
country. Any such power as that of authorizing the federal
judiciary to entertain suits by individuals against the States had
been expressly disclaimed, and even resented, by the great
defenders of the Constitution while it was on its trial before the
American people. As some of their utterances are directly pertinent
to the question now under consideration, we deem it proper to quote
them.
The eighty-first number of the Federalist, written by Hamilton,
has the following profound remarks:
"It has been suggested that an assignment of the public
securities of one State to the citizens of another would enable
them to prosecute that State in the federal courts for the amount
of those securities, a suggestion which the following
considerations prove to be without foundation: "
Page 134 U. S. 13
"It is inherent in the nature of sovereignty not to be amenable
to the suit of an individual without its consent. This is the
general sense and the general practice of mankind, and the
exemption, as one of the attributes of sovereignty, is now enjoyed
by the government of every State in the Union. Unless, therefore,
there is a surrender of this immunity in the plan of the
convention, it will remain with the States, and the danger
intimated must be merely ideal. The circumstances which are
necessary to produce an alienation of state sovereignty were
discussed in considering the article of taxation, and need not be
repeated here. A recurrence to the principles there established
will satisfy us that there is no color to pretend that the State
governments would, by the adoption of that plan, be divested of the
privilege of paying their own debts in their own way, free from
every constraint but that which flows from the obligations of good
faith. The contracts between a nation and individuals are only
binding on the conscience of the sovereign, and have no pretension
to a compulsive force. They confer no right of action independent
of the sovereign will. To what purpose would it be to authorize
suits against States for the debts they owe? How could recoveries
be enforced? It is evident that it could not be done without waging
war against the contracting State, and to ascribe to the federal
courts by mere implication, and in destruction of a preexisting
right of the State governments, a power which would involve such a
consequence would be altogether forced and unwarrantable."
The obnoxious clause to which Hamilton's argument was directed,
and which was the ground of the objections which he so forcibly
met, was that which declared that
"[t]he judicial power shall extend to all . . . controversies
between a State and citizens of another State, . . . and between a
State and foreign states, citizens, or subjects."
It was argued by the opponents of the Constitution that this
clause would authorize jurisdiction to be given to the federal
courts to entertain suits against a State brought by the citizens
of another State or of a foreign state. Adhering to the mere
letter, it might be so, and so, in fact, the Supreme Court held in
Chisholm v.
Page 134 U. S. 14
Georgia; but looking at the subject as Hamilton did,
and as Mr. Justice Iredell did, in the light of history and
experience and the established order of things, the views of the
latter were clearly right, as the people of the United States in
their sovereign capacity subsequently decided.
But Hamilton was not alone in protesting against the
construction put upon the Constitution by its opponents. In the
Virginia convention, the same objections were raised by George
Mason and Patrick Henry, and were met by Madison and Marshall as
follows. Madison said:
"Its jurisdiction [the federal jurisdiction] in controversies
between a State and citizens of another State is much objected to,
and perhaps without reason. It is not in the power of individuals
to call any State into court. The only operation it can have is
that, if a State should wish to bring a suit against a citizen, it
must be brought before the federal court. This will give
satisfaction to individuals, as it will prevent citizens on whom a
State may have a claim being dissatisfied with the State courts. .
. . It appears to me that this [clause] can have no operation but
this: to give a citizen a right to be heard in the federal courts,
and, if a State should condescend to be a party, this Court may
take cognizance of it."
3 Elliott, Debates, 533. Marshall, in answer to the same
objection, said:
"With respect to disputes between a State and the citizens of
another State, its jurisdiction has been decried with unusual
vehemence. I hope that no gentleman will think that a State will be
called at the bar of the federal court. . . . It is not rational to
suppose that the sovereign power should be dragged before a court.
The intent is to enable States to recover claims of individuals
residing in other States. . . . But, say they, there will be
partiality in it if a State cannot be a defendant; if an individual
cannot proceed to obtain judgment against a State, though he may be
sued by a State. It is necessary to be so, and cannot be avoided. I
see a difficulty in making a State defendant which does not prevent
its being plaintiff."
Ib., 555.
It seems to us that these views of those great advocates and
defenders of the Constitution were most sensible and just, and
Page 134 U. S. 15
they apply equally to the present case as to that then under
discussion. The letter is appealed to now, as it was then, as a
ground for sustaining a suit brought by an individual against a
State. The reason against it is as strong in this case as it was in
that. It is an attempt to strain the Constitution and the law to a
construction never imagined or dreamed of. Can we suppose that,
when the Eleventh Amendment was adopted, it was understood to be
left open for citizens of a State to sue their own State in the
federal courts, while the idea of suits by citizens of other
States, or of foreign states, was indignantly repelled? Suppose
that Congress, when proposing the Eleventh Amendment, had appended
to it a proviso that nothing therein contained should prevent a
State from being sued by its own citizens in cases arising under
the Constitution or laws of the United States, can we imagine that
it would have been adopted by the States? The supposition that it
would is almost an absurdity on its face.
The truth is that the cognizance of suits and actions unknown to
the law, and forbidden by the law, was not contemplated by the
Constitution when establishing the judicial power of the United
States. Some things, undoubtedly, were made justifiable which were
not known as such at the common law; such, for example, as
controversies between States as to boundary lines, and other
questions admitting of judicial solution. And yet the case of
Penn v. Lord Baltimore, 1 Ves.Sen. 444, shows that some of
these unusual subjects of litigation were not unknown to the courts
even in colonial times; and several cases of the same general
character arose under the Articles of Confederation, and were
brought before the tribunal provided for that purpose in those
articles. 131 U.S.App. 1. The establishment of this new branch of
jurisdiction seemed to be necessary from the extinguishment of
diplomatic relations between the States. Of other controversies
between a State and another State or its citizens, which, on the
settled principles of public law, are not subjects of judicial
cognizance, this Court has often declined to take jurisdiction.
See Wisconsin v. Insurance Co., 127 U.
S. 265,
127 U. S. 288,
127 U. S. 289,
and cases there cited.
Page 134 U. S. 16
The suability of a State without its consent was a thing unknown
to the law. This has been so often laid down and acknowledged by
courts and jurists that it is hardly necessary to be formally
asserted. It was fully shown by an exhaustive examination of the
old law by Mr. Justice Iredell in his opinion in
Chisholm v.
Georgia, and it has been conceded in every case since where
the question has in any way been presented, even in the cases which
have gone furthest in sustaining suits against the officers or
agents of States.
Osborn v. Bank of United
States, 9 Wheat. 738;
Davis v.
Gray, 16 Wall. 203;
Board of Liquidators v.
McComb, 92 U. S. 531;
United States v. Lee, 106 U. S. 196;
Poindexter v. Greenhow, 109 U. S. 63;
Virginia Coupon Cases, 114 U. S. 269. In
all these cases, the effort was to show, and the court held, that
the suits were not against the State or the United States, but
against the individuals; conceding that, if they had been against
either the State or the United States, they could not be
maintained.
Mr. Webster stated the law with precision in his letter to
Baring Bros. & Co. of October 16, 1839. Works, vol. 6, p. 537.
"The security for state loans," he said,
"is the plighted faith of the State as a political community. It
rests on the same basis as other contracts with established
governments -- the same basis, for example, as loans made by the
United States under the authority of Congress -- that is to say,
the good faith of the government making the loan, and its ability
to fulfil its engagements."
In
Briscoe v. Bank of
Kentucky, 11 Pet. 257,
36 U. S. 321,
Mr. Justice McLean, delivering the opinion of the court, said:
"What means of enforcing payment from the State had the holder
of a bill of credit? It is said by the counsel for the plaintiff
that he could have sued the State. But was a State liable to be
sued? . . . No sovereign State is liable to be sued without her
consent. Under the Articles of Confederation, a State could be sued
only in cases of boundary. It is believed that there is no case
where a suit has been brought, at any time on bills of credit
against a State, and it is certain that no suit could have been
maintained on this ground prior to the Constitution. "
Page 134 U. S. 17
"It may be accepted as a point of departure unquestioned," said
Mr. Justice Miller in
Cunningham v. Macon & Brunswick
Railroad, 109 U. S. 446,
109 U. S.
451,
"that neither a State nor the United States can be sued as
defendant in any court in this country without their consent,
except in the limited class of cases in which a State may be made a
party in the Supreme Court of the United States by virtue of the
original jurisdiction conferred on this Court by the
Constitution."
Undoubtedly a State may be sued by its own consent, as was the
case in
Curran v. Arkansas et
al., 15 How. 304,
56 U. S. 309,
and in
Clark v. Barnard, 108 U. S. 436,
108 U. S. 447.
The suit in the former case was prosecuted by virtue of a state law
which the legislature passed in conformity to the Constitution of
that State. But this Court decided, in
Beers v.
Arkansas, 20 How. 527, that the State could repeal
that law at any time; that it was not a contract within the terms
of the Constitution prohibiting the passage of state laws impairing
the obligation of a contract. In that case, the law allowing the
State to be sued was modified pending certain suits against the
State on its bonds, so as to require the bonds to be filed in
court, which was objected to as an unconstitutional change of the
law. Chief Justice Taney, delivering the opinion of the court,
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. . . . The
prior law was not a contract. It was an ordinary act of
legislation, prescribing the conditions upon which the State
consented to waive the privilege of sovereignty. It contained no
stipulation that these regulations should not be modified
afterwards if, upon experience, it was found that further
provisions were
Page 134 U. S. 18
necessary to protect the public interest; and no such contract
can be implied from the law, nor can this Court inquire whether the
law operated hardly or unjustly upon the parties whose suits were
then pending. That was a question for the consideration of the
legislature. They might have repealed the prior law altogether, and
put an end to the jurisdiction of their courts in suits against the
State, if they had thought proper to do so, or prescribe new
conditions upon which the suits might still be allowed to proceed.
In exercising this latter power, the State violated no contract
with the parties."
The same doctrine was held in
Railroad Company v.
Tennessee, 101 U. S. 337,
101 U. S. 339;
Railroad Company v. Alabama, 101 U.
S. 832; and
In re Ayers, 123 U.
S. 443,
123 U. S.
505.
But besides the presumption that no anomalous and unheard-of
proceedings or suits were intended to be raised up by the
Constitution -- anomalous and unheard of when the Constitution was
adopted -- an additional reason why the jurisdiction claimed for
the Circuit Court does not exist is the language of the act of
Congress by which its jurisdiction is conferred. The words are
these:
"The Circuit Courts of the United States shall have original
cognizance, concurrent with the courts of the several States, of
all suits of a civil nature, at common law or in equity, . . .
arising under the Constitution or laws of the United States, or
treaties,"
etc. "Concurrent with the courts of the several States." Does
not this qualification show that Congress, in legislating to carry
the Constitution into effect, did not intend to invest its courts
with any new and strange jurisdictions? The state courts have no
power to entertain suits by individuals against a State without its
consent. Then how does the Circuit Court, having only concurrent
jurisdiction, acquire any such power? It is true that the same
qualification existed in the Judiciary Act of 1789, which was
before the court in
Chisholm v. Georgia, and the majority
of the court did not think that it was sufficient to limit the
jurisdiction of the Circuit Court. Justice Iredell thought
differently. In view of the manner in which that decision was
received by the country, the adoption of the Eleventh Amendment,
the light of history, and the reason of the thing, we
Page 134 U. S. 19
think we are at liberty to prefer Justice Iredell's views in
this regard.
Some reliance is placed by the plaintiff upon the observations
of Chief Justice Marshall in
Cohens v.
Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264,
19 U. S. 410.
The Chief Justice was there considering the power of review
exercisable by this Court over the judgments of a state court,
wherein it might be necessary to make the State itself a defendant
in error. He showed that this power was absolutely necessary in
order to enable the judiciary of the United States to take
cognizance of all cases arising under the Constitution and laws of
the United States. He also showed that making a State a defendant
in error was entirely different from suing a State in an original
action in prosecution of a demand against it, and was not within
the meaning of the Eleventh Amendment; that the prosecution of a
writ of error against a State was not the prosecution of a suit in
the sense of that Amendment, which had reference to the prosecution
by suit of claims against a State. "Where," said the Chief
Justice,
"a State obtains a judgment against an individual, and the court
rendering such judgment overrules a defense set up under the
Constitution or laws of the United States, the transfer of this
record into the Supreme Court, for the sole purpose of inquiring
whether the judgment violates the Constitution or laws of the
United States, can, with no propriety, we think, be denominated a
suit commenced or prosecuted against the State whose judgment is so
far reexamined. Nothing is demanded from the State. No claim
against it of any description is asserted or prosecuted. The party
is not to be restored to the possession of anything. . . . He only
asserts the constitutional right to have his defense examined by
that tribunal whose province it is to construe the Constitution and
laws of the Union. . . . The point of view in which this writ of
error, with its citation, has been considered uniformly in the
courts of the Union, has been well illustrated by a reference to
the course of this Court in suits instituted by the United States.
The universally received opinion is that no suit can be commenced
or prosecuted against the United States; that the Judiciary Act
does not authorize such suits.
Page 134 U. S. 20
Yet writs of error, accompanied with citations, have uniformly
issued for the removal of judgments in favor of the United States
into a superior court. . . . It has never been suggested that such
writ of error was a suit against the United States, and therefore
not within the jurisdiction of the appellate court."
After thus showing by incontestable argument that a writ of
error to a judgment recovered by a State, in which the State is
necessarily the defendant in error, is not a suit commenced or
prosecuted against a State in the sense of the Amendment, he added
that, if the court were mistaken in this, its error did not affect
that case, because the writ of error therein was not prosecuted by
"a citizen of another State" or "of any foreign state," and so was
not affected by the Amendment, but was governed by the general
grant of judicial power, as extending "to all cases arising under
the Constitution or laws of the United States, without respect to
parties." P.
19 U. S.
412.
It must be conceded that the last observation of the Chief
Justice does favor the argument of the plaintiff. But the
observation was unnecessary to the decision, and in that sense
extrajudicial, and, though made by one who seldom used words
without due reflection, ought not to outweigh the important
considerations referred to which lead to a different conclusion.
With regard to the question then before the Court, it may be
observed that writs of error to judgments in favor of the Crown, or
of the State, had been known to the law from time immemorial, and
had never been considered as exceptions to the rule that an action
does not lie against the sovereign. To avoid misapprehension, it
may be proper to add that, although the obligations of a State rest
for their performance upon its honor and good faith, and cannot be
made the subjects of judicial cognizance unless the State consents
to be sued or comes itself into court, yet, where property or
rights are enjoyed under a grant or contract made by a State, they
cannot wantonly be invaded. While the State cannot be compelled by
suit to perform its contracts, any attempt on its part to violate
property or rights acquired under its contracts
Page 134 U. S. 21
may be judicially resisted, and any law impairing the obligation
of contracts under which such property or rights are held is void
and powerless to affect their enjoyment. It is not necessary that
we should enter upon an examination of the reason or expediency of
the rule which exempts a sovereign State from prosecution in a
court of justice at the suit of individuals. This is fully
discussed by writers on public law. It is enough for us to declare
its existence. The legislative department of a State represents its
polity and its will, and is called upon by the highest demands of
natural and political law to preserve justice and judgment, and to
hold inviolate the public obligations. Any departure from this
rule, except for reasons most cogent (of which the legislature, and
not the courts, is the judge), never fails in the end to incur the
odium of the world and to bring lasting injury upon the State
itself. But to deprive the legislature of the power of judging what
the honor and safety of the State may require, even at the expense
of a temporary failure to discharge the public debts, would be
attended with greater evils than such failure can cause. The
judgment of the Circuit Court is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, concurring.
I concur with the Court in holding that a suit directly against
a State by one of its own citizens is not one to which the judicial
power of the United States extends, unless the State itself
consents to be sued. Upon this ground alone, I assent to the
judgment. But I cannot give my assent to many things said in the
opinion. The comments made upon the decision in
Chisholm v.
Georgia do not meet my approval. They are not necessary to the
determination of the present case. Besides, I am of opinion that
the decision in that case was based upon a sound interpretation of
the Constitution as that instrument then was.