A suit against state officers to enjoin them from enforcing a
tax alleged to be in violation of the Constitution of the United
States is not a suit against a state within the prohibition of the
Eleventh Amendment.
While a state may not, without its consent, be sued in a circuit
court of the United States, such immunity may be waived, and if it
voluntarily becomes a party to a cause and submits its rights for
judicial determination, it will be bound thereby.
An appearance "for and on behalf of the state" by the Attorney
General, pursuant to statutory provisions, in an action brought
against county officers but affecting state revenues, in this case
amounted to a waiver by the its immunity from .suit, and such
immunity could not be invoked in an ancillary suit subsequently
brought against the successors of the original defendants to
enforce the decree.
A decree of the circuit court of the United States having
jurisdiction of the cause and in which the state appeared that a
charter exemption existed in favor of a railroad company by virtue
of a contract within the meaning of the impairment of obligation
clause of the federal Constitution is binding upon the state as to
the existence and effect of the contract during the period of
exemption, and the rule that a decree enjoining the collection of a
tax is not
res judicata as to the right to collect for a
subsequent year does not apply.
Neither the Eleventh Amendment nor § 720 Rev.Stat. controls a
court of
Page 200 U. S. 274
the United States in administering relief where it is action in
a matter ancillary to a decree rendered in a cause over which it
had jurisdiction; nor is a circuit court debarred from enforcing
its decree by ancillary suit in equity restraining improper
prosecutions of actions in the state courts because there is an
adequate remedy at law by interposing defense in those actions. The
rule that the collection of a tax should not be enjoined unless the
amount admitted to be due is tendered does not apply where the
amount due is for a period not covered by the injunction or
affected by the decree.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 200 U. S. 277
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Before analyzing the facts particularly bearing upon the legal
questions for decision, in order to a comprehension of those
questions, we summarize, in their chronological order, matters
which are undisputed concerning the origin and development of this
controversy.
The Legislature of South Carolina, in 1855, exempted the capital
stock and property of the Northeastern Railroad Company from all
taxation during its charter existence. In 1849, the Cheraw &
Darlington Railroad Company was chartered by legislative act, and,
by an amendment to the charter, adopted in 1863, the last-named
company was endowed with all the powers, rights, and privileges
granted by the charter of the Northeastern Railroad Company, it
being besides provided that the charter should not be subject to
the provisions of a general law reserving the right to repeal,
alter, and amend except where otherwise specially provided.
Under the assumed authority of a law of South Carolina providing
for the assessment and taxation of property, passed in 1868 (14
S.C.Stat. 27-69), the Cheraw & Darlington Railroad was assessed
in the Counties of Darlington and Chesterfield, through which the
road ran. It became the duty of
Page 200 U. S. 278
the respective treasurers of the counties named to collect the
state and county taxes on the assessment thus made, and they
proceeded so to do. Thereupon, in 1870, Thomas E. B. Pegues, a
citizen of Mississippi, a stockholder of the Cheraw &
Darlington Railroad, filed his bill in the Circuit Court of the
United States for the District of South Carolina against the Cheraw
& Darlington Railroad Company and the Treasurers of Darlington
and Chesterfield Counties, seeking to enjoin the corporation from
paying, and the county treasurers from collecting, the taxes
referred to. The ground stated for the relief prayed was that the
taxes in question impaired the obligation of the charter contract
of exemption, and were therefore repugnant to the Constitution of
the United States. Various provisions of a law of South Carolina,
adopted in 1870 as an amendment to the act of 1868 under which the
taxes were levied, restricting the right of the corporation to
resist the collection of taxes or to recover back an illegal tax,
if paid, were alleged as justifying the interposition of a court of
equity. An injunction
pendente lite was allowed
restraining the collection of the disputed taxes. By its answer,
the corporation admitted the averments of the bill. A joint answer
was filed for the two county treasurers, signed by "The Attorney
General for the South Carolina, for defendants." This answer
admitted the assessment, the steps taken to collect the taxes, and
asserted their validity, and denied the existence of the alleged
contract of exemption. It was averred that if such an exemption
ever existed, it was subject to the legislative power to repeal,
alter, and amend, and such repeal was alleged to have been operated
by constitutional and legislative provisions, which were referred
to. Jurisdiction of the court in equity was challenged on the
ground that there was an adequate remedy at law. A final decree
passed in favor of the complainant, recognizing the alleged
exemption and perpetuating the injunction. An appeal was prosecuted
to this Court. The cause was decided at the December term, 1872. It
was held that there was a contract of exemption, which would be
impaired by enforcing the taxes
Page 200 U. S. 279
complained of, and hence the decree below was affirmed.
Humphrey v.
Pegues, 16 Wall. 244.
For at least twenty-five years following the decision in the
Pegues case, no attempt was made to tax the property of
the Cheraw & Darlington Railroad Company. In the year 1897, an
act was passed directing the Attorney General to proceed to test
the right of any railroad company to exemption, and, under this
act, that official sued the Cheraw & Darlington Railroad
Company to recover $134,000, the sum of taxes, penalties, and
interest for a period of twenty years on the alleged ground that
the company had been mistakenly treated as having a contract of
exemption. The supreme court of the state, however, without passing
upon the question of exemption, decided that the right to recover
did not obtain because, in any event, an assessment against the
railroad, as provided by law, was a prerequisite to the levy and
collection of taxes.
From a statement made in the argument of counsel it is to be
deduced that, during the year 1898 the capital stock and property
of the Cheraw & Darlington Railroad Company was acquired by the
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company of South Carolina, and, as the
result of a charter granted to that company by the State of South
Carolina, in 1898, it is conceded that the property formerly
belonging to the Cheraw & Darlington Railroad Company became
taxable, and that the state has, since that time, levied and
collected the taxes due on the property. It is, moreover, conceded
that the appellee on this record, the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad
Company, a Virginia corporation, acquired in 1900 the property of
the Cheraw & Darlington Railroad Company, as the successor of
the South Carolina corporation which bore the same name.
In the year 1900, an act was passed in South Carolina providing
for the assessment for taxation of railroad property
"which has been off the tax books for the years in which they
have been off the books, and to fix the time when such taxes shall
become due, and for the collection thereof."
The act
Page 200 U. S. 280
created a board to make the assessment to which it referred,
limited the taxes to be imposed to ten years back, provided that
the assessment made by the board should be put upon the rolls
separately for each of the back years, and that there should be
levied upon such assessment state and county taxes for the years to
which the back assessment related. The act caused the taxes for
which it provided to become a lien against the property upon which
they might bear, and directed a certification of the taxes as
assessed and levied to the respective county treasurers, and made
it their duty to collect the same. To this end, such treasurers
were directed to make a demand for payment upon the company in
whose name the assessment was made, or, if it was found that the
property assessed was "in the control of another company, demand
should be made of the company . . . in possession of the property."
By the act, in addition, the Attorney General was directed, if the
back taxes assessed were not paid within sixty days after demand,
to bring a suit in the name of the state, with the cooperation of
such counsel as the counties might employ, to enforce the
collection of the back taxes against the company in whose name they
were assessed, or against the company found in possession of the
property assessed.
A meeting of the board appointed by this act was called in May,
1900, by the Secretary of State for the purpose of assessing the
property formerly belonging to the Cheraw & Darlington Railroad
Company, and in the control and possession of the Atlantic Coast
Line Railroad, for a period of ten years back from 1898, on the
ground that, during such period, the property in question had not
been taxed for state or county purposes. The Atlantic Coast Line
Railroad Company appeared and protested against the proposed
assessment. In the protest, it directed the attention of the board
to the exemption act, to the injunction granted, and the decree
rendered and affirmed by this Court in the
Pegues case.
The board overruled the protest and valued the property of the
Cheraw & Darlington Railroad Company for a period of ten years
back from
Page 200 U. S. 281
1898, inclusive. The valuation so made was certified to the
officials of the Counties of Chesterfield, Darlington, and
Florence, respectively, these three counties embracing the
territory included in the Counties of Chesterfield and Darlington
at the time the decree was rendered in the
Pegues case.
The state and county taxes for the years covered by the assessments
were placed upon the rolls, and the taxes were certified for
collection to the county treasurers. These officers demanded
payment of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad, as the company in
possession and control of the property taxed. The company refusing
to pay, the Attorney General of the State of South Carolina, and
counsel associated with him, commenced, in the common pleas court
in the respective counties actions in the name of the state to
enforce payment against the Cheraw & Darlington Railroad
Company and the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company, as the
corporation in possession of the property. Thereupon the Atlantic
Coast Line Railroad Company, alleging itself to be a citizen of
Virginia, commenced, in the Circuit Court of the United States for
the District of South Carolina, the proceeding which is now before
us against the Attorney General of the state, the counsel
associated with him in the suits above referred to, and the
Treasurers of Chesterfield, Darlington, and Florence Counties. The
petition which initiated the proceeding was filed as ancillary to
the original
Pegues case, and was entitle and numbered as
of that cause. It referred to the prior proceedings in the cause,
including the perpetual injunction therein issued, and to the
decree of this Court which affirmed the same. It alleged the
assessment of back taxes as above stated, the asserted lien
resulting therefrom, the demand of payment, and the suits brought
to enforce payment, and charged that each and all of the acts done
concerning the said assessment of the back taxes, including the
bringing of the actions in the state court, were in direct
violation and disregard of the injunction previously issued. The
prayer was that the petitioner, as successor in interest of Pegues,
be protected in the rights and privileges adjudged in the
Pegues
Page 200 U. S. 282
case, and be accorded the benefit of the injunction issued in
that case, and to that end that the Attorney General of the state
and his associate counsel be enjoined from further prosecution of
the actions commenced in the state courts in the name of the state,
to enforce payment of the taxes, and that the respective county
treasurers be enjoined from any further attempt to collect such
taxes.
A preliminary injunction was granted, restraining the Attorney
General and his associate counsel from further prosecuting the
actions brought in the state court and also restraining the county
treasurers from further proceeding to collect the taxes. In
response to a rule to show cause why the preliminary injunction
should not be made perpetual, the defendants answered, denying the
right to the relief prayed upon grounds which, as far as now
material, we shall hereafter state and consider. After hearing on
petition and answers, accompanied by affidavits or admissions
establishing the facts to be as we have previously stated them, a
final decree was entered perpetuating the preliminary injunction.
Subsequently the court, reciting that its attention had been
directed to the fact that its decree was interpreted as restraining
the prosecution of suits for any tax which might have accrued from
the eighteenth day of July, 1898, when the exemption had been
surrendered, modified its decree so as to exclude from the
operation of the injunction any act of the defendants looking to
the collection,
"by suit or otherwise, of any sum or sums of money which may be
due or charged for taxes on said property of the Cheraw &
Darlington Railroad Company after said eighteenth day of July, 1898
at which date it was admitted in argument the exemption established
in
Humphrey v. Pegues was surrendered."
This appeal was then taken.
Although the errors assigned on the record are seventeen in
number, in the argument at bar but six contentions were relied
upon, and we shall therefore confine ourselves to their
consideration.
All the propositions involved in the assignments will be
disposed
Page 200 U. S. 283
of by determining first whether all the defendants on this
record, including the state, through its Attorney General, were
parties or privies to the decree in the
Pegues case;
second, if they were, whether the decree in that case concluded
against them the want of power to impose or collect the taxes in
controversy; and, third, if it did so conclude them, whether the
court below erred in granting the relief which it awarded.
First. We at once treat as undoubted the right of the Atlantic
Coast Line Railroad Company to the benefits of the decree in the
Pegues case, since it is conceded in the argument at bar
that that company, as the successor to the rights of Pegues, is
entitled to the protection of the original decree rendered in his
favor.
On the face of the record in the
Pegues case, the
nominal defendants were the treasurers of the Counties of
Chesterfield and Darlington, in which counties the property of the
railroad was situated. Those now holding the office of treasurer in
each of the named counties are among the parties on this record,
with the addition of the Treasurer of Florence County, which
county, as we have stated, consists of territory embraced in
Chesterfield or Darlington County at the time of the entry of the
Pegues decree. That, under these circumstances, the
defendant treasurers, as the successors in office of the officials
who were parties to the
Pegues case, are privies to that
decree is established.
Prout v. Starr, 188 U.
S. 537,
188 U. S.
544.
In deciding whether the state and its Attorney General were
privies to the
Pegues decree, some elementary propositions
must be borne in mind.
a. In view of the prohibitions of the Eleventh Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States, a state, without its consent,
may not be sued by an individual in a circuit court of the United
States.
b. A suit against state officers to enjoin them from enforcing a
tax alleged to be in violation of the Constitution of the United
States is not a suit against a state within the prohibition of the
Eleventh Amendment. The doctrine announced in
Page 200 U. S. 284
many previous cases on the subject was stated by MR. JUSTICE
HARLAN, delivering the opinion of the Court in
Smyth v.
Ames, 169 U. S. 466,
wherein, after holding that a suit against officers to prevent the
doing of acts authorized by a state statute was not necessarily a
suit against the state, or within the prohibitions of the Eleventh
Amendment, it was said (pp.
169 U. S.
518-519):
"It is the settled doctrine of this Court that a suit against
individuals for the purpose of preventing them, as officers of a
state, from enforcing an unconstitutional enactment to the injury
of the rights of the plaintiff is not a suit against the state
within the meaning of that amendment."
And the subject was reviewed and restated in
Prout v.
Starr, 188 U. S. 537.
c. Although a state may not be sued without its consent, such
immunity is a privilege which may be waived, and hence, where a
state voluntarily become a party to a cause, and submits its rights
for judicial determination, it will be bound thereby, and cannot
escape the result of its own voluntary act by invoking the
prohibitions of the Eleventh Amendment.
Clark v. Barnard,
108 U. S. 436,
108 U. S.
447.
As, then, the state was not a party
eo nomine in the
Pegues case and as, although the suit was against
officers, it was not, for that reason alone, a suit against the
state, it must follow that the ascertainment of whether the state
was a party to that cause depends upon determining whether the
taxing officers, who were the nominal defendants, were endowed by
the state with the power, in a suit brought against them assailing
the validity of taxes levied, to represent the state in the
controversy so as to conclusively establish the rights of the state
against the plaintiff if decree passed against him, and, on the
other hand, to establish, as against the state, the rights of the
plaintiff in that cause if decree passed in his favor. Thus, the
inquiry reduces itself to this: did the State of South Carolina
become, in substance and effect, a party to the
Pegues
case? In other words, did the state, through the authority which it
had conferred upon the defendant officers, voluntarily submit
Page 200 U. S. 285
to judicial determination the question raised in the
Pegues case concerning the alleged limitation of the
taxing power of the state arising from the contract on that subject
which was asserted in that case?
As a prelude to the consideration of the question just stated,
it is well to determine at once the interest which the state had in
the controversy which was represented by the county treasurers, who
were the nominal defendants in the
Pegues case. Coming to
do so, it is plain that the controversy which that suit involved
was one in which the state was directly interested, since the
officers who were the nominal defendants were charged by the state
law, not only with the duty of collecting the county, but also the
state, taxes, the validity of which was assailed on grounds which
challenged the power of the state to impose any tax upon the
property of the corporation during the existence of its charter.
The officers were therefore in a sense state officers, charged with
the performance of a duty imposed for the benefit of the state. And
that those officers were considered as being
pro hac vice
state officers for the purposes of the controversy which the
Pegues case involved is shown by the statement of the case
made by this Court in delivering its opinion affirming the decree.
Thus, it was said (
83 U. S. 16
Wall. 245,
83 U. S.
246):
"These different enactments above mentioned being in force, the
state officers of counties in South Carolina where the Cheraw &
Darlington Railroad was situate, acting under the authority of the
legislature of the state, imposed certain taxes on the stock and
property of that company, and were proceeding to enforce payment of
them when one
Pegues, a stockholder in Mississippi, filed
a bill in the court below, praying an injunction to restrain the
collection."
The question, then, is narrowed to this: were the officers
endowed with authority to stand in judgment for the state in suits
brought against such officers wherein the validity of the taxes was
assailed?
The law of South Carolina under which the taxes were levied
Page 200 U. S. 286
was adopted in 1868. Now, by § 137 of that act (14 S.C.Stat.
65), the county auditors and county treasurers were authorized to
employ counsel, and the counties were made liable for the fees of
such counsel, as well as for any damages which might be awarded
against such officials, resulting from a defense made by them of
any action prosecuted against the officials
"for performing or attempting to perform any duty enjoined upon
them by this act, the result of which action will affect the
interests of the county, if decided in favor of the plaintiff in
such action."
It follows from this provision that, where a suit was brought
against a county treasurer in respect to county taxes, that
official was empowered to represent the county for the purpose of
the defense of its interest, and a judgment rendered against such
official was therefore made binding upon the county. It was further
provided in the section that
"if the state be interested in the revenue in said action, the
county auditor shall immediately, upon the commencement of said
action, inform the Auditor of State of its commencement of the
alleged cause thereof, and the Auditor of State shall submit the
same to the Attorney General, who shall defend said action for and
on behalf of the state."
We see no escape from the conclusion that the provision last
quoted, where suit was brought concerning state taxes, made a
county treasurer, who was the state tax collector, an agent for the
state, and empowered him, "for and on behalf of the state," to
defend the suit, and required him, in order fully to protect the
interests of the state, to be represented by the highest law
officer of the state -- the Attorney General. And the power which
we think the section referred to conferred upon the county officers
to represent the state in suits or actions is, moreover,
persuasively indicated by a consideration of the act of 1870,
amending in certain particulars the act of 1868. 14 S.C.Stat. 366.
Substantially, that amendment, whilst forbidding the taxpayer from
enjoining the collection of taxes, created a remedial system by
which questions of asserted illegality were to be examined by the
state auditor and, where that official
Page 200 U. S. 287
disallowed the claim of illegality, made it the duty of the
taxpayer to pay, and, subject to certain conditions, gave a right
of action to recover back the money paid. And by section 8, where
such an action was brought, it was made
"the duty of the Attorney General of the state to defend any
suit or proceedings against any tax collector or other officer who
shall be sued for moneys collected, or property levied on, or sold
on account of any tax, when the state auditor shall have ordered
such collector to proceed in the collection of any such tax, . . .
and any judgment against such collector or officer finally
recovered shall be paid in the manner provided in section 81 of the
act to provide for the assessment and taxation of the property
aforesaid,"
that is, section 81 of the act of 1868. Now by that section,
where a judgment passed against a county official concerning state
taxes which had been paid, the state was, in effect, made liable
for the amount of the judgment. Thus, in such a case, as in cases
provided for in section 137 of the act of 1868, the state, through
its officials, was made the real defendant.
If there were doubt -- which we think there is not -- as to the
construction which we give to the act of 1868, that doubt is
entirely dispelled by a consideration of the contemporaneous
interpretation given to the act by the officials charged with its
execution, by the view which this Court took as to the real party
in interest on the record in the
Pegues case, and by the
action as well as nonaction which followed the decision of that
case by the state government in all its departments through a long
period of years.
The answer in the
Pegues case, which denied the
existence of the alleged contract of exemption and asserted the
existing and continuing power of the state to tax, was signed for
the defendants by the Attorney General of South Carolina, who also,
in his official capacity, verified such pleading. The word
"defendants" cannot be construed as implying any other than the
county officers empowered to represent the state, without imputing
to the Attorney General a failure to discharge the
Page 200 U. S. 288
duty directly imposed upon him by the state. This must result
from the command of the statute that he should defend the suit, the
state revenue being concerned, not merely for the county officers,
but "for and on behalf of the state" -- a command which would have
been wholly disregarded if the appearance of the Attorney General
be treated as having been made solely for the purpose of
representing the defendants as individuals. And subsequent events
show that the highest law officer of the state, when he filed the
answer for the defendants in the
Pegues case, intended
that answer to be what the statute caused it to be -- that is, an
answer for the defendants, standing upon the record, for and in
behalf of the state, in defense of the right of the state to
collect the taxes. When the appeal was prosecuted from the final
decree perpetually enjoining the officials who were named as the
defendants (and, as we have seen, their successors in office) from
any attempt in the future to collect a tax upon the property of the
Cheraw & Darlington Railroad Company, such appeal was prayed by
the same counsel who had signed the answer as Attorney General of
the state, and who, upon the expiration of his term of office, was
retained by his successor in office and the governor of the state
(as shown by an official report made to the legislature of the
state) to prosecute the appeal, and "to appear in behalf of the
state." And when the appeal was heard in this Court, a printed
argument was signed not only by the counsel thus retained on behalf
of the state by the Governor and the Attorney General, but also by
the then incumbent of the office of Attorney General of the state.
That this Court, in deciding the appeal in the
Pegues
case, considered that the state was the real party appellant is
shown by the opinion, where it was said (16 Wall. p.
83 U. S.
247):
"The state contends that the privileges thus granted were
limited to those conferred upon the Northeastern by its original
charter or act of incorporation, passed in 1851."
When to all these conclusive considerations there is added the
fact that we have not been referred to any legislative action
Page 200 U. S. 289
repudiating the conduct of the governor and the Attorney General
in the defense of the
Pegues suit for and on behalf of the
state, and when, besides, we take into account the failure of the
state government, in all its departments, for more than twenty-five
years following the decision of the
Pegues case, to assert
any right to tax in conflict with the contract exemption which the
Pegues decree sustained, the binding efficacy of the
decree in that case upon the State of South Carolina seems to us
beyond the reach of serious controversy. Indeed, we are not left to
conjecture that the inaction of the state was the result of what
was deemed to be the conclusive effect on the State of the
Pegues decree, since it is shown that, in one or two
instances after that decree was rendered, where preliminary steps
were taken by the taxing officials of the state to impose taxes on
the property of the railroad, such efforts were at once abandoned
in consequence of the advice of attorneys general of the state that
the decree in the
Pegues case was conclusive, and the
property could not be taxed.
Concluding, as we do from the terms of the act of 1868, that the
officers who were named as defendants in the
Pegues case
were, for the purpose of that litigation, the agents voluntarily
appointed by the state to defend its rights and submit them to
judicial determination, we content ourselves with saying that it is
unnecessary to review the case of
State v. Corbin, 16 S.C.
533, and other decisions of the Supreme Court of South Carolina
pressed upon our attention, since those cases did not involve the
statute of 1868 or statutes of like import. And, moreover, we must
not be understood as holding that other provisions of the law of
South Carolina, relied upon in argument, would be inadequate to
bind the state by the action of its Attorney General if the
provisions of the act of 1868 did not exist. Into that
consideration we have not entered.
Second. The State of South Carolina and its Attorney General and
his associate counsel as the agents of the state being therefore
privies to and bound by the decree in the
Pegues case, we
must determine what was concluded by that decree.
Page 200 U. S. 290
That the issue in the case was the existence of a charter
exemption from taxation in favor of the Cheraw & Darlington
Railroad Company and the consequent want of power of the state to
tax the property of the railroad during the continuance of the
exemption is obvious. And that the decree rendered in the cause
established the exemption embraced in the issues is also obvious.
This being true, it unquestionably follows that the decree
established as to the parties and their privies the very question
in issue in this proceeding. Escape from this inevitable result is
sought to be accomplished by several propositions, all of which we
think are unsound.
a. The complaint in the
Pegues case, it is said,
mistakenly averred that the Cheraw & Darlington Railroad had
not been built at the time the amendment of the charter was made
which gave the exemption relied upon, and as this, it is asserted,
was not traversed by the answer filed in the case by the Attorney
General, it was consequently erroneously assumed to be true in
fact, and the decree, it is argued, was based upon such assumption.
From this the contention is that, if the truth had been
established, a different decree would have been rendered, because
no consideration for the grant of exemption would then have
appeared. But, even granting the premise, the deduction is unsound.
To admit it would destroy the effect of the thing adjudged,
resulting from the decree in the
Pegues case, since all
defenses then existing to the asserted right of exemption, whether
brought to the attention of the court or waived, were foreclosed by
the decree.
United States v. California & Oregon Land
Co., 192 U. S. 355;
Fayerweather v. Ritch, 195 U. S. 276,
195 U. S. 300,
and cases cited. And although it be conceded for the sake of
argument that the doctrine of
res judicata, as announced
in rulings of the Supreme Court of South Carolina, lend support to
the contention made, our duty is to give to the decree of the
circuit court of the United States in the
Pegues case the
force and effect to which it is entitled under the principles of
res judicata as settled by this Court, especially in view
of the fact that the controversy in the
Pegues case
involved
Page 200 U. S. 291
rights protected by the Constitution of the United States.
Deposit Bank v. Frankfort, 191 U.
S. 499.
b. It is urged that, as the taxes the collection of which the
court enjoined were not for the same years as were the taxes with
which the
Pegues case was concerned, the
Pegues
decree was therefore not
res judicata, because it related
to a different cause of action. This rests upon the assumption that
a decree enjoining the collection of a tax for one year can never
be the thing adjudged as to the right to collect taxes of a
subsequent year. But the proposition entirely disregards the fact
that the decree in the
Pegues case enjoining the
collection of the taxes in controversy in that case was rested upon
the ground that there was a contract protected from impairment by
the Constitution of the United States which was as controlling on
future taxes as it was upon the particular taxes to which the
Pegues suit related. The contention therefore simply
asserts that a contract right of exemption was beyond the pale of
judicial protection because rights under such contract could never
be sanctioned by final judicial action. Besides, the proposition is
not open to controversy.
New Orleans v. Citizens' Bank,
167 U. S. 371;
Deposit Bank v. Frankfort, supra.
Third. It is insisted that the court below had no power to
restrain the Attorney General of South Carolina and the counsel
associated with him from prosecuting in the state courts actions
authorized by the laws of the state, and hence that the court erred
in awarding an injunction against said officers. Support for the
proposition is rested upon the terms of the Eleventh Amendment and
the provisions of section 720 of the Revised Statutes, forbidding
the granting of a writ by any court of the United States to stay
proceedings in any court of a state except in cases where such
injunction may be authorized by any law relating to proceedings in
bankruptcy. The soundness of the doctrine relied upon is undoubted.
In re Ayers, 123 U. S. 443;
Fitts v. McGhee, 172 U. S. 516. The
difficulty is that the doctrine is inapplicable to this case.
Section 720 of the Revised Statutes was originally adopted in
Page 200 U. S. 292
1793, whilst the Eleventh Amendment was in process of formation
in Congress for submission to the states, and long therefore before
the ratification of that amendment. The restrictions embodied in
the section were therefore but a partial accomplishment of the more
comprehensive result effectuated by the prohibitions of the
Eleventh Amendment. Both the statute and the amendment relate to
the power of courts of the United States to deal, against the will
and consent of a state, with controversies between it and
individuals. None of the prohibitions, therefore, of the amendment
or of the statute relate to the power of a federal court to
administer relief in causes where jurisdiction as to a state and
its officers has been acquired as a result of the voluntary action
of the state in submitting its rights to judicial determination. To
confound the two classes of cases is but to overlook the
distinction which exists between the power of a court to deal with
a subject over which it has jurisdiction and its want of authority
to entertain a controversy as to which jurisdiction is not
possessed. From this it follows that, as in the
Pegues
case, the court had acquired jurisdiction, with the assent of the
State of South Carolina, to determine as to it the controversy
presented in that case the right of the court to administer relief
-- to make its decree effective -- cannot be measured by
constitutional or statutory provisions relating to original
proceedings where jurisdiction over the controversy did not obtain.
In other words, the proposition relied upon is disposed of by the
conclusion which we have previously expressed concerning the
persons who were parties and privies to the decree rendered in the
Pegues case. Indeed, the proposition that the Eleventh
Amendment or section 720 of the Revised Statutes controls a court
of the United States in administering relief, although the court
was acting in a matter ancillary to a decree rendered in a cause
over which it had jurisdiction, is not open for discussion.
Dietzsch v. Huidekoper, 103 U. S. 494;
Prout v. Starr, 188 U. S. 537;
Julian v. Central Trust Co., 193 U. S.
93,
193 U. S.
112.
And this reasoning disposes of the contention that the court
Page 200 U. S. 293
below erred in enforcing its prior decree because there was
adequate remedy at law, by interposing a defense in the state
courts to the actions brought by the Attorney General. That
question was foreclosed by the decree in the
Pegues case.
So also does the reasoning dispose of the assertion that, because a
part of the tax for the year 1898 may have been due, therefore
tender should have been made before invoking the power of the court
to protect its jurisdiction and enforce the prior decree. The
amendment of the decree made by the court eliminated from the
controversy all question concerning the portion of the tax not
covered by the decree in the
Pegues case. Having acquired
by that decree a right which the petitioner was entitled to
enforce, whatever might have been the rule of tender as applied to
other cases, that rule could not rightly be invoked to deprive the
court below, as a court of equity, of the power to protect the
petitioner in the enjoyment of rights previously secured under a
decree of the court.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BROWN dissents.