The Supreme Court has jurisdiction of a bill filed by the State
of Rhode Island against the State of Massachusetts to ascertain and
establish the northern boundary between the states, that the rights
of sovereignty and jurisdiction be restored and confirmed to the
plaintiffs and they be quieted in the enjoyment thereof and their
title, and for other and further relief.
Jurisdiction is the power to hear and determine the subject
matter in controversy between parties to a suit -- to adjudicate or
exercise any judicial power over them. An objection to jurisdiction
on the ground of exemption from the process of the court in which
the suit is brought or the manner in which a defendant is brought
into it is waived by appearance and pleading to issue, but when the
objection goes to the power of the court over the parties or the
subject matter, the defendant need not, for he cannot give the
plaintiff a better writ, or bill,
The Supreme Court is one of limited and special original
jurisdiction. Its action must be confined to the particular cases,
controversies, and parties over which the Constitution and laws
have authorized it to act; any proceeding without the limits
prescribed is
coram non judice, and its action a
nullity.
And whether the want or excess of power is objected by a party
or is apparent to the Court, it must surcease its action or proceed
extrajudicially.
The several states of the United States, in their highest
sovereign capacity, in the convention of the people thereof, on
whom, by the Revolution, the prerogative of the Crown and the
transcendent power of Parliament devolved in a plenitude unimpaired
by any act and controllable by no authority, adopted the
Constitution, by which they respectively made to the United States
a grant of judicial power over controversies between two or more
states. By the Constitution, it was ordained that this judicial
power, in cases where a state was a party, should be exercised by
the Supreme Court as one of original jurisdiction. The states
waived their exemption from judicial power as sovereigns by
original and inherent right by their own grant of its exercise over
themselves in such cases, but which they would not grant to any
inferior tribunal. By this grant, this Court has acquired
jurisdiction over the parties in this cause by their own consent
and delegated authority, as their agent for executing the judicial
power of the United States in the cases specified.
Massachusetts has appeared, submitted to the process in her
legislative capacity, and plead in bar of the plaintiffs action
certain matters on which the judgment of the Court is asked. All
doubts as to jurisdiction over the parties are thus at rest, as
well by the grant of power by the people as the submission of the
legislature to the process, and calling on the Court to exercise
its jurisdiction on the case presented by the bill, plea, and
answer.
Although the Constitution does not in terms extend the judicial
power to all controversies between two or more states, yet it in
terms excludes none, whatever may be their nature or subject.
This Court, in construing the Constitution as to the grants of
powers to the United
Page 37 U. S. 658
States and the restrictions upon the states, has ever held that
an exception of any particular case presupposes that those which
are not excepted are embraced within the grant or prohibition, and
has laid it down as a general rule that where no exception is made
in terms, none will be made by mere implication or
construction.
In the construction of the Constitution, we must look to the
history of the times and examine the state of things existing when
it was framed and adopted to ascertain the old law, the mischief,
and the remedy.
The boundary established and fixed by compact between nations
becomes conclusive upon all the subjects and citizens thereof and
binds their rights, and is to be treated to all intents and
purposes as the true real boundary. The construction of such
compact is a judicial question.
There can be but two tribunals under the Constitution who can
act on the boundaries of states, the legislative or the judicial
power; the former is limited in express terms to assent or dissent
where a compact or agreement is referred to them by the states, and
as the latter can be exercised only by this Court when a state is a
party, the power is here or it cannot exist.
This Court exists by a direct grant from the people of their
judicial power; it is exercised by their authority, as their agent,
selected by themselves for the purposes specified. The people of
the states, as they respectively become parties to the
Constitution, gave to the judicial power of the United States
jurisdiction over themselves, controversies between states, between
citizens of the same or different states claiming lands under their
conflicting grants within disputed territory.
No court acts differently in deciding on boundary between states
than on lines between separate tracts of land. If there is
uncertainty where the line is, if there is a confusion of
boundaries by the nature of interlocking grants, the obliteration
of marks, the intermixing of possession under different
proprietors, the effects of accident, fraud, or time, or other
kindred causes, it is a case appropriate to equity. An issue at law
is directed, a commission of boundary awarded, or, if the court is
satisfied without either, the decree what and where the boundary of
a farm, a manor, province, or a state is and shall be.
There is neither the authority of law or reason for the position
that boundary between nations or states is, in its nature, any more
a political question than any other subject on which they may
contend. None can be settled without war or treaty, which is by
political power; but under the old and new confederacy, they could
and can be settled by a court constituted by themselves as their
own substitutes, authorized to do that for states, which states
alone could do before.
It has been contended that this Court cannot proceed in this
cause without some process and rule of decision prescribed
appropriate to the case; but no question on process can arise on
these pleadings; none is now necessary, as the defendant has
appeared and plead, which plea in itself makes the first point in
the cause, without any additional proceeding; that is whether the
plea shall be allowed, if sufficient in law, to bar the complaint,
or be overruled as not being a bar in law, though true in fact.
This Court cannot presume that any state which holds prerogative
rights for the good of its citizens, and by the Constitution has
agreed that those of any other state shall enjoy rights,
privileges, and immunities in each as its own do, would either do
wrong or deny right to a sister state or its citizens, or refuse to
submit
Page 37 U. S. 659
to those decrees of this Court, rendered pursuant to its own
delegated authority; when in a monarchy, its fundamental law
declares that such decree executes itself.
In the case of
Olmstead, this Court expressed its
opinion that if state legislatures may annul the judgments of the
courts of the United States and the rights thereby acquired, the
Constitution becomes a solemn mockery and the nation is deprived of
the means of enforcing its laws by its own tribunal. So fatal a
result must be deprecated by all, and the people of every state
must feel a deep interest in resisting principles so destructive of
the Union and in averting consequences so fatal to themselves.
On 16 March, 1832, the State of Rhode Island, by its solicitor,
filed a bill against the State of Massachusetts for the settlement
of the boundary between the two states and moved for a subpoena to
be issued according to the practice of the court in similar
cases.
This motion was held under advisement until the following term,
and a subpoena was awarded and issued on 2 March, 1833.
This subpoena was returned with service on 30 July, 1833, and on
18 January, 1834, the appearance of Mr. Webster was entered for the
defendants; and, on his motion, the cause was continued with leave
to plea, answer, or demur.
On 12 January, 1835, a plea and answer was filed by Mr. Webster,
and on 22 February, 1836, by agreement of counsel, it was ordered
by the Court that the complainant file a replication to the answer
of the defendant within six months from the last day of January
term, 1836, or that the cause shall stand dismissed. The
complainant filed a replication on 18 August, 1836, and at the same
time a
"notice of intention to move the Court for leave to withdraw the
replication upon the ground that the rule requiring the same was
agreed to and entered into by mistake."
The bill filed by the complainants set forth the original
charter granted on the third day of November, 1621, by King James
the First to the council at Plymouth for planting, ruling, ordering
and governing New England in America, describing the limits and
boundaries of the territory so granted. The grant or conveyance to
the council at Plymouth, of 19 March, 1628, to Sir Henry Rosewell
and others of a certain tract of land described in the same, as
"all that part of New England, in America, aforesaid, which lies
and extends between a great river there, commonly called Monomack,
alias Merrimac, and a certain other river, there called Charles
River, being in the bottom of a certain Bay, there commonly called
Massachusetts, alias Mattachusetts, alias Massatusetts, Bay, and
also all and
Page 37 U. S. 660
singular those lands and hereditaments whatsoever lying within
the space of three English miles on the south part of the said
Charles River, or of any or every part thereof, and also all and
singular the lands and hereditaments whatsoever lying and being
within the space of three English miles to the southward of the
southernmost part of the said Bay, called Massachusetts, alias
Mattachusetts, alias Massatusetts Bay, and also all those lands and
hereditaments whatsoever which lie and be within the space of three
English miles to the northward of the said river, called Monomack,
alias Merrimac, or to the northward of any and every part thereof,
and all lands and hereditaments whatsoever lying within the limits
aforesaid, north and south in latitude and breadth, and in length
and longitude of and within all the breadth aforesaid, throughout
the main lands there, from the Atlantic and western sea and ocean
on the east part, to the South sea on the west part."
The letters patent of confirmation and grant of Charles the
First, of 4 March, 1629, to Sir Henry Rosewell and others, for the
lands included in the charter of James the First, and the deed of
the council at Plymouth, to them by the name of "The Governor and
Company of Mattachusetts Bay in New England," incorporated by the
said letters patent.
The bill further stated that on 7 June, 1635, the council
established at Plymouth for planting a colony and governing New
England in America, yielded up and surrendered the charter of James
the First, to Charles the First, which surrender was duly and in
form accepted. That after the granting of the letters patent before
set forth and prior to the granting of the letters patent
afterwards set forth in the bill to the colony of Rhode Island and
Providence Plantations, the tract of land comprised within the
limits of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations had
been colonized and settled with a considerable population by
emigration, principally from England and the colony of the
Massachusetts Bay, and that the persons who had so colonized and
settled the same were seized and possessed by purchase and consent
of the Indian natives, of certain lands, islands, rivers, harbors
and roads, within said tract. That on 8 July, 1663, King Charles
the Second, by letters patent, granted a charter of incorporation
to William Brenton, John Coddington and others, by the name of "The
governor and Company of the English Colony of Rhode Island and
Providence Plantations in New England, in America," and granted and
conferred to the corporation by the letters patent
"all that part of
Page 37 U. S. 661
our dominions in New England, in America, containing the
Nahantick and Nanhygansett, alias Narragansett Bay, and countries
and parts adjacent, bounded on the west or westerly to the middle
or channel of a river there, commonly called and known by the name
of Pawcatuck, alias Paweawtuck, River, and so along the said river
as the greater or middle stream thereof reacheth or lies up into
the north country, northward unto the head thereof, and from
thence, by a straight line drawn due north, until it meets with the
south line of the Massachusetts Colony, and on the north or
northerly by the aforesaid south or southerly line of the
Massachusetts Colony or plantation, and extending towards the east
or eastwardly three English miles, to the east and northeast of the
most eastern and northeastern parts of the aforesaid Narragansett
Bay, as the said bay lieth or extendeth itself from the ocean on
the south or southwardly unto the mouth of the river which runneth
towards the Town of Providence, and from thence along the
eastwardly side or bank of the said river (higher called by the
name of Seacunck River) up to the falls called Patuckett Falls,
being the most westwardly line of Plymouth Colony, and so from the
said falls in a straight line due north until it meet with the
aforesaid line of the Massachusetts Colony, and bounded on the
south by the ocean. And in particular the lands belonging to the
Town of Providence, Pawtuxet, Warwick, Nisquammacock, alias
Pawcatuck, and the rest upon the mainland in the tract aforesaid,
together with Rhode Island, Block Island, and all the rest of the
islands and banks in the Narragansett Bay, and bordering upon the
coast of the tract aforesaid (Fisher Island only excepted),
together with all firm lands, soils, grounds, havens, ports,
rivers, waters, fishings, mines royal, and all other mines,
minerals, precious stones, quarries, woods, wood grounds, rocks,
slates, and all and singular other commodities, jurisdictions,
royalties, privileges, franchises, preeminences, and hereditaments
whatsoever within the said tract, bounds, lands, and islands
aforesaid or to them or any of them, belonging or in anywise
appertaining."
The bill proceeds to state the canceling and vacating of the
charter to "The Governor and Company of Massachusetts Bay in New
England" on a
scire facias, and afterwards the regrant of
the same territory, with other territories known by the name of the
Colony of Massachusetts Bay and Colony of New Plymouth, the
Province of Maine, &c., by King William and Queen Mary, on
7
Page 37 U. S. 662
October, 1691. The description of the territory then granted, so
far as the same is important in this case, was the following:
"All that part of New England in America lying and extending
from the great river commonly called Monomack, alias Merrimack, on
the north part, and from three miles northward of the said river to
the Atlantic or western sea or ocean on the south part, and all the
lands and hereditaments whatsoever lying within the limits
aforesaid, and extending as far as the outermost points or
promontories of land called Cape Cod and Cape Malabar, north and
south, and in latitude, breadth, and in length and longitude of and
within all the breadth and compass aforesaid, throughout the main
land there, from the said Atlantic or western sea and ocean on the
east part, towards the South Sea, or westward, as far as our
colonies of Rhode Island, Connecticut, and the Narragansett
country. And also all that part and portion of mainland beginning
at the entrance of Piscataway Harbor, and so to pass up the same
into the River of Newichwannock, and through the same into the
furthest head thereof, and from thence northwestward till one
hundred and twenty miles be finished, and from Piscataway Harbor
mouth aforesaid northeastward along the sea coast to Sagadehock,
and from the period of one hundred and twenty miles aforesaid to
cross overland to the one hundred and twenty miles before reckoned
up into the land from Piscataway Harbor, through Newichwannock
River, and also the north half of the Isles of Shoals, together
with the Isles of Capawock and Nantuckett, near Cape Cod aforesaid,
and also the lands and hereditaments lying and being in the country
or territory commonly called Accada or Nova Scotia, and all those
lands and hereditaments lying and extending between the said
country or territory of Nova Scotia and the said River of
Sagadehock, or any part thereof."
The bill states that the Province of Massachusetts and the
colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, thus
established, continued under the charters and letters patent until
July 4, 1776, when with their sister colonies they became
independent states. The bill alleges the dividing boundary line,
under the letters patent and charter to the Colony of Rhode Island
and Providence Plantations and Massachusetts, to have been "a line
drawn east and west three English miles south of the river called
Charles River, or of any or every part thereof." That for some
years after the granting of the charter to Rhode Island, the lands
included in the colony adjoining Massachusetts, remained wild and
uncultivated, and were of little value;
Page 37 U. S. 663
that previous to 1709, the inhabitants of Rhode Island entered
on parts of the land and made improvements, and that the said
northern boundary line never having been settled, defined or
established, disputes and controversies arose between the
inhabitants of the Province of the Massachusetts Bay and of the
Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, and between the
governments of the said province and colony in relation to the
boundary of said colony.
The bill proceeds to state that in consequence of various
disputes and controversies about the boundary between the two
colonies, numerous efforts were made to adjust and settle the same,
all of which, as the bill alleges, were not productive of a
satisfactory result to the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence
Plantations and to the State of Rhode Island, afterwards
established.
These are particularly set forth in the bill, and the
proceedings of the Legislatures of Rhode Island and Massachusetts
are given at large in the same, with the operations of the
commissioners appointed and acting under the authority thereof.
After stating the efforts made by the two states, both whilst
colonies and after they became independent states, for the
determination of the line, up to 1791, alleged to have been
abortive and without success, the bill proceeds to state
"That on or about the year of our Lord one thousand seven
hundred and nine, other commissioners were appointed by the said
State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations and the said State
of Massachusetts for the purpose of ascertaining and settling the
said northern line of the said State of Rhode Island and Providence
Plantations; that the said last mentioned commissioners
respectively continued such commissioners until the year of our
Lord one thousand seven hundred and eighteen; and that the said
last mentioned commissioners had several meetings, but were never
able to agree upon and settle, and never did agree upon and settle,
the said northern line of the said State of Rhode Island and
Providence Plantations."
The bill asserts the right of Rhode Island to the territory in
dispute; that Massachusetts is in possession of the same and
exercises and asserts sovereignty and jurisdiction over the same
under the pretenses that the same was included in the grants or
charters from the Crown of England, under the mistaken belief that
the line, three miles south of Charles River (a station having been
fixed by Nathaniel Woodword and Solomon Saffrey as the point three
miles south of Charles River), actually runs where Massachusetts
has assumed it to run, and alleging that the line, as it is claimed
and has always been
Page 37 U. S. 664
claimed by Massachusetts, was settled and adjusted by the
commissioners acting under the authority of the parties
respectively.
The bill proceeds to show the errors of proceedings of the
commissioners acting for the two colonies, and states
"That no mark, stake or monument at that time existed by which
the place in which said Woodword and Saffrey were so as aforesaid
alleged to have set up a stake could then be ascertained. That the
persons who executed, witnessed and consented to the said pretended
agreement did not, nor did any or either of them, go to any place
where said stake was alleged to have been set up, nor did they or
any or either of them make any survey or cause any survey to be
made or run any line or lines or cause any line or lines to be run
or take any other means to ascertain at what place, if any, the
said stake was set up by said Woodword and Saffrey, nor whether the
place in which the said stake was alleged as aforesaid to have been
set up by the said Woodword and Saffrey was in fact three English
miles, and no more, south of the river called Charles River, or of
any or every part thereof, nor whether the said line, alleged in
said pretended agreement to have been run by the said Woodword and
Saffrey, was ever in fact run by said Woodword and Saffrey, nor
whether said pretended line was the true and proper boundary line
between the said Province of the Massachusetts Bay on the north and
the said Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations on the
south, U.S. according to the true intent and meaning of the grants
contained in the respective charters or letters patent
aforesaid."
The bill asserts that the line designated and run under the
agreements has always been resisted by Rhode Island while a colony
and since she became a sovereign state, and that no other boundary
than that asserted in the bill between Rhode Island and
Massachusetts than that defined, granted and established in and by
the respective charters and letters patent aforesaid hereinbefore
set forth, according to the true and fair construction thereof, has
ever been consented to or admitted to be the true boundary line by
the complainants, either while she continued under the royal
government or since she became an independent and sovereign state.
The proceedings of Massachusetts are alleged to
"interfere with and prevent the exercise of that jurisdiction
and sovereignty which, by the law of the land and the Constitution
of the Union, she is entitled to exercise over the whole tract of
land mentioned and described in the charter or letters patent
granted to the said Colony of Rhode Island and Providence
Page 37 U. S. 665
Plantations and hereinbefore set forth, and over the citizens
and inhabitants thereof, according to her claim in this her bill
made."
The bill asks that inasmuch as the complainants have no
satisfactory relief on the common law side of the court,
"especially as the controversy concerns questions of jurisdiction
and sovereignty," that the Commonwealth of Massachusetts answer the
matters set forth in the bill, and that
"the northern boundary line between the complainants and the
State of Massachusetts may, by the order and decree of this
Honorable Court, be ascertained and established, and that the
rights of jurisdiction and sovereignty of the complainants to the
whole tract of land, with the appurtenances mentioned, described,
and granted in and by the said charter or letters patent to the
said Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations,
hereinbefore set forth, and running on the north, an east and west
line drawn three miles south of the waters of said Charles River or
of any or every part thereof, may be restored and confirmed to the
complainants and the complainants may be quieted in the full and
free enjoyment of her jurisdiction and sovereignty over the same,
and the title, jurisdiction and sovereignty of the said State of
Rhode Island and Providence Plantations over the same be confirmed
and established by the decree of the Court, and that the
complainants may have such other and further relief in the
premises, as to 'the' Court shall seem meet and consistent with
equity and good conscience."
"The Plea and Answer of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to the
bill of complaint of the State of Rhode Island" alleges that in
1642, for the purpose of ascertaining the true southern boundary
line of Massachusetts, a station or monument was erected and fixed
at a point south of Charles River, taken and believed to be on the
true and real boundary line of the Colony of Massachusetts, which
monument became and has ever since been well known and notorious,
and then was and ever since has been called Woodword and Saffrey's
Station, on Wrentham Plains, and after the fixing of said station,
and after running of the line aforesaid, and after the granting of
the charter of Rhode Island, and while all the territory north of
said station and line was claimed, held, and possessed, and
jurisdiction over the same exercised and enjoyed by Massachusetts
as parcel of her own territory, about the year 1709, dispute and
controversy having arisen between the two governments respecting
the said boundary line,
Page 37 U. S. 666
persons were appointed by the government of Rhode Island and by
the government of Massachusetts to settle the misunderstanding
about the line between the colonies, and what the persons appointed
should agree upon should be forever after taken and deemed to be
the stated lines and bounds, so as the agreement be drawn up in
writing, and indented, under their hands and seals, within six
months as aforesaid.
That afterwards, on 19 January, 1710, the commissioners
appointed by the colonies met and entered into an "agreement of the
partition line betwixt the Colony of Massachusetts and the Colony
of Rhode Island" by which it was declared:
"That the stake set up by Nathaniel Woodword and Solomon
Saffrey, skillful approved artists, in the year of our Lord one
thousand six hundred and forty-two, and since that often renewed,
in the latitude of forty-one degrees and fifty-five minutes, being
three English miles distant southward from the southernmost part of
the river called Charles River, agreeable to the letters patent for
the Massachusetts Province, be accompted and allowed, on both
sides, the commencement of the line between the Massachusetts and
the Colony of Rhode Island, and to be continued betwixt the said
two governments in such manner as that, after it has proceeded
between the said two governments, it may pass over Connecticut
River at or near Bissell's house, as is deciphered in the plan and
tract of that line by Nathaniel Woodword and Solomon Saffrey."
By this agreement, on a presumption that there had been error in
setting up the station, certain surveys had been made within the
line of Massachusetts thus ascertained, it stipulated that there
should
"be and remain unto the said Town of Providence and inhabitants
of the government of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations a
certain tract of land of one mile in breadth, to the northward of
the said line of Woodword and Saffrey, as before described and
platted, beginning from the great River of Pautucket, and so to
proceed at the north side of the said patent line, of equal
breadth, until it come to the place where Providence west line cuts
the said patent line, supposed to contain five thousand acres, be
the same more or less, the soil whereof shall be and remain to the
Town of Providence, or others, according to the disposition thereof
to be made by the government of Rhode Island aforesaid.
Nevertheless to continue and remain within the jurisdiction and
government of her Majesty's Province of the Massachusetts Bay,
anything in this agreement to the contrary thereof, or seemingly
so, notwithstanding. "
Page 37 U. S. 667
The agreement contained other provisions for the preservation of
the line, and for the ascertaining the surveys made by the
inhabitants of Providence within the same, so that they might
proceed with the settlement and improvement thereof.
This agreement was executed under the hands and seals of the
commissioners and was witnessed by persons on the part of the two
colonies.
The plea and answer alleges that the whole of the real and true
merits of the complainants' supposed cause of action were fully
heard, tried, and determined by the judgment and agreement of the
commissioners, that the same was a full settlement of all the
matters in controversy and was made in good faith, and the station
so fixed and established, became matter of common notoriety, and
the line capable of being always known and ascertained.
The answer and plea further states that afterwards, on or about
June 18, 1717, to complete the settling and running the line
between the two governments, the General Assembly of Massachusetts
passed an order appointing commissioners to meet commissioners to
be appointed by Rhode Island to run the line, according to the
agreement of January 19, 1710. Certain other proceedings on the
part of Massachusetts took place preparatory to the proceedings of
the commissioners, and on 17 June, 1717, the General Assembly of
the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations passed an act
appointing commissioners on the part of Rhode Island for the final
settlement of the boundary line with the commissioners named and
appointed by Massachusetts. On or about 22 of October, 1718, the
commissioners met and then made an agreement which was signed,
sealed, executed, and delivered by them by which it was stipulated
and declared:
"That the stake set up by Nathaniel Woodword and Solomon Saffrey
in the year one thousand six hundred and forty-two upon Wrentham
Plain, be the station or commencement to begin the line which shall
divide between the two governments aforesaid, from which said stake
the dividing line shall run, so as it may (at Connecticut River) be
two miles and a half to the southward of a due west line, allowing
the variation of the compass to be nine degrees, which said line
shall forever be and remain to be the dividing line and boundary
between the said governments, any former difference, controversy,
claim, demand, or challenge whatsoever notwithstanding."
And on the twenty-ninth day of the said October last aforesaid,
the General Assembly of the said Colony of
Page 37 U. S. 668
Rhode Island and Providence Plantations accepted the agreement
of the said commissioners and caused the same to be duly recorded,
and thereby ratified and confirmed the same.
The answer avers that all this was done in good faith and with a
full and equal knowledge of all the circumstances by the respective
parties and that the same has never been annulled, rescinded, or
abandoned, and the last agreement was in pursuance of the agreement
of 1709. Afterwards, on 14 May, 1719, the commissioners on the part
of Massachusetts and Rhode Island signed a report, return, and
statement of their proceedings under the designation of
"The Subscribers, being of the committee appointed and empowered
by the governments of the Province of Massachusetts Bay and the
Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, for settling the
east and west line between the said governments,"
stating that they had met at the stake of Nathaniel Woodword and
Solomon Saffrey on Wrentham Plain, and had run the line, placing
heaps of stones and marking trees to designate the same.
The defendant further alleges
"That the said report, return, or statement was afterwards --
that is to say on or about 16 June in the year of our Lord one
thousand seven hundred and nineteen, approved by the General
Assembly of the said Colony of Rhode Island and Providence
Plantations,"
and the defendant alleges that from the date of the said
agreements to the present time the said Commonwealth of
Massachusetts has possessed and enjoyed all the territory and
exercised jurisdiction over the same north of the said line, as
prescribed in the said agreements of October, 1718, without
hindrance or molestation, and the said defendant avers that both
the points of beginning agreed upon by said parties to said
agreement,
viz., the stake or station set up by the said
Woodword and Saffrey, and the line run therefrom to Connecticut
River, then were, ever since have been, and still are well known
and notorious; that the whole boundary line fixed on by said
agreement is precise, definite, and certain, and that the said
defendant has occupied and exercised jurisdiction and enjoyed all
rights of sovereignty according to the same from the date thereof
to the present time.
The defendant pleads the agreement of 19 January, 1710, and the
agreement in pursuance and confirmation thereof of 22 October,
1717, and unmolested possession under the same from their date in
bar of the whole bill of the complainants, and prays judgment
accordingly.
Page 37 U. S. 669
The answer and plea further aver that the agreements stated were
made and entered into with full knowledge of all the circumstances
in both parties; that the same were a valid and effectual
settlement of the matters in controversy and were made and entered
into without fraud or misrepresentation, and the station settled
there has been notorious, and the line run therefrom has always
been known and its marks and memorials capable of being discerned
and renewed.
Mr. Webster, of counsel for the State of Massachusetts, moved to
dismiss the bill filed by the State of Rhode Island on the ground
that the court had no jurisdiction of the cause.
Page 37 U. S. 714
MR. JUSTICE BALDWIN delivered the opinion of the Court:
At the January term of this Court, 1832, the plaintiff filed a
bill in equity presenting a case arising under the various charters
from the Crown of England to the Plymouth Company in 1621; to
Massachusetts in 1629; to Rhode Island in 1663; the new charter to
Massachusetts in 1691; together with sundry intermediate
proceedings of the council of Plymouth, the result of which was to
vest in the Colony of Massachusetts and the King all the rights of
propriety and government previously granted to that company as a
political corporation. The bill also set out the repeal of the
original charter of Massachusetts on a
scire facias in the
Court of Chancery in England, the grant by the Crown and acceptance
by the Colony of a new charter subsequent to the charter to Rhode
Island.
All these acts are specially and at large set out in the bill,
but need not in this stage of the cause be referred to by the Court
in detail. They present the claim of the plaintiff to the territory
in controversy between the two states in virtue of these charters,
according to the boundaries therein described.
Independently of the claim under the charter of 1663, the
plaintiff asserts a previous right in virtue of grants from the
Indians and settlements made under a title thus acquired, and also
asserts that under both titles, the inhabitants of Rhode Island
made settlements on the lands immediately south of the boundary
between the two colonies as now asserted, which settlements were so
made and continued from the time of the purchase from the Indians
before, under the charter, and afterwards, though the line was not
defined and disputed.
The bill then proceeds to state the existence of controversies
between the two colonies at a very early period, to settle which
commissioners
Page 37 U. S. 715
were appointed by each colony in 1709, and at various other
periods down to 1809, and sets forth the proceedings of the
commissioners of the colonies before the Revolution and the states
afterwards down to 1818.
For the present purposes of this case it is necessary to refer
only to one subject matter of these proceedings during this whole
period, which is presented in the bill in the same aspect
throughout; that subject is the agreement of 1709, and 1718, and
the acts done pursuant thereto, which are recited at large in the
bill. It then states the agreement of the commissioners of the two
colonies, that a line should be run and marked as their boundary,
which was done; a survey made and returned, together with all the
proceedings to the legislatures of the respective colonies,
accepted by Massachusetts, but as the bill avers, not accepted and
ratified by Rhode Island. This is the line now claimed by
Massachusetts, and whether the charter line or that is the true
line of right and boundary between the two states is the only point
in controversy in this case.
The bill avers that this line was agreed on in consequence of a
representation by the Massachusetts' commissioners to those of
Rhode Island, that in 1642, Woodword and Saffrey has ascertained
the point three miles south of Charles River which, by the charters
of both colonies, was to form their common boundary by line to run
east and west therefrom. That Woodword and Saffrey had set up a
stake at that point on Wrentham Plains as the true southern
boundary of Massachusetts. That the Rhode Island commissioners,
confiding in such representation, believing that such point had
been truly ascertained, and that such stake was no more than three
miles from Charles River, south, entered into and made the
agreement of 1710-1711, which was executed by the commissioners on
both sides.
In the agreement is this clause:
"That the stake set up by Woodword and Saffrey, approved
artists, in 1642, and since that often renewed, in lat. 41�55' N.,
being three English miles south of Charles River, in its
southernmost part, agreeably to the letters patent to
Massachusetts, be accounted and allowed as the commencement of the
line between the colonies, and continued between them as deciphered
in the plan of Woodword and Saffrey, on record in the Massachusetts
government."
It is then averred in the bill that no mark stake or monument
then existed (1710-11) by which the place at which Woodword and
Saffrey were alleged to have set up the stake could be ascertained;
that
Page 37 U. S. 716
none of the parties to the agreement went to such place; that no
survey was made, no line run, or any means taken to ascertain where
it was; whether it was three miles or more from Charles River;
whether Woodword and Saffrey ever run the line, or whether it was
the true boundary line between the colonies, according to their
respective charters. That Massachusetts took wrongful possession of
the territory in question, in which Rhode Island never acquiesced
and to which she never agreed, but continued to assert her claim
from the time of the agreement to the filing of the bill, to all
the territory embraced in her charter, and sovereignty and
jurisdiction within and over it, as claimed in the bill. The bill
denies that any line was ever run by Woodword and Saffrey in 1642;
avers that the agreements of 1710-1711, which adopted it, were
unfair, inequitable, executed under a misrepresentation and mistake
as to material facts; that the line is not run according to the
charters of the colonies; that it is more than seven miles south of
the southernmost part of Charles River; that the agreement was made
without the assent of the King; that Massachusetts has continued to
hold wrongful possession of the disputed territory, and prevents
the exercise of the rightful jurisdiction and sovereignty of Rhode
Island therein. The prayer of the bill is to ascertain and
establish the northern boundary between the states, that the rights
of sovereignty and jurisdiction be restored and confirmed to the
plaintiffs, and they be quieted in the enjoyment thereof, and their
title, and for other and further relief.
On the service of this bill on the Governor and Attorney General
of Massachusetts agreeably to a rule of this Court, the legislature
passed a resolution authorizing the appearance of the state to the
suit and the employment of counsel by the governor to defend the
rights of the state. In obedience to this resolution the governor,
after reciting it, appointed counsel under the seal of the state to
appear and make defense either by objecting to the jurisdiction of
this Court or by plea, answer, or otherwise, at his discretion, as
he should judge most proper.
Under this authority, an appearance was entered, and at January
term, a plea in bar of the plaintiff's bill was filed in which it
was averred that in 1642, a station or monument was erected and
fixed at a point believed to be on the true southern boundary line
of Massachusetts, and a line continued therefrom to the Connecticut
River westwardly, which station or monument was well known,
notorious, and has ever since been called Woodword and
Saffrey's
Page 37 U. S. 717
Station on Wrentham Plains. It then sets up the agreement of
1709 and subsequent proceedings at large; avers that the whole
merits of plaintiff's case, as set forth in the bill, were fully
heard, tried, and determined in the hearing and by the judgment of
the Rhode Island commissioners; that the agreement was fair, legal,
and binding between the parties; that it was a valid and effectual
settlement of the matter in controversy, without cover, fraud, or
misrepresentation, with a full and equal knowledge of all
circumstances by both parties. That such agreement is still in full
force, no way waived, abandoned, or relinquished, and that the
defendant has held, possessed, occupied, and enjoyed the land,
propriety, and jurisdiction according to the well known and easily
discovered station of Woodword and Saffrey and the line run by them
therefrom, from the date of the agreement to the present time,
without hindrance or molestation.
The plea then sets forth the subsequent agreement of the two
colonies, in 1717 and 1718, touching their boundaries and a running
and marking thereof by their respective commissioners, appointed
for the purpose of finally settling the controversy, who in 1718
agreed that the stake of Woodword and Saffrey, should be the point
from which the dividing line should be run and be forever the
boundary between the two governments, notwithstanding any former
controversy or claim. That this agreement was recorded, ratified,
and confirmed by the General Assembly of Rhode Island; that no
false representation was made to their commissioners; that the
agreement was concluded fairly, in good faith, with full and equal
knowledge by the respective parties, has never been annulled,
rescinded or abandoned, and was in pursuance and completion of the
agreement of 1709. The report of the commissioners is then set out,
stating that in 1719 they run and marked a line west, 2� south from
the stake of Woodword and Saffrey, at which they met, as the
boundary, which report was approved by Rhode Island in the same
year. The plea then makes the same averment as to these proceedings
of 1717, 1718, and 1719 as it did in relation to those of 1709,
1710, and 1711; pleads both agreements and unmolested possession by
the defendant, from their respective dates to the present time, as
a bar to the whole bill and against any other or further relief
therein; prays the judgment of the Court whether the defendant
shall make any further answer to the bill, and to be dismissed.
Then the defendant, not waiving but relying on his plea, by
way
Page 37 U. S. 718
of answer and in support of the plea as a bar to the bill, avers
that both agreements were a valid and effectual settlement of the
whole matter of controversy in the case, as is insisted on in the
plea.
To this plea a replication was put in, but afterwards withdrawn
and notice given that the cause would be put down for hearing on
the plea; the cause was continued at the last term; the plaintiff
gave notice that he should at this term move to amend the bill, and
the case is now before us for consideration on a motion by the
defendant to dismiss the bill for want of jurisdiction in the
cause.
However late this objection has been made or may be made in any
cause in an inferior or appellate court of the United States, it
must be considered and decided before any court can move one
further step in the cause, as any movement is necessarily the
exercise of jurisdiction. Jurisdiction is the power to hear and
determine the subject matter in controversy between parties to a
suit, to adjudicate or exercise any judicial power over them; the
question is whether on the case before a court, their action is
judicial or extrajudicial, with or without the authority of law, to
render a judgment or decree upon the rights of the litigant
parties. If the law confers the power to render a judgment or
decree, then the court has jurisdiction; what shall be adjudged or
decreed between the parties, and with which is the right of the
case, is judicial action, by hearing and determining it.
31 U. S. 6 Pet.
709; 4 Russell 415;
28 U. S. 3 Pet.
203-207.
A motion to dismiss a cause pending in the courts of the United
States, is not analogous to a plea to the jurisdiction of a court
of common law or equity in England; there, the superior courts have
a general jurisdiction over all persons within the realm, and all
causes of action between them. It depends on the subject matter,
whether the jurisdiction shall be exercised by a court of law or
equity, but that court, to which it appropriately belongs, can act
judicially upon the party and the subject of the suit, unless it
shall be made apparent to the court that the judicial determination
of the case has been withdrawn from the court of general
jurisdiction, to an inferior and limited one. It is a necessary
presumption that the court of general jurisdiction can act upon the
given case, when nothing appears to the contrary; hence has arisen
the rule that the party claiming an exemption from its process,
must set out the reasons by a special plea in abatement, and show
that some interior court of law or equity has the exclusive
cognizance of the case; otherwise the superior court must proceed,
in virtue of its general
Page 37 U. S. 719
jurisdiction.
The rule prevails both at law and in equity. 1 Ves.Sr. 204; 2
Ves.Sr. 307; Mit. 183. A motion to dismiss therefore cannot be
entertained, as it does not and cannot disclose a case of
exception, and if a plea in abatement is put in, it must not only
make out the exception, but point to the particular court to which
the case belongs. A plaintiff in law or equity is not to be driven
from court to court by such pleas; if a defendant seeks to quash a
writ or dismiss a bill for such cause, he must give the plaintiff a
better one, and shall never put in a second plea to the
jurisdiction of that court, to which he has driven the plaintiff by
his plea. 1 Ves.Sr. 203.
There are other classes of cases where the objection to the
jurisdiction is of a different nature, as on a bill in chancery;
that the subject matter is cognizable only by the King in council,
and not by any judicial power, 1 Ves.Sr. 445, or that the parties,
defendant, cannot be brought before any municipal court on account
of their sovereign character and the nature of the controversy, as
1 Ves.Sr. 371, 387; 2 Ves.Jr. 56, 60, or in the very common cases
which present the question whether the cause properly belongs to a
court of law or equity. To such cases, a plea in abatement would
not be applicable, because the plaintiff could not sue in an
inferior court; the objection goes to a denial of any jurisdiction
of a municipal court in one class of cases and to the jurisdiction
of any court of equity or of law in the other, on which last the
court decides according to their legal discretion. An objection to
jurisdiction on the ground of exemption from the process of the
court in which the suit is brought or the manner in which a
defendant is brought into it is waived by appearance and pleading
to issue.
35 U. S. 10
Pet. 473;
Toland v.
Sprague, 12 Pet. 300, but when the objections goes
to the power of the court over the parties or the subject matter,
the defendant need not, for he cannot, give the plaintiff a better
writ or bill. Where no inferior court can have jurisdiction of a
case in law or enquiry, the ground of the objection is not taken by
plea in abatement, as an exception of the given case, from the
otherwise general jurisdiction of the court; appearance does not
cure the defect of judicial power, and it may be relied on by plea,
answer, demurrer, or at the trial or hearing unless it goes to the
manner of bringing the defendant into court, which is waived by
submission to the process.
As a denial of jurisdiction over the subject matter of a suit
between parties within the realm over which and whom the court has
power to act cannot be successful in an English court of general
jurisdiction,
Page 37 U. S. 720
a motion like the present could not be sustained consistently
with the principles of its constitution. But as this Court is one
of limited and special original jurisdiction, its action must be
confined to the particular cases, controversies, and parties over
which the Constitution and laws have authorized it to act; any
proceeding without the limits prescribed is
coram non
judice, and its action a nullity.
35 U. S. 10
Pet. 474;
S.P. 4 Russ. 415. And whether the want or excess
of power is objected by a party or is apparent to the court, it
must surcease its action, or proceed extrajudicially.
Before we can proceed in this cause, we must therefore inquire
whether we can hear and determine the matters in controversy
between the parties, who are two states of this Union, sovereign
within their respective boundaries, save that portion of power
which they have granted to the federal government and foreign to
each other for all but federal purposes. So they have been
considered by this Court through a long series of years and cases
to the present term, during which, in the case of
Bank
of the United States v. Daniels, this Court has
declared this to be a fundamental principle of the Constitution,
and so we shall consider it in deciding on the present motion.
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
590-591.
Those states, in their highest sovereign capacity in the
convention of the people thereof, on whom by the Revolution the
prerogative of the Crown and the transcendant power of Parliament
devolved in a plenitude unimpaired by any act and controllable by
no authority,
21 U. S. 8
Wheat. 584,
21 U. S. 588,
adopted the Constitution, by which they respectively made to the
United States a grant of judicial power over controversies between
two or more states. By the Constitution it was ordained that this
judicial power, in cases where a state was a party, should be
exercised by this Court as one of original jurisdiction. The states
waived their exemption from judicial power,
19 U. S. 6
Wheat. 378,
19 U. S. 380,
as sovereigns by original and inherent right, by their own grant of
its exercise over themselves in such cases, but which they would
not grant to any inferior tribunal. By this grant, this Court has
acquired jurisdiction over the parties in this cause by their own
consent and delegated authority, as their agent for executing the
judicial power of the United States in the cases specified.
Massachusetts has appeared, submitted to the process in her
legislative capacity, and plead in bar of the plaintiff's action,
certain matters on which the judgment of the Court is asked;
Page 37 U. S. 721
all doubts as to jurisdiction over the parties are thus at rest,
as well by the grant of power by the people as the submission of
the legislature to the process, and calling on the Court to
exercise its jurisdiction on the case presented by the bill, plea,
and answer.
Our next inquiry will be whether we have jurisdiction of the
subject matters of the suit to hear and determine them.
That it is a controversy between two states cannot be denied,
and though the Constitution does not in terms extend the judicial
power to all controversies between two or more states, yet it in
terms excludes none, whatever may be their nature or subject. It is
therefore a question of construction whether the controversy in the
present case is within the grant of judicial power. The solution of
this question must necessarily depend on the words of the
Constitution; the meaning and intention of the convention which
framed and proposed it for adoption and ratification to the
conventions of the people of and in the several states, together
with a reference to such sources of judicial information as are
resorted to by all courts in construing statutes, and to which this
Court has always resorted in construing the Constitution. It was
necessarily left to the legislative power to organize the Supreme
Court, to define its powers consistently with the Constitution, as
to its original jurisdiction, and to distribute the residue of the
judicial power between this and the inferior courts, which it was
bound to ordain and establish, defining their respective powers,
whether original or appellate, by which and how it should be
exercised. In obedience to the injunction of the Constitution,
Congress exercised their power, so far as they thought it necessary
and proper, under the seventeenth clause of the eighth section,
first article, for carrying into execution the powers vested by the
Constitution in the judicial as well as all other departments and
officers of the government of the United States.
16 U. S. 3
Wheat. 389. No department could organize itself; the Constitution
provided for the organization of the legislative power and the mode
of its exercise, but it delineated only the great outlines of the
judicial power;
14 U. S. 1
Wheat. 326;
17 U. S. 4
Wheat. 407, leaving the details to Congress, in which was vested,
by express delegation, the power to pass all laws necessary and
proper for carrying into execution all powers except their own. The
distribution and appropriate exercise of the judicial power must
therefore be made by laws passed by Congress, and cannot be assumed
by any other department, else, the power being concurrent in the
legislative and judicial departments, a conflict between them would
be probable if not unavoidable under a Constitution of
government
Page 37 U. S. 722
which made it the duty of the judicial power to decide all cases
in law or equity arising under it, or laws passed, and treaties
made by its authority.
By the Judiciary Act of 1789, the judicial system of the United
States was organized, the powers of the different courts defined,
brought into action, and the manner of their exercise regulated.
The 13th section provided
"That the Supreme Court shall have exclusive jurisdiction of all
controversies of a civil nature where a state is a party, except
between a state and its citizens and except also between a state
and citizens of other states or aliens, in which latter case it
shall have original, but not exclusive jurisdiction."
1 Story's Laws 59.
The power of Congress to make this provision for carrying into
execution the judicial power in such cases has never been, and we
think cannot be questioned, and taken in connection with the
Constitution, presents the great question in this cause which is
one of construction appropriate to judicial power and exclusively
of judicial cognizance till the legislative power acts again upon
it.
Vide 28 U. S. 3 Pet.
203. In deciding whether the present case is embraced or excluded
by the Constitution and Judiciary Act and whether it is a case of
lawful original cognizance by this Court, it is the exercise of
jurisdiction, for it must be in the legal discretion of the Court
to retain or dismiss the bill of the plaintiffs. Act as we may feel
it our duty to do, there is no appeal from our judgment, save to
the amending power of the Constitution, which can annul not only
its judgments, but the Court itself. So that the true question is
necessarily whether we will so exercise our jurisdiction as to give
a judgment on the merits of the case as presented by the parties,
who are capable of suing and being sued in this Court, in law or
equity, according to the nature of the case and controversy between
the respective states.
This Court, in construing the Constitution as to the grants of
powers to the United States and the restrictions upon the states,
has ever held that an exception of any particular case presupposes
that those which are not excepted are embraced within the grant or
prohibition, and have laid it down as a general rule that where no
exception is made in terms, none will be made by mere implication
or construction.
19 U. S. 6
Wheat. 378;
21 U. S. 8
Wheat. 489-490;
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 438;
22 U. S. 9 Wheat.
206-207,
22 U. S. 216.
Then the only question is whether this case comes within the
rule, or presents an exception,
Page 37 U. S. 723
according to the principles of construction adopted and acted on
by this Court in cases involving the exposition of the Constitution
and laws of the United States, which are construed as other
instruments granting power or property.
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 437;
31 U. S. 6 Pet.
738,
31 U. S. 740.
That some degree of implication must be given to words is a
proposition of universal adoption; implication is but another term
for meaning and intention apparent in the writing on judicial
inspection; "the evident consequence," 1 Bl.Com. 250, "or some
necessary consequence resulting from the law," 2 Ves.Sr. 351, or
the words of an instrument in the construction of which the words,
the subject, the context, the intention of the person using them
are all to be taken into view.
17 U. S. 4
Wheat. 415;
31 U. S. 6 Pet.
739,
31 U. S. 741.
Such is the sense in which the common expression is used in the
books, "express words or necessary implication," such as arise on
the words, taken in connection with other sources of construction,
but not by conjecture, supposition, or mere reasoning on the
meaning or intention of the writing. All rules would be subverted
if mere extraneous matter should have the effect of interpreting a
supreme law differently from its obvious or necessarily to be
implied sense;
vide 22 U. S. 9 Wheat.
188, so apparent as to overrule the words used,
19 U. S. 6
Wheat. 380. "Controversies between two or more states," "all
controversies of a civil nature, where a state is a party," are
broad comprehensive terms, by no obvious meaning or necessary
implication excluding those which relate to the title, boundary,
jurisdiction, or sovereignty of a state.
19 U. S. 6
Wheat. 378.
The Judiciary Act makes certain exceptions, which apply only to
cases of private persons and cannot embrace a case of state against
state; established rules forbid the extension of the exception to
such cases if they are of a civil nature. What then are
"controversies of a civil nature" between state and state or more
than two states�
We must presume that Congress did not mean to exclude from our
jurisdiction those controversies the decision of which the states
had confided to the judicial power, and are bound to give to the
Constitution and laws such a meaning as will make them harmonize
unless there is an apparent or fairly to be implied conflict
between their respective provisions. In the construction of the
Constitution, we must look to the history of the times and examine
the state of things existing when it was framed and adopted,
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 354;
19 U. S. 6
Wheat. 416;
29 U. S. 4 Pet.
431-432, to ascertain the old law, the mischief, and the remedy. It
is a part of the public history of the United
Page 37 U. S. 724
States of which we cannot be judicially ignorant that at the
adoption of the Constitution, there were existing controversies
between eleven states respecting their boundaries, which arose
under their respective charters and had continued from the first
settlement of the colonies. New Hampshire and New York contended
for the territory which is now Vermont until the people of the
latter assumed by their own power the position of a state and
settled the controversy by taking to themselves the disputed
territory as the rightful sovereign thereof. Massachusetts and
Rhode Island are now before us; Connecticut claimed part of New
York and Pennsylvania. She submitted to the decree of the Council
of Trenton, acting pursuant to the authority of the confederation,
which decided that Connecticut had not the jurisdiction, but she
claimed the right of soil till 1800. New Jersey had a controversy
with New York, which was before this Court in 1832, and one yet
subsists between New Jersey and Delaware. Maryland and Virginia
were contending about boundaries in 1835, when a suit was pending
in this Court, and the dispute is yet an open one. Virginia and
North Carolina contended for boundary till 1802, and the remaining
states, South Carolina and Georgia, settled their boundary in the
April preceding the meeting of the general convention which framed
and proposed the Constitution. 1 Laws U.S. 466.
With the full knowledge that there were at its adoption not only
existing controversies between two states singly, but between one
state and two others, we find the words of the Constitution
applicable to this state of things, "controversies between two or
more states." It is not known that there were any such
controversies then existing other than those which relate to
boundary, and it would be a most forced construction to hold that
these were excluded from judicial cognizance and that it was to be
confined to controversies to arise prospectively on other subjects.
This becomes the more apparent when we consider the context and
those parts of the Constitution which bear directly on the
boundaries of states, by which it is evident that there remained no
power in the contending states to settle a controverted boundary
between themselves as states competent to act by their own
authority on the subject matter, or in any department of the
government, if it was not in this.
By the first clause of the tenth section of the first article of
the Constitution, there was a positive prohibition against any
state's entering into "any treaty, alliance, or confederation." No
power under the
Page 37 U. S. 725
government could make such an act valid or dispense with the
constitutional prohibition. In the next clause is a prohibition
against any state's entering
"into any agreement or compact with another state or with a
foreign power, without the consent of Congress, or engaging in war
unless actually invaded or in imminent danger admitting of no
delay."
By this surrender of the power, which before the adoption of the
Constitution was vested in every state, of settling these contested
boundaries as in the plenitude of their sovereignty they might,
they could settle them neither by war, or in peace, by treaty,
compact or agreement without the permission of the new legislative
power which the states brought into existence by their respective
and several grants in conventions of the people. If Congress
consented, then the states were in this respect restored to their
original inherent sovereignty, such consent being the sole
limitation imposed by the Constitution, when given, left the states
as they were before, as held by this Court in
Poole
v. Fleeger, 11 Pet. 209, whereby their compacts
became of binding force and finally settled the boundary between
them, operating with the same effect as a treaty between sovereign
powers. That is that the boundaries so established and fixed by
compact between nations become conclusive upon all the subjects and
citizens thereof and bind their rights, and are to be treated to
all intents and purposes as the true real boundaries.
36 U. S. 11
Pet. 209;
S.P. 1 Ves.Sr. 448-449;
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 534. The construction of such compact is a judicial
question, and was so considered by this Court in
Lessee of
Sims v. Irvine, 3 Dall. 425-454, and in
Marlatt v. Silk &
McDonald, 11 Pet. 2,
36 U. S. 18;
Barton v.
Williams, 3 Wheat. 529-533.
In looking to the practical construction of this clause of the
Constitution relating to agreements and compacts by the states, in
submitting those which relate to boundaries to Congress for its
consent, its giving its consent, and the action of this Court upon
them, it is most manifest that by universal consent and action, the
words "agreement" and "compact," are construed to include those
which relate to boundary; yet that word "boundary" is not used. No
one has ever imagined that compacts of boundary were excluded
because not expressly named; on the contrary, they are held by the
states, Congress, and this Court to be included by necessary
implication, the evident consequence resulting from their known
object, subject matter, the context, and historical reference to
the state of the times and country. No such exception has been
thought of, as it would
Page 37 U. S. 726
render the clause a perfect nullity for all practical purposes,
especially the one evidently intended by the Constitution in giving
to Congress the power of dissenting to such compacts. Not to
prevent the states from settling their own boundaries so far as
merely affected their relations to each other, but to guard against
the derangement of their federal relations with the other states of
the Union and the federal government, which might be injuriously
affected if the contracting states might act upon their boundaries
at their pleasure.
Every reason which has led to this construction applies with
equal force to the clause granting to the judicial power
jurisdiction over controversies between states as to that clause
which relates to compacts and agreements. We cannot make an
exception of controversies relating to boundaries without applying
the same rule to compacts for settling them, nor refuse to include
them within one general term when they have uniformly been included
in another. Controversies about boundary are more serious in their
consequences upon the contending states and their relations to the
Union and governments than compacts and agreements. If the
Constitution has given to no department the power to settle them,
they must remain interminable, and as the large and powerful states
can take possession to the extent of their claim, and the small and
weak ones must acquiesce and submit to physical power, the
possession of the large state must consequently be peaceable and
uninterrupted; prescription will be asserted, and whatever may be
the right and justice of the controversy, there can be no remedy
though just rights may be violated. Bound hand and foot by the
prohibitions of the Constitution, a complaining state can neither
treat, agree, or fight with its adversary without the consent of
Congress; a resort to the judicial power is the only means left for
legally adjusting or persuading a state which has possession of
disputed territory to enter into an agreement or compact relating
to a controverted boundary. Few if any will be made when it is left
to the pleasure of the state in possession, but when it is known
that some tribunal can decide on the right, it is most probable
that controversies will be settled by compact.
There can be but two tribunals under the Constitution who can
act on the boundaries of states -- the legislative or the judicial
power; the former is limited in express terms to assent or dissent,
where a compact or agreement is referred to them by the states, and
as the latter
Page 37 U. S. 727
can be exercised only by this Court, when a state is a party,
the power is here, or it cannot exist. For these reasons, we cannot
be persuaded that it could have been intended to provide only for
the settlement of boundaries when states could agree and to
altogether withhold the power to decide controversies on which the
states could not agree and presented the most imperious call for
speedy settlement.
There is another clause in the Constitution which bears on this
question. The judicial power extends to "controversies between
citizens of different states;" "between citizens of the same state
claiming lands under grants of different states." We cannot but
know judicially that the latter classes of cases must necessarily
arise on boundary and that few if any ever arise from any other
source. If there is a compact between the states, it settles the
line of original right; it is the law of the case binding on the
states and its citizens as fully as if it had been never contested;
if there is no compact, then the controversy must be settled by
adjudging where the line of boundary ought to be by the laws and
rules appropriate to the case.
19 U. S. 6
Wheat. 393;
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
300. It is not recollected that any such cases have ever arisen
"between citizens of the same state," as the judiciary acts have
made no provision for this exercise of this undoubted
constitutional jurisdiction, and it is not necessary for the
decision of this cause to inquire whether a law is necessary for
this purpose. But for the other class of cases, "controversies
between citizens of different states," the eleventh section of the
Judiciary Act makes provision, and the circuit courts in their
original and this Court in its appellate jurisdiction have decided
on the boundaries of the states under whom the parties respectively
claim, whether there has been a compact or not. The jurisdiction of
the circuit court in such cases was distinctly and expressly
asserted by this Court as early as 1799 in
Fowler v.
Miller, 3 Dall. 411-412;
S.P. 30 U. S. 5 Pet.
290.
In
Handly's Lessee v. Anthony, the Circuit Court of
Kentucky decided on the boundary between that state and Indiana in
an ejectment between these parties, and their judgment was affirmed
by this Court.
18 U. S. 5
Wheat. 375;
16 U. S. 3 Wheat.
212-218;
S.P. 25 U. S.
Gaillard, 12 Wheat. 523. When the boundaries of states can be
thus decided collaterally in suits between individuals, we cannot
by any just rule of interpretation declare that this Court cannot
adjudicate on the question of boundary when it is presented
directly in a controversy between two or more states and is the
only point in the cause.
Page 37 U. S. 728
There is yet another source of reference from which to ascertain
the true construction of the Constitution.
By the ninth Article of Confederation adopted by the
legislatures of the several states, it is provided
"That the United States in Congress assembled shall also be the
last resort on appeal in all disputes and differences now
subsisting or which may hereafter arise between two or more states
concerning boundary, jurisdiction, or any other cause
whatever."
It directed the appointment of a tribunal, whose judgment should
be final and conclusive. It also gave to Congress power to appoint
a judicial tribunal to decide on a petition of either of the
parties, claiming land under grants of two or more states, who had
adjusted their boundaries but had previously made the grants on
which the controversy arose. One of the most crying evils of the
Confederation was that it created no judicial power without the
action of Congress, and confined the power of that body to the
appointment of courts for the trial of piracies and felonies
committed on the high seas, for determining finally on appeal, in
all cases of captures, and for the adjustment of the controversies
before referred to. Yet defective as was the Confederation in other
respects, there was full power to finally settle controverted
boundaries in the two cases by an appeal by a state or petition of
one of its citizens. This power was given from the universal
conviction of its necessity in order to preserve harmony among the
confederated states, even during the pressure of the Revolution. If
in this state of things it was deemed indispensable to create a
special judicial power for the sole and express purpose of finally
settling all disputes concerning boundary, arise how they might,
when this power was plenary, its judgment conclusive on the right,
while the other powers delegated to Congress were mere shadowy
forms, one conclusion at least is inevitable. That the
Constitution, which emanated directly from the people, in
conventions in the several states, could not have been intended to
give to the judicial power a less extended jurisdiction or less
efficient means of final action than the Articles of Confederation,
adopted by the mere legislative power of the states, had given to a
special tribunal appointed by Congress, whose members were the mere
creatures and representatives of state legislatures, appointed by
them, without any action by the people of the state.
This Court exists by a direct grant from the people of their
judicial power; it is exercised by their authority, as their agent
selected by themselves, for the purposes specified; the people of
the states as they
Page 37 U. S. 729
respectively became parties to the Constitution, gave to the
judicial power of the United States jurisdiction over themselves,
controversies between states, between citizens of the same or
different states, claiming lands under their conflicting grants,
within disputed territory. No fact was more prominent in our
history, none could have been more strongly impressed on the
members of the general and state conventions, than that contests
for the vacant lands of the Crown, long threatened the dissolution
of the Confederation, which existed practically and by common
consent, from 1774 to 1781, when, after five years of discussion,
it was ratified by the legislatures of all the states. This Court
has attested the fact,
10 U. S. 6
Cranch 142;
18 U. S. 5
Wheat. 376. Similar danger was imminent, from controversies about
boundaries between the states till provision was made for their
decision, with a proviso "That no state should be deprived of
territory for the benefit of the United States." 1 Laws U.S. 17.
These two provisions, taken in connection, put an end to any fears
of convulsion by the contests of states about boundary and
jurisdiction, when any state could, by appeal, bring the powers of
Congress and a judicial tribunal into activity, and the United
States could not take any vacant land within the boundary of a
state. Hence resulted the principles laid down by this Court in
Harcourt v.
Gaillard, 12 Wheat. 526, that the boundaries of the
United States was the external boundaries of the several states,
and that the United States did not acquire any territory by the
Treaty of Peace in 1783.
Yet though this express provision was made to settle
controverted boundaries by judicial power, Congress had no
supervision over compacts and agreements between states as to
boundary save on grants made before the compact; the states did and
could so settle them without the consent of Congress, to whom, as
no express power on or over the subject of such compacts was
delegated, their dissent could not invalidate them. Such was the
law of the confederacy during a common war, when external danger
could not suppress the danger of dissolution from internal
dissentions, when, owing to the imbecility of Congress, the powers
of the states being reserved for legislative and judicial purposes,
and the utter want of power in the United States to act directly on
the people of the states, on the rights of the states (except those
in controversy between them), or the subject matters, on which they
had delegated but mere shadowy jurisdiction, a radical change of
government became necessary. The Constitution, which superseded the
Articles of Confederation, erected
Page 37 U. S. 730
a new government, organized it into distinct departments,
assigning to each its appropriate powers and to Congress the power
to pass laws for carrying into execution the powers granted to
each, so that the laws of the Union could be enforced by its own
authority upon all persons and subject matters over which
jurisdiction was granted to any department or officer of the
government of the United States. It was to operate in a time of
peace with foreign powers, when foreign pressure was not in itself
some bond of union between the states and danger from domestic
sources might be imminent; to extend the legislative, executive and
judicial power alike over persons and states on the enumerated
subjects by their own grants. The states submitted to its exercise,
waived their sovereignty, and agreed to come to this Court to
settle their controversies with each other, excepting none in
terms. So they had agreed by the Confederation, not only not
excepting but in express terms including all disputes and
differences whatever.
In the front of the Constitution is a declaration by the
sovereign power from which it emanated; that it was ordained, "in
order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure
domestic tranquility," &c. Whether it was best calculated to
effect these objects by making the judicial power utterly
incompetent to exercise a jurisdiction expressly delegated to the
old Congress and its constituted court, over states and their
boundaries, in the plenitude of absolute power, yet granted only by
the legislative power of the several states, or whether the powers
granted to this Court by the people of all the states, ought, by
mere construction and implication, to be held inefficient for the
objects of its creation, and not capable of "establishing justice"
between two or more states, are the direct questions before us for
consideration. Without going further into any general consideration
on the subject, there is one which cannot be overlooked and is
imperious in its results.
Under the Confederation, the states were free to settle their
controversies of any kind whatever by compact or agreement; under
the Constitution, they can enter into none without the consent of
Congress in the exercise of its political power, thus making an
amicable adjustment a political matter for the concurring
determination of the states and Congress and its construction a
matter of judicial cognizance by any court to which the appropriate
resort may be had by the Judiciary Act.
This has uniformly been done in the courts of the states and
Page 37 U. S. 731
Union; no one has ever deemed such an exercise of power to be
extrajudicial or a case which called for it to be
coram non
judice. When, therefore, the Court judicially inspects the
Articles of Confederation, the preamble to the Constitution,
together with the surrender by the states of all power to settle
their contested boundaries, with the express grant of original
jurisdiction to this Court, we feel not only authorized but bound
to declare that it is capable of applying its judicial power to
this extent at least:
1. To act as the tribunal substituted by the Constitution in
place of that which existed at the time of its adoption, on the
same controversies, and to a like effect.
2. As the substitute of the contending states, by their own
grant, made in their most sovereign capacity, conferring that
preexisting power, in relation to their own boundaries, which they
had not surrendered to the legislative department, thus separating
the exercise of political from judicial power and defining
each.
There is but one power in this Union paramount to that by which,
in our opinion, this jurisdiction has been granted and must be
brought into action if it can. That power has been exerted in the
11th Amendment, but while it took from this Court all jurisdiction,
past, present, and future,
3
U. S. 3 Dall. 382, of all controversies between states
and individuals, it left its exercise over those between states as
free as it had been before. This too with the full view of the
decisions of this Court and the act of 1789 giving it exclusive
jurisdiction of all controversies of a civil nature where a state
is a party, and there can be no subject on which the judicial power
can act with a more direct and certain tendency to effectuate the
great objects of its institution than the one before us. If we
cannot "establish justice" between these litigant states, as the
tribunal to which they have both submitted the adjudication of
their respective controversies, it will be a source of deep regret
to all who are desirous that each department of the government of
the Union should have the capacity of acting within its appropriate
orbit, as the instrument appointed by the Constitution, so to
execute its agency as to make this bond of union between the states
more perfect and thereby enforce the domestic tranquility of each
and all.
Being thus fully convinced that we have an undoubted
jurisdiction of this cause as far as we have proceeded in examining
whether, by a true and just construction of the Constitution and
laws, it is included or excluded in the grant of judicial power for
any purpose,
Page 37 U. S. 732
we now proceed to inquire how that jurisdiction shall be exerted
-- whether to retain or dismiss the complainant's bill.
This depends on our jurisdiction over any of the matters on
which the plaintiff asks our interposition. If there is any one
subject on which we can act, the bill must be retained, so that the
true inquiry is not as to the extent, but the existence, of any
jurisdiction. 1 Ves.Sr. 203, 205; 2 Ves.Sr. 356.
The bill prays
1. For the ascertaining and establishing the boundary line
between the states by the order of this Court.
2. That the right of jurisdiction and sovereignty of the
plaintiff to the disputed territory may be restored to her, and she
be quieted in the enjoyment thereof and her title thereto, and for
further relief. If we can decree any relief specially called for,
or any other relief, consistently with the specific prayer, we must
proceed in the cause.
35 U. S. 10
Pet. 228;
33 U. S. 8 Pet.
536.
The first prayer is to ascertain and establish a boundary.
Having expressed our opinion that the subject of boundary is within
our jurisdiction, we must exercise it to some extent and on some
matter connected with or dependent upon it, and as the bill is on
the equity side of the Court, it must be done according to the
principles and usages of a court of equity.
In the bill are set forth various charters from the Crown from
1621 to 1691 and sundry proceedings by the grantees and the Crown
in relation thereto; also agreements between the parties as
colonies and states for adjusting their boundaries and the
proceedings of their respective legislatures and commissioners in
relation thereto from 1709 to 1818. The plaintiff relies on the
charters of the two colonies as the rule by which to settle the
boundary; on the continued assertion of her rights, as well by the
charter, as her previous purchase from the Indians; denying
altogether the validity of the agreements and subsequent
proceedings; averring that they were made under misrepresentation
and mistake as to material facts. On the other hand the defendant
pleads the agreements as a bar; that they are binding, and have
been ratified by the plaintiff, so that the plaintiff rests his
case on a question of original boundary, unaffected by any
agreement; the defendant rests on the agreements, without regard to
the original charter boundaries. One asking us to annul, the other
to enforce, the agreements, one averring continual claim, the other
setting up the quiet unmolested possession for more than a century
in strict conformity to and by the line in the agreements.
Page 37 U. S. 733
Our first inquiry then must be as to our power to settle the
boundary -- in other words, to decide what portion of the territory
in dispute belongs to the one state or the other, according to the
line which is their common boundary. There is not in fact, or by
any law can be, any territory which does not belong to one or the
other state, so that the only question is to which the territory
belongs. This must depend on the right by which each state claims
the territory in question. Both claim under grants of contiguous
territory by the King, in whom was the absolute propriety and full
dominion in and over it;
34 U. S. 9 Pet.
745-748;
21 U. S. 8
Wheat. 595; the line drawn or pointed out in his grant is therefore
that which is designated in the two charters as the common boundary
of both.
18 U. S. 5
Wheat. 375.
The locality of that line is matter of fact, and when
ascertained separates the territory of one from the other, for
neither state can have any right beyond its territorial boundary.
It follows that when a place is within the boundary, it is a part
of the territory of a state; title, jurisdiction, and sovereignty
are inseparable incidents, and remain so till the state makes some
cession. The plain language of this Court in
United
States v. Bevans, 3 Wheat. 386, saves the necessity
of any reasoning on this subject. The question is put by the
Court
"What then is the extent of jurisdiction which a state
possesses? . . . We answer without hesitation the jurisdiction of a
state is coextensive with its territory, coextensive with its
legislative power. The place described, is unquestionably within
the original territory of Massachusetts. It is, then, within the
jurisdiction of Massachusetts, unless that jurisdiction has been
ceded to [by] the United States [
id., 16 U. S.
387]. . . . A cession of territory is essentially a
cession of jurisdiction [
id., 16 U. S.
388]. Still the general jurisdiction over the place,
subject to this grant of power [to the United States] adheres to
the territory as a portion of sovereignty not yet given away
[
id., 16 U. S. 389]."
This principle is embodied in the sixteenth clause of the eighth
section, first article of the Constitution, relative to this
district, forts, arsenals, dock yards, magazines, and uniformly
applied to all acquisitions of territory by the United States in
virtue of cessions by particular states or foreign nations.
18 U. S. 5
Wheat. 324;
18 U. S. 5
Wheat. 375;
16 U. S. 3
Wheat. 388-389;
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
300. Title, jurisdiction, sovereignty, are therefore dependent
questions, necessarily settled when boundary is ascertained, which
being the line of territory, is the
Page 37 U. S. 734
line of power over it, so that great as questions of
jurisdiction and sovereignty may be, they depend in this case on
two simple facts. 1. Where is the southernmost point of Charles
River. 2. Where is the point three English miles in a south line,
drawn from it. When these points are ascertained, which by the
terms are those called for in both charters, then an east and west
line from the second point is necessarily the boundary between the
two states if the charters govern it.
If this Court can, in a case of original jurisdiction, where
both parties appear and the plaintiff rests his case on these
facts, proceed to ascertain them, there must be an end of this case
when they are ascertained if the issue between them is upon
original right by the charter boundaries. We think it does not
require reason or precedent to show that we may ascertain facts
with or without a jury, at our discretion, as the circuit courts
and all others do in the ordinary course of equity; our power to
examine the evidence in the cause, and thereby ascertain a fact,
cannot depend on its effects, however important in their
consequences. Whether the sovereignty of the United States, of a
state, or the property of an individual depends on the locality of
a tree, a stone, or watercourse, whether the right depends on a
charter, treaty, cession, compact, or a common deed, the right is
to territory great or small in extent, and power over it, either of
government or private property, the title of a state is
sovereignty, full and absolute dominion;
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
300-301; the title of an individual such as the state makes it by
its grant and law.
No court acts differently in deciding on boundary between states
than on lines between separate tracts of land; if there is
uncertainty where the line is, if there is a confusion of
boundaries by the nature of interlocking grants, the obliteration
of marks, the intermixing of possession under different
proprietors, the effects of accident, fraud, or time, or other
kindred causes, it is a case appropriate to equity. An issue at law
is directed, a commission of boundary awarded, or, if the court are
satisfied without either, they decree what and where the boundary
of a farm, a manor, province, or a state is and shall be.
When no other matter affects a boundary, a decree settles it as
having been by original right at the place decreed, in the same
manner as has been stated where it is settled by treaty or compact;
all dependent rights are settled when boundary is; 1 Ves.Sr.
448-450. If, therefore, there was an issue in this case on the
locality of the point three miles south of the southernmost point
of Charles River, we
Page 37 U. S. 735
should be competent to decide it, and decree where the boundary
between the states was in 1629, and 1663 at the dates of their
respective charters.
On these principles it becomes unnecessary to decide on the
remaining prayers of the bill; if we grant the first and settle
boundary, the others follow, and if the plaintiff obtains relief as
to that, he wants no other. The established forms of such decrees
extend to everything in manner or way necessary to the final
establishment of the boundary as the true line of right and power
between the parties.
This, however, is not a case where there is an issue on original
boundary; the defendant does not rest on that fact, but puts in a
plea setting up an agreement or compact of boundary between the
parties while colonies, and the actual establishment of a line
agreed on, run, marked, and ratified by both colonies, long
possession, and a right by prescription to all the territory north
of such line. This presents a case on an agreement on one side,
alleged to be conclusive upon every matter complained of in the
bill; on the other, to be invalid for the reasons alleged. If this
matter of the plea is sufficient in law and true in fact, it ends
the cause; if not so in both respects, then the parties are thrown
back on their original rights according to their respective claims
to the territory in question, by charters, or purchase from the
Indians. If, then, we can act at all on the case, we must, on this
state of the pleadings, decide on the legal sufficiency of the
plea, if true, as on a demurrer to it; next, on the truth of its
averments; and then decide whether it bars the complaint of the
plaintiff, and all relief; if it does not, then we must ascertain
the fact on which the whole controversy turns. In the first aspect
of the case it presents a question of the most common and undoubted
jurisdiction of a court of equity; an agreement which the defendant
sets up as conclusive to bar all relief, and the plaintiff asks to
be declared void on grounds of the most clear and appropriate
cognizance in equity, and not cognizable in a court of law. A false
representation made by one party, confided in by the other, as to a
fact on which the whole cause depends; the execution of the
agreement, and all proceedings under it, founded on a mistaken
belief of the truth of the fact represented. We must therefore do
something in the cause unless the defendants have, in their
objections, made out this to be an exception to the usual course of
equity in its action on questions of boundary.
Page 37 U. S. 736
It is said that this is a political, not civil controversy
between the parties, and so not within the Constitution or
thirteenth section of the Judiciary Act.
As it is viewed by the Court, it is on the bill alone, had it
been demurred to, a controversy as to the locality of a point three
miles south of the southernmost point of Charles River; which is
the only question which can arise under the charter. Taking the
case on the bill and plea, the question is whether the stake set up
on Wrentham Plain by Woodword and Saffrey in 1642, is the true
point from which to run an east and west line, as the compact
boundary between the states. In the first aspect of the case it
depends on a fact; in the second on the law of equity, whether the
agreement is void or valid; neither of which present a political
controversy, but one of an ordinary judicial nature, of frequent
occurrence in suits between individuals. This controversy, then,
cannot be a political one unless it becomes so by the effect of the
settlement of the boundary; by a decree on the fact, or the
agreement; or because the contest is between states as to political
rights and power, unconnected with the original, or compact
boundary.
We will not impute to the men who conducted the colonies at
home, and in Congress, in the three declarations of their rights
previous to the consummation of the Revolution, from 1774, to 1776,
and its final act, by a declaration of the rights of the states,
then announced to the world; an ignorance of the effects of
territorial boundary between them, in both capacities. Every
declaration of the old Congress would be falsified, if the line of
territory is held not to have been, from the first, the line of
property and power. The Congress, which, in 1777, framed and
recommended the Articles of Confederation for adoption by the
legislative power of the several states were acting in a spirit of
fatuity if they thought that a final and conclusive judgment on
state boundaries was not equally decisive as to the exercise of
political power by a state, making it rightful within but void
beyond the adjudged line.
The members of the general and state conventions were alike
fatuitous, if they did not comprehend, and know the effect of the
states submitting controversies between themselves, to judicial
power; so were the members of the first Congress of the
Constitution, if they could see, and not know, read, and not
understand its plain provisions, when many of them assisted in its
frame.
The founders of our government could not but know what has
Page 37 U. S. 737
ever been and is familiar to every statesman and jurist, that
all controversies between nations are in this sense political, and
not judicial, as none but the sovereign can settle them. In the
Declaration of Independence, the states assumed their equal station
among the powers of the earth and asserted that they could of right
do what other independent states could do; "declare war, make
peace, contract alliances;" of consequence, to settle their
controversies with a foreign power, or among themselves, which no
state, and no power could do for them. They did contract an
alliance with France in 1778, and with each other, in 1781; the
object of both was to defend and secure their asserted rights as
states, but they surrendered to Congress and its appointed court
the right and power of settling their mutual controversies, thus
making them judicial questions, whether they arose on "boundary,
jurisdiction, or any other cause whatever." There is neither the
authority of law or reason for the position, that boundary between
nations or states, is, in its nature, any more a political question
than any other subject on which they may contend. None can be
settled without war or treaty, which is by political power, but
under the old and new confederacy they could and can be settled by
a court constituted by themselves, as their own substitutes,
authorized to do that for states, which states alone could do
before. We are thus pointed to the true boundary line between
political and judicial power, and question.
A sovereign decides by his own will, which is the supreme law
within his own boundary;
31 U. S. 6 Pet.
714;
34 U. S. 9 Pet.
748; a court or judge decides according to the law prescribed by
the sovereign power, and that law is the rule for judgment. The
submission by the sovereigns or states to a court of law or equity
of a controversy between them, without prescribing any rule of
decision, gives power to decide according to the appropriate law of
the case; 11 Ves. 294; which depends on the subject matter, the
source and nature of the claims of the parties, and the law which
governs them. From the time of such submission, the question ceases
to be a political one, to be decide by the
sic volo, sic
jubeo of political power; it comes to the Court to be decided
by its judgment, legal discretion, and solemn consideration of the
rules of law appropriate to its nature as a judicial question,
depending on the exercise of judicial power; as it is bound to act
by known and settled principles of national or municipal
jurisprudence, as the case requires.
It has never been contended that prize courts of admiralty
jurisdiction,
Page 37 U. S. 738
or questions before them, are not strictly judicial; they decide
on questions of war and peace, the law of nations, treaties, and
the municipal laws of the capturing nation, by which alone they are
constituted;
a fortiori, if such courts were constituted
by a solemn treaty between the state under whose authority the
capture was made, and the state whose citizens or subjects suffer
by the capture. All nations submit to the jurisdiction of such
courts over their subjects, and hold their final decrees conclusive
on rights of property.
10 U. S. 6
Cranch 284-285.
These considerations lead to the definition of political and
judicial power and questions; the former is that which a sovereign
or state exerts by his or its own authority as reprisal and
confiscation; 3 Ves. 429; the latter is that which is granted to a
court or judicial tribunal. So of controversies between states;
they are in their nature political when the sovereign or state
reserves to itself the right of deciding on it; makes it the
"subject of a treaty, to be settled as between states independent,"
or "the foundation of representations from state to state." This is
political equity, to be adjudged by the parties themselves, as
contradistinguished from judicial equity, administered by a court
of justice, decreeing the
equum et bonum of the case, let
who or what be the parties before them. These are the definitions
of law as made in the great Maryland case of
Barclay v.
Russell, 3 Ves. 435, as they have long been settled and
established. Their correctness will be tested by a reference to the
question of original boundary, as it ever has been and yet is by
the Constitution of England, which was ours before the Revolution,
while colonies;
21 U. S. 8
Wheat. 588; as it was here from 1771 to 1781, thence to 1788, and
since by the Constitution as expounded by this Court.
If the question concerning the boundaries of contiguous pieces
of land, manors, lordships, or counties palatine, arises within the
realm, it was cognizable in the High Court of Chancery, in an
appropriate case, a mere question of title to any defined part, was
cognizable only by ejectment or real action in a court of law,
which were in either case judicial questions. 1 Ves.Sr. 446-447. If
between counts Palatine, boundary involved not only the right of
soil, but the highest franchise known to the law of England,
jura regalia, to the same extent as the King in right of
the Crown and royal jurisdiction. Palatine jurisdiction was a
qualified sovereignty till abridged by the 24 H. 8. ch. 24,
Seld.Tit.Hon. 380, 382, 638, 838; 1 Black.Com. 108-17; 7 Co. 19;
Cro.El. 240; 4 D.C.D. 450, &c. The
Page 37 U. S. 739
count appointed the judges of courts of law and equity; the
King's writs did not run into his county; writs were in his name,
and indictments against his peace, Co.Inst. 204-218. Yet his
jurisdiction, his royalties, and
jura regalia, &c.,
existed or disappeared, according as a chancellor should decree as
to boundary.
Penn v. Baltimore, 1 Ves.Sr. 448-449, &c.
The King had no jurisdiction over boundary within the realm,
without he had it in all his dominions, as the absolute owner of
the territory, from whom all title and power must flow, 1 Bl.Com.
241; Co.Litt. 1; Hob. 322; 7 D.C.D. 76; Cowp. 205-211; 7 Co. 17,
b., as the supreme legislator; save a limited power in Parliament.
He could make and unmake boundaries in any part of his dominions,
except in proprietary provinces. He exercised this power by treaty,
as in 1763, by limiting the colonies to the Mississippi, whose
charters extended to the South Sea; by proclamation, which was a
supreme law, as in Florida and Georgia,
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 524; 1 Laws U.S. 443-51; by order in council, as between
Massachusetts and New Hampshire, cited in the argument.
But in all cases it was by his political power, which was
competent to dismember royal, though it was not exercised on the
chartered or proprietary provinces.
McIntosh v.
Johnson, 8 Wheat. 580. In council, the King had no
original judicial power, 1 Ves.Sr. 447. He decided on appeals from
the colonial courts, settled boundaries, in virtue of his
prerogative, where there was no agreement; but if there is a
disputed agreement, the King cannot decree on it, and therefore,
the council remit it to be determined in another place, on the foot
of the contract, 1 Ves.Sr. 447. In virtue of his prerogative, where
there was no agreement, 1 Ves.Sr. 205, the King acts not as a
judge, but as the sovereign acting by the advice of his counsel,
the members whereof do not and cannot sit as judges. By the statute
20 E. 3, ch. 1, it is declared, that "the King hath delegated his
whole judicial power to the judges, all matters of judicature
according to the laws," 1 Ruff. 246; 4 Co.Inst. 70, 74; he had,
therefore, none to exercise, and judges, though members of council,
did not sit in judicature, but merely as his advisers.
The courts had no jurisdiction over the colonies, persons or
property therein, except in two cases; colonies and provinces being
corporations under letters patent, 3 Ves. 435, were amenable to the
King in the King's Bench, by
quo warranto, which is a
prerogative writ, and a
scire facias, in chancery, to
repeal the letters patent, which is a part of the statutory
jurisdiction of that court in such cases, by
Page 37 U. S. 740
the court in chancery, also in virtue of the royal prerogative,
by which the charter was made. But chancery could not act on
boundaries in the royal or chartered colonies; it could act on
lords proprietors of provinces, when they were in the realm, where
they were subjects, though in their provinces they were sovereign,
dependent only on the Crown and the general supremacy of
Parliament. Acts of Parliament did not bind them unless extended to
them expressly or by necessary consequence, 2 Ves.Sr. 351. They had
all the powers of counts palatine, the absolute propriety of soil,
and the powers of legislation; the only restraint upon them was by
the powers reserved to the King by his letters patent, and
allegiance to the Crown in matters of prerogative not granted. The
power of Parliament was, on the American principle of the
Revolution, confined to the regulation of "external commerce,"
though by the English principle, it extended to all cases whatever.
Yet sovereign as they were as to all things, except those relating
to the powers of the King and Parliament, chancery could and did
act on agreements between them as to their boundaries, in the case
of
Penn v. Baltimore, though it could not have done so had
they stood at arms' length; in which case the King in council could
alone have decided the original boundary on an appeal, 1 Ves.Sr.
446. Chancery also could and did decide on the title to the Isle of
Man, which was a feudal Kingdom; on a bill for discovery of title,
relief as to rectories and tithes, which was a mere franchise, a
plea to jurisdiction was overruled.
Derby v. Athol, 1
Ves.Sr. 202;
S.P. Bishop of Sodor & Man v. E. Derby, 2
Ves.Sr. 337, 356.
In each of these cases, objections to the jurisdiction were made
similar to those made in this, but were overruled, and neither the
authority or principles of either have been questioned; on the
contrary, they have been recognized and adopted by all courts which
follow the course of the law of England; yet each involved the same
question as the present. In the first, the decree as to boundary
settled by consequence the collateral and dependent questions of
title, jurisdiction, and sovereignty, of and over the disputed
territory; in the two last, on a suit for rectories and tithes, the
title to a feudal Kingdom was but a dependent matter, and was
settled by deciding that the bishop had a right to the tithes he
claimed. The same principle was settled in the case of
Nabob of
the Carnatic v. East India Company, though it is commonly
referred to in favor of a contrary position.
Page 37 U. S. 741
On the original pleadings, the case was on a bill for an account
founded on two agreements between the parties, in 1785 and 1787.
The defendants plead their rights and privileges under their
charter, with power to make peace and war within its limits; that
the plaintiff was a sovereign prince; that the agreements stated in
the bill were made with him in their respective capacities, one as
an absolute, the other as a qualified sovereign, and that the
matters therein contained related to peace and war, and the
security and defense of their respective territorial
possessions.
The plea was considered and overruled by the chancellor, thus
exercising jurisdiction to that extent. 1 Ves. 371, 387. An answer
was then put in, containing the same matter as the plea, adding
that the agreements between the parties were treaties of a federal
character, both being sovereigns, and that the agreement of 1787
was a final treaty, and therefore the subject matters thereof were
cognizable by the law of nations not by a municipal court. The bill
was dismissed on this ground:
"It is a case of mutual treaty between persons acting, in that
instance, as states independent of each other, and the circumstance
that the East India Company are mere subjects with relation to this
country, has nothing to do with that. That treaty was entered into
with them as a neighboring independent state, and is the same as if
it was a treaty between two sovereigns, and consequently is not a
subject of municipal private jurisdiction."
It thus is manifest that if the answer had been to the merits,
there must have been a decree; the dismission resulted from the new
matter added, as is evident from the opinion of the chancellor on
the plea; and of lord commissioner Eyre on the answer, and his
closing remarks, in which he declares
"That the case was considered wholly independent of the judgment
on the plea, and was decided on the answer, which introduced
matters showing that it was not mercantile in its nature, but
political, and therefore the decision stood wholly clear of the
judgment on the plea."
2 Ves.Jr. 56, 60.
That a foreign sovereign may sue in an English court of law or
equity, was settled in cases brought by the King of Spain, Hob.
113. That a foreign government may sue in chancery, by such agents
as it authorizes to represent them, on whom a cross-bill can be
served, with such process as will compel them to do justice to the
defendant, was decided in
Columbian Government v.
Rothschild, 1 Sim. 104. These cases were recognized in
King of Spain v. Machado, by the House of Lords, which
held that a King had the same right to
Page 37 U. S. 742
sue as any other person, but that when he did sue in chancery,
it was as any other suitor, who sought or submitted to its
jurisdiction; that it could decide on the construction and validity
of the treaties between France and the allied sovereigns of Europe
in 1814, and on the validity of a private and separate treaty
between France and Spain.
The case involved both questions; both were fully considered by
the Lords in affirming the decree of the chancellor overruling the
demurrer, 4 Russell 560, which assigned for cause that the
plaintiff had not made out a case for any relief in a court of
equity, for the reasons assigned in the argument; that a foreign
sovereign could not sue in virtue of his prerogative rights; that
an English court would not enforce these rights, accruing out of a
treaty with France, which was inconsistent with the existing
relations between each of those countries (France and Spain), and
the King of England. 2 Bligh.P.C. new series, 31, 44, 46, 50,
60.
The Court of King's Bench also will consider the effect of the
declaration of independence and treaty of peace in an action on a
bond.
Folliott v. Ogden, 3 D. & E. 730.
From this view of the law of England, the results are clear that
the settlement of boundaries by the King in council is by his
prerogative, which is political power acting on a political
question between dependent corporations or proprietaries, in his
dominions without the realm. When it is done in chancery, it is by
its judicial power, in "judicature according to the law," and
necessarily a judicial question, whether it relates to the boundary
of provinces, according to an agreement between the owners, as
Penn v. Baltimore; the title to a feudal Kingdom in a suit
appropriate to equity, where the feudal King appears and pleads, as
in the
Case of the Isle of Man, or on an agreement between
a foreign sovereign and the East India Company, in their mere
corporate capacity. But when the company assumed the character of a
sovereign, assert the agreement to be a "federal treaty" between
them and the plaintiff as neighboring sovereigns, each independent,
and the subject matter to be peace and war, political in its
nature, on which no municipal court can act by the law of nations,
chancery has no jurisdiction but to dismiss the bill. Not because
it is founded on a treaty, but because the defendant refused to
submit it to judicial power, for, had the Company not made the
objection, by their answer, the court must have proceeded as in
King of Spain v. Machado, and decreed on
Page 37 U. S. 743
the validity, as well as the construction of the treaties. The
court in one case could not force a sovereign defendant to submit
the merits of the case to their cognizance, but in the other, when
he was plaintiff and a subject was a defendant who appeared and
plead, the whole subject matter of the pleadings was decided by
judicial power as a judicial question, and such has been and is the
settled course of equity in England.
In the colonies there was no judicial tribunal which could
settle boundaries between them, for the court of one could not
adjudicate on the rights of another, unless as a plaintiff. The
only power to do it remained in the King, where there was no
agreement, and in chancery, where there was one, and the parties
appeared, so that the question was partly political and partly
judicial, and so remained till the declaration of independence.
Then the states, being independent, reserved to themselves the
power of settling their own boundaries, which was necessarily a
purely political matter, and so continued till 1781. Then the
states delegated the whole power over controverted boundaries to
Congress, to appoint and its court to decide, as judges, and give a
final sentence and judgment upon it, as a judicial question,
settled by a specially appointed judicial power, as the substitute
of the King in council, and the court of chancery in a proper case,
before the one as a political and the other as a judicial
question.
Then came the Constitution, which divided the power between the
political and judicial departments after incapacitating the states
from settling their controversies upon any subject, by treaty,
compact, or agreement, and completely reversed the long established
course of the laws of England. Compacts and agreements were
referred to the political, controversies to the judicial power.
This presents this part of the case in a very simple and plain
aspect. All the states have transferred the decision of their
controversies to this Court; each had a right to demand of it the
exercise of the power which they had made judicial by the
Confederation of 1781 and 1788; that we should do that which
neither states or Congress could do, settle the controversies
between them. We should forget our high duty to declare to litigant
states that we had jurisdiction over judicial, but not the power to
hear and determine political controversies; that boundary was of a
political nature, and not a civil one, and dismiss the plaintiff's
bill from our records without even giving it judicial
consideration. We should equally forget the dictate
Page 37 U. S. 744
of reason, the known rule drawn by fact and law; that from the
nature of a controversy between Kings or states, it cannot be
judicial; that where they reserve to themselves the final decision,
it is of necessity by their inherent political power; not that
which has been delegated to the judges, as matters of judicature,
according to the law. These rules and principles have been adopted
by this Court from a very early period.
In 1799, it was laid down that though a state could not sue at
law for an incorporeal right, as that of sovereignty and
jurisdiction, there was no reason why a remedy could not be had in
equity. That one state may file a bill against another, to be
quieted as to the boundaries of disputed territory, and this Court
might appoint commissioners to ascertain and report them, since it
is monstrous to talk of existing rights, without correspondent
remedies.
3 U. S. 3 Dall.
413. In
New Jersey v. Wilson, the only question in the
case was, whether Wilson held certain lands exempt from taxation.
11 U. S. 7 Cranch
164. In
Cohens v. Virginia, the Court held that the
judicial power of the United States must be capable of deciding any
judicial question growing out of the Constitution and laws. That in
one class of cases, "the character of the parties is everything,
the nature of the case nothing;" in the other, "the nature of the
case is everything, the character of the parties nothing." That the
clause relating to cases in law or equity, arising under the
Constitution, laws, and treaties, makes no exception in terms, or
regards "the condition of the party." If there be any exception, it
is to be implied against the express words of the article. In the
second class, "the jurisdiction depends entirely on the character
of the parties," comprehending
"controversies between two or more states. . . . If these be the
parties, it is entirely unimportant what may be the subject of
controversy. Be it what it may, these parties have a constitutional
right to come into the courts of the Union."
19 U. S. 6
Wheat. 378,
19 U. S. 384,
19 U. S.
392-393.
In the following cases it will appear that the course of the
Court on the subject of boundary has been in accordance with all
the foregoing rules; let the question arise as it may, in a case in
equity or a case in law, of a civil or criminal nature, and whether
it affects the rights of individuals, of states, or the United
States, and depends on charters, laws, treaties, compacts, or
cessions which relate to boundary. In
Robinson v.
Campbell, the suit involved the construction of the compact of
boundary between Virginia and North Carolina, made in 1802, and
turned on the question whether the land in controversy
Page 37 U. S. 745
was always within the original limits of Tennessee, which the
Court decided.
16 U. S. 3
Wheat. 213,
16 U. S. 218,
16 U. S. 224.
United States v. Bevan was an indictment for murder; the
questions certified for the opinion of this Court were 1st, whether
the place at which the offense was committed, was within the
jurisdiction of Massachusetts, and 2d, whether it was committed
within the jurisdiction of the circuit court of that district. It
was considered and decided, as a question of boundary,
16 U. S. 3
Wheat. 339,
16 U. S. 386,
as before stated. In
Burton v. Williams, the case involved
a collision of interest between North Carolina, Tennessee, and the
United States, under the cessions by the former to the two latter,
in which this Court reviewed all the acts of Congress and of the
two states on the subject, and the motives of the parties, to
ascertain whether the
casus foederis had ever arisen. The
case also involved the construction of the compact between
Tennessee and the United States, made in 1806. The Court use this
language in relation to it:
"The members of the American family possess ample means of
defense under the Constitution, which we hope ages to come will
verify. But happily for our domestic harmony, the power of
aggressive operation against each other is taken away."
It is difficult to imagine what other means of defense existed
in such a case, unless those which the court adopted, by construing
the acts recited, as the contracts of independent states, by those
rules which regulate contracts relating to territory and boundary.
16 U. S. 3 Wheat.
529,
16 U. S. 533,
16 U. S. 538.
In
De La Croix v. Chamberlain, it was held that
"a question of disputed boundary between two sovereign,
independent nations is indeed more properly a subject for
diplomatic discussion and of treaty, than of judicial
investigation. If the United States and Spain had settled this
dispute by treaty, before the United States extinguished the claim
of Spain to the Floridas, the boundary fixed by such treaty would
have concluded all parties."
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 600. Accordingly, in
Harcourt v. Gailliard, which
arose on a British grant made in 1777, the Court decided the case
by reference to the treaty of 1763, the acts of the King before the
Revolution, the effect of the declaration of independence and
treaty of peace in 1783, in order to ascertain the original
boundary between Florida and Georgia, on which the whole case
turned.
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 524. In
Henderson v. Poindexter, the same point
arose, and the same course was taken; the treaty of boundary with
Spain in 1795, was also considered by the Court, as well as the
cession by Georgia to the United States in 1802, and the various
acts of Congress on the
Page 37 U. S. 746
subject.
25 U. S. 12 Wheat.
530,
25 U. S. 534.
In
Patterson v. Jenckes, the title depended on the
boundary between Georgia and the Cherokees, and the only question
was as to the territorial limits of the state, according to the
treaties with them and that state, which the court defined, and
decided accordingly.
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
225-227. So they had previously done in various cases, arising on
the boundary between North Carolina and the Cherokees.
14 U. S. 1 Wheat.
155;
15 U. S. 2 Wheat.
25;
22 U. S. 9 Wheat.
673;
24 U. S. 11 Wheat.
380. In
Foster & Elam v. Neilson, two questions
arose:
1. On the boundary of the treaty of 1803, ceding Louisiana to
the United States, as it was before the cession of the Floridas by
Spain, by the treaty of 1819.
2d. The construction of the eighth article of that treaty. Both
claimed the territory lying north of a line drawn east from the
Iberville, and extending from the Mississippi to the Perdido.
The title to the land claimed by the parties, depended on the
right of Spain to grant lands within the disputed territory, at the
date of the Spanish grant to the plaintiff, in 1804. He claimed
under it, as being then within the territory of Spain, and
confirmed absolutely by the treaty of cession; the defendant rested
on his possession. On the first question, the Court held that so
long as the United States contested the boundary, it was to be
settled by the two governments, and not by the Court, but if the
boundary had been settled between France while she held Louisiana,
and Spain while she held Florida, or the United States and Spain
had agreed on the boundary after 1803; then the court could decide
it as a matter bearing directly on the title of the plaintiff. On
the second question, they held that as the government had up to
that time construed the eighth article of the treaty of 1819, to be
a mere stipulation for the future confirmation of previous grants
by Spain, to be made by some legislative act, and not a present
confirmation, absolute and final by the mere force of the treaty
itself, as a supreme law of the land, the Court was bound not to
give a different construction.
On that construction, the question was by whom the confirmation
should be made; the Court held the words of the treaty to be the
language of contract, to be executed by an act of the legislature,
of course by political power; to be exercised by the Congress at
its discretion, on which the Court could not act. But the Court
distinctly recognized the distinction between an executory treaty,
as a mere contract between nations, to be carried into execution by
the sovereign power of the respective parties, and an executed
treaty, effecting of itself the object to be accomplished, and
defined the line
Page 37 U. S. 747
between them thus:
"Our Constitution declares a treaty to be the law of the land.
It is consequently to be regarded in courts of justice, as
equivalent to an act of the legislature, whenever it operates of
itself without the aid of any legislative provision. But when the
terms of the stipulation import a contract; when either of the
parties stipulate to perform a particular act; the treaty addresses
itself to the political, not to the judicial department, and the
legislature must execute the contract before it can become a rule
for the Court."
Adopting the construction given by Congress, and the boundary
being disputed in 1804, when the grant was made, the Court
considered both to be political questions and held them not to be
cognizable by judicial power.
27 U. S. 2 Pet.
253,
27 U. S. 299,
27 U. S. 306,
27 U. S. 309,
27 U. S.
314-315. All the principles laid down in this case were
fully considered and affirmed in the
United States v.
Arredondo, which arose under an act of Congress submitting to
this Court the final decision of controversies between the United
States and all persons claiming lands in Florida under grants,
&c., by Spain, and prescribing the rules for its decision,
among which was the "stipulations of any treaty," &c. Thus
acting under the authority delegated by Congress, the court held
that the construction of the eighth article of the treaty of 1819,
by its submission to judicial power, became a judicial question,
and on the fullest consideration, held that it operated as a
perfect, present, and absolute confirmation of all the grants which
come within its provision. That no act of the political department
remained to be done; that it was an executed treaty, the law of the
land, and a rule for the Court.
31 U. S. 6 Pet.
710,
31 U. S. 735,
31 U. S.
741-743.
In the
United States v. Percheman, the Court, on
considering the necessary effect of this construction, repudiated
that which had been given in
Foster & Elam v.
Neilson, 7 Pet. 89. In the numerous cases which
have arisen since, the treaty has been taken to be an executed one,
a rule of title and property, and all questions arising under it to
be judicial, and Congress has confirmed the action of the court
whenever necessary. In
New Jersey v. New York, the Court
was unanimous in considering the disputed boundary between these
states to be within its original jurisdiction, and reaffirming the
jurisdiction of the circuit courts, in cases between parties
claiming lands under grants from different states, the only
difference of opinion was on one point, suggested by one of the
judges, whether, as New York had not appeared, the Court could
award compulsory process, or proceed
ex parte -- a point
which does not arise in this cause, and need
Page 37 U. S. 748
not to be considered in its present stage, as Massachusetts has
appeared and plead to the merits of the bill.
If judicial authority is competent to settle what is the line
between judicial and political power and questions, it appears from
this view of the law, as administered in England and the courts of
the United States, to have been done without any one decision to
the contrary from the time of Edward the Third. The statute
referred to operated like our Constitution to make all questions
judicial which were submitted to judicial power by the Parliament
of England, the people or Legislature of these states, or Congress,
and when this has been done by the Constitution, in reference to
disputed boundaries, it will be a dead letter if we did not
exercise it now, as this Court has done in the cases referred
to.
The course of the argument made it necessary for the Court to
pursue that which has been taken. Having disposed of the leading
objection to jurisdiction, we will examine the others.
It has been argued by the defendant's counsel that by the
Declaration of Independence, Massachusetts became a sovereign state
over all the territory in her possession which she claimed by
charter or agreement, in the enjoyment of which she cannot be
disturbed.
To this objection there are two obvious answers:
1st. By the third Article of Confederation, the states entered
into a mutual league for the defense of their sovereignty, their
mutual and general welfare; being thus allies in the War of the
Revolution, a settled principle of the law of nations, as laid down
by this Court, prevented one from making any acquisition at the
expense of the other.
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 525-526. This alliance continued, in war and peace, till
1788, when,
2d. Massachusetts surrendered the right to judge of her own
boundary, and submitted the power of deciding a controversy
concerning it to this Court.
19 U. S. 6
Wheat. 378,
19 U. S. 380,
19 U. S.
393.
It is said that the people inhabiting the disputed territory
ought to be made parties, as their rights are affected. It might
with the same reason be objected that a treaty or compact settling
boundary, required the assent of the people to make it valid, and
that a decree under the ninth Article of Confederation was void, as
the authority to make it was derived from the legislative power
only. The same objection was overruled in
Penn v.
Baltimore and in
Poole v. Fleeger, this Court
declared that an agreement between states, consented to by
Congress, bound the citizens of each state. There are two
principles of the law of nations which would protect them in
Page 37 U. S. 749
their property:
1st. That grants by a government,
de facto, of parts of
a disputed territory in its possession, are valid against the state
which had the right.
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 600-601.
2d. That when a territory is acquired by treaty, cession, or
even conquest, the rights of the inhabitants to property are
respected and sacred.
21 U. S. 8
Wheat. 589;
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 535;
31 U. S. 6 Pet.
712;
33 U. S. 8 Pet.
445;
34 U. S. 9 Pet.
133;
35 U. S. 10
Pet. 330,
35 U. S.
718.
It has been contended that this Court cannot proceed in this
cause without some process and rule of decision prescribed
appropriate to the case, but no question on process can arise on
these pleadings; none is now necessary, as the defendant has
appeared and plead, which plea in itself makes the first point in
the cause, without any additional proceeding; that is whether the
plea shall be allowed if sufficient in law to bar the complaint, or
be overruled, as not being a bar in law, though true in fact. In
this state of the case, it is that of
Nabob v. East India
Company, where the plea was overruled on that ground, whereby
the defendant was put to an answer, assigning additional grounds,
to sustain a motion to dismiss, or if the plea is allowed, the
defendant must next prove the truth of the matters set up. When
that is done, the Court must decide according to the law of equity,
1 Ves.Sr. 446, 203, whether the agreement plead shall settle, or
leave the boundary open to a settlement by our judgment, according
to the law of nations, the charters from the Crown under which both
parties claim, as in
18 U. S. 5
Wheat. 375; by the law of prescription, as claimed by the
defendant, on the same principles which have been rules for the
action of this Court in the case, 1 Ves.Sr. 453;
34 U. S. 9 Pet.
760.
It is further objected that though the Court may render, it
cannot execute a decree without an act of Congress in aid.
In testing this objection by the common law, there can be no
difficulty in decreeing, as in
Penn v. Baltimore; mutatis
mutandis. That the agreement is valid and binding between the
parties; appointing commissioners to ascertain and mark the line
therein designated; order their proceedings to be returned to the
court;
3 U. S. 3 Dall.
412, note; decree that the parties should quietly hold according to
the articles; that the citizens on each side of the line should be
bound thereby, so far and no farther than the states could bind
them by a compact, with the assent of Congress,
36 U. S. 11
Pet. 209; 1 Ves.Sr. 455; 3 Ves.Sr., supplement by Belt. 195, 197.
Or if any difficulty should occur, do as declared in 1 Ves.Sr.; if
the parties want
Page 37 U. S. 750
anything more to be done, they must resort to another
jurisdiction, which is appropriate to the cause of complaint, as
the King's Bench, or the King in council.
Vide 9 U.
S. Peters, 5 Cranch 115,
9 U. S. 135;
make the decree without prejudice to the (United States) or any
persons whom the parties could not bind. And in case any person
should obstruct the execution of the agreement, the party to be at
liberty, from time to time, to apply to the court. 1 Ves.Jr. 454; 3
Ves.Sr. 195, 196. Or, as the only question is one of jurisdiction,
which the court will not divide, they will retain the bill, and
direct the parties to a forum proper to decide collateral
questions. 1 Ves.Sr. 204, 205; 2 Ves.Sr. 356, 357; 1 Ves.Sr. 454;
9 U. S. 5 Cranch
115,
9 U. S. 136. On
the other hand, should the agreement not be held binding, the Court
will decree the boundary to be ascertained agreeably to the
charters according to the altered circumstances of the case, by
which, the boundary being established, the rights of the parties
will be adjudicated and the party in whom it is adjudged may
enforce it by the process appropriate to the case, civilly or
criminally, according to the laws of the state, in which the act
which violates the right is committed. In ordinary cases of
boundary, the functions of a court of equity consist in settling it
by a final decree, defining and confirming it when run. Exceptions,
as they arise, must be acted on according to the circumstances.
In England, right will be administered to a subject against the
King, as a matter of grace, but not upon compulsion, not by writ,
but petition to the chancellor, 1 Bl.Com. 243, for no writ or
process can issue against the King, for the plain reason given in 4
Co. 55, a; 7 Com.Dig., by Day 83; Prerog. D 78; 3 Bl.Com. 255;
"that the King cannot command himself." No execution goes out on a
judgment or decree against him, on a
monstrans de droit or
petition of right, or traverse of an inquisition which had been
taken in his favor; for this reason, that as the law gives him a
prerogative for the benefit of his subjects, 1 Bl.Com. 255, he is
presumed never to do a wrong, or refuse a right to a subject; he is
presumed to have done the thing decreed, by decreeing in his Courts
that it shall be done; such decree is executed by the law as soon
as it is rendered, and though process is made out to make the
record complete, it is never taken from the office. Co.Ent. 196; 9
Co. 98, a; 7 D.C.D. 83. The party in whose favor a decree is made,
for removing the lands of the King from the possession of a subject
or declaring a seizure unlawful and awarding a writ,
de
libertate, is,
eo instanti, deemed to be in
actual
Page 37 U. S. 751
possession thereof, so that a feoffment, with livery of seizin,
made before it is actually taken, is as valid as if made
afterwards. Cro.El. 523;
S.P. 463.
The same principle was adopted by the eminent jurists of the
Revolution, in the ninth Article of the Confederation, declaring
that the sentence of the court in the cases provided for should be
final and conclusive, and with the other proceedings in the case,
be transmitted to Congress, and lodged among their acts, for the
security of the parties concerned, nothing further being deemed
necessary. The adoption of this principle was indeed a necessary
effect of the Revolution, which devolved on each state the
prerogative of the King as he had held it in the colonies;
17 U. S. 4
Wheat. 651;
21 U. S. 8
Wheat. 584,
21 U. S. 588,
and now holds it within the realm of England, subject to the
presumptions attached to it by the common law, which gave, and by
which it must be exercised. This Court cannot presume that any
state which holds prerogative rights for the good of its citizens,
and by the Constitution has agreed that those of any other state
shall enjoy rights, privileges, and immunities in each, as its own
do, would either do wrong, or deny right to a sister state or its
citizens, or refuse to submit to those decrees of this Court,
rendered pursuant to its own delegated authority, when in a
monarchy its fundamental law declares that such decree executes
itself. When, too, the highest courts of a kingdom have most
solemnly declared that when the King is a trustee, a court of
chancery will enforce the execution of a trust by a royal trustee;
1 Ves.Sr. 453, and that when a foreign king is a plaintiff in a
court of equity, it can do complete justice, impose any terms it
thinks proper, has him in its power and completely under its
control and jurisdiction, 2 Bligh.P.C. 57, we ought not to doubt as
to the course of a state of this Union, as a contrary one would
endanger its peace, if not its existence.
In the
Case of Olmstead, this Court expressed its
opinion that if state legislatures may annul the judgments of the
courts of the United States and the rights thereby acquired, the
Constitution becomes a solemn mockery, and the nation is deprived
of the means of enforcing its laws, by its own tribunal. So fatal a
result must be deprecated by all, and the people of every state
must feel a deep interest in resisting principles so destructive of
the Union, and in averting consequences so fatal to themselves.
30 U. S. 5 Pet.
115,
30 U. S.
135.
The motion of the defendants is therefore
Overruled.
Page 37 U. S. 752
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TANEY, dissenting:
I dissent from the opinion of the Court, upon the motion to
dismiss the bill. It has, I find, been the uniform practice in this
Court for the Justices who differed from the Court on
constitutional questions, to express their dissent. In conformity
to this usage, I proceed to state briefly the principle on which I
differ, but do not, in this stage of the proceedings, think it
necessary to enter fully into the reasoning upon which my opinion
is founded. The final hearing of the case, when all the facts are
before the Court, would be a more fit occasion for examining
various points stated in the opinion of the Court, in which I do
not concur.
I do not doubt the power of this Court to hear and determine a
controversy between states or between individuals in relation to
the boundaries of the states where the suit is brought to try a
right of property in the soil, or any other right which is properly
the subject of judicial cognizance and decision, and which depends
upon the true boundary line.
But the powers given to the courts of the United States by the
Constitution are judicial powers, and extend to those subjects only
which are judicial in their character, and not to those which are
political. And whether the suit is between states or between
individuals, the matter sued for must be one which is properly the
subject of judicial cognizance and control in order to give
jurisdiction to the court to try and decide the rights of the
parties to the suit.
The object of the bill filed by Rhode Island, as stated in the
prayer, is as follows:
"That the northern boundary line between your complainants and
the State of Massachusetts may, by the order and decree of this
Honorable Court, be ascertained and established, and that the
rights of jurisdiction and sovereignty of your complainants to the
whole tract of land, with the appurtenances mentioned, described,
and granted, in and by the said charter or letters patent to the
said Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations hereinbefore
set forth, and running on the north, an east and west line drawn
three miles south of the waters of said Charles River, or of any or
every part thereof, may be restored and confirmed to your
complainants and your complainants may be quieted in the full and
free enjoyment of her jurisdiction and sovereignty over the same,
and the title, jurisdiction, and sovereignty of the said State of
Rhode Island and Providence Plantations over the same be confirmed
and established by the decree of this Honorable Court, and that
your complainants
Page 37 U. S. 753
may have such other and further relief in the premises as to
this Honorable Court shall seem meet and consistent with equity and
good conscience."
It appears from this statement of the object of the bill that
Rhode Island claims no right of property in the soil of the
territory in controversy. The title to the land is not in dispute
between her and Massachusetts. The subject matter which Rhode
Island seeks to recover from Massachusetts in this suit is
"sovereignty and jurisdiction" up to the boundary line described in
her bill. And she desires to establish this line as the true
boundary between the states for the purpose of showing that she is
entitled to recover from Massachusetts the sovereignty and
jurisdiction which Massachusetts now holds over the territory in
question. Sovereignty and jurisdiction are not matters of property,
for the allegiance in the disputed territory cannot be a matter of
property. Rhode Island therefore sues for political rights. They
are the only matters in controversy and the only things to be
recovered, and if she succeeds in this suit, she will recover
political rights over the territory in question, which are now
withheld from her by Massachusetts.
Contests for rights of sovereignty and jurisdiction between
states over any particular territory are not, in my judgment, the
subjects of judicial cognizance and control, to be recovered and
enforced in an ordinary suit, and are therefore not within the
grant of judicial power contained in the Constitution.
In the case of
New York v.
Connecticut, 4 Dall. 1, in the note, Chief Justice
Ellsworth says
"To have the benefit of the agreement between the states, the
defendants below, who are the settlers of New York, must apply to a
court of equity, as well as the state herself, but in no case can a
specific performance be decreed unless there is a substantial right
of soil, not a mere right of political jurisdiction, to be
protected and enforced."
In the case of
Cherokee Nation v. State of
Georgia, 5 Pet. 20, Chief Justice Marshall, in
delivering the opinion of the Court, said:
"That part of the bill which respects the land occupied by the
Indians, and prays the aid of the Court to protect their
possession, may be more doubtful. The mere question of right might
perhaps be decided by this Court in a proper case, with proper
parties. But the Court is asked to do more than decide on the
title. The bill requires us to control the legislation of Georgia
and to restrain the exertion of its physical force. The propriety
of such an
Page 37 U. S. 754
interposition by the Court may be well questioned. It savors too
much of the exercise of political power to be within the proper
province of the Judicial Department. But the opinion on the point
respecting parties makes it unnecessary to decide this
question."
In the case before the Court we are called on to protect and
enforce the "mere political jurisdiction" of Rhode Island, and the
bill of the complainant in effect asks us to "control the
Legislature of Massachusetts and to restrain the exercise of its
physical force" within the disputed territory. According to the
opinions above referred to, these questions do not belong to the
Judicial Department. This construction of the Constitution is, in
my judgment, the true one, and I therefore think the proceedings in
this case ought to be dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
MR. JUSTICE BARBOUR said that he concurred in the result of the
opinion in this case.
That this Court had jurisdiction to settle the disputed boundary
between the two states litigant before it, but he wished to be
understood as not adopting all the reasoning by which the Court had
arrived at its conclusion.
MR. JUSTICE STORY did not sit in this case.
On consideration of the motion made by Mr. Webster on a prior
day of the present term of this Court, to-wit, on Monday 15
January, A.D. 1838, to dismiss the complainant's bill filed in this
case for want of jurisdiction, and of the arguments of counsel
thereupon had as well in support of as against the said motion, it
is now here ordered and adjudged by this Court that the said motion
be and the same is hereby overruled.