Court Opinion

ID: 6676144
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 21:16:06.404578+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:00:42.619826
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered
Mr. Justice McIver.
This action was brought by the plaintiff against the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund of the State of South Carolina to recover the possession of two papers in the form of deeds, purporting to be conveyances of certain tracts of land in the County of York, by the plaintiff to C. P.. Leslie, as land commissioner of the said State, the consideration mentioned therein aggregating the sum of seventeen thousand five hundred and ninety-nine dollars. The case as made for the plaintiff was, in substance, this :
Sometime in the year 1870, the plaintiff agreed to sell to the said Leslie, as land commissioner, the said tracts of land at the price named as the consideration in the said papers, to be paid in cash. Accordingly the papers were drawn up, signed and sealed, but not delivered, and were placed by the plaintiff in the hands of one Gulick to be delivered to the said land commissioner when the balance of the purchase money should be paid, the plaintiff having previously received twenty-four hundred dollars on account thereof. While the papers were thus in the possession of Gulick, the said Leslie applied to him for them so that they might be submitted to the attorney general for examination and approval, alleging that this was necessary in order to enable him to pay the balance of the purchase money. Gulick delivered the papers to the agent of Leslie for the purpose of examination, with the understanding that they were to be returned to him after they had been examined. They never were returned, but the said Leslie upon various pretexts neglected to do so, although repeated demands were made upon him for their return both by plaintiff and the said Gulick, and on the contrary, the same were surreptitiously put upon record in the proper office in York County.
By the act of February 15, 1872, the office of land comis-sioner was abolished, and in the second section of that act it was *418provided: “That all books and papers pertaining to the office of the land commissioner be turned over to the secretary of State on and after the passage of this act. And the secretary of State shall execute the duties heretofore devolving upon the land commissioner.” By the act of 1878, now section 60 of the General Statutes, it was provided: “The secretary of State shall take charge of all property of the State, the care and custody of which is not otherwise provided for by law. He shall hold the same subject to the directions and instructions of the commissioners of the sinking fund.” Section 6L: “Hereafter no grants of vacant lands shall be issued, except to actual purchasers of the said lands for value; and all vacant lands purchased by the late land commissioners of the State shall be likewise subject to the directions and instructions of the commissioner's of the sinking fund.” And then by section 62, which is but a re-enactment of the act of 1870, the several public officers mentioned in the title of this action are constituted the commissioners of the sinking fund, “to receive and manage the incomes and revenues set apart and applied to the sinking fund of the State.” And by section 63, it is made the duty of the said commissioners “to sell and convey, for and on behalf of the State, all such real and personal property, assets, and effects belonging to the State, as is not in public use,” with certain exceptions which need not be mentioned here, and apply the proceeds as therein directed.
It seems that the papers in question, together with the other books and papers pertaining to the office of land commissioner, were, when that office was abolished, turned over to the secretary of State, and the same are noAV in the possession of that officer. On October 18, 1883, the plaintiff made a formal demand upon the commissioners of the sinking fund for the papers in controversy, which not being complied with, this action was commenced for their recovery. As the secretary of State has not been made a party, the action seems to be based upon the theory that though the papers in question are in the actual possession of the secretary of State, yet they are only held by that officer as the mere hand of the commissioners of the sinking fund, and being subject entirely to their control, the action is brought against them alone, as they alone can direct the disposition of them.
*419The Circuit Judge held that the land commissioner originally obtained possession of these papers by fraud, and the subsequent fraudulent holding of them by that officer “followed the papers into the hands of the present defendants, his successors, who still hold, but should not be allowed to retain, possession of the same,” and that the value of the papers to the plaintiff should be measured by his liability under the covenants of warranty therein, to wit: the sum of seventeen thousand five hundred and ninety-nine dollars. He therefore rendered judgment that the plaintiff do recover from the defendants the papers in question, and in case the specific property cannot be delivered up, that he recover the value thereof, to wit: the sum of fifteen thousand, one hundred and ninety-nine dollars. From this judgment defendants appeal upon the several grounds set out in the record, which need not be mentioned here. Upon the argument of that appeal the court suggested a question of jurisdiction not raised by the parties, to wit: whether the action was not, in fact, though not in form, an action against the State, and as such not maintainable in any of the courts of the State, and ordered a re-argument upon that question, which has been had.
It will be necessary, first, to dispose of the question of jurisdiction; for if it shall be determined that the court has no jurisdiction, then it would be not only unnecessary but improper to undertake to decide any of the other questions in the case.
(That a State cannot be sued in any of its courts, without its express consent, which can only be given by the legislative authority, is a proposition so universally conceded as to render ^ any argument or authority to support it wholly unnecessary. If, /however, authority should be asked for, it will be found in almost 1 every case which will be hereinafter cited, where it will be found (that the proposition has either been distinctly decided or ex- / pressly recognized, and we are not aware of any authority to the | contra^. As it is not pretended that any such consent was given in this case, the first inquiry is, whether this is really an action against the State. The fact that the State is not named as a party to the record is not conclusive of this inquiry, though at one time it seems to have been so held in the case of Osborn v. United States Bank, 9 Wheat., 738, followed by Davis v. *420Gray, 16 Wall., 203; but these cases, so far as this particular point is concerned, are entirely inconsistent with the more recent decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States, where the rule seems to be now well settled that an action though in form against an officer of a State, if it is in fact a suit against the State itself, cannot be maintained even though the State is not made a party on the record. Louisiana v. Jumel, 107 U. S., 711; Cunningham v. Macon & Brunswick R. R. Co., 109 Id., 446; Hagood v. Southern, 117 Id., 62.
Indeed, it being universally conceded that a State cannot be sued without its consent, except in the limited class of cases in which a State may be sued in the original jurisdiction expressly granted to the Supreme Court by the constitution of the United States, it is only in cases where the State is not named as a party defendant in the record, that any real question of jurisdiction can arise; for if the State is named as a party defendant in the record, that precludes further inquiry, and the court, it is universally conceded, cannot take jurisdiction. In Cunningham v. Macon & Brunswick R. R. Co., supra, Mr. Justice Miller reviews this whole subject and admits that it is not an easy matter to reconcile the various decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States upon the subject; and while disavowing any attempt to do so, he proceeds to deduce from them certain general principles. After laying down the general principle that a State cannot be sued without its consent, except in the limited class of cases above alluded to, he says: “This principle is conceded in all the cases, and whenever it can be clearly seen that the State is an indispensable party to enable the court, according. to the rules which govern its procedure, to grant the relief sought, it will refuse to take jurisdiction;” and after adding that the courts have, “in some instances gone a long way in holding the State not to be a necessary party, though some interest of hers may be more or less affected by the decision," he proceeds to classify the cases in which this has been done, as follows :
“1. It has been held in a class of cases where property of the State, or property in which the State has an interest, comes before the court and under its control in the regular course of judicial administration, without being forcibly taken from the *421possession of the government, the court will proceed to discharge its duty in regard to that property. And the State, if it,chooses to come in as plaintiff, as in prize cases, or to intervene in other cases when she may have a lien or other claim on the property, will be permitted to do so, but subject to the rule that her rights will receive the same consideration as any other party interested in the matter, and be subjected in like manner to the judgment of the court. Of this class are the cases of The Siren, 7 Wall., 152, 157; The Davis, 10 Id., 15, 20; and Clark v. Barnard, 108 U. S., 436.” It will be observed that in the case of The Davis, supra, while the lien for salvage on the personal property of the United States was fully recognized, yet it was held that such lien could not be enforced by a suit against the United States, or by a proceeding in rem where the possession of the property can only be had by taking it out of the actual possession of the officers or agents of the government charged therewith, but that as it appeared in that case that the property was not taken out of the possession of any officer or agent of the government, but from the common carrier to whom it had been delivered for transportation from one port to another, when the government came in and asserted its claim to the property, it would be required to discharge the lien before the property would be delivered to it.
*420\
*421“2. Another class of cases is where an individual is sued in tort for some act injurious to another in regard to person or property, to which his defence is that he has acted under the orders of the government. In these eases he is not sued as, or because he is, the officer of the government, but as an individual, and the court is not ousted of jurisdiction because he asserts authority as such .officer. To make out his defence he must show that his authority was sufficient in law to protect him.” The somewhat famous case of United States v. Lee, 106 U. S., 196, is cited as belonging to this class, and to.it we may add the subsequent case of Poindexter v. Greenhow, 114 U. S., 270.
“3. A third class, which has given rise to more controversy, is where the law has imposed upon an officer of the government a well defined duty in regard to a specific matter, not affecting the general powers or functions of the government, but in the .performance of which one or more individuals have a distinct *422interest capable of enforcement by judicial process.” Amongst the cases mentioned as illustrations of this class are, Davis v. Gray, 16 Wall., 203, which, however, is questioned as going to an extreme limit, if not beyond it; Board of Liquidation v. McComb, 92 U. S., 531; and Osborn v. Bank of the United States, 9 Wheat., 738, which last mentioned case is declared to go no further than to decide: “That where a plain official duty, requiring no exercise of discretion, is to be performed, and performance is refused, any person who will sustain a personal injury by such refusal may have a mandamus to compel performance; 'and when such duty is threatened to be violated by some positive official act, any person who will sustain personal injury thereby, for which adequate compensation cannot be had at law, may have an injunction to prevent it.” As a further illustration of this class we may add the recent case of Allen v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, 114 U. S., 311.
We have felt warranted in making these liberal quotations from the case of Cunningham v. Macon & Brunswick R. R. Co., because it is manifestly a well considered case, in which the whole subject is reviewed and ably treated, and the case has been distinctly recognized and followed in one of the most recent decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States — Hagood v. Southern, supra.
It may be well to mention here that the title of the case (United States v. Lee) much relied on to support the jurisdiction in this case, as it is designated in the reports and usually cited, is well calculated to mislead, by conveying the impression that the United States was a party to the action in that case. The fact, however, is otherwise. The action was brought against Kaufman and others, as individuals, in the State court and removed to the Circuit Court of the United States. Thereupon the attorney general filed a suggestion, setting forth certain facts upon which he claimed that the court could not take jurisdiction of the case, and moved to set aside all the proceedings for want of jurisdiction, saying expressly 'that he appeared only for the purpose of such motion. The plaintiff having recovered judgment in the Circuit Court, two writs of error were sued out — one in the name of the United States, and the other in the name of Kaufman and others, *423the defendants against whom judgment was rendered. That the United States was not a party, is apparent from the following language used in the opinion of the court: “As the United States was not a party to the suit below, and while, defending the action by its proper law officers, expressly declined to submit itself as a defendant to the jurisdiction of the court, there may exist some doubt whether it has a right to prosecute the writ of error in its own name; but as the judgment against Kaufman and Strong is here on their writ of error, under which all the questions are raised which could be raised under the other, their writ being /prosecuted in the interest of the United States, and argued here by the solicitor general, the point is immaterial, and the question has not been mooted.” The whole decision shows clearly that the case turned entirely upon the question whether an individual who, when sued for a trespass, undertakes to justify under the title of the United States, can maintain such defence without establishing the validity of such title. It is clear, therefore, that this case was properly placed by Mr. Justice Miller in the second class, when, in Cunningham v. Macon & Brunswick R. R. Co., he was classifying the various cases in which the court could take jurisdiction.
Now let us examine the case presented for our determination in the light of these decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States, to which we have resorted in the absence of any cases in our own State upon the point involved. It certainly cannot be pretended that the case falls within either the first or third of the classes in which Mr. Justice Miller arranged the cases in the case of Cunningham v. Macon & Brunswick R. R. Co., and we think it equally clear that it does not fall within the second class. The action is not brought against the defendants us individuals for a tort, from which they are seeking to defend themselves by some act or order of the State government; but the action is brought against them as commissioners of the sinking fund to recover property alleged to be in their possession officially. Indeed, the person or officer, the secretary of State, who, it is conceded, has the actual possession of the property, has not been made a party to the action, and the claim against the defendants as officers or agents of the State government is rested solely upon *424the ground that the secretary of State, who has the actual possession of the property, holds it “subject to the directions and instructions of the commissioners of the sinking fund,” who are therefore sued as the only parties having the right to control the disposition of the property in question.
Now, unless the property is held and claimed as the property of the State, it is very manifest that the defendants, as commissioners of the sinking fund, have nothing whatever to do with it, and never having had it in their actual possession, they would not, on that ground, be amenable to an action for its delivery. For the act (section 60 of the General Statutes) only requirethe secretary of State to take charge of "the property of the State” and hold uthe same subject to the directions and instructions of the commissioners of the sinking fund,” and hence if the property in question is not held and claimed as the property of the State, then it is clear that the commissioners of the sinking fund have nothing more to do with it, and are under no more responsibility for it than for any other property of a third person which may happen either wrongfully or accidentally to be in the actual possession of the person who holds the office of secretary of State. If, then, the property is to be regarded as in the official possession of the secretary of State, held and claimed as the property of the State, and as such subject to the control of the commissioners of the sinking fund, it would seem to be clear that the action is, in fact, though not in form, an action against the State itself; for in such case, as the State can only hold possession of personal property by or through an officer or agent, the possession of the officer or agent is the possession of the State, and the State is an indispensable party to any contest for the right of possession. .
Even if the possession of the State was originally acquired by some wrongful act of some one of its officers or agents (though it is difficult to see how this could be judicially determined until the question of jurisdiction is first disposed of), still no action •could be maintained by the rightful owner to recover possession against an officer of the State government holding and claiming the property as the property of the State when sued as such; because in such case, the State being the real party in interest, *425would be an indispensable party to the action, and as she could not be made a party without her consent, the action could not be maintained in any court, and the claimant would be remitted to his remedy by petition to the legislature, just as in the ease of all other claims against the State, where, if his claim be well founded, it is not permissible to doubt he would receive ample justice. If, however, the action should be brought against the person in possession as an individual, and he, in his defence, seeks to justify his possession by alleging title to. or right of pos- . session in, the State, then, as in the case of United States v. Lee, supra, he.must establish such title or right of possession, and if he fails to do so, judgment goes against him as an individual.
The reason for the distinction is obvious. In the former case the party in possession being sued as an officer, judgment can only go against him as such, and not against him as an individual, for he is not sued as such; and as the only propei'ty which he holds as an officer is the property of the State, it is clear that the State is the real party in interest, as it is out of her property alone that the judgment sought to be recovered can be satisfied. But in the latter case, where the party in possession is sued as an individual, the judgment can only be enforced against the individual property of the defendant, and the State is not necessarily interested and is not therefore the real party in interest. Take this very case as an illustration. Suppose it should become necessary to enforce the alternative money decree, against whose property could it be enforced ? Certainly not against the individual property of the persons named as defendants, for no claim against them as individuals has been established. If it is proposed to enforce such judgment against the property held by them as commissioners of the sinking fund, the answer would be •that all of the property so held is the property of the State, which, of course, even if the State enjoyed no more exemption from suit than a private citizen, could not be reached under such judgment, as she was not a party to the action in w'hich the judgment was recovered, according to the only theory upon which the action ■ could be maintained. True, it may be said that it is not likely .that it will be necessary to enforce the alternative money decree.; *426but that cannot affect the legal question involved. If the judgment is a valid one at all, it is just as valid in the one alternative as in the other; for if the court had jurisdiction of the case, the judgment as rendered was not only authorized, but required by the conclusions as to the facts and the law reached by the Circuit Judge. It seerns to us, therefore, that the fact that the judgment rendered in this case cannot, in one of its alternatives, be enforced, because it goes against the property of the State, shows conclusively that the action was in fact, though not i form, an action against the State, of which neither this court no the court below has any jurisdiction.
The cases of The State v. The President and Directors of the Bank of the State of South Carolina, 1 S. C., 63; Dabney, Morgan & Co. v. The Bank of the State, 3 Id., 124; Bank of the United States v. The Planters Bank, 9 Wheat., 904; Bank Kentucky v. Wister, 2 Peters, 318; Briscoe v. Bank of Kentucky, 11 Id., 257; Darrington v. State Bank of Alabama, 13 How., 12; and Curran v. State of Arkansas, 15 Id., 304, relied on by the counsel for the plaintiff, have all been carefully examined, and do not appear to us to be applicable to the present inquiry. These cases, so far as we are at present concerned with them, only decide that the fact that a State owns a part or the whole of the stock of a banking corporation, does not exempt such corporation from suit under the rule that a State cannot be sued without its consent. Aside from the fact, which of itself would be ¡ conclusive of the inapplicability of these cases, that in most, and probably all of them, the charters of the corporations contained > express provisions that they could sue and be sued, it is well settled that, in the eye of the law, a corporation and the individuals who compose it are totally distinct and different persons. Hence an action against a corporation can never be regarded or treated as an action against the individuals who hold its stock. Without. some special provision in the charter to that effect, or some general law of the State, the individuals who compose the corporation are not only not to be regarded as parties to an action brought against it, but their individual property could not be; reached under a judgment against the corporation. From this it follows naturally and logically that when an artificial person *427called a corporation is brought into existence, it, like all other persons, natural as well as artificial, may be subjected to the process of the courts, and the fact that its stock is owned in part or in whole by the State, confers upon it no exemption from suit, as the corporation and the persons who compose it are totally distinct and different persons.
It is argued, however, that when the State established the office of land commissioner, who was charged with certain specific duties, to wit: the buying of lands and selling them in small parcels to actual settlers, and set apart a fund, the proceeds of the sale of bonds issued for that purpose, to be used in paying for the lands so purchased, that fund was as much separated from the other funds of the State and placed under the control of the land commissioner, as the capital provided for the Bank of the State was separated from the other funds of the State and placed under the control of the president and directors of that institution, and that as the latter was subject to suit in the courts of the State upon any contract made by them, so could the former, as the State, in such case, could not be regarded, as a necessary party to the action, and hence no exemption from suit on that account could bo claimed. It will be observed, however, that the land commissioner, neither singly nor in conjunction with the advisory board, was ever constituted a corporation while the bank was, and therefore the analogy would not hold good.
But even assuming, for the purposes of this inquiry, that the land commissioner could, in his own name, sue or be sued upon any contract made by him in the performance of his official duties, it must be remembered that that office has long since been abolished, and all the funds and property pertaining thereto have been placed in the hands of the secretary of State, along with all the other property of the State, the custody of which is not otherwise provided for by law, and hence such funds and property are no longer separated from the other assets of the State, but along with such assets are directed to be applied to the payment of the debt of the State. There is, therefore, now no longer any separate agency entrusted with a specific fund, in regard to which such agency can contract and be contracted with, as was formerly the case in reference to the land commissioner and the Bank of *428the State. So that, besides the fact that the land commissioner was never made a corporation as the Bank of the State was, there is this additional objection to the view contended for by the plaintiff. The State has resumed the possession and control of all the assets heretofore entrusted to the land commissioner for a specific purpose, and has appropriated these assets, along with others, to the general purpose of the payment of the public debt.
If, however, in resuming the possession and control of the books and papers heretofore entrusted to the land commissioner the State has acquired the possession of any property belonging to the plaintiff, upon which the State has no rightful claim, this court cannot permit itself to doubt, that upon a showing to that effect made in the proper way for a claim against the State to be presented, that restitution will be made upon such terms as are just; but no action against the State or any officer thereof entrusted with the custody of such property, can be maintained in the courts of this State for want of jurisdiction.
Having reached the conclusion that neither this court nor the court below has any jurisdiction of this case, because it is in fact though not in form an action against the State, we have no authority to consider any other question arising in the case, and anything which we might say would be an extra-judicial utter'ance, in which this court has no disposition to indulge.
The judgment of this court is that the judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed, and that the complaint be dismissed for want of jurisdiction, without prejudice as to the merits of the claim.
Mr. Justice McGowaN concurred.