This was a suit by citizens of New York against citizens of
South Carolina to recover the possession of certain real property
in that state, with damages for withholding possession. One of the
defendants in his answer stated that he had no personal interest in
the property, but, as Secretary of State of South Carolina, had
custody of it, and was in possession only in that capacity. The
other defendant stated that he was watching, guarding, and taking
care of the property under employment by his co-defendant. Both
defendants disclaimed any personal interest in the property, and
averred that the title and right of possession was in the state.
Held that the suit was not one against the state within
the meaning of the Eleventh Amendment of the Constitution of the
United States declaring 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 a foreign state."
Whether a particular suit is one against the state within the
meaning of the Constitution depends upon the same principles that
determine whether a particular suit is one against the United
States.
United States v. Lee, 106 U. S. 196, and
other cases examined and held to decide that a suit against
individuals to recover the possession of real property is not a
suit against the state simply because the defendant holding
possession happens to be an officer of the state and asserts that
he is lawfully in possession on its behalf. The Eleventh Amendment
gives no immunity to officers or agents of a state in withholding
the property of a citizen without authority of law, and when such
officers or agents assert that they are in rightful possession,
they must make that assertion good, upon its appearing, in a suit
against them as individuals, that the legal title and right of
possession is in the plaintiff.
Page 167 U. S. 205
The judgment in this case does not conclude the state unless it
becomes a party to the suit. Not having submitted its rights to the
determination of the court, it will be open to the state to bring
any action that will be appropriate to establish and protect
whatever claim it has to the premises in dispute.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
Wesley, a citizen of New York, brought this action in the
circuit court of the United States against Tindal and Boyles,
citizens of South Carolina, to recover the possession of certain
real property in the City of Columbia, South Carolina, with damages
for withholding such possession, as well as the value of the use
and occupation of the premises.
The complaint alleged that on the 16th day of February, 1892,
the plaintiff purchased from the commissioners of the sinking fund
of South Carolina two certain parcels of land in the City of
Columbia, in that state, on one of which is a building known as
"Agricultural Hall," the lots being the same conveyed to the state
by deed of J. B. Johnston, dated April 9, 1883, and duly
recorded.
That on the day of the purchase, the premises, by the direction
and appointment of the plaintiff, were conveyed by the
commissioners to J. W. Alexander, to hold the same
"in trust for the use of the plaintiff, his heirs and assigns,
forever, and to permit the plaintiff to have and possess the same,
and to enjoy the profits, and in trust to convey the same to the
plaintiff, his heirs and assigns, or such person as he might direct
and appoint."
That, upon the request of the plaintiff, J. W. Alexander, by
deed dated the 11th day of February, 1893, conveyed the premises in
fee simple to the plaintiff.
Page 167 U. S. 206
That, the plaintiff
"being so possessed thereof, the defendants, on the 20th day of
February, 1892, wrongfully entered into said premises and ousted
the plaintiff, and that the defendants are, and ever since the said
20th day of February, 1892, have been, in possession of said
premises, and have been and still are withholding the same from the
plaintiff, although plaintiff has demanded from the defendants the
possession thereof, to the damage of the plaintiff ten thousand
dollars,"
and hat the value of the use and occupation of the premises was
at least twenty-five hundred dollars per annum.
The plaintiff demanded judgment against the defendants for the
possession of the premises, for ten thousand dollars as damages for
withholding the same, for the value of the use and occupation of
the premises after February 20, 1892 at the rate of twenty-five
hundred dollars per annum, and for the costs and disbursements of
the action.
The defendant Tindal answered, and for his first defense denied
each and every allegation of the complaint. For a second defense,
he alleged that on the 20th day of February, 1892, he was, and
thereafter continued to be, and was at the bringing of this action,
the Secretary of State of South Carolina; that the premises
described in the complaint on the above date were, and thereafter
continued to be, and now are, the property of the state, in its
possession and in actual public use, and that he
"has no right, title, interest, or estate to or in the said
premises, of any kind whatever, but that, in pursuance of law, the
same is in the custody of this defendant as said Secretary of
State."
The defendant Boyles made the same defenses as his co-defendant
Tindal, and further alleged that he had
"no right, title, interest, or estate of any kind to or in the
said premises, but that, by the employment of the said J. E. Tindal
as Secretary of State, this defendant has been and now is engaged,
on behalf of the said state, in watching, guarding, and taking care
of the said premises."
The jury found for the plaintiff the possession of the land
described in the complaint, and judgment for such possession
Page 167 U. S. 207
was entered in his favor. This was followed by an execution
commanding the United States marshal or his deputies to deliver
possession of the property to the plaintiff.
That judgment was affirmed by the circuit court of appeals.
Tindal v. Wesley, 65 F. 731. The case is in this Court
upon writ of certiorari directed to that court.
1. The bill of exceptions shows that W. H. Lyles was a witness
on behalf of the plaintiff, and while under cross-examination gave
the following testimony:
"Q. You and Mr. Muller went out of the state treasurer's office,
and almost immediately returned. Now what occurred between the
state treasurer, on the one hand, and Mr. Muller and yourself on
the other?"
"A. We returned within five minutes -- I think, within two
minutes. We called the state treasurer's attention to the fact that
the bond which had been delivered by us for Alexander contained a
clause which authorized him to anticipate of it at any time, and we
told him, on behalf of Mr. Alexander, we desired to pay that bond
and mortgage immediately. We then drew out the revenue bond scrip
known as the 'Blue Ridge Railroad Scrip,' which we counted out to
the amount of a few cents or dollars in excess of the amount due on
the bond and mortgage from its date up to the date of this
transaction, and we told Dr. Bates we tendered him that in payment
of the bond and mortgage. We demanded no receipt; we demanded
nothing."
"Q. And it was refused?"
"A. Yes, the advertisement was not referred to."
"Q. Was it not the purpose of the transaction to create an issue
in the United States court, in order to test the validity of the
revenue bond scrip -- was not that the object of the purchase?"
"A. The object of the purchase from the beginning was to create
an issue as to the validity of the revenue bond scrip, but, as to
the United States circuit court, we were not --"
"Q. Then, when you bought it, you did not intend to pay for it
in good money?"
"A. We did, and considered the scrip as good money."
"Q. When you made the purchase, you made it with a view of
compelling the state to take the deferred payment of it in revenue
bond scrip?"
"A. Yes. "
Page 167 U. S. 208
"Q. Did you happen to know whether the revenue bond scrip had
any value in the market?"
"A. I don't know."
"Q. It has not?"
"A. I don't know that it has."
"Q. Very little, if any?"
"A. Yes."
"Q. You know Alexander?"
"A. Yes. I have never seen him personally."
"Q. Do you know him as a poor man?"
"A. Yes."
"Q. He and Mr. Wesley had no use for this property, that you
know of, except to create the issue to which you have
referred?"
"A. That was the sole object for which it was purchased. Mr.
Wesley regarded the property as worth the money, and, even if he
had to pay, he would not lose the money."
"Q. Mr. Wesley holds a large block of revenue bond scrip?"
"A. Yes."
The court excluded this testimony, and the defendants duly
excepted to its ruling. That ruling is the subject of one of the
assignments of error.
It is claimed that the excluded testimony tended to show that
Alexander and Wesley intended from the outset to make the payment
of the deferred installments of purchase money in "revenue bond
scrip, known as Blue Ridge Railroad Scrip;" that, by the terms of
the contract, the purchaser was entitled to anticipate the payment
of the deferred purchase money, and that, as soon as Alexander
received the alleged conveyance from the commissioners of the
sinking fund, he attempted to discharge the bond and mortgage given
to secure the unpaid purchase money by tendering in payment
"revenue bond scrip." But all this was immaterial under the issue
in this case as to the right of possession of the premises. If the
legal title passed by a valid deed from the commissioners of the
sinking fund, then the right of the grantee to possession was not
impaired by the circumstance that he intended to insist upon paying
the deferred installments of purchase money in revenue bond scrip.
Whether he was entitled to make payment in such scrip was a
question to be finally determined when suit was brought to
foreclose the mortgage given to secure the payment of the balance
of the purchase price. But the possibility, or even certainty, that
such a dispute would arise constituted no reason for refusing
possession if the conveyance to Alexander was valid and passed the
legal
Page 167 U. S. 209
title without any reservation by the grantors of the right to
retain possession until the whole purchase price was paid.
Throughout the argument of counsel for defendants, it is assumed
that the purpose on the part of both Alexander and Wesley to tender
revenue bond scrip in payment of the deferred installments was in
itself a fraud that entitled the commissioners of the sinking fund
to withhold possession after conveying the legal title. We cannot
concur in this view. If, under the law of the state, the scrip
referred to could be used in meeting any obligations due to it, how
could it be regarded as a fraud to do what the law allowed to be
done? Nor was it in any legal sense a fraud for Alexander or Wesley
to form the purpose of tendering such scrip in payment in order
that there might be a judicial determination of the question of its
validity. If the deed had been obtained under assurances that the
deferred installments of purchase price should be paid in money,
and not in revenue bond scrip, it may be that the commissioners, in
a proper proceeding, could have obtained a rescission of the
contract. But upon that point it is unnecessary to express an
opinion, as no such case is presented by the record. The case here
is one in which the excluded testimony does not tend to show
anything more than that Alexander, and, perhaps Wesley, did not,
during the negotiations for the property or before the deed was
obtained, disclose to the commissioners their purpose to use
revenue bond scrip, if it could be done, in paying the deferred
installments of purchase money.
The plaintiff insists that the question of fraud or no fraud in
the alleged purchase from the commissioners of the sinking fund is
not a question in which the defendants have any concern, and could
only be raised by the state in a proceeding to which it was a
party. We need not stop to consider this question, because we are
of opinion that in no view of the case arising upon this record was
error committed in excluding so much of the testimony of Lyles as
is set forth in the bill of exceptions.
2. At the close of the testimony in the circuit court, the
defendants raised the question whether this suit was not, in
Page 167 U. S. 210
effect, one against the state of which the court was prohibited
from taking cognizance by the clause of the Constitution declaring
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."
Eleventh Amendment. The circuit court held that the suit was not
one against the state, and that view was approved by the circuit
court of appeals.
It is not claimed, nor could it be claimed, that the
commissioners of the sinking fund were without authority to sell
the lands in controversy. By an Act of the general assembly of the
state approved December 24, 1890, the commissioners were authorized
to sell and convey all the right, title, and interest of the state
(the same being a title in fee simple) in the building in the City
of Columbia, with the lot on which it stands, known as
"Agricultural Hall," and by the General Statutes of South Carolina
it was made their duty to sell and convey, for and in behalf of the
state, all such real and personal property of the state as was not
in actual public use, the sales to be made from time to time, in
such manner and upon such terms as they may deem most advantageous
to the state. Acts of S.C. 1890, p. 707; Gen.Stat.S.C. 1882, 28, c.
5, § 63; 1 Rev.Stat.S.C. p. 35, § 85. It is true that by an Act
approved December 24, 1892, the above Act of December 24, 1890, was
repealed so far as it authorized and provided for the sale of the
lot and building known as "Agricultural Hall," and the
appropriation of the proceeds to Clemson College, and it was
provided that if that property had not then been sold and conveyed,
it should remain unsold, and, if sold, that the proceeds of sale
should be covered into the treasury for the benefit of the state.
Acts S.C. 1892, p. 88. But, as already stated, the sale and
conveyance by the commissioners occurred before the passage of the
repealing act, and were therefore not affected by it.
The parties stipulated that the testimony to be printed in the
record should be the evidence given by W. H. Lyles, W. T. C. Bates,
and J. E. Tindal. But no part of the testimony
Page 167 U. S. 211
is made a part of the record by a bill of exceptions, except the
above questions and answers in the testimony of Lyles. It must
therefore be assumed from the record that the plaintiff, prior to
the bringing of this action, had acquired from the commissioners
the legal title to the premises in dispute, and was entitled to
possession. The bill of exceptions presents no question as to the
genuineness or the execution and delivery of the deed to Alexander
conveying the premises in trust for Wesley, and in support of the
verdict it must be taken that the conveyance referred to in the
complaint as having been made by the commissioners of the sinking
fund to Alexander was in fact properly executed and delivered to
the grantee, and that, as alleged in the complaint, Alexander
conveyed to Wesley in 1893.
But it appears from the statutes of South Carolina that the
Secretary of State has charge of all the property of the state the
care and custody of which is not otherwise provided for by law.
Gen.Stat.S.C. 1882, p. 27, c. 5, § 60; 1 Rev.Stat.S.C. p. 34, § 82.
He admits in his answer that the property in controversy is in his
custody. Boyles, under the employment of the Secretary of State,
watches, guards, and takes care of it. They are therefore in
possession, within the meaning of the general rule that ejectment
will not lie against a person out of possession. Tyler on Ejectment
411;
Pope v. Pendergrast, 1 A. K. Marsh. 122. The
defendants are the actual occupants of the premises. The
contention, therefore, of the plaintiffs in error is that the
circuit court erred in not holding, as it was asked to do, that,
they having no personal interest in the property and being only
custodians of it on behalf of the state, a suit to dispossess them
and to give possession to the plaintiff was, in effect, a suit
against the state.
Of course it was competent for the defendants to prove that the
lots in question belonged to the state, and in that way defeat the
present action. So it would have been competent for the state, if
it claimed the property, to have intervened and, submitting to the
jurisdiction of the court, to have obtained a judicial
determination of the claim asserted for it by the defendants. But
it did not intervene. It refused to
Page 167 U. S. 212
do so. It appears from
South Carolina v. Wesley,
155 U. S. 542,
155 U. S. 545,
that the state, by its Attorney General, suggested to the Court
that these lands were held, occupied, and possessed by the state
through and by its officer and agent, and were used for public
purposes, and,
"without submitting the rights of the state to the jurisdiction
of the court, but respectfully insisting that the court has no
jurisdiction of the subject in controversy,"
it moved that the proceedings be dismissed. That motion was
overruled, and a writ of error sued out by the state was dismissed,
the Chief Justice observing:
"The state does not complain that it was refused leave to
intervene, but that the circuit court, without the intervention of
the state, refused merely upon suggestion to dismiss the complaint
against the defendants who were sued as individuals. The state was
not a party to the record in the circuit court, and did not become
a party by intervention,
pro interesse suo or otherwise,
but expressly refused to submit its rights to the jurisdiction of
the court. This being so, the motion to dismiss may well be
sustained on that ground.
United States v. Lee,
106 U. S.
196,
106 U. S. 197;
Georgia
v. Jesup, 106 U. S. 458."
So that the question is directly presented whether an action
brought against individuals to recover the possession of land of
which they have actual possession and control is to be deemed an
action against the state within the meaning of the Constitution,
simply because those individuals claim to be in rightful possession
as officers or agents of the state, and assert title and right of
possession in the state. Can the court, in such an action, decline
to inquire whether the plaintiff is, in law, entitled to
possession, and whether the individual defendants have any right,
in law, to withhold possession? And if the court finds upon due
inquiry that the plaintiff is entitled to possession and that the
assertion by the defendants of right of possession and title in the
state is without legal foundation, may it not, as between the
plaintiff and the defendants, adjudge that the plaintiff recover
possession?
We are of opinion that the principles announced by this Court in
cases heretofore decided furnish an answer to these questions.
Page 167 U. S. 213
The leading case upon the subject is
United States v.
Lee, 106 U. S. 196. It
is true that the question there presented was whether the suit was
one against the United States within the recognized rule that the
government, without its consent, cannot be sued directly in any
court by original process as a defendant. But it cannot be doubted
that the question whether a particular suit is one against the
state within the meaning of the Constitution must depend upon the
same principles that determine whether a particular suit is one
against the United States.
What was the case of
United States v. Lee? By direction
of the Executive Department of the government, proceeding, as was
supposed, under legislative authority, Kaufman and Strong, as
officers and agents of the United States, held possession of
certain real estate in Virginia known as "Arlington," and
constituting a national cemetery, in which were interred the
remains of Union soldiers. An action was brought by Lee in a
circuit court of the United States against Kaufman and Strong to
recover possession. The action proceeded upon the ground that the
legal title and right of possession were in the plaintiff. The
Attorney General of the United States, without submitting the
rights of the government to the jurisdiction of the court,
suggested in writing that the property in dispute was held,
occupied, and possessed by the United States as a military station,
through its officers and agents having actual possession for the
government, but without any personal interest in it, and therefore
that the court had no jurisdiction of the subject of the
controversy. Upon these grounds, he moved that all further
proceedings be stayed and dismissed. The motion was denied. The
same question was raised by the answers of Kaufman and Strong.
There was a verdict and judgment against the defendants.
Although the result of the trial of that case was to show that
the plaintiff had title to the premises, and that what was set up
by the defendants on behalf of the United States was no title at
all, it was contended that the court could render no judgment
against the defendants. That there may be no doubt as to what was
determined, we give the language of
Page 167 U. S. 214
the Court stating the question presented for its
consideration:
"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 [
United States v.
Peters, 5 Cranch 115], 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."
After a full examination of the principles upon which rested the
exemption of government from suit by individuals, and observing
that, in view of the essential differences between the American and
English governments in respect of the source and depositaries of
power, the decisions of the English courts on this subject were
entitled to but little weight, this Court, speaking by Mr. Justice
Miller, said that an
"examination of the cases in this Court establishes clearly this
result: that the proposition that, when an individual is 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, 13 Pet.
498,
Brown v. Huger, 21 How. 305,
and
Grisar v. McDowell, 6 Wall.
363, it was not thought necessary to reexamine a proposition
Page 167 U. S. 215
so often and so clearly overruled in previous well considered
decisions."
And that,
"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?"
Upon the general proposition that the possession by officers, on
behalf of the United States, of property claimed by a citizen is
sufficient of itself to protect those officers against suit by that
citizen to recover possession, the Court said:
"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, 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
Page 167 U. S. 216
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 Mr. 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 the 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."
Assuming, upon the record before the Court, that the President
had no lawful authority to place officers of the government in
possession of the property in question, and that Congress could not
give him any such authority except upon making just compensation,
the Court said:
"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 that
the executive possessed no such power. Not only no
Page 167 U. S. 217
such power is given, but 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 the 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."
Again:
"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 courts
cannot give a remedy when the citizen has been deprived of his
property by force, his estate seized and converted to the use of
the government without lawful authority, without process of law,
and without 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.'
Page 167 U. S. 218
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."
We have made these extracts from the opinion of the Court in the
Lee case because the reasons there assigned for the
conclusion reached control the determination of the present case.
If a suit by an individual against individuals to recover the
possession of property is not a suit against the United States
merely by reason of possession's being held by the defendants as
agents of the United States, and under title asserted to be in the
government, we cannot perceive how the present suit can be regarded
as one against the state merely because the defendants assert a
right of possession in the state through them as its officers and
agents.
The essential principles of the
Lee case have not been
departed from by this Court, but have been recognized and enforced
in recent cases.
In
Cunningham v. Macon & Brunswick Railroad,
109 U. S. 446,
109 U. S. 452,
the Court, referring to the cases in which an individual, sued for
tort committed upon person or property, defends upon the ground
that he acted as an officer of the government, and in which he must
show that his authority was sufficient in law to protect him,
said:
"To this class of cases belongs also the recent case of
United States v. Lee, 106 U. S. 196, for the action of
ejectment in that case is, in its essential character, an action of
trespass, with the power in the court to restore the possession to
the plaintiff as part of the judgment. And the defendants Strong
and Kaufman, being sued individually as trespassers, set up their
authority as officers of the United States, which this Court held
to be unlawful, and therefore insufficient as a defense. The
judgment in that case did not conclude the United States, as
the
Page 167 U. S. 219
opinion carefully stated, but held the officers liable as
unauthorized trespassers, and turned them out of their unlawful
possession."
Stanley v. Schwalby, 147 U. S. 508,
147 U. S. 518,
was an action of trespass to try title brought in a state court
against individuals to recover possession of certain lands. T he
defendants asserted a right of possession in themselves as officers
of the United States, which, they alleged, had title and right of
possession. Referring to the cases in which an individual was sued
in tort for some act injurious to another in regard to person or
property, in which the defense was that he acted under the orders
of the government, this Court, speaking by THE CHIEF JUSTICE,
said:
"In these cases, he is not sued as an officer of the government,
but as an individual, and the court is not ousted of jurisdiction
because he asserts the authority of such officer. To make out that
defense, he must show that his authority was sufficient in law to
protect him. In this class is included
United States v.
Lee, 106 U. S. 196, where the action
of ejectment was held to be in its essential character an action of
trespass, with the power in the court to restore the possession to
the plaintiff as part of the judgment, and the defendants Strong
and Kaufman, being sued individually as trespassers, set up their
authority as officers of the United States, which this Court held
to be unlawful, and therefore insufficient as a defense."
See also Stanley v. Schwalby, 162 U.
S. 255,
162 U. S. 271;
Belknap v. Schild, 161 U. S. 10.
The cases in this Court in which it has been necessary to
consider the meaning and scope of the Eleventh Amendment are quite
numerous. In
Pennoyer v. McConnaughy, 140 U. S.
1,
140 U. S. 10, the
opinion in which case was delivered by Mr. Justice Lamar, the cases
previously decided were examined and were held to belong to two
classes. The first class, he said,
"is where the suit is brought against the officers of the state,
as representing the state's action and liability, thus making it,
though not a party to the record, the real party against which the
judgment will so operate as to compel it to specifically perform
its contracts,"
citing
In re Ayers, 123 U. S. 443;
Louisiana v. Junel, 107 U. S. 711;
Antoni v.
Greenhow,
Page 167 U. S. 220
107 U. S. 769;
Cunningham v. Macon & Brunswick Railroad, 109 U.
S. 446, and
Hagood v. Southern, 117 U. S.
52. The other class, the Court said,
"is where a suit is brought against defendants who, claiming to
act as officers of the state, and under the color of an
unconstitutional statute, commit acts of wrong and injury to the
rights and property of the plaintiff acquired under a contract with
the state. Such suit, whether brought to recover money or property
in the hands of such defendants, unlawfully taken by them in behalf
of the state, or for compensation in damages, or, in a proper case,
where the remedy at law is inadequate, for an injunction to prevent
such wrong and injury, or for a mandamus, in a like case, to
enforce upon the defendant the performance of a plain legal duty,
purely ministerial, is not, within the meaning of the Eleventh
Amendment, an action against the state,"
citing
Osborn v.
Bank, 9 Wheat. 738;
Davis v.
Gray, 16 Wall. 203;
Tomlinson
v. Branch, 15 Wall. 460;
Litchfield v. Webster
County, 101 U. S. 773;
Allen v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 114 U.
S. 311;
Board of Liquidation v. McComb,
92 U. S. 531;
Poindexter v. Greenhow, 114 U. S. 270.
And in
In re Tyler, 149 U. S. 164,
149 U. S. 190,
THE CHIEF JUSTICE, referring to the review in
Pennoyer v.
McConnaughy of previous cases, said:
"The result was correctly stated to be that where a suit is
brought against defendants who claim to act as officers of a state,
and, under color of an unconstitutional statute, commit acts of
wrong and injury to the property of the plaintiff, to recover money
or property in their hands unlawfully taken by them in behalf of
the state, or for compensation for damages, or, in a proper case,
for an injunction to prevent such wrong and injury, or for a
mandamus, in a like case, to enforce the performance of a plain
legal duty, purely ministerial, such suit is not, within the
meaning of the amendment, an action against the state."
In the recent case of
Scott v. Donald, 165 U. S.
58,
165 U. S. 69,
the principle was again announced, MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS delivering
the opinion, that a suit against individuals,
"who claim to act as officers of a state, and, under color of an
unconstitutional statute, commit
Page 167 U. S. 221
acts of wrong and injury to the property of the plaintiff to
recover money or property in their hands unlawfully taken by them
in behalf of the state, or for compensation for damages, is not,
within the meaning of the Constitution, an action against the
state."
The adjudged cases, in principle, determine the one before us.
The settled doctrine of this Court wholly precludes the idea that a
suit against individuals to recover possession of real property is
a suit against the state simply because the defendant holding
possession happens to be an officer of the state and asserts that
he is lawfully in possession on its behalf. We may repeat here what
was said by Chief Justice Marshall, delivering the unanimous
judgment of this Court in
United States v.
Peters, 5 Cranch 115,
9 U. S. 139:
"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."
Whether the one or the other party is entitled in law to
possession is a judicial, not an executive or legislative,
question. It does not cease to be a judicial question because the
defendant claims that the right of possession is in the government,
of which he is an officer or agent. The case here is not one in
which judgment is asked against the defendants as officers of the
state, nor one in which the plaintiff seeks to compel the specific
performance by the State of any contract alleged to have been made
by it, nor to enforce the discharge by the defendants of any
specific duty enjoined by the state. Nor is it one, like
Cunningham v. Macon & Brunswick Railroad, above cited,
in which the plaintiff seeks to enforce a lien upon real estate in
the actual possession of and claimed by the state, where a decree
of sale would be fruitless, as no title could be given to the
purchaser without the presence of the state as a party to the
proceeding. It is a suit against individuals -- a case in which the
plaintiff seeks merely the possession of certain real estate once
belonging to the state, but which the complaint alleges has become
his property, and which, according to the verdict of the jury and
the judgment of the court thereon, must, on this record,
Page 167 U. S. 222
be taken to belong absolutely to him. The withholding of such
possession by defendants is consequently a wrong, but a wrong
which, according to the view of counsel, cannot be remedied if the
defendants choose to assert that the state, by them as its agents,
is in rightful possession. The doors of the courts of justice are
thus closed against one legally entitled to possession by the mere
assertion of the defendants that they are entitled to possession
for the state. But the Eleventh Amendment gives no immunity to
officers or agents of a state in withholding the property of a
citizen without authority of law. And when such officers or agents
assert that they are in rightful possession, they must make good
that assertion when it is made to appear in a suit against them as
individuals that the legal title and right of possession is in the
plaintiff. If a suit against officers of a state to enjoin them
from enforcing an unconstitutional statute whereby the plaintiff's
property will be injured, or to recover damages for taking under a
void statute the property of the citizen, be not one against the
state, it is impossible to see how a suit against the same
individuals to recover the possession of property belonging to the
plaintiff and illegally withheld by the defendants can be deemed a
suit against the state. Any other view leads to this result: that
if a state, by its officers, acting under a void statute, should
seize for public use the property of a citizen without making or
securing just compensation for him, and thus violate the
constitutional provision declaring that no state shall deprive any
person of property without due process of law,
Chicago,
Burlington &c. Railroad v. Chicago, 166 U.
S. 226,
166 U. S. 236,
166 U. S. 241,
the citizen is remediless so long as the state, by its agents,
chooses to hold his property, for, according to the contention of
the defendants, if such agents are sued as individuals wrongfully
in possession, they can bring about the dismissal of the suit by
simply informing the court of the official character in which they
hold the property thus illegally appropriated. It is true that even
in such a case, the citizen may, if he choose, rely upon the good
faith of the state in the matter of compensation. But he is not
compelled to part with his property for public use except upon the
terms prescribed
Page 167 U. S. 223
by the supreme law of the land -- namely, upon just compensation
made or secured.
It is said that the judgment in this case may conclude the
state. Not so. It is a judgment to the effect only that, as between
the plaintiff and the defendants, the former is entitled to
possession of the property in question, the latter having shown no
valid authority to withhold possession from the plaintiff -- that
the assertion by the defendants of a right to remain in possession
is without legal foundation. The state not being a party to the
suit, the judgment will not conclude it. Not having submitted its
rights to the determination of the court in this case, it will be
open to the state to bring any action that may be appropriate to
establish and protect whatever claim it has to the premises in
dispute. Its claim, if it means to assert one, will thus be brought
to the test of the law as administered by tribunals ordained to
determine controverted rights of property, and the record in this
case will not be evidence against it for any purpose touching the
merits of its claim. It was insisted in
United States v.
Lee in support of the contention there made that a judgment in
favor of Lee against the persons who, as agents of the United
States, held possession of Arlington would be in effect a judgment
against the United States. But this Court said:
"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, 98 U. S. 433, 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 purpose 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."
106 U. S. 106
U.S. 222.
We are of opinion that this suit is not one against the state
within the meaning of the Eleventh Amendment, and, as the record
before us shows that the plaintiff owns the premises, and is
entitled to possession as against the defendants, the judgment must
be
Affirmed.