The act of incorporation of the Bank of the United States gives
the circuit courts of the United States jurisdiction of suits by
and against the bank.
This provision in the charter is warranted by the Third Article
of the Constitution, which declares that
"The judicial power 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."
The exemption of the State from suability, no objection to the
proceedings against its officers, for executing an unconstitutional
law.
The decision of the Court in
M'Culloch v. Maryland
reviewed and confirmed.
It is unnecessary for an attorney or solicitor who prosecutes a
suit for the Bank of the United States or other corporation to
produce a warrant of attorney under the corporate seal.
Whatever authority may be necessary for an attorney or solicitor
to appear for a natural or artificial person, it is not a ground of
reversal for error in an appellate court that such authority does
not appear on the face of the record. It is a formal defect which
is cured by the statute of jeofails and the thirty-second section
of the Judiciary Act of 1789, ch. 20.
In general, the answer of one defendant in equity cannot be read
in evidence against another. But where one defendant succeeds to
another, so that the right of the one devolves on the other and
they become privies in estate, the rule does not apply.
Where the defendant is restrained by an injunction from using
money in his possession, interest will not be decreed against
him.
An injunction will be granted to prevent the franchise of a
corporation from being destroyed, as well as to restrain a party
from violating it by attempting to participate in its exclusive
privileges.
In general, an injunction will not be allowed, nor a decree
rendered, against an agent where the principal is not made a party
to the suit. But if the principal be not himself subject to the
jurisdiction of the court (as in the case of a sovereign state),
the rule may be dispensed with.
A court of equity will interpose by injunction to prevent the
transfer of a specific thing which, if transferred, will be
irretrievably lost to the owner, such as negotiable securities and
stocks.
The circuit courts of the United States have jurisdiction of a
bill brought by the Bank of the United States for the purpose of
protecting the Bank in the exercise of its franchises, which are
threatened to be invaded, under the unconstitutional laws of a
State, and, as the State itself cannot, according to the Eleventh
Amendment of the Constitution, be made a party defendant to the
suit, it may be maintained against the officers and agents of the
State, who are intrusted with the execution of such laws.
A State cannot tax the Bank of the United States, and any
attempt on the part of its agents and officers to enforce the
collection of such tax against the property of the Bank may be
restrained by injunction from the circuit court.
The bill filed in this cause, was exhibited in the court below,
at September term, 1819, in the name of the respondents, and signed
by solicitors of the court, praying an injunction to restrain Ralph
Osborn, Auditor of the State of Ohio,
Page 22 U. S. 740
from proceeding against the complainants, under an act of the
Legislature of that State, passed February the 8th, 1819,
entitled
"An act to levy and collect a tax from all banks, and
individuals, and companies, and associations of individuals, that
may transact banking business in this State, without being allowed
to do so by the laws thereof."
This act, after reciting that the Bank of the United States
pursued its operations contrary to a law of the State, enacted,
that if, after the 1st day of the following September, the said
Bank, or any other, should continue to transact business in the
State, it should be liable to an annual tax of 50,000 dollars on
each office of discount and deposit. And that, on the 15th day of
September, the Auditor should charge such tax to the Bank, and
should make out his warrant, under his seal of office, directed to
any person, commanding him to collect the said tax, who should
enter the banking house, and demand the same, and if payment should
not be made, should levy the amount on the money or other goods of
the Bank, the money to be retained, and the goods to be sold, as if
taken on a
fieri facias. If no effects should be found in
the banking room, the person having the warrant was authorized to
go into every room, vault, &c. and to open every chest, &c.
in search of what might satisfy his warrant.
The bill, after reciting this act, stated, that Ralph Osborn is
the Auditor, and gives out, &c. that he will execute the said
act. It was exhibited in open court, on the 14th of September, and,
notice of the application having been given to the defendant,
Page 22 U. S. 741
Osborn, an order was made awarding the injunction on the
execution of bonds and security in the sum of 100,000 dollars,
after which, a subpoena was issued on which the order that had been
made for the injunction was endorsed by the solicitors for the
plaintiffs, and a memorandum, that bond with security had been
given by the plaintiffs was endorsed by the clerk, and a power to
James M'Dowell to serve the same was endorsed by the Marshal. It
appeared from the affidavit of M'Dowell, that both the subpoena and
endorsement were served on R. Osborn early in the morning of the
15th. On the 18th of the same month of September, a writ of
injunction was issued on the same bill, which was served on R.
Osborn and on John L. Harper. The affidavit of M'Dowell stated that
he served the writ on Harper while on his way to Columbus with the
money and funds on which the same were to operate, as he
understood, and that the writ was served on Osborn before Harper
reached Columbus.
In September, 1820, leave was given to file a supplemental and
amended bill, and to make new parties.
The amended bill charges, that, subsequent to the service of the
subpoena and injunction, to-wit, on the 17th of September, 1819, J.
L. Harper, who was employed by Osborn to collect the tax, and well
knew that an injunction had been allowed, proceeded by violence to
the office of the Bank at Chilicothe, and took therefrom 100,000
dollars, in specie and bank notes, belonging to, or in deposit
with, the plaintiffs. That this money
Page 22 U. S. 742
was delivered to H. M. Curry, who was then Treasurer of the
State, or to the defendant, Osborn, both of whom had notice of the
illegal seizure, and paid no consideration for the amount, but
received it to keep it on safe deposit. That Curry did keep the
same until he delivered it over to one S. Sullivan, his successor
as Treasurer. That neither Curry nor Sullivan held the said money
in their character as Treasurer, but as individuals. The bill
prays, that the said H. M. Curry, late Treasurer, S. Sullivan, the
present Treasurer, and R. Osborn, in their official and private
characters, and the said J. L. Harper, may be made defendants; that
they may make discovery, and may be enjoined from using or paying
away the coin or notes taken from the Bank, may be decreed to
restore the same, and may be enjoined from proceeding further under
the said act.
The defendant, Curry, filed his answer, admitting that the
defendant, Harper, delivered to him, about the 20th of September,
1819, the sum of ninety-eight thousand dollars, which, he was
informed and believed, was a tax levied of the Branch Bank of the
United States. He passed this sum to the credit of the State, as
revenue, but, in fact, kept it separate from other moneys, until
January or February, 1820, when the moneys in the Treasury were
seized upon by a committee of the House of Representatives, soon
after which he resigned his office, and the moneys and bank notes,
in the bill mentioned, still separate from other moneys in the
Treasury, came to the hands of S. Sullivan, the
Page 22 U. S. 743
present Treasurer, who gave a receipt for the same.
The defendant, Sullivan, failing to answer, an attachment for
contempt was issued, on which he was taken into custody. He then
filed his answer, and was discharged.
This answer denies all personal knowledge of the levying,
collecting, and paying over the money in the bill mentioned. It
admits that he was appointed Treasurer, as successor to Curry, on
the 17th of February, 1820, and that he entered the Treasury on the
23d, and began an examination of the funds, among which he found
the sum of ninety-eight thousand dollars, which he understood was
the same that is charged in the bill; but this was not a fact
within his own knowledge. He gave a receipt as Treasurer, and the
money has remained in his hands, as Treasurer, and not otherwise.
The sum of ninety-eight thousand dollars remains untouched, out of
respect to an injunction said to have been allowed by the circuit
court, on a bill since dismissed. He admits the sum in his hands to
correspond with the description in the bill, so far as that
description goes, and annexes to his answer a description of the
residue. He has no private individual interest in the money, and
holds it only as State Treasurer; admits notice, from general
report, and from the late Treasurer, that the said sum of
ninety-eight thousand dollars was levied as a tax from the Bank,
and that the Bank alleged it to be illegal and void.
The cause came on to be heard upon these answers, and upon the
decrees nisi, against Osborn and Harper, and the Court pronounced a
decree
Page 22 U. S. 744
directing them to restore to the Bank the sum of 100,000
dollars, with interest on 19,830 dollars, the amount of specie in
the hands of Sullivan. The cause was then brought, by appeal, to
this Court.
Page 22 U. S. 816
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court,
and, after stating the case, proceeded as follows:
At the close of the argument, a point was suggested of such
vital importance as to induce the Court to request that it might be
particularly spoken to. That point is the right of the Bank to sue
in the courts of the United States. It has been argued, and ought
to be disposed of, before we proceed to the actual exercise of
jurisdiction, by deciding on the rights of the parties.
Page 22 U. S. 817
The appellants contest the jurisdiction of the Court on two
grounds:
1st. That the act of Congress has not given it.
2d. That, under the Constitution, Congress cannot give it.
1. The first part of the objection depends entirely on the
language of the act. The words are that the Bank shall be "made
able and capable in law,"
"to sue and be used, plead and be impleaded, answer and be
answered, defend and be defended, in all state courts having
competent jurisdiction, and in any circuit court of the United
States."
These words seem to the Court to admit of but one
interpretation. They cannot be made plainer by explanation. They
give, expressly, the right "to sue and be sued," "in every circuit
court of the United States," and it would be difficult to
substitute other terms which would be more direct and appropriate
for the purpose. The argument of the appellants is founded on the
opinion of this Court in
Bank of the United States v.
Deveaux, 5 Cranch 85, 2 Cond.Rep. 189. In that
case, it was decided that the former Bank of the United States was
not enabled, by the act which incorporated it, to sue in the
federal courts. The words of the third section of that act are that
the Bank may "sue and be sued," &c. "in courts of record, or
any other place whatsoever." The Court was of opinion that these
general words, which are usual in all acts of incorporation, gave
only a general capacity to sue, not a particular privilege to sue
in the
Page 22 U. S. 818
courts of the United States, and this opinion was strengthened
by the circumstance that the ninth rule of the seventh section of
the same act subjects the directors, in case of excess in
contracting debt, to be sued in their private capacity, "in any
court of record of the United States, or either of them." The
express grant of jurisdiction to the federal courts, in this case,
was considered as having some influence on the construction of the
general words of the third section, which does not mention those
courts. Whether this decision be right or wrong, it amounts only to
a declaration that a general capacity in the Bank to sue, without
mentioning the courts of the Union, may not give a right to sue in
those courts. To infer from this that words expressly conferring a
right to sue in those courts, do not give the right, is surely a
conclusion which the premises do not warrant.
The act of incorporation, then, confers jurisdiction on the
circuit courts of the United States, if Congress can confer it.
2. We will now consider the constitutionality of the clause in
the act of incorporation, which authorizes the Bank to sue in the
federal courts.
In support of this clause, it is said that the legislative,
executive, and judicial powers, of every well constructed
government, are coextensive with each other; that is, they are
potentially coextensive. The executive department may
constitutionally execute every law which the legislature may
constitutionally make, and the judicial department may receive from
the legislature the power of construing every such law. All
governments
Page 22 U. S. 819
which are not extremely defective in their organization must
possess within themselves the means of expounding, as well as
enforcing, their own laws. If we examine the Constitution of the
United States, we find that its framers kept this great political
principle in view. The second article vests the whole executive
power in the President; and the third article declares
"that the judicial power 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."
This clause enables the judicial department to receive
jurisdiction to the full extent of the Constitution, laws, and
treaties of the United States, when any question respecting them
shall assume such a form that the judicial power is capable of
acting on it. That power is capable of acting only when the subject
is submitted to it by a party who asserts his rights in the form
prescribed by law. It then becomes a case, and the Constitution
declares that the judicial power shall extend to all cases arising
under the Constitution, laws, and treaties of the United
States.
The suit of Bank of the United States v. Osborn and others, is a
case, and the question is whether it arises under a law of the
United States?
The appellants contend that it does not, because several
questions may arise in it which depend on the general principles of
the law, not on any act of Congress.
If this were sufficient to withdraw a case from
Page 22 U. S. 820
the jurisdiction of the federal courts, almost every case,
although involving the construction of a law, would be withdrawn,
and a clause in the Constitution, relating to a subject of vital
importance to the government, and expressed in the most
comprehensive terms, would be construed to mean almost nothing.
There is scarcely any case every part of which depends on the
Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States. The questions
whether the fact alleged as the foundation of the action be real or
fictitious; whether the conduct of the plaintiff has been such as
to entitle him to maintain his action, whether his right is barred,
whether he has received satisfaction or has in any manner released
his claims, are questions some or all of which may occur in almost
every case, and if their existence be sufficient to arrest the
jurisdiction of the Court, words which seem intended to be as
extensive as the Constitution, laws, and treaties of the Union,
which seem designed to give the courts of the government the
construction of all its acts, so far as they affect the rights of
individuals, would be reduced to almost nothing.
In those cases in which original jurisdiction is given to the
Supreme Court, the judicial power of the United States cannot be
exercised in its appellate form. In every other case, the power is
to be exercised in its original or appellate form, or both, as the
wisdom of Congress may direct. With the exception of these cases,
in which original jurisdiction is given to this Court, there is
none to which the judicial power extends from which the original
jurisdiction of the inferior courts is excluded
Page 22 U. S. 821
by the Constitution. Original jurisdiction, so far as the
Constitution gives a rule, is coextensive with the judicial power.
We find, in the Constitution, no prohibition to its exercise, in
every case in which the judicial power can be exercised. It would
be a very bold construction to say that this power could be applied
in its appellate form only, to the most important class of cases to
which it is applicable.
The Constitution establishes the Supreme Court, and defines its
jurisdiction. It enumerates cases in which its jurisdiction is
original and exclusive; and then defines that which is appellate,
but does not insinuate that in any such case, the power cannot be
exercised in its original form by courts of original jurisdiction.
It is not insinuated that the judicial power, in cases depending on
the character of the cause, cannot be exercised in the first
instance, in the courts of the Union, but must first be exercised
in the tribunals of the State -- tribunals over which the
government of the Union has no adequate control, and which may be
closed to any claim asserted under a law of the United States.
We perceive, then, no ground on which the proposition can be
maintained that Congress is incapable of giving the circuit courts
original jurisdiction in any case to which the appellate
jurisdiction extends.
We ask, then, if it can be sufficient to exclude this
jurisdiction that the case involves questions depending on general
principles? A cause may depend on several questions of fact and
law. Some
Page 22 U. S. 822
of these may depend on the construction of a law of the United
States; others on principles unconnected with that law. If it be a
sufficient foundation for jurisdiction that the title or right set
up by the party may be defeated by one construction of the
Constitution or law of the United States, and sustained by the
opposite construction, provided the facts necessary to support the
action be made out, then all the other questions must be decided as
incidental to this, which gives that jurisdiction. Those other
questions cannot arrest the proceedings. Under this construction,
the judicial power of the Union extends effectively and
beneficially to that most important class of cases which depend on
the character of the cause. On the opposite construction, the
judicial power never can be extended to a whole case, as expressed
by the Constitution, but to those parts of cases only which present
the particular question involving the construction of the
Constitution or the law. We say it never can be extended to the
whole case because, if the circumstance that other points are
involved in it shall disable Congress from authorizing the courts
of the Union to take jurisdiction of the original cause, it equally
disables Congress from authorizing those courts to take
jurisdiction of the whole cause on an appeal, and thus will be
restricted to a single question in that cause, and words obviously
intended to secure to those who claim rights under the
Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States, a trial in
the federal courts, will be restricted to the insecure remedy of an
appeal upon an insulated point, after it has
Page 22 U. S. 823
received that shape which may be given to it by another tribunal
into which he is forced against his will.
We think, then that when a question to which the judicial power
of the Union is extended by the Constitution forms an ingredient of
the original cause, it is in the power of Congress to give the
circuit courts jurisdiction of that cause, although other questions
of fact or of law may be involved in it.
The case of the Bank is, we think, a very strong case of this
description. The charter of incorporation not only creates it, but
gives it every faculty which it possesses. The power to acquire
rights of any description, to transact business of any description,
to make contracts of any description, to sue on those contracts, is
given and measured by its charter, and that charter is a law of the
United States. This being can acquire no right, make no contract,
bring no suit, which is not authorized by a law of the United
States. It is not only itself the mere creature of a law, but all
its actions and all its rights are dependant on the same law. Can a
being thus constituted have a case which does not arise literally,
as well as substantially, under the law?
Take the case of a contract, which is put as the strongest
against the Bank.
When a Bank sues, the first question which presents itself, and
which lies at the foundation of the cause, is has this legal entity
a right to sue? Has it a right to come, not into this Court
particularly, but into any court? This depends on a
Page 22 U. S. 824
law of the United States. The next question is has this being a
right to make this particular contract? If this question be decided
in the negative, the cause is determined against the plaintiff; and
this question, too, depends entirely on a law of the United States.
These are important questions, and they exist in every possible
case. The right to sue, if decided once, is decided forever; but
the power of Congress was exercised antecedently to the first
decision on that right, and if it was constitutional then, it
cannot cease to be so because the particular question is decided.
It may be revived at the will of the party, and most probably would
be renewed were the tribunal to be changed. But the question
respecting the right to make a particular contract, or to acquire a
particular property, or to sue on account of a particular injury,
belongs to every particular case, and may be renewed in every case.
The question forms an original ingredient in every cause. Whether
it be in fact relied on or not in the defence, it is still a part
of the cause, and may be relied on. The right of the plaintiff to
sue cannot depend on the defence which the defendant may choose to
set up. His right to sue is anterior to that defence, and must
depend on the state of things when the action is brought. The
questions which the case involves, then, must determine its
character, whether those questions be made in the cause or not.
The appellants say that the case arises on the contract, but the
validity of the contract depends on a law of the United States, and
the plaintiff is
Page 22 U. S. 825
compelled in every case to show its validity. The case arises
emphatically under the law. The act of Congress is its foundation.
The contract could never have been made but under the authority of
that act. The act itself is the first ingredient in the case, is
its origin, is that from which every other part arises. That other
questions may also arise as the execution of the contract or its
performance cannot change the case, or give it any other origin
than the charter of incorporation. The action still originates in,
and is sustained by, that charter.
The clause giving the Bank a right to sue in the circuit courts
of the United States stands on the same principle with the acts
authorizing officers of the United States who sue in their own
names, to sue in the courts of the United States. The Postmaster
General, for example, cannot sue under that part of the
Constitution which gives jurisdiction to the federal courts in
consequence o the character of the party, nor is he authorized to
sue by the Judiciary Act. He comes into the courts of the Union
under the authority of an act of Congress the constitutionality of
which can only be sustained by the admission that his suit is a
case arising under a law of the United States. If it be said that
it is such a case because a law of the United States authorizes the
contract, and authorizes the suit, the same reasons exist with
respect to a suit brought by the Bank. That, too, is such a case,
because that suit, too, is itself authorized, and is brought on a
contract authorized by a law of the United States. It depends
absolutely on
Page 22 U. S. 826
that law, and cannot exist a moment without its authority.
If it be said that a suit brought by the Bank may depend in fact
altogether on questions unconnected with any law of the United
States, it is equally true with respect to suits brought by the
Postmaster General. The plea in bar may be payment, if the suit be
brought on a bond, or nonassumpsit, if it be brought on an open
account, and no other question may arise than what respects the
complete discharge of the demand. Yet the constitutionality of the
act authorizing the Postmaster General to sue in the courts of the
United States has never been drawn into question. It is sustained
singly by an act of Congress, standing on that construction of the
Constitution which asserts the right of the legislature to give
original jurisdiction to the circuit courts in cases arising under
a law of the United States.
The clause in the patent law authorizing suits in the circuit
courts stands, we think, on the same principle. Such a suit is a
case arising under a law of the United States. Yet the defendant
may not, at the trial, question the validity of the patent, or make
any point which requires the construction of an act of Congress. He
may rest his defence exclusively on the fact that he has not
violated the right of the plaintiff. That this fact becomes the
sole question made in the cause cannot oust the jurisdiction of the
Court, or establish the position that the case does not arise under
a law of the United States.
It is said that a clear distinction exists between
Page 22 U. S. 827
the party and the cause; that the party may originate under a
law with which the cause has no connexion; and that Congress may,
with the same propriety, give a naturalized citizen, who is the
mere creature of a law, a right to sue in the courts of the United
States as give that right to the Bank.
This distinction is not denied; and, if the act of Congress was
a simple act of incorporation, and contained nothing more, it might
be entitled to great consideration. But the act does not stop with
incorporating the Bank. It proceeds to bestow upon the being it has
made all the faculties and capacities which that being possesses.
Every act of the Bank grows out of this law and is tested by it. To
use the language of the Constitution, every act of the Bank arises
out of this law.
A naturalized citizen is indeed made a citizen under an act of
Congress, but the act does not proceed to give, to regulate, or to
prescribe his capacities. He becomes a member of the society,
possessing all the rights of a native citizen, and standing, in the
view of the Constitution, on the footing of a native. The
Constitution does not authorize Congress to enlarge or abridge
those rights. The simple power of the national legislature is to
prescribe a uniform rule of naturalization, and the exercise of
this power exhausts it so far as respects the individual. The
Constitution then takes him up, and, among other rights, extends to
him the capacity of suing in the courts of the United States
precisely under the same circumstances under which a native might
sue. He is
Page 22 U. S. 828
distinguishable in nothing from a native citizen except so far
as the Constitution makes the distinction. The law makes none.
There is, then, no resemblance between the act incorporating the
Bank and the general naturalization law.
Upon the best consideration we have been able to bestow on this
subject, we are of opinion that the clause in the act of
incorporation, enabling the Bank to sue in the courts of the United
States is consistent with the Constitution, and to be obeyed in all
courts.
We will now proceed to consider the merits of the cause.
The appellants contend that the decree of the circuit court is
erroneous --
1. Because no authority is shown in the record from the Bank
authorizing the institution or prosecution of the suit.
2. Because, as against the defendant, Sullivan, there are
neither proofs nor admissions sufficient to sustain the decree.
3. Because, upon equitable principles, the case made in the bill
does not warrant a decree against either Osborn or Harper for the
amount of coin and notes in the bill specified to have passed
through their hands.
4. Because the defendants are decreed to pay interest upon the
coin when it was not in the power of Osborn or Harper and was
stayed in the hands of Sullivan by injunction.
5. Because, the case made in the bill does not warrant the
interference of a Court of chancery by injunction.
6. Because, if any case is made in the bill proper for the
interference of
Page 22 U. S. 829
a court of chancery, it is against the State of Ohio, in which
case the circuit court could not exercise jurisdiction.
7. Because the decree assumes that the Bank of the United States
is not subject to the taxing power of the State of Ohio, and
decides that the law of Ohio, the execution of which is enjoined,
is unconstitutional.
These points will be considered in the order in which they are
made.
1. It is admitted that a corporation can only appear by
attorney, and it is also admitted that the attorney must receive
the authority of the corporation to enable him to represent it. It
is not admitted that this authority must be under seal. On the
contrary, the principle decided in the cases of the
Bank of
Columbia v. Patterson, &c. is supposed to apply to this
case, and to show that the seal may be dispensed with. It is,
however, unnecessary to pursue this inquiry, since the real
question is whether the nonappearance of the power in the record be
error, not whether the power was insufficient in itself.
Natural persons may appear in Court, either by themselves, or by
their attorney. But no man has a right to appear as the attorney of
another without the authority of that other. In ordinary cases, the
authority must be produced, because there is, in the nature of
things, no
prima facie evidence that one man is in fact
the attorney of another.
Page 22 U. S. 830
The case of an attorney at law, an attorney for the purpose of
representing another in Court, and prosecuting or defending a suit
in his name, is somewhat different. The power must indeed exist,
but its production has not been considered as indispensable.
Certain gentlemen, first licensed by government, are admitted by
order of Court, to stand at the bar, with a general capacity to
represent all the suitors in the Court. The appearance of any one
of these gentlemen in a cause has always been received as evidence
of his authority, and no additional evidence, so far as we are
informed, has ever been required. This practice, we believe, has
existed from the first establishment of our courts, and no
departure from it has been made in those of any State, or of the
Union.
The argument supposes some distinction in this particular
between a natural person and a corporation, but the Court can
perceive no reason for this distinction. A corporation, it is true,
can appear only by attorney, while a natural person may appear for
himself. But when he waives this privilege, and elects to appear by
attorney, no reason is perceived why the same evidence should not
be required that the individual professing to represent him has
authority to do so, which would be required if he were incapable of
appearing in person. The universal and familiar practice, then, of
permitting gentlemen of the profession to appear without producing
a warrant of attorney, forms a rule which is as applicable in
reason to their appearance for a corporation, as for a natural
person. Were it even otherwise, the practice is
Page 22 U. S. 831
as uniform and as ancient with regard to corporations as to
natural persons. No case has ever occurred, so far as we are
informed, in which the production of a warrant of attorney has been
supposed a necessary preliminary to the appearance of a
corporation, either as plaintiff or defendant, by a gentleman
admitted to the bar of the Court. The usage, then, is as full
authority for the case of a corporation as of an individual. If
this usage ought to be altered, it should be a rule to operate
prospectively, not by the reversal of a decree pronounced in
conformity with the general course of the court, in a case in which
no doubt of the legality of the appearance had ever been
suggested.
In the statutes of jeofails and amendment, which respect this
subject, the nonappearance of a warrant of attorney in the record,
has generally been treated as matter of form; and the thirty-second
section of the Judiciary Act may very well be construed to
comprehend this formal defect in its general terms in a case of
law. No reason is perceived why the courts of chancery should be
more rigid in exacting the exhibition of a warrant of attorney than
a court of laws and, since the practice has, in fact, been the same
in both courts, an appellate court ought, we think, to be governed
in both by the same rule.
2. The second point is one on which the productiveness of any
decree in favour of the plaintiffs most probably depends, for, if
the claim be not satisfied with the money found in the possession
of Sullivan, it is, at best, uncertain whether
Page 22 U. S. 832
a fund, out of which it can be satisfied, is to be found
elsewhere.
In inquiring whether the proofs or admissions in the cause be
sufficient to charge Sullivan, the court will look into the answer
of Currie, as well as into that of Sullivan. In objection to this
course, it is said that the answer of one defendant cannot be read
against another. This is generally, but not universally, true.
Where one defendant succeeds to another, so that the right of the
one devolves on the other, and they become privies in estate, the
rule is not admitted to apply. Thus, if an ancestor die pending a
suit, and the proceedings be revived against his heir, or if a suit
be revived against an executor or administrator, the answer of the
deceased person, or any other evidence, establishing any fact
against him might be read also against the person who succeeds to
him. So, a
pendente lite purchaser is bound by the decree,
without being even made a party to the suit;
a fortiori,
he would, if made a party, be bound by the testimony taken against
the vendor.
In this case, if Currie received the money taken out of the
Bank, and passed it over to Sullivan, the establishment of this
fact in a suit against Currie would seem to bind his successor,
Sullivan, both as a privy in estate and as a person getting
possession
pendente lite, if the original suit had been
instituted against Currie. We can perceive no difference, so far as
respects the answer of Currie, between the case supposed and the
case as it stands. If Currie, who was the predecessor of Sullivan,
admits that he received the money of
Page 22 U. S. 833
the Bank, the fact seems to bind all those coming in under him
as completely as it binds himself. This, therefore, appears to the
Court to be a case in which, upon principle, the answer of Currie
may be read.
His answer states that, on or about the 19th or 20th of
September, 1819, the defendant Harper delivered to him, in coin and
notes, the sum of ninety-eight thousand dollars, which he was
informed and believed to be the money levied on the Bank as a tax
in pursuance of the law of the State of Ohio. After consulting
counsel on the question whether he ought to retain this sum within
his individual control or pass it to the credit of the State on the
books of the Treasury, he adopted the latter course, but retained
it carefully in a trunk, separate from the other funds of the
Treasury. The money afterwards came to the hands of Sullivan, the
gentleman who succeeded him as Treasurer, and gave him a receipt
for all the money in the Treasury, including this, which was still
kept separate from the rest.
We think no reasonable doubt can be entertained but that the
ninety-eight thousand dollars delivered by Harper to Currie were
taken out of the Bank. Currie understood and believed it to be the
fact. When did he so understand and believe it? At the time when he
received the money. And from whom did he derive his understanding
and belief? The inference is irresistible that he derived it from
his own knowledge of circumstances, for they were of public
notoriety, and from the information of Harper. In the necessary
course of things, Harper, who was sent, as Currie must have known,
on this
Page 22 U. S. 834
business, brings with him to the Treasurer of the State a sum of
money which, by the law, was to be taken out of the Bank, pays him
ninety-eight thousand dollars thereof, which the Treasurer receives
and keeps, as being money taken from the Bank, and so enters it on
the books of the Treasury. In a suit brought against Mr. Currie for
this money by the State of Ohio, if he had failed to account for
it, could any person doubt the competency of the testimony to
charge him? We think no mind could hesitate in such a case.
Currie, then, being clearly in possession of this money and
clearly liable for it, we are next to look into Sullivan's answer
for the purpose of inquiring whether he admits any facts which show
him to be liable also.
Sullivan denies all personal knowledge of the transaction; that
is, he was not in office when it took place, and was not present
when the money was taken out of the Bank or when it was delivered
to Currie. But when he entered the Treasury office, he received
this sum of ninety-eight thousand dollars, separate from the other
money of the Treasury, which, he understood from report, and was
informed by his predecessor, from whom he received it, was the
money taken out of the Bank. This sum has remained untouched ever
since, from respect to the injunction awarded by the court.
We ask if a rational doubt can remain on this subject.
Mr. Currie, as Treasurer of the State of Ohio, receives
ninety-eight thousand dollars as being the amount of a tax imposed
by the legislature of that State on
Page 22 U. S. 835
the Bank of the United States; enters the same on the books of
the Treasury; and, the legality of the act by which the money was
levied being questioned, puts it in a trunk, and keeps it apart
from the other money belonging to the public. He resigns his
office, and is succeeded by Mr. Sullivan, to whom he delivers the
money, informing him, at the same time that it is the money raised
from the Bank; and Mr. Sullivan continues to keep it apart, and
abstains from the use of it, out of respect to an injunction
forbidding him to pay it away or in any manner to dispose of it. Is
it possible to doubt the identity of this money?
Even admitting that the answer of Currie, though establishing
his liability as to himself, could not prove even that fact as to
Sullivan, the answer of Sullivan is itself sufficient, we think, to
charge him. He admits that these ninety-eight thousand dollars were
delivered to him as being the money which was taken out of the
Bank, and that he so received it, for, he says, he understood this
sum was the same as charged in the bill; that his information was
from report, and from his predecessor; and that the money has
remained untouched from respect to the injunction. This
declaration, then, is a part of the fact. The fact, as admitted in
his answer, is not simply that he received ninety-eight thousand
dollars, but that he received ninety-eight thousand dollars, as
being the money taken out of the Bank -- the money to which the
writ of injunction applied.
In a common action between two private individuals, such an
admission would at least be sufficient to throw on the defendant
the burthen of
Page 22 U. S. 836
proving that the money, which he acknowledges himself to have
received and kept as the money of the plaintiff, was not that which
it was declared to be on its delivery. A declaration accompanying
the delivery and constituting a part of it gives a character to the
transaction, and is not to be placed on the same footing with a
declaration made by the same person at a different time. The answer
of Sullivan, then, is, in the opinion of the Court, sufficient to
show that these ninety-eight thousand dollars were the specific
dollars for which this suit was brought. This sum having come to
his possession with full knowledge of the fact, in a separate
trunk, unmixed with money, and with notice that an injunction had
been awarded respecting it, he would seem to be responsible to the
plaintiff for it unless he can show sufficient matter to discharge
himself.
3. The next objection is to the decree against Osborn and
Harper, as to whom the bill was taken for confessed.
The bill charges that Osborn employed John L. Harper to collect
the tax, who proceeded by violence to enter the office of discount
and deposit at Chilicothe, and forcibly took therefrom 100,000
dollars in specie and bank notes; and that, at the time of the
seizure, Harper well knew, and was duly notified that an injunction
had been allowed, which money was delivered either to Currie or
Osborn.
So far as respects Harper and Osborn, these allegations are to
be considered as true. If the act of the legislature of Ohio and
the official
Page 22 U. S. 837
character of Osborn constitute a defence, neither of these
defendants is liable, and the whole decree is erroneous; but if the
act be unconstitutional and void, it can be no justification, and
both these defendants are to be considered as individuals who are
amenable to the laws. Considering them, for the present, in this
character, the fact, as made out in the bill, is that Osborn
employed Harper to do an illegal act, and that Harper has done that
act; and that they are jointly responsible for it, is supposed to
be as well settled as any principle of law whatever.
We think it unnecessary, in this part of the case, to enter into
the inquiry respecting the effect of the injunction. No injunction
is necessary to attach responsibility on those who conspire to do
an illegal act, which this is if not justified by the authority
under which it was done.
4. The next objection is to the allowance of interest on the
coin which constituted a part of the sum decreed to the
complainants. Had the complainants, without the intervention of a
court of equity, resorted to their legal remedy for the injury
sustained, their right to principal and interest would have stood
on equal ground. The same rule would be adopted in a court of
equity, had the subject been left under the control of the party in
possession, while the right was in litigation. But the subject was
not left under the control of the party. The court itself
interposed, and forbade the person, in whose possession the
property was to make any use of it. This order, having been obeyed,
places the defendant in the same
Page 22 U. S. 838
situation, so far as respects interest, as if the court had
taken the money into its own custody. The defendant, in obeying the
mandate of the court, becomes its instrument as entirely as the
Clerk of the court would have been had the money been placed in his
hands. It does not appear reasonable that a decree which proceeds
upon the idea that the injunction of the court was valid ought to
direct interest to be paid on the money which that injunction
restrained the defendant from using.
5. The fifth objection to the decree is that the case made in
the bill does not warrant the interference of a court of
chancery.
In examining this question, it is proper that the court should
consider the real case, and its actual circumstances. The original
bill prays for an injunction against Ralph Osborn, Auditor of the
State of Ohio, to restrain him from executing a law of that State,
to the great oppression and injury of the complainants, and to the
destruction of rights and privileges conferred on them by their
charter, and by the Constitution of the United States. The true
inquiry is whether an injunction can be issued to restrain a person
who is a State officer from performing any official act enjoined by
statute, and whether a court of equity can decree restitution if
the act be performed. In pursuing this inquiry, it must be assumed
for the present that the act is unconstitutional, and furnishes no
authority or protection to the officer who is about to proceed
under it. This must be assumed, because, in the arrangement of his
argument,
Page 22 U. S. 839
the counsel who opened the cause has chosen to reserve that
point for the last, and to contend that, though the law be void, no
case is made out against the defendants. We suspend, also, the
consideration of the question whether the interest of the State of
Ohio, as disclosed in the bill, shows a want of jurisdiction in the
circuit court, which ought to have arrested its proceedings. That
question, too, is reserved by the appellants, and will be
subsequently considered. The sole inquiry, for the present, is
whether, stripping the case of these objections, the plaintiffs
below were entitled to relief in a court of equity, against the
defendants, and to the protection of an injunction. The appellants
expressly waive the extravagant proposition that a void act can
afford protection to the person who executes it, and admits the
liability of the defendants to the plaintiffs, to the extent of the
injury sustained, in an action at law. The question, then, is
reduced to the single inquiry whether the case is cognizable in a
court of equity. If it is, the decree must be affirmed so far as it
is supported by the evidence in the cause.
The appellants allege that the original bill contains no
allegation which can justify the application for an injunction, and
treat the declarations of Ralph Osborn, the Auditor, that he should
execute the law, as the light and frivolous threats of an
individual that he would commit an ordinary trespass. But surely
this is not the point of view in which the application for an
injunction is to be considered. The legislature of Ohio had
passed
Page 22 U. S. 840
a law for the avowed purpose of expelling the Bank from the
State, and had made it the duty of the Auditor to execute it as a
ministerial officer. He had declared that he would perform this
duty. The law, if executed, would unquestionably effect its object,
and would deprive the Bank of its chartered privileges so far as
they were to be exercised in that State. It must expel the Bank
from the State, and this is, we think, a conclusion which the Court
might rightfully draw from the law itself. That the declarations of
the Auditor would be fulfilled did not admit of reasonable doubt.
It was to be expected that a person continuing to hold an office
would perform a duty enjoined by his government, which was
completely within his power. This duty was to be repeated until the
Bank should abandon the exercise of its chartered rights.
To treat this as a common casual trespass would be to disregard
entirely its true character and substantial merits. The application
to the court was to interpose its writ of injunction to protect the
Bank not from the casual trespass of an individual who might not
perform the act he threatened, but from the total destruction of
its franchise, of its chartered privileges, so far as respected the
State of Ohio. It was morally certain that the Auditor would
proceed to execute the law, and it was morally certain that the
effect must be the expulsion of the Bank from the State. An annual
charge of 100,000 dollars, would more than absorb all the
advantages of the privilege, and would consequently annul it.
Page 22 U. S. 841
The appellants admit that injunctions are often awarded for the
protection of parties in the enjoyment of a franchise, but deny
that one has ever been granted in such a case as this. But,
although the precise case may never have occurred, if the same
principle applies, the same remedy ought to be afforded. The
interference of the court in this class of cases, has most
frequently been to restrain a person from violating an exclusive
privilege by participating in it. But if, instead of a continued
participation in the privilege, the attempt be to disable the party
from using it, is not the reason for the interference of the court
rather strengthened than weakened? Had the privilege of the Bank
been exclusive, the argument admits that any other person, or
company might have been enjoined, according to the regular course
of the court of chancery, from using or exercising the same
business. Why would such person or company have been enjoined? To
prevent a permanent injury from being done to the party entitled to
the franchise or privilege; which injury, the appellants say,
cannot be estimated in damages. It requires no argument to prove
that the injury is greater if the whole privilege be destroyed than
if it be divided; and, so far as respects the estimate of damages,
although precise accuracy may not be attained, yet a reasonable
calculation may be made of the amount of the injury so as to
satisfy the court and jury. It will not be pretended that, in such
a case, an action at law could not be maintained, or that the
materials do not exist on which a verdict might be
Page 22 U. S. 842
found, and a judgment rendered. But in this and many other cases
of continuing injuries, as in the case of repeated ejectments, a
court of chancery will interpose. The injury done by denying to the
Bank the exercise of its franchise in the State of Ohio is as
difficult to calculate as the injury done by participating in an
exclusive privilege. The single act of levying the tax in the first
instance is the cause of an action at law; but that affords a
remedy only for the single act, and is not equal to the remedy in
chancery, which prevents its repetition and protects the privilege.
The same conservative principle, which induces the court to
interpose its authority for the protection of exclusive privileges,
to prevent the commission of waste, even in some cases of trespass,
and in many cases of destruction will, we think, apply to this.
Indeed, trespass is destruction where there is no privity of
estate.
If the State of Ohio could have been made a party defendant, it
can scarcely be denied that this would be a strong case for an
injunction. The objection is that, as the real party cannot be
brought before the court, a suit cannot be sustained against the
agents of that party, and cases have been cited to show that a
court of chancery will not make a decree unless all those who are
substantially interested be made parties to the suit.
This is certainly true where it is in the power of the plaintiff
to make them parties; but if the person who is the real principal,
the person who is the true source of the mischief, by whose power
and for whose advantage it is done, be himself
Page 22 U. S. 843
above the law, be exempt from all judicial process, it would be
subversive of the best established principles to say that the laws
could not afford the same remedies against the agent employed in
doing the wrong which they would afford against him could his
principal be joined in the suit. It is admitted that the privilege
of the principal is not communicated to the agent, for the
appellants acknowledge that an action at law would lie against the
agent in which full compensation ought to be made for the injury.
It being admitted, then that the agent is not privileged by his
connexion with his principal -- that he is responsible for his own
act, to the full extent of the injury -- why should not the
preventive power of the court also be applied to him? Why may it
not restrain him from the commission of a wrong, which it would
punish him for committing? We put out of view the character of the
principal as a sovereign State, because that is made a distinct
point, and consider the question singly as respects the want of
parties. Now, if the party before the court would be responsible
for the whole injury, why may he not be restrained from its
commission if no other party can be brought before the court? The
appellants found their distinction on the legal principle that all
trespasses are several, as well as joint, without inquiry into the
validity of this reason, if true. We ask if it be true? Will it be
said that the action of trespass is the only remedy given for this
injury? Can it be denied that an action on the case, for money had
and received to the plaintiff's use might be maintained?
Page 22 U. S. 844
We think it cannot, and if such an action might be maintained,
no plausible reason suggests itself to us for the opinion that an
injunction may not be awarded to restrain the agent with as much
propriety as it might be awarded to restrain the principal, could
the principal be made a party.
We think the reason for an injunction is much stronger in the
actual than it would be in the supposed case. In the regular course
of things, the agent would pay over the money immediately to his
principal, and would thus place it beyond the reach of the injured
party, since his principal is not amenable to the law. The remedy
for the injury, would be against the agent only; and what agent
could make compensation for such an injury? The remedy would have
nothing real in it. It would be a remedy in name only, not in
substance. This alone would, in our opinion, be a sufficient reason
for a court of equity. The injury would, in fact, be irreparable;
and the cases are innumerable in which injunctions are awarded on
this ground.
But, were it even to be admitted that the injunction, in the
first instance, was improperly awarded, and that the original bill
could not be maintained, that would not, we think, materially
affect the case. An amended and supplemental bill, making new
parties, has been filed in the cause, and on that bill, with the
proceedings under it, the decree was pronounced. The question is
whether that bill and those proceedings support the decree.
The case they make, is that the money and
Page 22 U. S. 845
notes of the plaintiffs in the circuit court have been taken
from them without authority, and are in possession of one of the
defendants, who keeps them separate and apart from all other money
and notes. It is admitted that this defendant would be liable for
the whole amount in an action at law, but it is denied that he is
liable in a court of equity.
We think it a case in which a court of equity ought to
interpose, and that there are several grounds on which its
jurisdiction may be placed.
One, which appears to be ample for the purpose, is that a court
will always interpose, to prevent the transfer of a specific
article which, if transferred, will be lost to the owner. Thus, the
holder of negotiable securities, indorsed in the usual manner, if
he has acquired them fraudulently, will be enjoined from
negotiating them because if negotiated, the maker or indorser must
pay them. 1 Mad. 154, 155. Thus, too, a transfer of stock will be
restrained in favour of a person having the real property in the
article. In these cases, the injured party would have his remedy at
law, and the probability that this remedy would be adequate is
stronger in the cases put in the books than in this, where the sum
is so greatly beyond the capacity of an ordinary agent to pay. But
it is the province of a court of equity in such cases to arrest the
injury and prevent the wrong. The remedy is more beneficial and
complete than the law can give. The money of the Bank, if mingled
with the other money
Page 22 U. S. 846
in the Treasury and put into circulation, would be totally lost
to the owners; and the reason for an injunction is at least as
strong in such a case as in the case of a negotiable note.
6. We proceed now to the sixth point made by the appellants,
which is that if any case is made in the bill proper for the
interference of a court of chancery, it is against the State of
Ohio, in which case the circuit court could not exercise
jurisdiction.
The bill is brought, it is said, for the purpose of protecting
the Bank in the exercise of a franchise granted by a law of the
United States, which franchise the State of Ohio asserts a right to
invade, and is about to invade. It prays the aid of the court to
restrain the officers of the State from executing the law. It is,
then, a controversy between the Bank and the State of Ohio. The
interest of the State is direct and immediate, not consequential.
The process of the court, though not directed against the State by
name, acts directly upon it by restraining its officers. The
process, therefore, is substantially, though not in form, against
the State, and the court ought not to proceed without making the
State a party. If this cannot be done, the court cannot take
jurisdiction of the cause.
The full pressure of this argument is felt, and the difficulties
it presents are acknowledged. The direct interest of the State in
the suit, as brought, is admitted; and, had it been in the power of
the Bank to make it a party, perhaps no decree ought to have been
pronounced in the cause until the
Page 22 U. S. 847
State was before the court. But this was not in the power of the
Bank. The Eleventh Amendment of the Constitution has exempted a
State from the suits of citizens of other States, or aliens; and
the very difficult question is to be decided whether, in such a
case, the court may act upon the agents employed by the State, and
on the property in their hands.
Before we try this question by the Constitution, it may not be
time misapplied if we pause for a moment and reflect on the
relative situation of the Union with its members, should the
objection prevail.
A denial of jurisdiction forbids all inquiry into the nature of
the case. It applies to cases perfectly clear in themselves; to
cases where the government is in the exercise of its best
established and most essential powers, as well as to those which
may be deemed questionable. It asserts that the agents of a State,
alleging the authority of a law void in itself, because repugnant
to the Constitution, may arrest the execution of any law in the
United States. It maintains that, if a State shall impose a fine or
penalty on any person employed in the execution of any law of the
United States, it may levy that fine or penalty by a ministerial
officer, without the sanction even of its own courts; and that the
individual, though he perceives the approaching danger, can obtain
no protection from the judicial department of the government. The
carrier of the mail, the collector of the revenue, the marshal of a
district, the recruiting officer, may all be inhibited, under
ruinous
Page 22 U. S. 848
penalties, from the performance of their respective duties; the
warrant of a ministerial officer may authorize the collection of
these penalties, and the person thus obstructed in the performance
of his duty may indeed resort to his action for damages, after the
infliction of the injury, but cannot avail himself of the
preventive justice of the nation to protect him in the performance
of his duties. Each member of the Union is capable, at its will, of
attacking the nation, of arresting its progress at every step, of
acting vigorously and effectually in the execution of its designs,
while the nation stands naked, stripped of its defensive armour,
and incapable of shielding its agent or executing its laws
otherwise than by proceedings which are to take place after the
mischief is perpetrated, and which must often be ineffectual, from
the inability of the agents to make compensation.
These are said to be extreme cases; but the case at bar, had it
been put by way of illustration in argument, might have been termed
an extreme case; and, if a penalty on a revenue officer for
performing his duty be more obviously wrong than a penalty on the
Bank, it is a difference in degree, not in principle. Public
sentiment would be more shocked by the infliction of a penalty on a
public officer for the performance of his duty than by the
infliction of this penalty on a Bank which, while carrying on the
fiscal operations of the government, is also transacting its own
business; but, in both cases, the officer levying the penalty acts
under a void authority, and the power
Page 22 U. S. 849
to restrain him is denied as positively in the one as in the
other.
The distinction between any extreme case and that which has
actually occurred, if, indeed, any difference of principle can be
supposed to exist between them, disappears when considering the
question of jurisdiction; for, if the courts of the United States
cannot rightfully protect the agents who execute every law
authorized by the Constitution from the direct action of State
agents in the collection of penalties, they cannot rightfully
protect those who execute any law.
The question, then, is whether the Constitution of the United
States has provided a tribunal which can peacefully and rightfully
protect those who are employed in carrying into execution the laws
of the Union from the attempts of a particular State to resist the
execution of those laws.
The State of Ohio denies the existence of this power, and
contends that no preventive proceedings whatever, or proceedings
against the very property which may have been seized by the agent
of a State, can be sustained against such agent, because they would
be substantially against the State itself, in violation of the
Eleventh Amendment of the Constitution.
That the courts of the Union cannot entertain a suit brought
against a State by an alien, or the citizen of another State, is
not to be controverted. Is a suit, brought against an individual
for any cause whatever, a suit against a State in the sense of the
Constitution?
Page 22 U. S. 850
The Eleventh Amendment is the limitation of a power supposed to
be granted in the original instrument; and, to understand
accurately the extent of the limitation, it seems proper to define
the power that is limited.
The words of the Constitution, so far as they respect this
question, are,
"The judicial power shall extend to controversies between two or
more States, between a State and citizens of another State, and
between a State and foreign states, citizens, or subjects."
A subsequent clause distributes the power previously granted,
and assigns to the Supreme Court original jurisdiction in those
cases in which "a State shall be a party."
The words of the Eleventh Amendment are,
"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."
The Bank of the United States contends that, in all cases in
which jurisdiction depends on the character of the party, reference
is made to the party on the record, not to one who may be
interested but is not shown by the record to be a party.
The appellants admit that the jurisdiction of the court is not
ousted by any incidental or consequential interest which a State
may have in the decision to be made, but is to be considered as a
party where the decision acts directly and immediately upon the
State through its officers.
Page 22 U. S. 851
If this question were to be determined on the authority of
English decisions, it is believed that no case can be adduced where
any person has been considered as a party who is not made so in the
record. But the Court will not review those decisions, because it
is thought a question growing out of the Constitution of the United
States requires rather an attentive consideration of the words of
that instrument than of the decisions of analogous questions by the
courts of any other country.
Do the provisions, then, of the American Constitution respecting
controversies to which a State may be a party extend, on a fair
construction of that instrument, to cases in which the State is not
a party on the record?
The first in the enumeration, is a controversy between two or
more States.
There are not many questions in which a State would be supposed
to take a deeper or more immediate interest than in those which
decide on the extent of her territory. Yet the Constitution, not
considering the State as a party to such controversies if not
plaintiff or defendant on the record, has expressly given
jurisdiction in those between citizens claiming lands under grants
of different States. If each State, in consequence of the influence
of a decision on her boundary, had been considered by the framers
of the Constitution as a party to that controversy, the express
grant of jurisdiction would have been useless. The grant of it
certainly proves that the Constitution
Page 22 U. S. 852
does not consider the State as a party in such a case.
Jurisdiction is expressly granted in those cases only where
citizens of the same State claim lands under grants of different
States. If the claimants be citizens of different States, the court
takes jurisdiction for that reason. Still, the right of the State
to grant is the essential point in dispute, and in that point the
State is deeply interested. If that interest converts the State
into a party, there is an end of the cause, and the Constitution
will be construed to forbid the circuit courts to take cognizance
of questions to which it was thought necessary expressly to extend
their jurisdiction even when the controversy arose between citizens
of the same State.
We are aware that the application of these cases may be denied
because the title of the State comes on incidentally, and the
appellants admit the jurisdiction of the court where its judgment
does not act directly upon the property or interests of the State;
but we deemed it of some importance to show that the framers of the
Constitution contemplated the distinction between cases in which a
State was interested and those in which it was a party, and made no
provision for a case of interest without being a party on the
record.
In cases where a State is a party on the record, the question of
jurisdiction is decided by inspection. If jurisdiction depend not
on this plain fact, but on the interest of the State, what rule has
the Constitution given by which this interest
Page 22 U. S. 853
is to be measured? If no rule be given, is it to be settled by
the court? If so, the curious anomaly is presented of a court
examining the whole testimony of a cause, inquiring into, and
deciding on, the extent of a State's interest, without having a
right to exercise any jurisdiction in the case. Can this inquiry be
made without the exercise of jurisdiction?
The next in the enumeration is a controversy between a State and
the citizens of another State.
Can this case arise if the State be not a party on the record?
If it can, the question recurs what degree of interest shall be
sufficient to change the parties and arrest the proceedings against
the individual? Controversies respecting boundary have lately
existed between Virginia and Tennessee, between Kentucky and
Tennessee, and now exist between New York and New Jersey. Suppose,
while such a controversy is pending, the collecting officer of one
State should seize property for taxes belonging to a man who
supposes himself to reside in the other State, and who seeks
redress in the federal court of that State in which the officer
resides. The interest of the State is obvious. Yet it is admitted
that, in such a case, the action would lie because the officer
might be treated as a trespasser, and the verdict and judgment
against him would not act directly on the property of the State.
That it would not so act may, perhaps, depend on circumstances. The
officer may retain the amount of the taxes in his hands and, on the
proceedings of the State against him, may plead in bar the judgment
of a court of
Page 22 U. S. 854
competent jurisdiction. If this plea ought to be sustained, and
it is far from being certain that it ought not, the judgment so
pleaded would have acted directly on the revenue of the State in
the hands of its officer. And yet the argument admits that the
action in such a case would be sustained. But, suppose, in such a
case, the party conceiving himself to be injured, instead of
bringing an action sounding in damages, should sue for the specific
thing while yet in possession of the seizing officer. It being
admitted in argument that the action sounding in damages would lie,
we are unable to perceive the line of distinction between that and
the action of detinue. Yet the latter action would claim the
specific article seized for the tax, and would obtain it, should
the seizure be deemed unlawful.
It would be tedious to pursue this part of the inquiry farther,
and it would be useless, because every person will perceive that
the same reasoning is applicable to all the other enumerated
controversies to which a State may be a party. The principle may be
illustrated by a reference to those other controversies where
jurisdiction depends on the party. But before we review them, we
will notice one where the nature of the controversy is in some
degree blended with the character of the party.
If a suit be brought against a foreign minister, the Supreme
Court alone has original jurisdiction, and this is shown on the
record. But, suppose a suit to be brought which affects the
interest of a foreign minister, or by which the person of his
secretary,
Page 22 U. S. 855
or of his servant, is arrested. The minister does not, by the
mere arrest of his secretary or his servant, become a party to this
suit, but the actual defendant pleads to the jurisdiction of the
court, and asserts his privilege. If the suit affects a foreign
minister, it must be dismissed not because he is a party to it, but
because it affects him. The language of the Constitution in the two
cases is different. This Court can take cognizance of all cases
"affecting" foreign ministers, and therefore jurisdiction does not
depend on the party named in the record. But this language changes
when the enumeration proceeds to States. Why this change? The
answer is obvious. In the case of foreign ministers, it was
intended, for reasons which all comprehend, to give the national
courts jurisdiction over all cases by which they were in any manner
affected. In the case of States, whose immediate or remote
interests were mixed up with a multitude of cases, and who might be
affected in an almost infinite variety of ways, it was intended to
give jurisdiction in those cases only to which they were actual
parties.
In proceeding with the cases in which jurisdiction depends on
the character of the party, the first in the enumeration is
"controversies to which the United States shall be a party."
Does this provision extend to the cases where the United States
are not named in the record, but claim, and are actually entitled
to, the whole subject in controversy?
Let us examine this question.
Suits brought by the Postmaster General are
Page 22 U. S. 856
for money due to the United States. The nominal plaintiff has no
interest in the controversy, and the United States are the only
real party. Yet these suits could not be instituted in the courts
of the Union under that clause which gives jurisdiction in all
cases to which the United States are a party, and it was found
necessary to give the court jurisdiction over them as being cases
arising under a law of the United States.
The judicial power of the Union is also extended to
controversies between citizens of different States, and it has been
decided that the character of the parties must be shown on the
record. Does this provision depend on the character of those whose
interest is litigated, or of those who are parties on the record?
In a suit, for example, brought by or against an executor, the
creditors or legatees of his testator are the persons really
concerned in interest; but it has never been suspected that, if the
executor be a resident of another State, the jurisdiction of the
federal courts could be ousted by the fact that the creditors or
legatees were citizens of the same State with the opposite party.
The universally received construction in this case is that
jurisdiction is neither given nor ousted by the relative situation
of the parties concerned in interest, but by the relative situation
of the parties named on the record. Why is this construction
universal? No case can be imagined in which the existence of an
interest out of the party on the record is more unequivocal than in
that which has been just stated. Why, then, is it universally
admitted that this interest in
Page 22 U. S. 857
no manner affects the jurisdiction of the court? The plain and
obvious answer is because the jurisdiction of the court depends not
upon this interest, but upon the actual party on the record.
Were a State to be the sole legatee, it will not, we presume, be
alleged that the jurisdiction of the court, in a suit against the
executor, would be more affected by this fact than by the fact that
any other person, not suable in the courts of the Union, was the
sole legatee. Yet, in such a case, the court would decide directly
and immediately on the interest of the State.
This principle might be further illustrated by showing that
jurisdiction, where it depends on the character of the party, is
never conferred in consequence of the existence of an interest in a
party not named, and by showing that, under the distributive clause
of the second section of the third article, the Supreme Court could
never take original jurisdiction in consequence of an interest in a
party not named in the record.
But the principle seems too well established to require that
more time should be devoted to it. It may, we think, be laid down
as a rule which admits of no exception that, in all cases where
jurisdiction depends on the party, it is the party named in the
record. Consequently, the Eleventh Amendment, which restrains the
jurisdiction granted by the Constitution over suits against States,
is, of necessity, limited to those suits in which a State is a
party on the record. The amendment has its full effect if the
Constitution be construed as it
Page 22 U. S. 858
would have been construed had the jurisdiction of the court
never been extended to suits brought against a State by the
citizens of another State or by aliens.
The State not being a party on the record, and the court having
jurisdiction over those who are parties on the record, the true
question is not one of jurisdiction, but whether, in the exercise
of its jurisdiction, the court ought to make a decree against the
defendants; whether they are to be considered as having a real
interest, or as being only nominal parties.
In pursuing the arrangement which the appellants have made for
the argument of the cause, this question has already been
considered. The responsibility of the officers of the State for the
money taken out of the Bank was admitted, and it was acknowledged
that this responsibility might be enforced by the proper action.
The objection is to its being enforced against the specific article
taken, and by the decree of this Court. But it has been shown, we
think, that an action of detinue might be maintained for that
article if the Bank had possessed the means of describing it, and
that the interest of the State would not have been an obstacle to
the suit of the Bank against the individual in possession of it.
The judgment in such a suit might have been enforced had the
article been found in possession of the individual defendant. It
has been shown that the danger of its being parted with, of its
being lost to the plaintiff, and the necessity of a discovery,
justified the application to a court of equity. It was in a
Page 22 U. S. 859
court of equity alone that the relief would be real,
substantial, and effective. The parties must certainly have a real
interest in the case, since their personal responsibility is
acknowledged, and, if denied, could be demonstrated.
It was proper, then, to make a decree against the defendants in
the circuit court if the law of the State of Ohio be repugnant to
the Constitution, or to a law of the United States made in
pursuance thereof, so as to furnish no authority to those who took,
or to those who received, the money for which this suit was
instituted.
7. Is that law unconstitutional?
This point was argued with great ability, and decided by this
Court, after mature and deliberate consideration in the case of
M'Culloch v. Maryland. A revision of that opinion has been
requested, and many considerations combine to induce a review of
it.
The foundation of the argument in favour of the right of a State
to tax the Bank is laid in the supposed character of that
institution. The argument supposes the corporation to have been
originated for the management of an individual concern, to be
founded upon contract between individuals, having private trade and
private profit for its great end and principal object.
If these premises were true, the conclusion drawn from them
would be inevitable. This mere private corporation, engaged in its
own business, with its own views, would certainly be subject to the
taxing power of the State, as any individual would be; and the
casual circumstance of its being
Page 22 U. S. 860
employed by the government in the transaction of its fiscal
affairs would no more exempt its private business from the
operation of that power than it would exempt the private business
of any individual employed in the same manner. But the premises are
not true. The Bank is not considered as a private corporation whose
principal object is individual trade and individual profit, but as
a public corporation, created for public and national purposes.
That the mere business of banking is, in its own nature, a private
business, and may be carried on by individuals or companies having
no political connexion with the government, is admitted; but the
Bank is not such an individual or company. It was not created for
its own sake, or for private purposes. It has never been supposed
that Congress could create such a corporation. The whole opinion of
the court in the case of
M'Culloch v. Maryland is founded
on, and sustained by, the idea that the Bank is an instrument which
is "necessary and proper for carrying into effect the powers vested
in the government of the United States." It is not an instrument
which the government found ready made, and has supposed to be
adapted to its purposes, but one which was created in the form in
which it now appears for national purposes only. It is undoubtedly
capable of transacting private, as well as public, business. While
it is the great instrument by which the fiscal operations of the
government are effected, it is also trading with individuals for
its own advantage. The appellants endeavour to distinguish between
this trade and its
Page 22 U. S. 861
agency for the public, between its Banking operations and those
qualities which it possesses in common with every corporation, such
as individuality, immortality, &c. While they seem to admit the
right to preserve this corporate existence, they deny the right to
protect it in its trade and business.
If there be anything in this distinction, it would tend to show
that so much of the act as incorporates the Bank is constitutional,
but so much of it as authorizes its Banking operations is
unconstitutional. Congress can make the inanimate body, and employ
the machine as a depository of, and vehicle for, the conveyance of
the treasure of the nation, if it be capable of being so employed,
but cannot breathe into it the vital spirit which alone can bring
it into useful existence.
Let this distinction be considered.
Why is it that Congress can incorporate or create a Bank? This
question was answered in the case of
M'Culloch v.
Maryland. It is an instrument which is "necessary and proper"
for carrying on the fiscal operations of government. Can this
instrument, on any rational calculation, effect its object unless
it be endowed with that faculty of lending and dealing in money
which is conferred by its charter? If it can, if it be as competent
to the purposes of government without as with this faculty, there
will be much difficulty in sustaining that essential part of the
charter. If it cannot, then this faculty is necessary to the
legitimate operations of government, and was constitutionally and
rightfully engrafted on the institution. It is, in that view of the
subject,
Page 22 U. S. 862
the vital part of the corporation; it is its soul; and the right
to preserve it originates in the same principle with the right to
preserve the skeleton or body which it animates. The distinction
between destroying what is denominated the corporate franchise and
destroying its vivifying principle, is precisely as incapable of
being maintained as a distinction between the right to sentence a
human being to death and a right to sentence him to a total
privation of sustenance during life. Deprive a Bank of its trade
and business, which is its sustenance, and its immortality, if it
have that property, will be a very useless attribute.
This distinction, then, has no real existence. To tax its
faculties, its trade, and occupation, is to tax the Bank itself. To
destroy or preserve the one is to destroy or preserve the
other.
It is urged that Congress has not, by this act of incorporation,
created the faculty of trading in money; that it had anterior
existence, and may be carried on by a private individual or company
as well as by a corporation. As this profession or business may be
taxed, regulated, or restrained, when conducted by an individual,
it may, likewise, be taxed, regulated, or restrained, when
conducted by a corporation.
The general correctness of these propositions need not be
controverted. Their particular application to the question before
the court, is alone to be considered. We do not maintain that the
corporate character of the Bank exempts its operations from the
action of State authority. If an individual were to be endowed with
the same faculties,
Page 22 U. S. 863
for the same purposes, he would be equally protected in the
exercise of those faculties. The operations of the Bank are
believed not only to yield the compensation for its services to the
government, but to be essential to the performance of those
services. Those operations give its value to the currency in which
all the transactions of the government are conducted. They are,
therefore, inseparably connected with those transactions. They
enable the Bank to render those services to the nation for which it
was created, and are, therefore, of the very essence of its
character, as national instruments. The business of the Bank
constitutes its capacity to perform its functions, as a machine for
the money transactions of the government. Its corporate character
is merely an incident, which enables it to transact that business
more beneficially.
Were the Secretary of the Treasury to be authorized by law to
appoint agencies throughout the Union, to perform the public
functions of the Bank, and to be endowed with its faculties, as a
necessary auxiliary to those functions, the operations of those
agents would be as exempt from the control of the States as the
Bank, and not more so. If, instead of the Secretary of the
Treasury, a distinct office were to be created for the purpose,
filled by a person who should receive, as a compensation for his
time, labour, and expense, the profits of the banking business,
instead of other emoluments, to be drawn from the Treasury, which
banking business was essential to the operations of the government,
would each State in the Union possess a right to
Page 22 U. S. 864
control these operations? The question on which this right would
depend must always be: are these faculties so essential to the
fiscal operations of the government, as to authorize Congress to
confer them? Let this be admitted, and the question, does the right
to preserve them exist? must always be answered in the
affirmative.
Congress was of opinion that these faculties were necessary to
enable the Bank to perform the services which are exacted from it,
and for which it was created. This was certainly a question proper
for the consideration of the national legislature. But, were it now
to undergo revision, who would have the hardihood to say that,
without the employment of a banking capital, those services could
be performed? That the exercise of these faculties greatly
facilitates the fiscal operations of the government is too obvious
for controversy, and who will venture to affirm that the
suppression of them would not materially affect those operations,
and essentially impair, if not totally destroy, the utility of the
machine to the government? The currency which it circulates, by
means of its trade with individuals, is believed to make it a more
fit instrument for the purposes of government than it could
otherwise be, and if this be true, the capacity to carry on this
trade is a faculty indispensable to the character and objects of
the institution.
The appellants admit that, if this faculty be necessary, to make
the Bank a fit instrument for the purposes of the government,
Congress possesses the same power to protect the machine in
Page 22 U. S. 865
this as in its direct fiscal operations; but they deny that it
is necessary to those purposes, and insist that it is granted
solely for the benefit of the members of the corporation. Were this
proposition to be admitted, all the consequences which are drawn
from it might follow. But it is not admitted. The court has already
stated its conviction that, without this capacity to trade with
individuals, the Bank would be a very defective instrument, when
considered with a single view to its fitness for the purposes of
government. On this point, the whole argument rests.
It is contended that, admitting Congress to possess the power,
this exemption ought to have been expressly asserted in the act of
incorporation, and, not being expressed, ought not to be implied by
the court.
It is not unusual for a legislative act to involve consequences
which are not expressed. An officer, for example, is ordered to
arrest an individual. It is not necessary, nor is it usual, to say
that he shall not be punished for obeying this order. His security
is implied in the order itself. It is no unusual thing for an act
of Congress to imply, without expressing, this very exemption from
State control, which is said to be so objectionable in this
instance. The collectors of the revenue, the carriers of the mail,
the mint establishment, and all those institutions which are public
in their nature are examples in point. It has never been doubted
that all who are employed in them are protected, while in the line
of duty; and yet this protection is not expressed in any act of
Congress. It is incidental
Page 22 U. S. 866
to, and is implied in the several acts by which these
institutions are created, and is secured to the individuals
employed in them by the judicial power alone; that is the judicial
power is the instrument employed by the government in administering
this security.
That department has no will, in any case. If the sound
construction of the act be that it exempts the trade of the Bank,
as being essential to the character of a machine necessary to the
fiscal operations of the government, from the control of the
States, courts are as much bound to give it that construction as if
the exemption had been established in express terms. Judicial
power, as contradistinguished from the power of the laws, has no
existence. Courts are the mere instruments of the law, and can will
nothing. When they are said to exercise a discretion, it is a mere
legal discretion, a discretion to be exercised in discerning the
course prescribed by law; and, when that is discerned, it is the
duty of the court to follow it. Judicial power is never exercised
for the purpose of giving effect to the will of the judge, always
for the purpose of giving effect to the will of the legislature;
or, in other words, to the will of the law.
The appellants rely greatly on the distinction between the Bank
and the public institutions, such as the mint or the post office.
The agents in those offices are, it is said, officers of
government, and are excluded from a seat in Congress. Not so the
directors of the Bank. The connexion of the government with the
Bank is likened to that with contractors.
It will not be contended that the directors, or
Page 22 U. S. 867
other officers of the Bank are officers of government. But it is
contended that, were their resemblance to contractors more perfect
than it is the right of the State to control its operations, if
those operations be necessary to its character, as a machine
employed by the government, cannot be maintained. Can a contractor
for supplying a military post with provisions be restrained from
making purchases within any State, or from transporting the
provisions to the place at which the troops were stationed? Or
could he be fined or taxed for doing so? We have not yet heard
these questions answered in the affirmative. It is true that the
property of the contractor may be taxed, as the property of other
citizens; and so may the local property of the Bank. But we do not
admit that the act of purchasing, or of conveying the articles
purchased, can be under State control.
If the trade of the Bank be essential to its character, as a
machine for the fiscal operations of the government, that trade
must be as exempt from State control as the actual conveyance of
the public money. Indeed, a tax bears upon the whole machine -- as
well upon the faculty of collecting and transmitting the money of
the nation as on that of discounting the notes of individuals. No
distinction is taken between them.
Considering the capacity of carrying on the trade of banking, as
an important feature in the character of this corporation, which
was necessary to make it a fit instrument for the objects for which
it was created, the court adheres to its decision in the case of
M'Culloch against The State
Page 22 U. S. 868
of Maryland, and is of opinion that the act of the
State of Ohio, which is certainly much more objectionable than that
of the State of Maryland, is repugnant to a law of the United
States, made in pursuance of the Constitution, and therefore void.
The counsel for the appellants are too intelligent, and have too
much self-respect, to pretend that a void act can afford any
protection to the officers who execute it. They expressly admit
that it cannot.
It being then shown, we think conclusively, that the defendants
could derive neither authority nor protection from the act which
they executed, and that this suit is not against the State of Ohio
within the view of the Constitution, the State being no party on
the record, the only real question in the cause is whether the
record contains sufficient matter to justify the court in
pronouncing a decree against the defendants? That this question is
attended with great difficulty has not been concealed or denied.
But when we reflect that the defendants Osborne and Harper are
incontestably liable for the full amount of the money taken out of
the Bank; that the defendant Currie is also responsible for the sum
received by him, it having come to his hands with full knowledge of
the unlawful means by which it was acquired; that the defendant
Sullivan is also responsible for the sum specifically delivered to
him, with notice that it was the property of the Bank, unless the
form of having made an entry on the books of the Treasury can
countervail the fact that it was, in truth, kept untouched, in a
trunk, by itself, as a deposit, to await
Page 22 U. S. 869
the event of the pending suit respecting it; we may lay it down
as a proposition safely to be affirmed that all the defendants in
the cause were liable in an action at law for the amount of this
decree. If the original injunction was properly awarded, for the
reasons stated in the preceding part of this opinion, the money,
having reached the hands of all those to whom it afterwards came
with notice of that injunction, might be pursued so long as it
remained a distinct deposit, neither mixed with the money of the
Treasury nor put into circulation. Were it to be admitted that the
original injunction was not properly awarded, still the amended and
supplemental bill, which brings before the court all the parties
who had been concerned in the transaction, was filed after the
cause of action had completely accrued. The money of the Bank had
been taken, without authority, by some of the defendants, and was
detained by the only person who was not an original wrongdoer, in a
specific form, so that detinue might have been maintained for it
had it been in the power of the Bank to prove the facts which are
necessary to establish the identity of the property sued for. Under
such circumstances, we think, a court of equity may afford its aid
on the ground that a discovery is necessary, and also on the same
principle that an injunction issues to restrain a person who has
fraudulently obtained possession of negotiable notes from putting
them into circulation; on a person having the apparent ownership of
stock really belonging to another, from transferring it. The suit,
then, might be as well sustained in a
Page 22 U. S. 870
court of equity as in a court of law, and the objection that the
interests of the State are committed to subordinate agents, if
true, is the unavoidable consequence of exemption from being sued
-- of sovereignty. The interests of the United States are sometimes
committed to subordinate agents. It was the case in
Hoyt v.
Gelston, in the case of
The Apollon, and in the case
of
Doddridge's Lessee v. Thompson and Wright, and in many
others. An independent foreign sovereign cannot be sued, and does
not appear in court. But a friend of the court comes in, and, by
suggestion, gives it to understand that his interests are involved
in the controversy. The interests of the sovereign, in such a case
and in every other where he chooses to assert them under the name
of the real party to the cause, are as well defended as if he were
a party to the record. But his pretensions, where they are not well
founded, cannot arrest the right of a party having a right to the
thing for which he sues. Where the right is in the plaintiff, and
the possession in the defendant, the inquiry cannot be stopped by
the mere assertion of title in a sovereign. The court must proceed
to investigate the assertion and examine the title. In the case at
bar, the tribunal established by the Constitution for the purpose
of deciding, ultimately, in all cases of this description, had
solemnly determined that a State law imposing a tax on the Bank of
the United States was unconstitutional and void, before the wrong
was committed for which this suit was brought.
We think, then that there is no error in the decree
Page 22 U. S. 871
of the circuit court for the district of Ohio, so far as it
directs restitution of the specific sum of ninety-eight thousand
dollars, which was taken out of the Bank unlawfully, and was in the
possession of the defendant Samuel Sullivan when the injunction was
awarded in September, 1820, to restrain him from paying it away or
in any manner using it; and so far as it directs the payment of the
remaining sum of two thousand dollars by the defendants, Ralph
Osborne and John L. Harper; but that the same is erroneous so far
as respects the interest on the coin, part of the said ninety-eight
thousand dollars, it being the opinion of this Court that, while
the parties were restrained by the authority of the circuit court
from using it, they ought not to be charged with interest. The
decree of the circuit court for the district of Ohio is affirmed as
to the said sums of ninety-eight thousand dollars and two thousand
dollars, and reversed, as to the residue.
MR. JUSTICE JOHNSON.
The argument in this cause presents three questions: 1. Has
Congress granted to the Bank of the United States, an unlimited
right of suing in the courts of the United States? 2. Could
Congress constitutionally grant such a right? and 3. Has the power
of the court been legally and constitutionally exercised in this
suit?
I have very little doubt that the public mind will be easily
reconciled to the decision of the Court here rendered, for, whether
necessary or unnecessary originally, a state of things has now
grown up in some of the States which renders all
Page 22 U. S. 872
the protection necessary that the general government can give to
this Bank. The policy of the decision is obvious, that is, if the
Bank is to be sustained; and few will bestow upon its legal
correctness, the reflection that it is necessary to test it by the
Constitution and laws, under which it is rendered.
The Bank of the United States is now identified with the
administration of the national government. It is an immense
machine, economically and beneficially applied to the fiscal
transactions of the nation. Attempts have been made to dispense
with it, and they have failed; serious and very weighty doubts have
been entertained of its constitutionality, but they have been
abandoned; and it is now become the functionary that collects, the
depository that holds, the vehicle that transports, the guard that
protects, and the agent that distributes and pays away, the
millions that pass annually through the national Treasury; and all
this not only without expense to the government, but after paying a
large bonus, and sustaining actual annual losses to a large amount;
furnishing the only possible means of embodying the most ample
security for so immense a charge.
Had its effects, however, and the views of its framers been
confined exclusively to its fiscal uses, it is more than probable
that this suit, and the laws in which it originated, would never
have had existence. But it is well known that with that object was
combined another, of a very general, and not less important
character.
The expiration of the charter of the former Bank led to State
creations of Banks; each new Bank increased
Page 22 U. S. 873
the facilities of creating others, and the necessities of the
general government, both to make use of the State Banks for their
deposits and to borrow largely of all who would lend to them,
produced that rage for multiplying Banks which, aided by the
emoluments derived to the States in their creation and the many
individual incentives which they developed, soon inundated the
country with a new description of bills of credit, against which it
was obvious that the provisions of the Constitution opposed no
adequate inhibition.
A specie-paying Bank, with an overwhelming capital, and the
whole aid of the government deposits, presented the only resource
to which the government could resort to restore that power over the
currency of the country which the framers of the Constitution
evidently intended to give to Congress alone. But this necessarily
involved a restraint upon individual cupidity and the exercise of
State power, and, in the nature of things, it was hardly possible
for the mighty effort necessary to put down an evil spread so wide,
and arrived to such maturity, to be made without embodying against
it an immense moneyed combination, which could not fail of making
its influence to be felt wherever its claimances could reach or its
industry and wealth be brought to operate.
I believe that the good sense of a people who know that they
govern themselves and feel that they have no interests distinct
from those of their government would readily concede to the Bank,
thus circumstanced, some if not all the rights here
Page 22 U. S. 874
contended for. But I cannot persuade myself that they have been
conceded in the extent which this decision affirms. Whatever might
be proper to be done by an amendment of the Constitution, this
Court is only, at present, expounding its existing provisions.
In the present instance, I cannot persuade myself that the
Constitution sanctions the vesting of the right of action in this
Bank, in cases in which the privilege is exclusively personal, or
in any case, merely on the ground that a question might possibly be
raised in it involving the Constitution or constitutionality of a
law of the United States.
When laws were heretofore passed for raising a revenue by a duty
on stamped paper, the tax was quietly acquiesced in,
notwithstanding it entrenched so closely on the unquestionable
power of the States over the law of contracts; but had the same law
which declared void contracts not written upon stamped paper,
declared that every person holding such paper should be entitled to
bring his action "in any circuit court" of the United States, it is
confidently believed that there could have been but one opinion on
the constitutionality of such a provision. The whole jurisdiction
over contracts might thus have been taken from the State courts and
conferred upon those of the United States. Nor would the evil have
rested there; by a similar exercise of power, imposing a stamp on
deeds generally, jurisdiction over the territory of the State,
whoever might be parties, even between citizens of the same State
-- jurisdiction of suits instituted for the recovery of
legacies
Page 22 U. S. 875
or distributive portions of intestates' estates -- jurisdiction,
in fact, over almost every possible case, might be transferred to
the courts of the United States. Wills may be required to be
executed on stamped paper; taxes may be, and have been, imposed
upon legacies and distributions; and, in all such cases, there is
not only a possibility, but a probability, that a question may
arise involving the constitutionality, construction, &c. of a
law of the United States. If the circumstance that the questions
which the case involves are to determine its character, whether
those questions be made in the case or not, then every case here
alluded to may as well be transferred to the jurisdiction of the
United States as those to which this Bank is a party. But, still
farther, as was justly insisted in argument, there is not a tract
of land in the United States, acquired under laws of the United
States, whatever be the number of mesne transfers that it may have
undergone, over which the jurisdiction of the courts of the United
States might not be extended by Congress upon the very principle on
which the right of suit in this Bank is here maintained. Nor is the
case of the alien, put in argument, at all inapplicable. The one
acquires its character of individual property, as the other does
his political existence, under a law of the United States; and
there is not a suit which may be instituted to recover the one, nor
an action of ejectment to be brought by the other, in which a right
acquired under a law of the United States does not lie as
essentially at the basis of the right of action, as in the suits
brought by this Bank.
Page 22 U. S. 876
It is no answer to the argument to say that the law of the
United States is but ancillary to the Constitution, as to the
alien; for the Constitution could do nothing for him without the
law, and, whether the question be upon law or Constitution, still,
if the possibility of its arising be a sufficient circumstance to
bring it within the jurisdiction of the United States courts, that
possibility exists with regard to every suit affected by alien
disabilities; to real actions in time of peace -- to all actions in
time of war.
I cannot persuade myself, then, that, with these palpable
consequences in view, Congress ever could have intended to vest in
the Bank of the United States the right of suit to the extent here
claimed. And, notwithstanding the confidence with which this point
has been argued, an examination of the terms of the act, and a
consideration of them with a view to the context, will be found to
leave it by no means a clear case that such is the legal meaning of
the act of incorporation. To be sure, if the act had simply and
substantively given the right "to sue and be sued in the circuit
courts of the United States," there could have been no question
made upon the construction of those words. But such is not the
fact. The words are not that the Bank shall be made able and
capable in law to sue, &c., but that it shall, "by a certain
name," be made able and capable in law to do the various acts
therein enumerated. And these words, under the force of which this
suit is instituted, are found in the ordinary incorporating clause
of this act, a clause
Page 22 U. S. 877
which is well understood to be, and which this Court, in the
case of
Deveaux, has recognised to be, little more than
the mere commonplace or formula of such an act. The name of a
corporation is the symbol of its personal existence; a misnomer
there is fatal to a suit (and still more fatal as to other
transactions). By the incorporating clause, a name is given it,
and, with that name, a place among created beings; then usually
follows an enumeration of the ordinary acts in which it may
personate a natural man; and among those acts, the right to sue and
be sued, of which the court, in
Deveaux's Case, very
correctly remarks that it is
"a power which if not incident to a corporation, is conferred by
every incorporating act, and is not understood to enlarge the
jurisdiction of any particular court, but to give a capacity to the
corporation to appear as a corporation in any court which would by
law have cognizance of the cause if brought by individuals."
With this qualification, the clause in question will be
construed as an enumeration of incidents, instead of a string of
enactments; and such a construction is strongly countenanced by the
concluding sentence of the section; for, after running through the
whole routine of powers, most of which are unquestionably
incidental, and needed no enactment to vest them, it concludes
thus: "and generally to do and execute all and singular the acts,
matters and things which to them it shall and may appertain to do."
And, in going over the act, it will be found that whenever it is
contemplated to vest a power not incidental, it is done by a
specific provision, made
Page 22 U. S. 878
the subject of a distinct clause; such is that power to transact
the business of the loan office of the United States. And, indeed,
there is one section of the act which strikingly exhibits the light
in which the lawmakers considered the incorporating clause. I mean
the tenth, which, notwithstanding that the same clause in the
seventh section, which is supposed to confer this sweeping power to
sue, confers also, in terms equally comprehensive, the power to
make laws for the institution, and "to do and execute all and
singular the matters and things, which to them it shall and may
appertain to do," contains an enactment in the following words:
"That they shall have power to appoint such officers, clerks,
and servants, under them, for executing the business of the
corporation, and to allow them such compensation for their services
respectively, as shall be reasonable; and shall be capable of
exercising such other powers and authorities for the well governing
and ordering the officers of the said corporation, as shall be
prescribed by the laws, regulations, and ordinances, of the
same;"
a section which would have been altogether unnecessary had the
seventh section been considered as enacting, instead of enumerating
and limiting. I consider the incorporating clause, then, not as
purporting the absolute investment of any power, but as the usual
and formal declaration of the extent to which this artificial
should personate the natural person, in the transactions incident
to ordinary life, or to the peculiar objects of its creation, and
therefore not vesting the right to sue in the courts of the
United
Page 22 U. S. 879
States, but only the right of personating the natural man in the
courts of the United States, as it might, upon general principles,
in any other courts of competent jurisdiction. And this, I say, is
consonant to the decision in
Deveaux's Case, and sustained
by abundant evidence on the face of the act itself. Indeed, any
other view of the effect of the section converts some of its
provisions into absolute nonsense.
It has been argued, and I have no objection to admit that the
phraseology of this act has been varied from that incorporating the
former Bank, with a view to meet the decision in
Deveaux's
Case. But it is perfectly obvious that, in the prosecution of
that design, the purport of
Deveaux's Case has been
misapprehended. The court there decide that the jurisdiction of the
United States depended (1) on the character of the cause, (2) on
the character of the parties; that the Judiciary Act confined the
jurisdiction of the circuit courts to the second class of cases,
and the incorporating act contained no words that purported to
carry it further. Whether the legislative power of the United
States could extend it as far as is here insisted on, or what words
would be adequate to that purpose, the case neither called on the
court to decide nor has it proposed to decide. If anything is to be
inferred from that decision on those points, it is unfavourable to
the sufficiency of the words inserted in the present act. For, the
argument of the court intimates that, where the legislature propose
to give jurisdiction to the courts of the United States, they
do
Page 22 U. S. 880
it by a separate provision, as in the case of the action of debt
for exceeding the sum authorized to be loaned. And on the words of
the incorporating section, it makes this remark,
"that it is not understood to enlarge the jurisdiction of any
particular court, but to give a capacity to the corporation to
appear as a corporation in any court, which would by law have
cognizance of the cause if brought by individuals. If jurisdiction
is given by this clause to the federal courts, it is equally given
to all courts having original jurisdiction, and for all sums,
however small they be."
Now, the difference of phraseology between the former act and
the present, in the clause in question, is this: the former has
these words, "may sue and be sued, &c. in courts of record or
any other place whatsoever;" the present act has substituted these
words, "in all State courts having competent jurisdiction, and in
any Circuit Court of the United States." Now, the defect here could
not have been the want of adequate words, had the intent appeared
to have been, to enlarge the jurisdiction of any particular court.
For, if the circuit courts were courts of record, the right of suit
given was as full as any other words could have made it. But, as
the court in its own words assigns the ground of its decision, the
clause could not have been intended to enlarge the jurisdiction of
the State courts, and therefore could not have been intended to
enlarge that of the federal courts, much less to have extended it
to the smallest sum possible. Therefore it concludes that the
clause is one of mere enumeration, containing,
Page 22 U. S. 881
as it expresses it, "the powers which, if not incident to a
corporation, are conferred by every incorporating act, and are not
understood to enlarge," &c. If, then, this variation had in
view the object which is attributed to it, the words intended to
answer that object have been inserted so unhappily as to neutralize
its influence; but, I think it much more consistent with the
respect due to the draftsman, who was known to have been an able
lawyer, to believe that, with such an object in view, he would have
pursued a much more plain and obvious course, and given it a
distinct and unequivocal section to itself, or at least have worded
it with more marked attention. This opinion is further supported by
considering the absurdities that a contrary opinion would lead
to.
A literal translation of the words in question is impossible.
Nothing but inconsistencies present themselves if we attempt to
apply it without a reference to the laws and Constitution of the
United States, forming together the judicial system of the Union.
The words are, "may sue and be sued, &c., in any State court
having competent jurisdiction, and in any circuit court of the
United States." But why should one member of the passage be
entitled to an enacting effect, and not the residue? Yet, who will
impute to the legislature or the draftsman an intention to vest a
jurisdiction by these words in a State court? I do not speak of the
positive effect, since the failure of one enactment, because of a
want either of power to give or capacity to receive, will not
control
Page 22 U. S. 882
the effect as to any other enactment. I speak of the intent or
understanding of the lawmaker, who must have used these words, as
applicable to the State courts, in an enacting sense if we suppose
him to have used them in that sense as to the courts of the United
States. Yet I should be very unwilling to impute to him, or to the
legislature of the country, ignorance of the fact that such an
enactment, if it was one, could not give a right to sue in the
State courts if the right did not exist without it. Or, in fact
that such enactment was altogether unnecessary if the legislative
power, which must give effect to such an enactment, was adequate to
constitute effectually this body corporate.
But why should this supposed enactment go still farther, and
confer the capacity to be sued, as well as to sue, either in the
courts of the one jurisdiction or the other? Did the lawgivers
suppose that this corporation would not be subject to suit without
an express enactment for that purpose also? Or was it guilty of the
more unaccountable mistake of supposing that it could confer upon
individuals, indiscriminately, this privilege of bringing suits in
the courts of the United States against the Bank? -- that, too, for
a cause of action originating, say, in work and labour, or in a
special action on the case, or perhaps, ejectment to try title to
land mortgaged by a person not having the estate in him, or
purchased of a tortious holder for a banking house? I cannot
acquiesce in the supposition; and yet, if one is an enactment,
and
Page 22 U. S. 883
takes effect as such, they are all enactments, for they are
uttered
eodem flatu.
My own conclusion is that none of them are enactments, but all
merely declaratory; or, at most, only enacting, in the words of the
court, in the case of
Deveaux, that the Bank may, by its
corporate name and metaphysical existence, bring suit, or personate
the natural man, in the courts specified, as though it were in fact
a natural person; that is, in those cases in which, according to
existing laws, suits may be brought in the courts specified
respectively.
Indeed, a more unrestricted sense given to the words of the act
could not be carried into execution; a literal exercise of the
right of suit supposed to be granted would be impossible. Can the
Bank of the United States be sued (in the literal language of the
act) "in any circuit court of the United States?" -- in that of
Ohio, or Louisiana, for instance? Locality, in this respect, cannot
be denied to such an institution, or at least it is only
incidentally, by distress infinite, or attachment, for instance,
that such a suit could be maintained. Nor, on the other hand, could
the Bank sue literally in any circuit court of the United States.
It must, of necessity, be confined to the circuit court of that
district in which the defendant resides, or is to be found. And
thus, at last, we circumscribe these general words by reference to
the judicial system of the United States as it existed at the time.
And why the same restriction should not have been imposed as to
amount which is imposed as to all other suitors,
Page 22 U. S. 884
to-wit, 500 dollars and upwards, is to me inscrutable except on
the supposition that this clause was not intended for any other
purpose than that which I have supposed. The United States have
suffered no other suitors to institute a suit in its courts for
less than that sum, and it is hard to conceive why the Bank should
be permitted to institute a suit to recover, if it will, a single
cent. This consideration is expressly drawn into notice by this
Court, in the case of
Deveaux, and if it was entitled to
weight then, in fixing the construction of the incorporating
section, I see no reason why it should be unnoticed now.
I will dwell no longer on a point which is in fact secondary and
subordinate, for if Congress can vest this jurisdiction, and the
people will it, the act may be amended and the jurisdiction vested.
I next proceed to consider more distinctly the constitutional
question on the right to vest the jurisdiction to the extent here
contended for.
And here I must observe that I altogether misunderstood the
counsel who argued the cause for the plaintiff in error if any of
them contended against the jurisdiction on the ground that the
cause involved questions depending on general principles. No one
can question that the court which has jurisdiction of the principal
question must exercise jurisdiction over every question. Neither
did I understand them as denying that, if Congress could confer on
the circuit courts appellate, they could confer original,
jurisdiction. The argument went to deny the right to assume
jurisdiction on a mere hypothesis. It was one of
Page 22 U. S. 885
description, identity, definition; they contended that until a
question involving the construction or administration of the laws
of the United States did actually arise, the
casus federis
was not presented on which the Constitution authorized the
government to take to itself the jurisdiction of the cause. That,
until such a question actually arose, until such a case was
actually presented,
non constat, but the cause depended
upon general principles, exclusively cognizable in the State
courts; that neither the letter nor the spirit of the Constitution
sanctioned the assumption of jurisdiction on the part of the United
States at any previous stage.
And this doctrine has my hearty concurrence in its general
application. A very simple case may be stated to illustrate its
bearing on the question of jurisdiction between the two
governments. By virtue of treaties with Great Britain, aliens
holding lands were exempted from alien disabilities and made
capable of holding, aliening, and transmitting their estates in
common with natives. But why should the claimants of such lands to
all eternity be vested with the privilege of bringing an original
suit in the courts of the United States? It is true, a question
might be made upon the effect of the treaty on the rights claimed
by or through the alien, but until that question does arise, nay,
until a decision against the right takes place, what end has the
United States to subserve in claiming jurisdiction of the cause?
Such is the present law of the United States, as to all but this
one distinguished party; and that law was
Page 22 U. S. 886
passed when the doctrines, the views, and ends of the
Constitution were at least as well understood as they are at
present. I attach much importance to the twenty-fifth section of
the Judiciary Act not only as a measure of policy, but as a
contemporaneous exposition of the Constitution on this subject --
as an exposition of the words of the Constitution, deduced from a
knowledge of its views and policy. The object was to secure a
uniform construction and a steady execution of the laws of the
Union. Except as far as this purpose might require, the general
government had no interest in stripping the State courts of their
jurisdiction; their policy would rather lead to avoid incumbering
themselves with it. Why, then, should it be vested with
jurisdiction in a thousand causes on a mere possibility of a
question's arising, which question, at last, does not occur in one
of them? Indeed, I cannot perceive how such a reach of jurisdiction
can be asserted without changing the reading of the Constitution on
this subject altogether. The judicial power extends only to "cases
arising" -- that is, actual, not potential cases. The framers of
the Constitution knew better than to trust such a
quo
minus fiction in the hands of any government.
I have never understood anyone to question the right of Congress
to vest original jurisdiction in its inferior courts in cases
coming properly within the description of "cases arising under the
laws of the United States," but surely it must first be ascertained
in some proper mode that the cases are such as the Constitution
describes. By possibility, a constitutional question may be raised
in
Page 22 U. S. 887
any conceivable suit that may be instituted; but that would be a
very insufficient ground for assuming universal jurisdiction, and
yet that a question has been made, as that, for instance, on the
Bank charter, and may again be made, seems still worse as a ground
for extending jurisdiction. For, the folly of raising it again in
every suit instituted by the Bank is too great to suppose it
possible. Yet this supposition, and this alone, would seem to
justify vesting the Bank with an unlimited right to sue in the
federal courts. Indeed, I cannot perceive how, with ordinary
correctness, a question can be said to be involved in a cause which
only may possibly be made, but which, in fact, is the very last
question that there is any probability will be made -- or rather,
how that can any longer be denominated a question which has been
put out of existence by a solemn decision. The Constitution
presumes that the decisions of the supreme tribunal will be
acquiesced in; and after disposing of the few questions which the
Constitution refers to it, all the minor questions belong properly
to the State jurisdictions, and never were intended to be taken
away in mass.
Efforts have been made to fix the precise sense of the
Constitution when it vests jurisdiction in the general government
in "cases arising under the laws of the United States." To me, the
question appears susceptible of a very simple solution -- that all
depends upon the identity of the case supposed -- according to
which idea, a case may be such in its very existence, or it may
become such in its progress. An action may "live, move, and
have
Page 22 U. S. 888
its being," in a law of the United States; such is that given
for the violation of a patent right, and four or five different
actions given by this act of incorporation, particularly that
against the President and Directors for over-issuing, in all of
which cases the plaintiff must count upon the law itself as the
ground of his action. And of the other description would have been
an action of trespass, in this case, had remedy been sought for an
actual levy of the tax imposed. Such was the case of the former
Bank against Deveaux, and many others that have occurred in this
Court, in which the suit, in its form, was such as occur in
ordinary cases, but in which the pleadings or evidence raised the
question on the law or Constitution of the United States. In this
class of cases, the occurrence of a question makes the case, and
transfers it, as provided for under the twenty-fifth section of the
Judiciary Act, to the jurisdiction of the United States. And this
appears to me to present the only sound and practical construction
of the Constitution on this subject, for no other cases does it
regard as necessary to place under the control of the general
government. It is only when the case exhibits one or the other of
these characteristics that it is acted upon by the Constitution.
Where no question is raised, there can be no contrariety of
construction; and what else had the Constitution to guard against?
As to cases of the first description,
ex necessitate rei,
the courts of the United States must be susceptible of original
jurisdiction; and as to all other cases, I should hold them, also,
susceptible of original jurisdiction if it were practicable
Page 22 U. S. 889
in the nature of things to make out the definition of the case
so as to bring it under the Constitution judicially, upon an
original suit. But until the plaintiff can control the defendant in
his pleadings, I see no practical mode of determining when the case
does occur otherwise than by permitting the cause to advance until
the case for which the Constitution provides shall actually arise.
If it never occurs, there can be nothing to complain of; and such
are the provisions of the twenty-fifth section. The cause might be
transferred to the circuit court before an adjudication takes
place; but I can perceive no earlier stage at which it can possibly
be predicated of such a case that it is one within the
Constitution; nor any possible necessity for transferring it then,
or until the court has acted upon it to the prejudice of the claims
of the United States. It is not, therefore, because Congress may
not vest an original jurisdiction where they can constitutionally
vest in the circuit courts appellate jurisdiction that I object to
this general grant of the right to sue, but because that the
peculiar nature of this jurisdiction is such as to render it
impossible to exercise it in a strictly original form, and because
the principle of a possible occurrence of a question as a ground of
jurisdiction is transcending the bounds of the Constitution, and
placing it on a ground which will admit of an enormous accession,
if not an unlimited assumption, of jurisdiction.
But, dismissing the question of possibility, which, I must
think, would embrace every other case as well as those to which
this Bank is a party, in what
Page 22 U. S. 890
sense can it be predicated of this case that it is one arising
under a law of the United States? It cannot be denied that
jurisdiction of this suit in equity could not be entertained unless
the court could have had jurisdiction of the action of trespass,
which this injunction was intended to anticipate. And, in fact,
there is no question that the Bank here maintains that the right to
sue extends to common trespass, as well as to contracts or any
other cause of action. But suppose trespass in the common form
instituted; the declaration is general, and the defendant pleads
not guilty, and goes to trial. Where is the feature in such a cause
that can give the court jurisdiction? What question arises under a
law of the United States? or what question that must not be decided
exclusively upon the
lex loci, upon State laws? Take also
the case of a contract, and in what sense can it be correctly
predicated of that that, in common with every other act of the
Bank, it arises out of the law that incorporates it? May it not
with equal propriety be asserted that all the crimes and all the
controversies of mankind, arise out of the fiat that called their
progenitor into existence? It is not because man was created that
he commits a trespass or incurs a debt, but because, being imbued
with certain faculties and propensities, he is led by an
appropriate motive to the one action or the other. Sound philosophy
attributes effects to their proximate causes. It is but pursuing
the grade of creation from one step to another to deduce the acts
of this Bank from State law, or even divine law, with as much
correctness as from the law of
Page 22 U. S. 891
its immediate creation. Its contracts arise under its own acts,
and not under a law of the United States; so far from it, indeed
that their effect, their construction, their limitation, their
concoction, are all the creatures of the respective State laws in
which they originate. There is a satisfactory illustration of the
distinction between contracts which draw their existence from
statutes and those which originate in the acts of man afforded by
this act of incorporation itself. It will be unnecessary to look
beyond it. The action of debt before alluded to, given by the ninth
clause of the seventh section against the directors to any one who
will sue, is one of those factitious or statute contracts which
exist in, and expire with, the statute that creates it. Not so with
the ordinary contracts of the Bank; upon the expiration of the
charter, they would be placed in the state of the credits of an
intestate before administration; there is no one to sue for them;
but the moral obligation would remain, and a court of equity would
enforce it against their debtors at the suit of the individual
stockholders. Nor would this be on the principle of contracts
executed under power of attorney, for the law applicable to
principals would govern every question in such causes. All the acts
of the corporation are executed in their own right, and not in the
right of another. A personal existence, with all its incidents, is
given to them, and it is in right of that existence that they are
capable of acting, and do act. Nor, indeed, in another point of
view, is it strictly predicable of this Bank that its acts
arise
Page 22 U. S. 892
out of, because its existence is drawn from, a law of the United
States. It is because it is incorporated, not because incorporated
by a law of the United States, that it is made capable of
exercising certain powers incidentally, and of being vested with
others expressly. The same effects would follow if incorporated by
any other competent legislative power. The law of the United States
creates the Bank, and the common law, or State law more properly,
takes it up and makes it what it is. Who can deny that, in many
points, the incidents to such an institution may vary in different
States, although its existence be derived from the general
government? It is the case with the natural alien, when adopted
into the national family. His rights, duties, powers, &c.,
receive always a shade from the
lex loci of the State in
which he fixes his domicil.
If this right to sue could be vested at all in the Bank, it is
obvious that it must have been for one or more of three causes: 1.
That a law of the United States incorporated it; 2. That a law of
the United States vested in it the power to sue; or, 3. That the
power to defend itself from trespasses as applicable to this case
strictly, or to contract debts as applicable to the Georgia case,
was conferred on it by a law of the United States expressly.
The first I have considered. On the second, no one would have
the hardihood to contend that such a grant has any efficacy unless
the suits come within the description of cases arising under a law
of the United States, independently of the
Page 22 U. S. 893
grant of the right to sue; and it only remains to add a few more
remarks on the third ground.
Of the power to repel trespasses and to enter into contracts as
mere incidents to its creation, I trust I have shown that neither
comes within the description of a case arising under a law of the
United States. But where will we find, in the law in question, any
express grant of power relative to either? The contracts on which
the Georgia case is founded are declared on as common promissory
notes, payable to bearer. Now, as mere incidents, I have no doubt
of an action being sustainable in a State court in both cases. But
if an express grant is relied on, as bringing this, or the case of
a contract, within the description of "a case arising under a law
of the United States," then I look through the law in vain for any
express grant, either to make the contract or repel the trespass.
It is true, the sweeping terms with which the incorporating section
concludes import that,
"by that name it shall and may be lawful for the Bank to do and
execute all and singular the acts, matters, and things, which to
them it shall and may appertain to do."
But this contains no grant of either, since the inquiry, at
last, must be into the incidents of such an institution, and, as
incidents, they needed not these words to sustain them; nor could
those words give any more force to the right. So that, at last, we
are referred to the mere fact of its corporate existence for the
basis of either of the actions, or either of the powers here
insisted on, as bringing this cause within the constitutional
definition. Having a legal
Page 22 U. S. 894
existence as an incorporated banking institution, it has a right
to security in its possessions, and to the performance of its
contracts; but that right will be precisely the same if
incorporated by a State law or even, as was held in the case of
Terrett v. Taylor, if having a common law corporate
existence. The common law, or the State law, is referred to by the
law of the United States as the source of these incidents when it
speaks of the acts which are appurtenant to it; and I know of no
other law that can define them, or confer them as incidents.
Suppose a naturalization act passed which, after specifying the
terms and conditions upon which an alien shall become a citizen,
proceeds to declare
"that, as a citizen, he shall lawfully do and execute all and
singular the acts, matters, and things, which to 'a citizen,' or
'to him as a citizen,' it shall and may appertain to do,"
would not these words be a mere nullity? His new existence, and
the relations with the society into which he is introduced that
grow out of that connexion, give him the right to defend his
property or his existence (as in this case), and to enter into and
enforce those contracts which, as an alien, he would have been
precluded from. He was no more a citizen without an act of Congress
than this was a Bank. Finally, after the most attentive
consideration of this cause, I cannot help thinking that this idea
of taking jurisdiction upon an hypothesis, or even of assuming
original, unlimited jurisdiction, of all questions arising under a
law of the United States involves some striking inconsistencies. A
court may take cognizance of a question
Page 22 U. S. 895
in a cause, and enter a judgment upon it, and yet not have
jurisdiction of the cause itself. Such are all questions of
jurisdiction, of which every court, however limited its
jurisdiction, must have cognizance in every cause brought before
it. So also, I see not why, upon the same principle, a law
expressly violating the Constitution, may not be made the
groundwork of a transfer of jurisdiction. Cases may arise, and
would arise, under such a law; and if the simple existence, or
possibility of such a case is a sufficient ground of jurisdiction,
and that ground sufficient to transfer the whole case to the
federal judiciary, the least that can be said of it is that it was
not a case within the mischief intended to be obviated by the
Constitution. I shall say no more on this subject, but proceed to
one which also acts forcibly on my judgment in forming my opinion
in this cause.
I will not undertake to define the limits within which the
discretion of the legislature of the Union may range in the
adoption of measures for executing their constitutional powers. It
is very possible that, in the choice of means as "proper and
necessary" to carry their powers into effect, they may have assumed
a latitude not foreseen at the adoption of the Constitution. For
example, in order to collect a stamp duty, they have exercised a
power over the general law of contracts; in order to secure debts
due the United States, they have controlled the State laws of
estates of deceased persons and of insolvents' estates; in the
distributions and the powers of individuals themselves, when
insolvent, in the assignment of their
Page 22 U. S. 896
own estates; in the exercise of various powers, they have taken
jurisdiction over crimes which the State laws took cognizance of;
and all this, being within the range of their discretion, is aloof
from judicial control while unaffectedly exercised for the purposes
of the Constitution. Nor, indeed, is there much to be alarmed at in
it while the same people who govern the States can, where they
will, control the legislature of the United States.
Yet certainly there is one limit to this chain of implied powers
which must lie beyond the reach of legislative discretion. No one
branch of the general government can new model the constitutional
structure of the other.
Much stress was laid in the argument upon the necessity of
giving coordinate extent to the several departments of a
government, but it was altogether unnecessary to bring this
consideration into the present case. As a ground of policy, this is
not its proper place; and as a ground of construction, it must be
needless when applied to a Constitution in which the judicial power
so very far transcends both the others, in its acknowledged
limits.
The principle is that every government should possess the means
of protecting itself -- that is, of construing and enforcing its
own laws. But this is not the half of the extent of the judicial
power of the Union. Its most interesting province is to enforce the
equal administration of laws, and systems of laws, over which the
legislative power can exercise no control. And thus, the judicial
power is distributed into the two
Page 22 U. S. 897
classes: 1. that which is defined by the circumstances of the
case; and, 2. that which depends upon the circumstances of the
person. On the first, I have endeavoured to show that the end is
adequately effected by the provisions of the twenty-fifth section
of the Judiciary Act, and, practically, can be exercised in no
other way. But with regard to the second class, the argument turns
against the United States, and every reason that may be urged in
favour of eking out the jurisdiction in the first class of cases
reacts forcibly to confine the jurisdiction strictly within its
constitutional limits as to the second class. When the alien, or
the citizen of another State, or the grants of another State are
implicated, the State courts open their tribunals to the judiciary
of the United States, and recognise their power as coordinate.
Their citizens, their territory, their laws, all are subjected to a
power quite foreign to the States, and judicial power is literally
poured out upon the courts of the Union without stint.
How interesting, then, is it to the States that the number of
those persons who claim the privilege of coming into the courts of
the United States should be strictly limited! Cases, since they
arise out of laws, &c. of the United States, must be very
limited in number; but persons may bring into the courts of the
United States any question and every question, and, if this law be
correctly construed, for any, the very smallest possible
amount.
But if the plain dictates of our senses be relied on, what state
of facts have we exhibited here?
Page 22 U. S. 898
Making a person makes a case; and thus, a government which
cannot exercise jurisdiction unless an alien or citizen of another
State be a party makes a party which is neither alien nor citizen,
and then claims jurisdiction because it has made a case. If this be
true, why not make every citizen a corporation sole, and thus bring
them all into the courts of the United States
quo minus?
Nay, it is still worse, for there is not only an evasion of the
Constitution implied in this doctrine, but a positive power to
violate it. Suppose every individual of this corporation were
citizens of Ohio, or, as applicable to the other case, were
citizens of Georgia, the United States could not give any one of
them, individually, the right to sue a citizen of the same State in
the courts of the United States; then on what principle could that
right be communicated to them in a body? But the question is
equally unanswerable if any single member of the corporation is of
the same State with the defendant, as has been repeatedly
adjudged.
One of the counsel who argued this cause in behalf of the Bank
has denominated it a bundle of faculties. This is very true, but
those faculties are substituted for the organization of a natural
person, and it is perfectly certain that, when it comes into this
Court, it must be treated as a person. It is altogether
inadmissible to refine away the principles of jurisprudence so as
to consider it in any other light than that of a person. As such,
it sues out a writ, declares, pleads, takes judgment, and levies an
execution. If it is not a
Page 22 U. S. 899
person, it has no standing in this Court; it must therefore
abandon this suit or be subjected to personal disabilities.
Gentlemen have a right to take what ground here they please to
sustain this action. but it is perfectly clear to me that the act
of Congress was intended to vest this right as a personal right, or
not at all. Let anyone look through this act and notice the
unrestricted latitude that has been assumed in vesting the right to
sue both by and against this Bank, and he will see that either
there is no general right to sue given in the seventh section, now
relied on, or that it is given under the general power granted to
pass all laws necessary to carry the powers of the general
government into execution. The proviso to the seventeenth section
is a remarkable proof of this. It puts the limits of judicial power
altogether out of view. If Congress, in legislating on this
subject, did intend such a grant as is here contended for, it must
be presumed that they did not advert to the consideration that
granting to an individual a right to sue was enlarging the
jurisdiction of the court. It never can be supposed that they meant
to assume the power of adding to the number of persons who might
constitutionally become suitors in the courts of the United States.
But every difficulty vanishes when we limit the meaning of the
language of the act by a reference to the context. In fact, a
general power to bring actions in the courts of the United States
is so peculiarly and explicitly personal on the face of the
Constitution that it is hard to perceive how Congress could have
for a moment lost sight of the restrictions
Page 22 U. S. 900
imposed in this respect upon the judicial power.
Nor had the Bank any idea that this power was vested in it upon
the ground that every possible case in which it might be involved
in litigation came within the constitutional definition of cases
arising under laws, &c. of the United States. In its averments,
those on which it claims jurisdiction, it simply takes two grounds:
1. that it was incorporated by an act of Congress; 2. that the
right to sue was given it by an act of Congress. But there is no
averment that the cause of action was a case arising under a law of
the United States. It well knew that it was a case emphatically
arising out of an act of the State of Ohio, operating upon the
domicil of the Bank, which, although purchased in right of an
existence metaphysically given it by Congress, was acquired and
held according to the laws of Ohio, acting upon its own territory.
Technically, these averments cover only two grounds; they affirm,
1. that the Bank, being incorporated by Congress, had, therefore, a
right to sue; 2. that, being incorporated, and having the right to
sue conferred upon it by an act of Congress, therefore it could
maintain this action. But yet neither nor both of these could give
the right unless in one of the cases defined in the Constitution,
which case is not the subject of an averment. I would not willingly
place the case on the ground of mere technicality, and therefore
only make the observation to show that the ground assumed in
argument is an afterthought. I believe that, until this argument,
the
Page 22 U. S. 901
ground now made was never thought of; and I am at a loss to
conceive how it is possible to maintain the position that all
possible cases in which this Bank shall sue or be sued come within
the description now contended for. Take, for instance, a trespass
or a fraud committed by the Bank, and suit brought by the injured
party -- in what sense could they be said to be cases arising under
a law of the United States? Or take the case of ejectment, suppose
to recover part of the premises of the banking house in
Philadelphia, and not a question raised in the suit, but what
arises under the territorial laws of the country, and what
circumstances characterize that as a case of the proper description
to give this Court jurisdiction? If this cause of action arises
under a statute, why is not the statute referred to, and the
provision particularly relied on, if there is any other than what
the averments specify?
Various instances have been cited and relied on in which this
right of suit in the courts of the United States has been given to
particular officers of the United States. But on these I would
remark that it is not logical to cite as proofs the exercise of
this right in instances which may themselves be the subject of
constitutional questions. It cannot be intended to surprise this
Court into the recognition of the constitutionality of the laws so
cited. But there is a stronger objection: no such instance is in
point until it be shown that Congress has authorized such officers
to bring their private contracts and private controversies into the
courts of the United States. In all the
Page 22 U. S. 902
cases cited, the individual is acting distinctly as the organ of
government; but let them take the character of a mere contractor, a
factor, a broker, a common carrier, and then let laws authorizing
them to sue in the courts of the United States be passed, and I
will acknowledge the cases to be in point, though I will still
dispute the principle that a repetition of error can convert an act
into law or truth. The distinction is a clear one between all these
cases and the Bank. The latter is a mere agent or attorney, in some
instances; in others, and especially in the cases now before the
court, it is a private person, acting on its own account, not
clothed with an official character at all. But the acts of public
officers are the acts of government, and emphatically so in suits
by the Postmaster General; the money to be recovered being the
property of the United States, it may be considered that they are
parties to the suit, just as those States are to the suits by or
against their Attorney General, where he is by law authorized to
bring and defend suits in his own name officially. When the United
States are parties, the grant of jurisdiction is general. But there
is express law also for every contract that the Postmaster enters
into, or it will be in vain for him to bring his suit in his own
name or otherwise. It would be in vain for him to rely simply on
his being made Postmaster under an act of Congress, in which point
alone there would seem to exist any analogy between his case and
that of the Bank.
As to the instance of the action given under the patent law, it
has been before remarked that so
Page 22 U. S. 903
entirely is its existence blended with an act of Congress that,
to prosecute it, it is indispensable that the act should be set
forth as the ground of action. I rather think it an unfortunate
quotation, since it presents a happy illustration of what we are to
understand by those cases arising under a law of Congress which, in
their nature, admit of an exercise of original jurisdiction. The
plaintiff must recover, must count upon the act of Congress; the
constitutional characteristic appears on the record before the
defendant is called to answer; and the repeal of the statute before
judgment puts an end to his right altogether. Various such cases
may be cited. But how the act of Congress is to be introduced into
an action of trespass, ejectment, or slander before the defendant
is called to plead I cannot imagine.
Upon the whole, I feel compelled to dissent from the court, on
the point of jurisdiction, and this renders it unnecessary for me
to express my sentiments on the residue of the points in the
cause.
Decree affirmed except as to interest on the amount of the
specie in the hands of the defendant Sullivan.