The boundary line between the States of Virginia and Tennessee,
which was ascertained and adjusted by commissioners appointed by
and on behalf of each State and marked upon the surface of the
ground between the summit of White Top Mountain and the top of the
Cumberland Mountains, having been established and confirmed by the
State of Virginia in January, 1803, and by the State of Tennessee
in November, 1803, and having been recognized and acquiesced in by
both parties for a long course of years, and having been treated by
Congress as the true boundary between the two States, in its
districting them for judicial and revenue purposes, and in its
action touching the territory in which Federal elections were to be
held and for which federal appointments were to be made, was a line
established under an agreement or compact between the two states,
to which the consent of Congress was constitutionally given, and as
so established, it takes effect as a definition of the true
boundary, even if it be found to vary somewhat from the line
established in the original grants.
The history of the Royal Grants, and of the colonial and state
legislation upon this subject reviewed.
An agreement or compact as to boundaries may be made between two
states, and the requisite consent of Congress may be given to it
subsequently, or may be implied from subsequent action of congress
itself towards the two states, and when such agreement or compact
is thus made and is thus assented to, it is valid.
What "an agreement or compact" between two states of the union
is, and what "the consent of Congress" to such agreement or compact
is within the meaning of Article I of the Constitution considered
and explained.
A boundary line between states or provinces which has been run
out, located, and marked upon the earth, and afterwards recognized
and acquiesced in by the parties for a long course of years, is
conclusive.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 148 U. S. 504
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit to establish by judicial decree the true boundary
line between the States of Virginia and Tennessee. It embraces a
controversy of which this Court has original jurisdiction, and in
this respect the judicial department of our government is
distinguished from the judicial department of any other country,
drawing to itself by the ordinary modes of peaceful procedure the
settlement of questions as to boundaries and consequent rights of
soil and jurisdiction between states, possessed, for purposes of
internal government, of the powers of independent communities,
which otherwise might be the fruitful cause of prolonged and
harassing conflicts.
The State of Virginia, as the complainant, summoning her sister
state, Tennessee, to the bar of this Court -- a jurisdiction to
which the latter promptly yields -- sets forth in her bill the
sources of her title to the territory embraced within her limits
and also of the title to the territory embraced by Tennessee.
The claim of Virginia is that by the charters of the English
sovereigns, under which the colonies of Virginia and North Carolina
were formed, the boundary line between them was intended and
declared to be a line running due west from a point on the Atlantic
Ocean on the parallel of latitude 36 degrees and 30 minutes north,
and that the State of Tennessee, having been created out of the
territory formerly constituting a part of North Carolina, the same
boundary line continued between her and Virginia, and the
contention of Virginia is that the boundary line claimed by
Tennessee does not follow this parallel of latitude, but varies
from it by running too far north, so as to unjustly include a strip
of land about one hundred and thirteen miles in length and varying
from two to eight miles in width, over which she asserts and
unlawfully exercises sovereign jurisdiction.
On the other hand, the claim of Tennessee is that the
Page 148 U. S. 505
boundary line, as declared in the English charters, between the
colonies of Virginia and North Carolina, was run and established by
commissioners appointed by Virginia and Tennessee after they became
states of the Union, by Virginia in 1800, and by Tennessee in 1801,
and that the line they established was subsequently approved in
1803 by the legislative action of both states, and has been
recognized and acted upon as the true and real boundary between
them ever since, until the commencement of this suit, a period of
over eighty-five years, and the contention of Tennessee is that the
line thus established and acted upon is not open to contestation as
to its correctness at this day, but is to be held and adjudged to
be the real and true boundary line between the states, even though
some deviations from the line of the parallel of latitude
thirty-six degrees and thirty minutes north may have been made by
the commissioners in the measurement and demarcation of the
line.
In order to clearly understand and appreciate the force and
effect to be accorded to the respective claims and contentions of
the parties, a brief history of preceding measures should be given,
with reference to the charters and legislation under which they
were taken.
On the 23d of May, 1609, James the First of England, by letters
patent, reciting previous letters, gave to Robert, Earl of
Salisbury, Thomas, Earl of Suffolk, and divers other persons
associated with them a charter which organized them into a
corporation by the name of the "Treasurer and Company of
Adventurers and Planters of the City of London," for the first
colony of Virginia, and granted to them all those lands and
territories lying
"in that part of America called 'Virginia,' from the point of
land called 'Cape or Point Comfort,' along the seacoast to the
northward 200 miles, and from the said point of Cape Comfort along
the seacoast to the southward 200 miles, and all that space and
circuit of land lying from the seacoast of the precinct aforesaid
up into the land throughout, from sea to sea, west and
northwest,"
and "also all the islands lying within 100 miles along the coast
of both seas of the precinct aforesaid."
Page 148 U. S. 506
On the 24th of March, 1663, Charles the Second of England
granted to Edward, Earl of Clarendon, and others of his subjects,
all that territory within his dominion of America
"extending from the north end of the island called 'Lucke
Island,' which lieth in the Southern Virginia seas, and within six
and thirty degrees of the northern latitude, and to the west as far
as the South Seas, and so southerly as far as the River Mathias,
which bordereth upon the coast of Florida, and within one and
thirty degrees of northern latitude, and so west in a direct line
as far as the South Seas aforesaid,"
and gave them full authority to organize and govern the
territory granted under the name of the "Province of Carolina."
On the 30th or May, 1665, Charles the Second granted to the
above proprietors of Carolina a charter confirming the previous
grant and enlarging the same so as to include the following
described territory: all that province and territory within
America
"extending north and eastward as far as the north end of
Currituck River or Inlet, upon a straight westerly line to Wyonoke
Creek, which lies within or about the degrees of thirty-six and
thirty minutes northern latitude, and so west in a direct line as
far as the South Seas, and south and westward so far as the degrees
of twenty-nine inclusive of northern latitude, and so west in a
direct line as far as the South Seas."
The northern and southern settlements of Carolina were separated
from each other by nearly three hundred miles, and numerous Indians
resided upon the intervening territory; and, though the whole
province belonged to the same proprietors, the legislation of the
settlements was by different assemblies, acting at times under
different governors. Early in 1700, the northern part of the
province was sometimes called the "Colony of North Carolina,"
although the province was not divided by the Crown into North and
South Carolina until 1732. Story's Commentaries on the
Constitution, sec. 137. Previously to this division, the
settlements on the borders of Virginia and of what was called the
"Colony of North Carolina" had largely increased, and disputes and
altercations frequently occurred between the settlers, growing out
of the
Page 148 U. S. 507
unlocated boundary between the provinces. Virginians were
charged with taking up lands, under titles of the crown, south of
the proper limits of their province, and Carolinians were charged
with taking up lands which belonged to the crown with warrants from
the proprietors. The troubles arising from this source were the
occasion of much disturbance to the communities, and various
attempts were made by parties in authority in the two provinces to
remove the cause of them. Previously to January, 1711,
commissioners were appointed on the part of Virginia and North
Carolina to run the boundary line between them, and proclamations
were made forbidding surveys of the grounds until that line within
the disputed limits should be marked. But these efforts for the
settlement of the difficulties were unavailing.
In January, 1711, commissioners were again appointed, but
failed, for want of the requisite means to accomplish their
intended object.
In 1728, an attempt to settle the difficulties was renewed, but,
as on previous occasions, it failed. The commissioners of the
colonies met, but they could not agree at what place to fix the
latitude thirty-six degrees and thirty minutes north, nor upon the
place called "Wyonoke," and they broke up without doing anything.
The Governors of North Carolina and Virginia then entered into a
convention upon the subject of the boundary between the two
provinces and transmitted it to England for approval. The King and
council approved of it, and so did the lords and proprietors, and
returned it to the governors to be executed. The agreement was as
follows:
"That from the mouth of Currituck River, setting the compass on
the north shore thereof, a due west line shall be run and fairly
marked, and if it happen to cut Chowan River between the mouth of
Nottaway River and Wiccacon Creek, then the same direct course
shall be continued towards the mountains, and be ever deemed the
dividing line between Virginia and Carolina; but if the said west
line cuts Chowan River to the southward of Wiccacon Creek, then
from that point of intersection the bounds shall be allowed to
continue up the middle of Chowan River to the middle of the
Page 148 U. S. 508
entrance into said Wiccacon Creek, and from thence a due west
line shall divide the two governments. That if said west line cuts
Blackwater River to the northward of Nottaway River, then from the
point of intersection, the bounds shall be allowed to be continued
down the middle of said Blackwater to the middle of the entrance
into said Nottaway River, and from thence a due west line shall
divide the two governments."
"That if a due west line shall be found to pass through islands,
or cut out small slips of land, which might much more conveniently
be included in one province or other by natural water bounds, in
such case, the persons appointed for running the line shall have
the power to settle the natural bounds, provided the commissioners
on both sides agree thereto, and that all variations from the west
line be punctually noted on the premises or plats, which they shall
return to be put upon the record of both governments."
Commissioners were appointed by Virginia and North Carolina to
carry this agreement into effect. They met at Currituck Inlet in
March, 1728. The variation of the compass was then found to be
three degrees one minute and two seconds west nearly, and the
latitude thirty-six degrees, thirty-one minutes. The dividing line
between the provinces struck Blackwater 176 poles above the mouth
of Nottaway. The variation of the compass at the mouth of Nottaway
was two degrees thirty minutes. The line was afterwards extended to
Steep Rock Creek, 320 miles from the coast, by Commissioners Joshua
Fry and Peter Jefferson on the part of Virginia, and Daniel Weldon
and William Churton on the part of North Carolina.
In 1778 and 1779, Virginia and North Carolina, having become, by
their separation in 1776 from the British Crown, independent
states, again took up the question of the boundary between them,
and appointed commissioners to extend and complete the line from
the point at which the previous commissioners, Fry and Jefferson
and others, had ended their work, on Steep Rock Creek, to Tennessee
River. The commissioners undertook the work with which they were
charged, but they could not find the line on Steep Rock Creek,
owing,
Page 148 U. S. 509
as they supposed, to the large amount of timber which had
decayed since it was marked. The report of their labors was signed
only by the Virginia commissioners. Their report was, in substance,
that after running the line as far as Carter's Valley, forty-five
miles west of Steep Rock Creek, the commissioners of Carolina
conceived the idea that the line was further south than it ought to
be, and, on trial, it appeared that there was a slight variation of
the needle, which the Virginia commissioners thought arose from
their proximity to some iron ore, that various expedients to
harmonize the action of the commissioners were unavailing, and the
Carolina commissioners, agreeing that they were more than two miles
too far south of the proper latitude, measured off that distance
directly north, and ran the line eastwardly from that place,
superintended by two of the Carolina and one of the Virginia
commissioners, while from the same place it was continued
westwardly, superintended by the others, for the sake of expediting
the business. The Virginia commissioners subsequently became
satisfied that the first line run by them was correct, and they
therefore continued it from Carter's Valley, where it had been
left, westward to Tennessee River. The North Carolina commissioners
carried their line as far as Cumberland Mountains, protesting
against the line run by the Virginia commissioners.
This was in 1779 and 1780. The line adopted by the Virginia
commissioners was known as the "Walker Line," and the line adopted
by the commissioners of North Carolina was known as the "Henderson
Line." Walker's Line was approved by the Legislature of Virginia in
1791, but it never received the approval of the Legislature of
Tennessee. Previously to the appointment of these commissioners,
and on the 6th of May, 1776, the State of Virginia, in a general
convention, with that generous public spirit which on all occasions
since has characterized her conduct in the disposition of her
claims to territory under different charters from the English
government, had declared that the territories within the charters
erecting the colonies of Maryland, Pennsylvania, North Carolina,
and South Carolina were thereby ceded and forever confirmed to the
people of those colonies respectively. On the
Page 148 U. S. 510
25th of February, 1790, North Carolina ceded to the United
States the territory which afterwards became the State of
Tennessee, and which was admitted into the Union on the 1st of
June, 1796. Subsequently the States of Virginia and Tennessee both
took steps for the final settlement of the controversy as to the
boundary between them. On the 10th of January, 1800, the House of
Delegates of the General Assembly of Virginia adopted the following
resolution:
"Whereas it is represented to the present General Assembly that
the people living between what are called Walker's and Henderson's
lines, so far as the same run between the State of Tennessee and
this state, do not consider themselves under either the
jurisdiction of that or this state, and therefore refuse the
payment of any taxes to either of said states or to the collectors
of either for the general government, because the State of North
Carolina, on the 25th of February, 1790, ceded the said State of
Tennessee, then called the 'Southwestern Territory,' to the
government of the United States, and therefore the act entitled 'An
act concerning the southern boundary of this state,' passed on the
7th of December, 1791, in this legislature, to establish the line
commonly called Walker's Line as the boundary between North
Carolina and this state, could only bind the State of North
Carolina as far as her territorial limits extended on the line of
this state, and could not bind the said Southwestern Territory,
which had previously been conveyed, as aforesaid, and"
"Whereas, since the said cession, the general government hath
erected the said Southwestern Territory into an independent state,
by their act, June 1, 1796, whereby it has become the duty of the
said State of Tennessee and of this state to settle all differences
between them with respect to the said boundary line:"
"
Resolved therefore that the executive be authorized
and requested to appoint three commissioners whose duty it shall be
to meet commissioners to be appointed by the State of Tennessee, to
settle and adjust all differences concerning the said boundary
line, and to establish the one or the other of the
Page 148 U. S. 511
said lines, as the case may be, or to run
any other
line which may be agreed on, for settling the same, and that
the executive be also requested to transmit a copy of this
resolution to the executive authority of the State of
Tennessee."
On the 13th of January, 1800, this resolution was agreed to by
the Senate.
On the 13th day of November, 1801, the General Assembly of
Tennessee passed an act on the same subject, the first section of
which is these words:
"
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of
Tennessee, that the governor, for the time being, is hereby
authorized and required, as soon as may be convenient after the
passing of this act, to appoint three commissioners on the part of
this state, one of whom shall be a mathematician capable of taking
latitude, who, when so appointed, are hereby authorized and
empowered, or a majority of them, to act in conjunction with such
commissioners as are or may be appointed by the State of Virginia
to settle and designate a true line between the aforesaid
states."
The second section is as follows:
"
And whereas it may be difficult for this legislature
to ascertain with precision what powers ought of right to be
delegated to the said commissioners, therefore,"
"
Be it enacted that the governor is hereby authorized
and required, from time to time, to issue such power to the
commissioners as he may deem proper for the purpose of carrying
into effect the object intended by this act, consistent with the
true interest of the state."
On the 22d day of January, 1803, a report having been made by
the commissioners, which is copied into the act, the Legislature of
Virginia ratified what had been done in the following act:
"Whereas, the commissioners appointed to ascertain and adjust
the boundary line between this state and the State of Tennessee, in
conformity to the resolution passed by the legislature of this
state for that purpose, have proceeded to the execution of that
business, and made a report thereof in the words following, to-wit:
"
Page 148 U. S. 512
" The commissioners for ascertaining and adjusting the boundary
line between the States of Virginia and Tennessee appointed
pursuant to public authority on the part of each, namely, General
Joseph Martin, Creed Taylor, and Peter Johnson, for the former, and
Moses Fisk, General John Sevier, and General George Rutledge, for
the latter, having met at the place previously appointed for that
purpose, and not uniting, from the general result of their
astronomical observations, to establish either of the former lines
called Walker's and Henderson's,
unanimously agreed, in
order to
end all controversy respecting the subject, to
run a due west line equally distant from both, beginning on the
summit of the mountain generally known by the name of White Top
Mountain, where the northeastern corner of Tennessee terminates, to
the top of Cumberland Mountain, where the southwestern corner of
Virginia terminates, which is hereby declared to be the true
boundary line between the said states, and has been accordingly run
by Brice Martin and Nathan B. Markland, the surveyors duly
appointed for that purpose, and marked under the directions of the
said commissioners, as will more at large appear by the report of
the said surveyors, hereto annexed, and bearing equal date
herewith."
" 2. And the said commissioners do further unanimously agree to
recommend to their respective states that individuals having claims
or titles to lands on either side of the said line, as now fixed
and agreed on, and between the lines aforesaid, shall not, in
consequence thereof, in anywise be prejudiced or affected thereby,
and that the legislatures of their respective states should pass
mutual laws to render all such claims or titles secure to the
owners thereof."
" 3. And the said commissioners do further agree unanimously to
recommend to their states respectively that reciprocal laws should
be passed confirming the acts of all public officers, whether
magistrates, sheriffs, coroners, surveyors, or constables, between
the said lines, which would have been legal in either of the said
states had no difference of opinion existed about the true boundary
line."
" 4. This agreement shall be of no effect until ratified by
Page 148 U. S. 513
the legislatures of the states aforesaid. Given under our hands
and seals at William Robertson's, near Cumberland Gap, December the
eighth, eighteen hundred and two (Dec. 8th, 1802)."
"Jos. Martin [L.S.]"
"Creed Taylor [L.S.]"
"Peter Johnson [L.S.]"
"John Sevier [L.S.]"
"Moses Fisk [L.S.]"
"George Rutledge [L.S.]"
"5. And whereas, Brice Martin and Nathan B. Markland, the
surveyors duly appointed to run and mark the said line, have
granted their certificate of the execution of their duties, which
certificate is in the words following, to-wit:"
" The undersigned surveyors, having been fully appointed to run
the boundary line between the States of Virginia and Tennessee, as
directed by the commissioners for that purpose, have, agreeably to
their orders, run the same, beginning on the summit of the White
Top Mountain at the termination of the northeastern corner of the
State of Tennessee, a due west course to the top of the Cumberland
Mountains, where the southwestern corner of Virginia terminates,
keeping at an equal distance from the lines called Walker/s and
Henderson's, and have had the new line run as aforesaid marked with
five chops, in the form of a diamond, as directed by the said
commissioners. Given under our hands and seals, this eighth day of
December, eighteen hundred and two (8th December, 1802)."
"B. Martin [L.S.]"
"Nat. B. Markland [L.S.]"
"And it is deemed proper and expedient that the said boundary
line, so fixed and ascertained as aforesaid, should be established
and confirmed on the part of this commonwealth:"
"
Be it therefore enacted by the General Assembly of the
Commonwealth of Virginia that said boundary line between this
state and the State of Tennessee, as laid down, fixed, and
ascertained by the said commissioners above named in their
Page 148 U. S. 514
said report above recited, shall be, and is hereby,
fully and
absolutely, to all intents and purposes
whatsoever,
ratified, established, and confirmed on the
part of this commonwealth as the
true, certain, and
real boundary line between the said states."
"7. All claims or titles derived from the government of North
Carolina or Tennessee which said lands, by the adjustment and
establishment of the line aforesaid, have fallen into this state,
shall remain as secure to the owners thereof as if derived from the
government of Virginia, and shall not be in any wise prejudiced or
affected in consequence of the establishment of the said line."
"8. The acts of all public officers, whether magistrates,
sheriffs, coroners, surveyors, or constables, heretofore done or
performed in that portion of the territory between the lines called
Walker's and Henderson's lines which has fallen into this state by
the adjustment of the present line, and which would have been legal
if done or performed in the states of North Carolina or Tennessee,
are hereby recognized and confirmed."
"9. This act shall commence and be in force from and after the
passing of a like law on the part of the State of Tennessee."
And on the 3d of November, 1803, Tennessee passed the following
ratifying act:
"Whereas, the commissioners appointed to settle and designate
the true boundary between this state and the State of Virginia, in
conformity to the act passed by the legislature of this state for
the purpose, on the thirteenth day of November, one thousand eight
hundred and one, have proceeded to the execution of said business,
and made a report thereof in the words following, to-wit:"
"[Here follows the report named in the Virginia act.]"
"And it is deemed proper and expedient that the said boundary
line, so fixed and ascertained as aforesaid, should be established
and confirmed on the part of this state:"
"1.
Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of
Tennessee that the said boundary line between this state
Page 148 U. S. 515
and the State of Virginia, as laid down, fixed, and ascertained
by the said commissioners above named in their said report above
recited, shall be, and is hereby, fully and absolutely, to all
intents and purposes whatsoever,
ratified, established, and
confirmed on the part of this state as the
true, certain,
and real boundary line between the said states."
"2. Be it enacted, that all claims or titles to lands derived
from the government of Virginia, which said lands, by the
adjustment and establishment of the line aforesaid have fallen into
this state shall remain as secure to the owners thereof as if
derived from the government of North Carolina or Tennessee, and
shall not be in anywise prejudiced or affected in consequence of
the establishment of the said line."
"3.
Be it enacted that the acts of all officers,
whether magistrates, sheriffs, coroners, surveyors, or constables,
heretofore done or performed in that portion of territory between
the lines called Walker's and Henderson's lines which has fallen
into this state by the adjustment of the present line, and which
would have been legal if done or performed in the State of
Virginia, are hereby recognized and confirmed."
Laws of Tennessee, 1803, c. 58.
This line thus run was accepted by both states as a satisfactory
settlement of a controversy which had, under their governments and
that of the colonies which preceded them, lasted for nearly a
century. As seen from the acts recited, both states, through their
legislatures, declared in the most solemn and authoritative manner
that it was fully and absolutely ratified, established, and
confirmed as the true, certain, and real boundary line between
them, and this declaration could not have been more significant had
it added in express terms what was plainly implied, that it should
never be departed from by the government of either, but be
respected, maintained, and enforced by the governments of both. All
modes of legislative action which followed it indicated its
approval. Each state asserted jurisdiction on its side up to the
line designated and recognized the lawful jurisdiction of the
adjoining state up to the line on the opposite side. Both states
levied taxes on the lands on their respective sides, and
Page 148 U. S. 516
granted franchises to the people resident thereon. The people on
the south side voted at state and municipal elections for
representatives and officers of Tennessee, and the people on the
north side at such state and municipal elections voted for
representatives and officers of Virginia. The courts of the two
states exercised jurisdiction, civil and criminal, on their
respective side, and enforced their process up to that line, and
the legislation of Congress, in the designation of districts for
the jurisdiction of courts, and in prescribing limits for
collection districts and for purposes of election, made no
exception to the boundary as thus established. Act of July 1, 1862,
12 Stat. 432, 433, c. 119.
The line was marked with great care by the commissioners of the
states, with five chops on the trees in the form of a diamond at
such intervals between them as they deemed sufficient to identify
and trace the line. Not a whisper of fraud or misconduct is made by
either side against the commissioners for the conclusions they
reached and the line they established. It is true that, in the year
1856, fifty-four years after the line was thus settled, Virginia,
reciting that the line as marked by the commissioners in 1802 had,
by lapse of time, the improvement of the country, natural waste and
destruction, and other causes, become indistinct, uncertain, and to
some extent unknown, so that many inconveniences and difficulties
occurred between the citizens of the respective states, and in the
administration of their governments, passed an act for the
appointment of commissioners, to meet commissioners to be appointed
by Tennessee, to again run and mark said line, not to run and mark
a new line, and provided that where there was no growing timber on
any part of the line by which it might be plainly marked, if the
old marks were gone, the commissioners should cause monuments of
stone to be permanently planted on the line at least one at every
five miles or less, where it might seem best to the commissioners
to do so, that the line might be readily identified for its entire
length. The whole purpose of the act, as is evident on its face,
was not to change the old boundary line, but only to more perfectly
identify it. Tennessee responded to that invitation,
Page 148 U. S. 517
and appointed commissioners to act with those from Virginia. The
commissioners together reran and remarked the line as it was
established in 1802, and planted such additional monuments as were
deemed necessary, and they reported to their respective
legislatures that they had "accurately run, remarked, and measured
the old line of 1802, with all its offsets and irregularities as
shown in the surveyor's report" therein incorporated, and on the
accompanying map therewith submitted. The Legislature of Tennessee
approved of the action of the commissioners, but Virginia withheld
her approval and called for a new appointment of commissioners to
rerun and remark the line, which was refused by Tennessee as
unnecessary. No complaint as to the correctness of the line run and
established in 1802 was made by Virginia until within a recent
period. She now by her bill asks that the compact entered into
between her and the State of Tennessee, as set forth in the act of
the General Assembly of Virginia of January 22, 1803, and which
became operative by similar action of the Legislature of Tennessee
on the 3d of November following, be declared null and void as
having been entered into between the states without the consent of
Congress, and prays that this Court will establish the true
boundary line between those states due east and west, in latitude
thirty-six degrees and thirty minutes north, in accordance with
what it alleges to be the ancient chartered rights of that
commonwealth and the laws creating the State of Tennessee and
admitting it into the Union.
The Constitution provides that
"No state shall, without the consent of Congress, lay any duty
of tonnage, keep troops or ships of war in time of peace, enter
into any agreement or compact with another state or with a foreign
power, or engage in war, unless actually invaded, or in such
imminent danger as will not admit of delay."
Is the agreement, made without the consent of Congress, between
Virginia and Tennessee, to appoint commissioners to run and mark
the boundary line between them within the prohibition of this
clause? The terms "agreement" or "compact," taken by themselves,
are sufficiently comprehensive to
Page 148 U. S. 518
embrace all forms of stipulation, written or verbal, and
relating to all kinds of subjects -- to those to which the United
States can have no possible objection or have any interest in
interfering with as well as to those which may tend to increase and
build up the political influence of the contracting states so as to
encroach upon or impair the supremacy of the United States or
interfere with their rightful management of particular subjects
placed under their entire control.
There are many matters upon which different states may agree
that can in no respect concern the United States. If, for instance,
Virginia should come into possession and ownership of a small
parcel of land in New York, which the latter state might desire to
acquire as a site for a public building, it would hardly be deemed
essential for the latter state to obtain the consent of Congress
before it could make a valid agreement with Virginia for the
purchase of the land. If Massachusetts, in forwarding its exhibits
to the World's Fair at Chicago, should desire to transport them a
part of the distance over the Erie Canal, it would hardly be deemed
essential for that state to obtain the consent of Congress before
it could contract with New York for the transportation of the
exhibits through that state in that way. If the bordering line of
two states should cross some malarious and disease-producing
district, there could be no possible reason, on any conceivable
public grounds, to obtain the consent of Congress for the bordering
states to agree to unite in draining the district, and thus
removing the cause of disease. So, in case of threatened invasion
of cholera, plague, or other causes of sickness and death, it would
be the height of absurdity to hold that the threatened states could
not unite in providing means to prevent and repel the invasion of
the pestilence without obtaining the consent of Congress, which
might not be at the time in session. If, then, the terms "compact"
or "agreement" in the Constitution do not apply to every possible
compact or agreement between one state and another, for the
validity of which the consent of Congress must be obtained, to what
compacts or agreements does the Constitution apply?
Page 148 U. S. 519
We can only reply by looking at the object of the constitutional
provision and construing the terms "agreement" and "compact" by
reference to it. It is a familiar rule in the construction of terms
to apply to them the meaning naturally attaching to them from their
context.
Noscitur a sociis is a rule of construction
applicable to all written instruments. Where any particular word is
obscure or of doubtful meaning, taken by itself, its obscurity or
doubt may be removed by reference to associated words, and the
meaning of a term may be enlarged or restrained by reference to the
object of the whole clause in which it is used.
Looking at the clause in which the terms "compact" or
"agreement" appear, it is evident that the prohibition is directed
to the formation of any combination tending to the increase of
political power in the states, which may encroach upon or interfere
with the just supremacy of the United States. Story, in his
Commentaries (§ 1403), referring to a previous part of the
same section of the Constitution in which the clause in question
appears, observes that its language
"may be more plausibly interpreted from the terms used, 'treaty,
alliance, or confederation,' and upon the ground that the sense of
each is best known by its association (
noscitur a sociis)
to apply to treaties of a political character, such as treaties of
alliance for purposes of peace and war, and treaties of
confederation, in which the parties are leagued for mutual
government, political cooperation, and the exercise of political
sovereignty, and treaties of cession of sovereignty, or conferring
internal political jurisdiction, or external political dependence,
or general commercial privileges,"
and that
"the latter clause, 'compacts and agreement,' might then very
properly apply to such as regarded what might be deemed mere
private rights of sovereignty, such as questions of boundary,
interests in land situate in the territory of each other, and other
internal regulations for the mutual comfort and convenience of
states bordering on each other."
And he adds:
"In such cases, the consent of Congress may be properly
required, in order to check any infringement of the rights of the
national government, and at the same time, a total prohibition to
enter
Page 148 U. S. 520
any compact or agreement might be attended with permanent
inconvenience or public mischief."
Compacts or agreements -- and we do not perceive any difference
in the meaning, except that the word "compact" is generally used
with reference to more formal and serious engagements than is
usually implied in the term "agreement" -- cover all stipulations
affecting the conduct or claims of the parties. The mere selection
of parties to run and designate the boundary line between two
states, or to designate what line should be run, of itself imports
no agreement to accept the line run by them, and such action of
itself does not come within the prohibition. Nor does a legislative
declaration, following such line, that is correct, and shall
thereafter be deemed the true and established line, import by
itself a contract or agreement with the adjoining state. It is a
legislative declaration which the state and individuals affected by
the recognized boundary line may invoke against the state as an
admission, but not as a compact or agreement. The legislative
declaration will take the form of an agreement or compact when it
recites some consideration for it from the other party affected by
it -- for example, as made upon a similar declaration of the border
or contracting state. The mutual declarations may then be
reasonably treated as made upon mutual considerations. The compact
or agreement will then be within the prohibition of the
Constitution, or without it, according as the establishment of the
boundary line may lead or not to the increase of the political
power or influence of the states affected and thus encroach or not
upon the full and free exercise of federal authority. If the
boundary established is so run as to cut off an important and
valuable portion of a state, the political power of the state
enlarged would be affected by the settlement of the boundary, and
to an agreement for the running of such a boundary, or rather for
its adoption afterwards, the consent of Congress may well be
required. But the running of a boundary may have no effect upon the
political influence of either state; it may simply serve to mark
and define that which actually existed before, but was undefined
and unmarked. In that case, the agreement for the running of the
line, or its actual survey,
Page 148 U. S. 521
would in no respect displace the relation of either of the
states to the general government. There was therefore no compact or
agreement between the states in this case which required, for its
validity, the consent of Congress, within the meaning of the
Constitution, until they had passed upon the report of the
commissioners, ratified their action, and mutually declared the
boundary established by them to be the true and real boundary
between the states. Such ratification was mutually made by each
state in consideration of the ratification of the other.
The Constitution does not state when the consent of Congress
shall be given, whether it shall precede or may follow the compact
made, or whether it shall be express or may be implied. In many
cases, the consent will usually precede the compact or agreement,
as where it is to lay a duty of tonnage, to keep troops or ships of
war in time of peace, or to engage in war. But where the agreement
relates to a matter which could not well be considered until its
nature is fully developed, it is not perceived why the consent may
not be subsequently given. Story says that the consent may be
implied, and is always to be implied when Congress adopts the
particular act by sanctioning its objects and aiding in enforcing
them, and observes that where a state is admitted into the union
notoriously upon a compact made between it and the state of which
it previously composed a part, there the act of Congress admitting
such state into the Union is an implied consent to the terms of the
compact. Knowledge by Congress of the boundaries of a state and of
its political subdivisions may reasonably be presumed, as much of
its legislation is affected by them, such as relate to the
territorial jurisdiction of the courts of the United States, the
extent of their collection districts, and of districts in which
process, civil and criminal, of their courts may be served and
enforced.
In the present case, the consent of Congress could not have
preceded the execution of the compact, for until the line was run,
it could not be known where it would lie, and whether or not it
would receive the approval of the states. The preliminary agreement
was not to accept a line run, whatever it
Page 148 U. S. 522
might be, but to receive from the commissioners designated a
report as to the line which might be run and established by them.
After its consideration, each state was free to take such action as
it might judge expedient upon their report. The approval by
Congress of the compact entered into between the states upon their
ratification of the action of their commissioners is fairly implied
from its subsequent legislation and proceedings. The line
established was treated by that body as the true boundary between
the states in the assignment of territory north of its as a portion
of districts set apart for judicial and revenue purposes in
Virginia, and as included in territory in which federal elections
were to be held, and for which appointments were to be made by
federal authority in that state, and in the assignment of territory
south of it as a portion of districts set apart for judicial and
revenue purposes in Tennessee, and as included in territory in
which federal elections were to be held, and for which federal
appointments were to be made for that state. Such use of the
territory on different sides of the boundary designated in a single
instance would not, perhaps, be considered as absolute proof of the
assent or approval of Congress to the boundary line, but the
exercise of jurisdiction by Congress over the country as a part of
Tennessee on one side, and as a part of Virginia on the other, for
a long succession of years, without question or dispute from any
quarter, furnishes as conclusive proof of assent to it by that body
as can usually be obtained from its most formal proceedings.
Independently of any effect due to the compact as such, a
boundary line between the states or provinces, as between private
persons, which has been run out, located, and marked upon the earth
and afterwards recognized and acquiesced in by the parties for a
long course of years, is conclusive even if it be ascertained that
it varies somewhat from the courses given in the original grant,
and the line so established takes effect not as an alienation of
territory, but as a definition of the true and ancient boundary.
Lord Hardwicke, in
Penn v. Lord Baltimore, 1 Vesey Sr.
444, 448;
Boyd v.
Graves, 4 Wheat. 513;
Rhode
Island v. Massachusetts, 12 Pet. 657,
Page 148 U. S. 523
734;
United States v.
Stone, 2 Wall. 525,
69 U. S. 537;
Kellogg v. Smith, 7 Cush. 375, 382;
Chenery v.
Waltham, 8 Cush. 327; Hunt on Boundaries (3d ed.) 306.
As said by this Court in the recent case of the
Indiana v.
Kentucky, 136 U. S. 479,
136 U. S. 516,
it is a principle of public law universally recognized that long
acquiescence in the possession of territory and in the exercise of
dominion and sovereignty over it is conclusive of the nation's
title and rightful authority. In the case of
Rhode
Island v. Massachusetts, 4 How. 591,
45 U. S. 639,
this Court, speaking of the long possession of Massachusetts, and
the delays in alleging any mistake in the action of the
commissioners of the colonies, said:
"Surely this, connected with the lapse of time, must remove all
doubts as to the right of the respondent under the agreements of
1711 and 1718. No human transactions are unaffected by time. Its
influence is seen on all things subject to change, and this is
peculiarly the case in regard to matters which rest in memory, and
which consequently fade with the lapse of time, and fall with the
lives of individuals. For the security of rights, whether of states
or individuals, long possession under a claim of title is
protected, and there is no controversy in which this great
principle may be invoked with greater justice and propriety than in
a case of disputed boundary."
Vattel, in his Law of Nations, speaking on this subject,
says:
"The tranquility of the people, the safety of states, the
happiness of the human race, do not allow that the possessions,
empire, and other rights of nations should remain uncertain,
subject to dispute and ever ready to occasion bloody wars. Between
nations, therefore, it becomes necessary to admit prescription
founded on length of time as a valid and incontestable title."
Book II, c. 11, § 149. And
Page 148 U. S. 524
Wheaton, in his International Law, says:
"The writers on natural law have questioned how far that
peculiar species of presumption, arising from the lapse of time,
which is called 'prescription,' is justly applicable as between
nation and nation; but the constant and approved practice of
nations shows that, by whatever name it be called, the
uninterrupted possession of territory or other property for a
certain length of time by one state excludes the claim of every
other in the same manner as, by the law of nature and the municipal
code of every civilized nation, a similar possession by an
individual excludes the claim of every other person to the article
of property in question."
Part II, c. 4, § 164.
There are also moral considerations which should prevent any
disturbance of long recognized boundary lines -- considerations
springing from regard to the natural sentiments and affections
which grow up for places on which parsons have long resided; the
attachments to country, to home, and to family, on which is based
all that is dearest and most valuable in life.
Notwithstanding the legislative declaration of Virginia in 1803
that the line marked by the joint commissioners of the two states
was ratified as the true and real boundary between them, and the
repeated reaffirmation of the same declaration in her laws since
that date, notably in the Code of 1858, in the Code of 1860, and in
the Code of 1887; notwithstanding that he state has in various
modes attested to the correctness of the boundary -- by solemn
affirmations in terms, by legislation, in the administration of its
government, in the levy of taxes and the election of officers, and
in its acquiescence for over eighty-five years, embracing nearly
the lives of three generations -- she now, by her bill, seeks to
throw aside the obligation from her legislative declaration
because, as alleged, not made upon the express consent in terms of
Congress, although such consent has been indicated by long
acquiescence in the assumption of the validity of the proceedings
resulting in the establishment of the boundary, and to have a new
boundary line between Virginia and Tennessee established running
due east and west on latitude thirty-six degrees thirty minutes
north.
Page 148 U. S. 525
But to this position there is, in addition to what has already
been said, a conclusive answer in the language of this Court in
Poole v.
Fleeger, 11 Pet. 185,
36 U. S. 209.
In that case, Mr. Justice Story, after observing that
"it is a part of the general right of sovereignty belonging to
independent nations to establish and fix the disputed boundaries
between their respective territories, and 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 and
real boundary,"
adds:
"This is a doctrine universally recognized in the law and
practice of nations. It is a right equally belonging to the states
of this Union, unless it has been surrendered under the
Constitution of the United States. So far from there being any
pretense of such a general surrender of the right, it is expressly
recognized by the Constitution, and guarded in its exercise by a
single limitation or restriction, requiring the consent of
Congress."
The Constitution, in imposing this limitation, plainly admits
that with such consent a compact as to boundaries may be made
between two states, and it follows that, when thus made, it has
full validity, and all the terms and conditions of it are equally
obligatory upon the citizens of both states.
The compact in this case, having received the consent of
Congress, though not in express terms, yet impliedly, subsequently,
which is equally effective, became obligatory and binding upon all
the citizens of both Virginia and Tennessee. Nor is it any
objection that there may have been errors in the demarcation of the
line which the states thus by their compact sanctioned. After such
compacts have been adhered to from years, neither party can be
absolved from them upon showing errors, mistakes, or
misapprehension of their terms, or in the line established, and
this is a complete and perfect answer to complainant's position in
this case.
It may also be stated that if the work of the joint
commissioners, under the laws of 1800 and 1801, approved by the
legislative action of both states in 1803, could be left out of
consideration, and a new line run, it would not follow that the
Page 148 U. S. 526
parallel of latitude thirty-six degrees thirty minutes north
would be strictly followed. The charter of Charles the Second
designates the northern boundary line of the province of North
Carolina as extending from Currituck River or Inlet upon a straight
westerly line to Wyonoke Creek, which lies
within or about
thirty-six degrees thirty minutes north latitude, from which
it is evident that that parallel was only to be the general
direction of the line, not one to be strictly and always followed
without any variations from it. The purpose of the declaration in
the charter of Charles the Second was only that the northern
boundary line was to be run in the neighborhood of that parallel.
The condition of the country at the time the charter was granted --
1665 -- would have made the running of a boundary line strictly on
that parallel a matter of great difficulty, if not impossible. Nor
did the needs of grantor or chartered proprietors call for any such
strict adherence to the parallel of latitude designated. That
neither party expected it is evident from the agreement made
between the Governors of Virginia and North Carolina as to running
the boundary line between them, and sent to England for approval by
the King and council. That agreement provided that if the west line
run should be found to pass through islands or to cut small slips
of land which might much more conveniently be included in one
province than the other by natural water bounds, in such case the
persons appointed to run the line should have power to settle
natural water bounds, provided the commissioners on both sides
agreed, and that all variations from the west line should be noted
on the premises, or on plats which they should return, to be put on
record by both governors. A possible -- indeed, a probable --
variation from the line of the parallel of latitude, or the
straight line, designated was contemplated by both Virginia and
Tennessee. With full knowledge of the line actually designated, and
of the ancient charter to Carolina, and of the description in the
Constitution of Tennessee, in appointing the joint commissioners,
they provided that they should settle and adjust all differences
concerning the boundary line, and establish either the Walker or
Henderson line, or run
any other line which might be agreed
on
Page 148 U. S. 527
for settling the same, and that means any line run and
measured with or without deviations from time to time from a
straight line, or the line of latitude mentioned as might in their
judgment be most convenient as the proper boundary for both states.
It was made with numerous variations from a straight line, and from
the line of the designated parallel of latitude for the convenience
of the two states, and, with the full knowledge of both, was
ratified, established, and confirmed as the true, certain, and real
boundary line between them. And when, fifty-six years afterwards,
in consequence of the line thus marked becoming indistinct, it was
rerun and remarked, by new commissioners under the directions of
the statutes of 1800 and 1801, in strict conformity with the old
line. The compact of the two states establishing the line adopted
by their commissioners, and to which Congress impliedly assented
after its execution, is binding upon both states and their
citizens. Neither can be heard at this date to say that it was
entered into upon any misapprehension of facts. No treaty, as said
by this Court, has been held void on the ground of misapprehension
of facts by either or both of the parties.
Rhode
Island v. Massachusetts, 4 How. 635.
The general testimony, with hardly a dissent, is that the old
line of 1802 can be readily traced throughout its whole length, and
moreover that line has been recognized by all the residents near
it, except those in the triangle at Denton's Valley and in another
district of small dimensions in which it is stated that the people
have voted as citizens of Virginia, and have recognized themselves
as citizens of that state. That fact, however, cannot affect the
potency and conclusiveness of the compact between the states by
which the line was established in 1803. The small number of
citizens whose expectations will be disappointed by being included
in Tennessee are secured in all their rights of property by
provisions of the compact passed especially for the protection of
their claims.
Some observations were made upon the argument of the case upon
the propriety and necessity, if the line established in 1803 be
sustained, of having it rerun and remarked so as hereafter to be
more readily identified and traced. But a careful examination
Page 148 U. S. 528
of the testimony of the numerous witnesses in the case, most of
them residing in the neighborhood of the boundary line, as to the
marks and identification of the line originally established in 1802
and rerun and remarked in 1859, satisfy us that no new marking of
the line is required for its ready identification. The
commissioners appointed under the act of Virginia of 1856 and under
the act of Tennessee of 1858, found all the old marks upon the
trees in the forest through which the line established ran, in the
form of a diamond, and whenever they were indistinct, or, in the
judgment of the commissioners, too far removed from each other, new
marks were made upon the trees, or, if no trees were found at
particular places to be marked, monuments in stone were planted.
Besides this, the State of Virginia does not ask that the line
agreed upon in 1803 shall be rerun or remarked, but prays that a
new boundary line be run on the line of thirty-six degrees, thirty
minutes. Tennessee does not ask that the line of 1803 be rerun or
remarked. Nevertheless, under the prayer of Virginia for general
relief, there can be no objection to the restoration of any marks
which may be found to have been obliterated or become indistinct
upon the line as herein defined.
Our judgment therefore is that the boundary line established by
the States of Virginia and Tennessee by the compact of 1803 is the
true boundary between them, and that, on a proper application,
based upon a showing that any marks for the identification of that
line have been obliterated or have become indistinct, an order may
be made at any time during the present term for the restoration of
such marks without any change of the line.
A decree will therefore be entered declaring and adjudging
that the boundary line established between the States of Virginia
and Tennessee by the compact of 1803 is the real, certain, and true
boundary between the said states, and that the prayer of the
complainant to have the said compact set aside and annulled, and to
have a new boundary line run between them on the parallel of
36�30' north latitude should be and is denied at the cost of
the complainant, and it is so ordered.