A distress warrant, issued by the Solicitor of the Treasury
under the act of Congress passed on the 15th May, 1820 (3 Stats. at
Large 592) is not inconsistent with the Constitution of the United
States.
It was an exercise of executive, and not of judicial, power,
according to the meaning of those words in the Constitution, and
the privilege allowed to a collector to bring the question of his
indebtedness before the courts of the United States, is merely the
consent of Congress to the suit, which is given in other classes of
cases also.
Neither is it inconsistent with that part of the Constitution
which prohibits a citizen from being deprived of his liberty or
property without due process of law. The historical and critical
meaning of these words examined.
By the common law of England and the laws of many of the
colonies before the Revolution, and of States before the formation
of the federal Constitution, a summary process existed for the
recovery of the debts due to the Government.
It does not necessarily follow that the adjustment of these
balances is a controversy to which the United States is a party
within the meaning of the Constitution.
Under the power of Congress to collect taxes and the exercise of
that power by the act above mentioned, the warrant of distress is
conclusive evidence of the facts recited in it and of the authority
to make the levy, so far as to justify the marshal in making it;
but the question of indebtedness may be the subject of a suit,
Congress having assented thereto, and the levy may provide security
for the event of the suit.
The article of the Constitution requiring an oath or affirmation
for a warrant has no application to proceedings for the recovery of
debts where no search warrant is used.
The article of the Constitution, requiring an oath or
affirmation for a warrant, has no application to proceedings for
the recovery of debts, where no search warrant is used.
The return of the marshal that he had levied on lands by virtue
of such a warrant is at least
prima facie evidence that
the levy was not irregular by reason of the existence of goods and
chattels of the Collector subject to his process.
These three cases came up from the Circuit Court of the United
States for the District of New Jersey upon a certificate of
division in opinion between the judges thereof.
As the opinion of the Court answers only the third question, it
may be proper to say that the first two related to a mortgage
executed by Henry Ogden, as the attorney in fact of Swartwout, to
Henry D. Gilpin, Solicitor of the Treasury. It was necessary to the
case of the plaintiffs to get rid of this mortgage in the first
instance, and afterwards to avoid the sale under the distress
warrant. If they failed in the last, the points raised in the first
two questions became of no practical consequence, and therefore
answers to them were not returned by this Court.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court. The decision of
one involved the two others, as they depended upon the same
principles.
Page 59 U. S. 274
MR. JUSTICE CURTIS delivered the opinion of the court.
This case comes before us on a certificate of division of
opinion of the judges of the Circuit Court of the United States for
the District of New Jersey. It is an action of ejectment, in which
both parties claim title under Samuel Swartwout -- the plaintiffs
under the levy of an execution on the 10th day of April, 1839, and
the defendants under a sale made by the marshal of the United
States for the district of New Jersey on the 1st day of June, 1839
-- by virtue of what is denominated a distress warrant, issued by
the Solicitor of the Treasury under the act of Congress of May 15,
1820, entitled, "An act providing for the better organization of
the Treasury Department." This act having provided, by its first
section, that a lien for the amount due should exist on the lands
of the debtor from the time of the levy and record thereof in the
office of the district court of the United States for the proper
district, and the date of that levy in this case being prior to the
date of the judgment under which the plaintiffs' title was made,
the question occurred in the Circuit Court
"whether the said warrant of distress in the special verdict
mentioned, and the proceedings thereon and anterior thereto, under
which the defendants claim title, are sufficient, under the
Constitution of the United States and the law of the land, to pass
and transfer the title and estate of the said Swartwout in and to
the premises in question, as against the lessors of the
plaintiff."
Upon this question, the judges being of opposite opinions, it
was certified to this Court, and has been argued by counsel.
Page 59 U. S. 275
No objection has been taken to the warrant on account of any
defect or irregularity in the proceedings which preceded its issue.
It is not denied that they were in conformity with the requirements
of the act of Congress. The special verdict finds that Swartwout
was Collector of the Customs for the port of New York for eight
years before the 29th of March, 1838: that, on the 10th of
November, 1838, his account, as such Collector, was audited by the
First Auditor, and certified by the First Comptroller of the
Treasury; and for the balance thus found, amounting to the sum of
$1,374,119 65/100, the warrant in question was issued by the
Solicitor of the Treasury. Its validity is denied by the plaintiffs
upon the ground that so much of the act of Congress as authorized
it is in conflict with the Constitution of the United States.
In support of this position, the plaintiff relies on that part
of the first section of the third article of the Constitution which
requires the judicial power of the United States to be vested in
one Supreme Court and in such inferior courts as Congress may, from
time to time, ordain and establish; the judges whereof shall hold
their offices during good behavior, and shall, at stated times,
receive for their services a compensation, which shall not be
diminished during their continuance in office. Also, on the second
section of the same article, which declares that the judicial power
shall extend to controversies to which the United States shall be a
party.
It must be admitted that, if the auditing of this account, and
the ascertainment of its balance, and the issuing of this process,
was an exercise of the judicial power of the United States, the
proceeding was void, for the officers who performed these acts
could exercise no part of that judicial power. They neither
constituted a court of the United States nor were they, or either
of them, so connected with any such court as to perform even any of
the ministerial duties which arise out of judicial proceedings.
The question whether these acts were an exercise of the judicial
power of the United States can best be considered under another
inquiry, raised by the further objection of the plaintiff, that the
effect of the proceedings authorized by the act in question is to
deprive the party against whom the warrant issues of his liberty
and property "without due process of law;" and therefore is in
conflict with the fifth article of the amendments of the
Constitution.
Taking these two objections together, they raise the questions,
whether, under the Constitution of the United States, a Collector
of the Customs from whom a balance of account has been found to be
due by accounting officers of the Treasury, designated for that
purpose by law, can be deprived of his liberty or property
Page 59 U. S. 276
in order to enforce payment of that balance without the exercise
of the judicial power of the United States, and yet by due process
of law, within the meaning of those terms in the Constitution, and,
if so, then, secondly, whether the warrant in question was such due
process of law?
The words, "due process of law" were undoubtedly intended to
convey the same meaning as the words "by the law of the land," in
Magna Charta. Lord Coke, in his commentary on those words (2 Inst.
50), says they mean due process of law. The Constitutions which had
been adopted by the several States before the formation of the
federal Constitution, following the language of the great charter
more closely, generally contained the words, "but by the judgment
of his peers, or the law of the land." The ordinance of Congress of
July 13, 1787, for the government of the territory of the United
States northwest of the River Ohio, used the same words.
The Constitution of the United States, as adopted, contained the
provision, that "the trial of all crimes, except in cases of
impeachment, shall be by jury." When the fifth article of amendment
containing the words now in question was made, the trial by jury in
criminal cases had thus already been provided for. By the sixth and
seventh articles of amendment, further special provisions were
separately made for that mode of trial in civil and criminal cases.
To have followed, as in the state constitutions, and in the
ordinance of 1787, the words of Magna Charta, and declared that no
person shall be deprived of his life, liberty, or property but by
the judgment of his peers or the law of the land, would have been
in part superfluous and inappropriate. To have taken the clause,
"law of the land," without its immediate context, might possibly
have given rise to doubts, which would be effectually dispelled by
using those words which the great commentator on Magna Charta had
declared to be the true meaning of the phrase, "law of the land,"
in that instrument, and which were undoubtedly then received as
their true meaning.
That the warrant now in question is legal process is not denied.
It was issued in conformity with an act of Congress. But is it "due
process of law?" The Constitution contains no description of those
processes which it was intended to allow or forbid. It does not
even declare what principles are to be applied to ascertain whether
it be due process. It is manifest that it was not left to the
legislative power to enact any process which might be devised. The
article is a restraint on the legislative, as well as on the
executive and judicial, powers of the government, and cannot be so
construed as to leave Congress free to make any process "due
process of law," by its mere will. To what principles, then, are we
to resort to ascertain whether
Page 59 U. S. 277
this process, enacted by Congress, is due process? To this the
answer must be twofold. We must examine the Constitution itself to
see whether this process be in conflict with any of its provisions.
If not found to be so, we must look to those settled usages and
modes of proceeding existing in the common and statute law of
England, before the emigration of our ancestors, and which are
shown not to have been unsuited to their civil and political
condition by having been acted on by them after the settlement of
this country. We apprehend there has been no period since the
establishment of the English monarchy when there has not been, by
the law of the land, a summary method for the recovery of debts due
to the crown, and especially those due from receivers of the
revenues. It is difficult, at this day, to trace with precision all
the proceedings had for these purposes in the earliest ages of the
common law. That they were summary and severe, and had been used
for purposes of oppression, is inferable from the fact that one
chapter of Magna Charta treats of their restraint. It declares:
"We or our bailiffs shall not seize any land or rent for any
debt as long as the present goods and chattels of the debtor do
suffice to pay the debt, and the debtor himself be ready to satisfy
therefor. Neither shall the pledges of the debtor be distrained, as
long as the principal debtor is sufficient for the payment of the
debt; and if the principal debtor fail in payment of the debt,
having nothing wherewith to pay, or will not pay where he is able,
the pledges shall answer for the debt. And if they will, they shall
have the lands and rents of the debtor until they be satisfied of
the debt which they before paid for him, except that the principal
debtor can show himself to be acquitted against the said
sureties."
By the common law, the body, lands, and goods of the king's
debtor were liable to be levied on to obtain payment. In conformity
with the above provision of Magna Charta, a conditional writ was
framed, commanding the sheriff to inquire of the goods and chattels
of the debtor, and, if they were insufficient, then to extend on
the lands. 3 Co. 12
b; Com.Dig., Debt, G. 2; 2 Inst. 19.
But it is said that, since the statute 33 Hen. VIII. c. 39, the
practice has been to issue the writ in an absolute form, without
requiring any previous inquisition as to the goods. Gilbert's Exch.
127.
To authorize a writ of extent, however, the debt must be matter
of record in the King's Exchequer. The 33 Hen. VIII. c. 39, § 50,
made all specialty debts due to the King of the same force and
effect as debts by statute staple, thus giving to such debts the
effect of debts of record. In regard to debts due upon simple
contract, other than those due from collectors of the revenue and
other accountants of the crown, the practice, from very ancient
Page 59 U. S. 278
times has been to issue a commission to inquire as to the
existence of the debt.
This commission being returned, the debt found was thereby
evidenced by a record, and an extent could issue thereon. No notice
was required to be given to the alleged debtor of the execution of
this commission (2 Tidd's Pr. 1047), though it seems that, in some
cases, an order for notice might be obtained. 1 Ves. 269. Formerly,
no witnesses were examined by the commission (Chitty's Prerog. 267;
West 22) the affidavit prepared to obtain an order for an immediate
extent being the only evidence introduced. But this practice has
been recently changed. 11 Price 29. By the statute, 13 Eliz. ch. 4,
balances due from receivers of the revenue and all other
accountants of the crown were placed on the same footing as debts
acknowledged to be due by statute staple. These balances were found
by auditors, the particular officers acting thereon having been,
from time to time, varied by legislation and usage. The different
methods of accounting in ancient and modern times are described in
Mr. Price's Treatise on the Law and Practice of the Exchequer, ch.
9. Such balances, when found, were certified to what was called the
pipe office, to be given in charge to the sheriffs for their levy.
Price 231.
If an accountant failed to render his accounts, a process was
issued, termed a
capias nomine districtionis, against the
body, goods, and lands of the accountant. Price 162, 233, note
3.
This brief sketch of the modes of proceeding to ascertain and
enforce payment of balances due from receivers of the revenue in
England is sufficient to show that the methods of ascertaining the
existence and amount of such debts and compelling their payment
have varied widely from the usual course of the common law on other
subjects, and that, as respects such debts due from such officers,
"the law of the land" authorized the employment of auditors, and an
inquisition without notice, and a species of execution bearing a
very close resemblance to what is termed a warrant of distress in
the act of 1820, now in question.
It is certain that this diversity in "the law of the land"
between public defaulters and ordinary debtors was understood in
this country, and entered into the legislation of the colonies and
provinces, and more especially of the States, after the declaration
of independence and before the formation of the Constitution of the
United States. Not only was the process of distress in nearly or
quite universal use for the collection of taxes, but what was
generally termed a warrant of distress, running against the body,
goods, and chattels of defaulting receivers of public money, was
issued to some public officer, to whom was committed
Page 59 U. S. 279
the power to ascertain the amount of the default, and. by such
warrant. proceed to collect it. Without a wearisome repetition of
details, it will be sufficient to give one section from the
Massachusetts act of 1786:
"That if any constable or collector, to whom any tax or
assessment shall be committed to collect, shall be remiss and
negligent of his duty, in not levying and paying unto the treasurer
and receiver-general such sum or sums of money as he shall from
time to time have received, and as ought by him to have been paid
within the respective time set and limited by the assessor's
warrant, pursuant to law, the treasurer and receiver-general is
hereby empowered, after the expiration of the time so set, by
warrant under his hand and seal, directed to the sheriff or his
deputy, to cause such sum and sums of money to be levied by
distress and sale of such deficient constable or collector's
estate, real and personal, returning the overplus, if any there be;
and, for want of such estate, to take the body of such constable or
collector, and imprison him until he shall pay the same; which
warrant the sheriff or his deputy is hereby empowered and required
to execute accordingly."
Then follows another provision that, if the deficient sum shall
not be made by the first warrant, another shall issue against the
town, and, if its proper authorities shall fail to take the
prescribed means to raise and pay the same, a like warrant of
distress shall go against the estates and bodies of the assessors
of such town. Laws of Massachusetts, vol. i. p. 266. Provisions not
distinguishable from these in principle may be found in the acts of
Connecticut (Revision of 1784, p. 198), of Pennsylvania, 1782 (2
Laws of Penn. 13); of South Carolina, 1788 (5 Stats. of S.C. 55);
New York, 1788 (1 Jones & Varick's Laws, 34);
see also
1 Henning's Stats. of Virginia, 319, 343; 12
ibid. 562;
Laws of Vermont (1797, 1800), 340. Since the formation of the
Constitution of the United States, other States have passed similar
laws.
See 7 Louis.An.R. 192. Congress, from an early
period, and in repeated instances, has legislated in a similar
manner. By the fifteenth section of the "Act to lay and collect a
direct tax within the United States," of July 14, 1798, the
supervisor of each district was authorized and required to issue a
warrant of distress against any delinquent collector and his
sureties, to be levied upon the goods and chattels, and for want
thereof upon the body of such collector, and, failing of
satisfaction thereby, upon the goods and chattels of the sureties.
1 Stats. at Large 602. And again, in 1813 (3 Stats. at Large, 33, §
28), and 1815 (3 Stats. at Large, 177, § 33), the Comptroller of
the Treasury was empowered to issue a similar warrant against
collectors of the customs and their sureties. This legislative
construction of the Constitution, commencing so early in the
government
Page 59 U. S. 280
when the first occasion for this manner of proceeding arose,
continued throughout its existence, and repeatedly acted on by the
judiciary and the executive, is entitled to no inconsiderable
weight upon the question whether the proceeding adopted by it was
"due process of law."
Prigg v.
Pennsylvania, 16 Pet. 621;
United
States v. Nourse, 9 Pet. 8;
Randolph's
Case, 2 Brock. 447;
Nourse's Case, 4 Cranch C.C.R.
151.
Tested by the common and statute law of England prior to the
emigration of our ancestors, and by the laws of many of the States
at the time of the adoption of this amendment, the proceedings
authorized by the act of 1820 cannot be denied to be due process of
law when applied to the ascertainment and recovery of balances due
to the government from a collector of customs, unless there exists
in the Constitution some other provision which restrains Congress
from authorizing such proceedings. For, though "due process of law"
generally implies and includes
actor, reus, judex, regular
allegations, opportunity to answer, and a trial according to some
settled course of judicial proceedings (2 Inst. 47, 50;
Hoke v.
Henderson, 4 Dev.N.C.Rep. 15;
Taylor v. Porter, 4
Hill, 146;
Van Zandt v. Waddel, 2 Yerger, 260;
State
Bank v. Cooper, ibid., 599;
Jones's Heirs v. Perry,
10
ibid. 59;
Greene v. Briggs, 1 Curtis, 311),
yet this is not universally true. There may be, and we have seen
that there are cases, under the law of England after Magna Charta,
and as it was brought to this country and acted on here, in which
process, in its nature final, issues against the body, lands, and
goods of certain public debtors without any such trial; and this
brings us to the question whether those provisions of the
Constitution which relate to the judicial power are incompatible
with these proceedings?
That the auditing of the accounts of a receiver of public moneys
may be, in an enlarged sense, a judicial act, must be admitted. So
are all those administrative duties the performance of which
involves an inquiry into the existence of facts and the application
to them of rules of law. In this sense, the act of the President in
calling out the militia under the act of 1795, 12 Wheat. 19, or of
a commissioner who makes a certificate for the extradition of a
criminal, under a treaty, is judicial. But it is not sufficient to
bring such matters under the judicial power that they involve the
exercise of judgment upon law and fact.
United
States v. Ferreira, 13 How. 40. It is necessary to
go further and show not only that the adjustment of the balances
due from accounting officers may be, but from their nature must be,
controversies to which the United States is a party within the
meaning of the second section of the third article of the
Page 59 U. S. 281
Constitution. We do not doubt the power of Congress to provide
by law that such a question shall form the subject matter of a suit
in which the judicial power can be exerted. The act of 1820 makes
such a provision for reviewing the decision of the accounting
officers of the Treasury. But, until reviewed, it is final and
binding; and the question is, whether its subject matter is
necessarily, and without regard to the consent of Congress, a
judicial controversy. And we are of opinion it is not.
Among the legislative powers of Congress are the powers
"to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises; to pay
the debts, and provide for the common defence and welfare of the
United States, to raise and support armies; to provide and maintain
a navy, and to make all laws which may be necessary and proper for
carrying into execution those powers."
What officers should be appointed to collect the revenue thus
authorized to be raised, and to disburse it in payment of the debts
of the United States; what duties should be required of them; when
and how, and to whom they should account, and what security they
should furnish, and to what remedies they should be subjected to
enforce the proper discharge of their duties, Congress was to
determine. In the exercise of their powers, they have required
collectors of customs to be appointed; made it incumbent on them to
account, from time to time, with certain officers of the Treasury
department, and to furnish sureties, by bond, for the payment of
all balances of the public money which may become due from them.
And, by the act of 1820, now in question, they have undertaken to
provide summary means to compel these officers -- and in case of
their default, their sureties -- to pay such balances of the public
money as may be in their hands.
The power to collect and disburse revenue, and to make all laws
which shall be necessary and proper for carrying that power into
effect, includes all known and appropriate means of effectually
collecting and disbursing that revenue, unless some such means
should be forbidden in some other part of the Constitution. The
power has not been exhausted by the receipt of the money by the
collector. Its purpose is to raise money and use it in payment of
the debts of the government; and, whoever may have possession of
the public money, until it is actually disbursed, the power to use
those known and appropriate means to secure its due application
continues.
As we have already shown, the means provided by the act of 1820
do not differ in principle from those employed in England from
remote antiquity -- and in many of the States, so far as we know
without objection -- for this purpose, at the time the
Constitution
Page 59 U. S. 282
was formed. It may be added that probably there are few
governments which do or can permit their claims for public taxes,
either on the citizen or the officer employed for their collection
or disbursement, to become subjects of judicial controversy,
according to the course of the law of the land. Imperative
necessity has forced a distinction between such claims and all
others, which has sometimes been carried out by summary methods of
proceeding and sometimes by systems of fines and penalties, but
always in some way observed and yielded to.
It is true that, in England, all these proceedings were had in
what is denominated the Court of Exchequer, in which Lord Coke
says, 4 Inst. 115, the barons are the sovereign auditors of the
kingdom. But the barons exercise in person no judicial power in
auditing accounts, and it is necessary to remember that the
Exchequer includes two distinct organizations, one of which has
charge of the revenues of the Crown and the other has long been in
fact, and now is for all purposes, one of the judicial courts of
the kingdom, whose proceedings are and have been as distinct, in
most respects, from those of the revenue side of the Exchequer, as
the proceedings of the Circuit Court of this district are from
those of the Treasury; and it would be an unwarrantable assumption
to conclude that, because the accounts of receivers of revenue were
settled in what was denominated the Court of Exchequer, they were
judicial controversies between the King and his subjects, according
to the ordinary course of the common law or equity. The fact, as we
have already seen, was otherwise.
It was strongly urged by the plaintiff's counsel that, though
the Government might have the rightful power to provide a summary
remedy for the recovery of its public dues, aside from any exercise
of the judicial power, yet it had not done so in this instance.
That it had enabled the debtor to apply to the judicial power, and
having thus brought the subject matter under its cognizance, it was
not for the Government to say that the subject matter was not
within the judicial power. That, if it were not in its nature a
judicial controversy, Congress could not make it such, nor give
jurisdiction over it to the district courts. In short, the argument
is that, if this were not, in its nature, a judicial controversy,
Congress could not have conferred on the district court power to
determine it upon a bill filed by the collector. If it be such a
controversy, then it is subject to the judicial power alone, and
the fact that Congress has enabled the district court to pass upon
it is conclusive evidence that it is a judicial controversy.
We cannot admit the correctness of the last position. If we
Page 59 U. S. 283
were of opinion that this subject matter cannot be the subject
of a judicial controversy, and that, consequently, it cannot be
made a subject of judicial cognizance, the consequence would be
that the attempt to bring it under the jurisdiction of a court of
the United States would be ineffectual. But the previous
proceedings of the Executive Department would not necessarily be
affected thereby. They might be final, instead of being subject to
judicial review.
But the argument leaves out of view an essential element in the
case, and also assumes something which cannot be admitted.
It assumes that the entire subject matter is or is not, in every
mode of presentation, a judicial controversy, essentially and in
its own nature, aside from the will of Congress to permit it to be
so; and it leaves out of view the fact that the United States is a
party.
It is necessary to take into view some settled rules.
Though generally both public and private wrongs are redressed
through judicial action, there are more summary extrajudicial
remedies for both. An instance of extrajudicial redress of a
private wrong is the recapture of goods by their lawful owner; of a
public wrong, by a private person, is the abatement of a public
nuisance; and the recovery of public dues by a summary process of
distress, issued by some public officer authorized by law, is an
instance of redress of a particular kind of public wrong, by the
act of the public through its authorized agents. There is, however,
an important distinction between these. Though a private person may
retake his property, or abate a nuisance, he is directly
responsible for his acts to the proper judicial tribunals. His
authority to do these acts depends not merely on the law, but upon
the existence of such facts as are, in point of law, sufficient to
constitute that authority; and he may be required, by an action at
law, to prove those facts; but a public agent, who acts pursuant to
the command of a legal precept, can justify his act by the
production of such precept. He cannot be made responsible in a
judicial tribunal for obeying the lawful command of the government;
and the government itself, which gave the command, cannot be sued
without its own consent.
At the same time, there can be no doubt that the mere question
whether a collector of the customs is indebted to the United States
may be one of judicial cognizance. It is competent for the United
States to sue any of its debtors in a court of law. It is equally
clear that the United States may consent to be sued, and may yield
this consent upon such terms and under such restrictions as it may
think just. Though both the marshal and the government are exempt
from suit for anything done by
Page 59 U. S. 284
the former in obedience to legal process, still Congress may
provide by law, that both or either shall, in a particular class of
cases and under such restrictions as they may think proper to
impose, come into a court of law or equity and abide by its
determination. The United States may thus place the government upon
the same ground which is occupied by private persons who proceed to
take extrajudicial remedies for their wrongs, and they may do so to
such extent and with such restrictions as may be thought fit.
When, therefore, the act of 1820 enacts that, after the levy of
the distress warrant has been begun, the collector may bring before
a district court the question whether he is indebted as recited in
the warrant, it simply waives a privilege which belongs to the
government, and consents to make the legality of its future
proceedings dependent on the judgment of the court; as we have
already stated in case of a private person, every fact upon which
the legality of the extrajudicial remedy depends may be drawn in
question by a suit against him. The United States consents that
this fact of indebtedness may be drawn in question by a suit
against them. Though they might have withheld their consent, we
think that, by granting it, nothing which may not be a subject of
judicial cognizance is brought before the court.
To avoid misconstruction upon so grave a subject, we think it
proper to state that we do not consider Congress can either
withdraw from judicial cognizance any matter which, from its
nature, is the subject of a suit at the common law, or in equity,
or admiralty, nor, on the other hand, can it bring under the
judicial power a matter which, from its nature, is not a subject
for judicial determination. At the same time, there are matters,
involving public rights, which may be presented in such form that
the judicial power is capable of acting on them, and which are
susceptible of judicial determination, but which Congress may or
may not bring within the cognizance of the courts of the United
States, as it may deem proper. Equitable claims to land by the
inhabitants of ceded territories form a striking instance of such a
class of cases; and as it depends upon the will of Congress whether
a remedy in the courts shall be allowed at all, in such cases, they
may regulate it and prescribe such rules of determination as they
may think just and needful. Thus, it has been repeatedly decided in
this class of cases that, upon their trial, the acts of executive
officers, done under the authority of Congress, were conclusive
either upon particular facts involved in the inquiry or upon the
whole title.
Foley v.
Harrison, 15 How. 433;
Burgess v.
Gray, 16 How. 48; ___ v. The Minnesota Mining
Company@ at the present term.
It is true, also, that even in a suit between private persons
to
Page 59 U. S. 285
try a question of private right, the action of the executive
power, upon a matter committed to its determination by the
Constitution and laws, is conclusive.
Luther v.
Borden, 7 How. 1;
Doe v.
Braden, 16 How. 635.
To apply these principles to the case before us, we say that,
though a suit may be brought against the marshal for seizing
property under such a warrant of distress, and he may be put to
show his justification, yet the action of the executive power in
issuing the warrant, pursuant to the act of 1820, passed under the
powers to collect and disburse the revenue granted by the
Constitution, is conclusive evidence of the facts recited in it,
and of the authority to make the levy; that, though no suit can be
brought against the United States without the consent of Congress,
yet Congress may consent to have a suit brought, to try the
question whether the collector be indebted, that being a subject
capable of judicial determination, and may empower a court to act
on that determination, and restrain the levy of the warrant of
distress within the limits of the debt judicially found to
exist.
It was further urged that, by thus subjecting the proceeding to
the determination of a court, it did conclusively appear that there
was no such necessity for a summary remedy, by the action of the
executive power, as was essential to enable Congress to authorize
this mode of proceeding.
But it seems to us that the just inference from the entire law
is that there was such a necessity for the warrant and the
commencement of the levy, but not for its completion, if the
collector should interpose, and file his bill and give security.
The provision that he may file his bill and give security, and thus
arrest the summary proceedings, only proves that Congress thought
it not necessary to pursue them, after such security should be
given, until a decision should be made by the court. It has no
tendency to prove they were not, in the judgment of Congress, of
the highest necessity under all other circumstances; and of this
necessity, Congress alone is the judge.
The remaining objection to this warrant is, that it was issued
without the support of an oath or affirmation, and so was forbidden
by the fourth article of the amendments of the Constitution. But
this article has no reference to civil proceedings for the recovery
of debts, of which a search warrant is not made part. The process,
in this case, is termed, in the act of Congress, a warrant of
distress. The name bestowed upon it cannot affect its
constitutional validity. In substance, it is an extent authorizing
a levy for the satisfaction of a debt; and as no other authority is
conferred, to make searches or seizures, than is ordinarily
embraced in every execution issued upon a
Page 59 U. S. 286
recognizance, or a stipulation in the admiralty, we are of
opinion it was not invalid for this cause.
Some objection was made to the proceedings of the marshal under
the warrant, because he did not levy on certain shares of corporate
stock belonging to Swartwout, and because it does not appear, by
the return of the warrant, that he had not goods and chattels
wherewith to satisfy the exigency of the warrant. In respect to the
corporate stocks, they do not appear to have been goods or
chattels, subject to such levy at the time it was made; and the
return of the marshal, that he had levied on the lands by virtue of
the warrant, is, at least,
prima facie evidence that his
levy was not irregular, by reason of the existence of goods and
chattels of the collector subject to his process.
The third question is, therefore, to be answered in the
affirmative.
This renders the other questions proposed immaterial, and no
answer need be returned thereto.
The other two cases --
John Den, ex dem. James B. Murray et
al. v. The Hoboken Land and Improvement Company, and John
Den, ex dem. William P. Rathbone et al. v. Rutsen Suckley et
al., are disposed of by this opinion, the same questions
having been certified therein.