Oklahoma v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co.,
ante, p.
220 U. S. 277,
followed to effect that a state cannot invoke the original
jurisdiction of this Court by suit against individual defendants on
its behalf where the primary purpose is to protect citizens
generally against violation of its own laws by the defendants.
A state cannot invoke the original jurisdiction of this Court to
enforce a judgment rendered in its courts for a violation of its
penal or criminal laws,
Wisconsin v. Pelican Insurance
Company, 127 U. S. 265, or
to enforce a penal statute.
A suit by a state to enjoin carriers from conveying intoxicating
liquors into its territory or an Indian reservation therein, is one
to enforce by injunction regulations prescribed by the state for
violations of its own penal statutes and is not within the original
jurisdiction of this Court, and so held as to a suit brought by the
Oklahoma to enjoin railway and express companies from introducing
liquor into its territory.
The facts, which involve the construction of the provisions of
the Constitution of the United States conferring original
jurisdiction on this Court in controversies in which a state is a
party, are stated in the opinion.
Page 220 U. S. 291
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The State of Oklahoma, by the present suit, invokes the original
jurisdiction of this Court for its protection against certain acts
alleged to have been done or threatened to be done by the
respective defendants in derogation of its rights as a state. The
case has been heard upon demurrers filed by the several defendants.
Some of the demurrers proceed upon the specific ground that this
Court cannot take jurisdiction of the cause, while others add the
general ground that the bill does not show any facts entitling the
state to the relief sought by the bill.
As the case involves some questions of a grave character, it is
proper to set forth with some fullness the grounds upon which the
state bases its claim for relief.
It is alleged in the bill that the defendant companies are
corporations of states other than Oklahoma, except that the
American Express Company is a partnership, composed of individuals
who are citizens and residents of New York; that what were formerly
the Territory of Oklahoma and the Indian Territory constitute the
present State of Oklahoma; that the lands in the Indian Territory,
owned by various Indian tribes, were, by agreement or treaties with
the United States, to be allotted in severalty among the members of
such tribes, with certain exceptions named in the treaties which it
is not necessary to set out here; that, by said agreement or
treaties, the United States agreed to maintain strict laws in said
territory, particularly in the allotted lands, against the
introduction, sale, barter, or the giving away of liquors and
intoxicants of any kind or quality, and that, pursuant to said
agreement and treaties, Congress, by the Act of June 16th, 1906, 34
Stat. 267, c. 3335, § 3, made it a condition of the admission
of Oklahoma into the Union as a state that it should provide by its
Constitution that
"the manufacture, sale, barter, giving away, or otherwise
Page 220 U. S. 292
furnishing, except as therein provided, of intoxicating liquors
within those parts of the proposed state then known as the Indian
Territory and the Osage Reservation, and within any other parts of
the proposed state which existed as an Indian reservation on the
first day of January, 1906, should be prohibited for twenty-one
years from the date of the admission of the state into the Union,
and that in said act no reservation or exception was made whereby
any one of the defendants might import into the said named portion
of said state, or in any other manner furnish, any intoxicating
liquors whatsoever, and the power to regulate interstate commerce
in intoxicating liquor was thereby surrendered to the State of
Oklahoma as to said portions of said state, and by the said act it
was not provided that intoxicating liquor should be furnished to
any person in what was formerly the Indian Territory, including the
Osage Reservation and any other parts of the state which existed as
Indian reservations on the first day of January, 1906, in the
manner and form that the same is now furnished and imported by said
defendants, as hereinafter more fully set forth, or in any other
manner or form."
The bill also alleged that, by ordinance irrevocable, Oklahoma
had accepted the terms and conditions of the Act of June 16th,
1906, including the provision relating to intoxicating liquors, and
thereby the state was obligated in place of the United States, so
far as the Power was lodged in it, to carry out the treaty and
agreements made with the said Indian tribes against the
introduction, sale, or in any manner the furnishing, of
intoxicating liquors in what was formerly the Indian Territory, but
that defendants, in violation of the law and the rights of said
Indian tribes therein, and to the injury of the State of Oklahoma
and its inhabitants, have, since November 16th, 1907, and up to
this time, continuously violated all said provisions against
furnishing, carrying, and conveying beer, ale,
Page 220 U. S. 293
wine, and intoxicating liquors into Indian Territory; that such
violation of law deeply injures and irreparably destroys the good
citizenship and property of the state and its inhabitants, and the
defendants threaten to continue the same unless restrained, and
that in continuing so to do, the defendants and each of them have
committed acts that amount to the surrender and abandonment of
their corporate right to be engaged and doing business in
interstate commerce between the states, and against such acts the
plaintiff has no adequate remedy according to the course of the
common law.
The state also complains that various persons, about two hundred
in number, within its limits (the names of such persons being all
set forth in a list made part of the bill) have made payment of the
special tax required of liquor dealers under the laws of the United
States; that, by the above Act of Congress of June 16th, 1906, it
was made a condition precedent to the admission of Oklahoma into
the Union that,
"in its constitution, it should provide that the payment of the
special tax required of liquor dealers by the United States, of any
person within those parts of the proposed state then known as the
Indian Territory and the Osage Reservation, and within any other
parts of said proposed state which existed as Indian reservations
on the first day of January, 1906, should constitute
prima
facie evidence of the intention of such persons to violate
that provision of the Act of June 16, 1906, in reference to the
prohibition of the manufacture, sale, barter, giving away, or
otherwise furnishing intoxicating liquors which it was provided as
a condition precedent that the constitution of said proposed state
should provide for."
The bill further shows that the state, through its
constitutional convention, submitted to the popular vote the
question of adopting a provision prohibiting the manufacture,
barter, sale, giving away, or otherwise furnishing
Page 220 U. S. 294
intoxicating liquors in the state, and the result was the
approval by the electors of a constitutional provision of that
kind, which has been in force since November 16th, 1907; that,
pursuant to that constitutional provision, the legislature of the
state, on March 24th, 1908, Okla.Laws 1907-08, p. 594, passed a
general statute, establishing a state agency and local agencies for
the sale of intoxicating liquors for certain purposes, and
prohibiting the manufacture, sale, barter, giving away, or
otherwise furnishing intoxicating liquors, except as provided in
the act; that, by the terms of said act (Art. 3, § 2), it was
provided that
"the payment of the special tax required of liquor dealers by
the United States by any person within this state, except the local
agents of said state by said act, should constitute
prima
facie evidence of an intention to violate the provisions of
said act,"
and that the defendants, each and all of them, had due notice in
writing from the state, by its constituted authorities, of the
provisions of the act of Congress, and of the Constitution and laws
of Oklahoma, referred to herein.
It should be here stated that the above Oklahoma statute of
March 24, 1908, prescribed various penalties of fine and
imprisonment for violations of its provisions.
The bill finally alleges that the State of Oklahoma gave to each
of the defendants due notice that it would hold all shipments made
by each of them
"whereby either of them undertook to receive at points without
the State of Oklahoma intoxicating liquors of any kind, and to
transport, carry, or otherwise convey such liquors or compounds to
or to the order of any of the persons, companies, corporations,
firms, or associations named in said list, as illegal, contrary to
good morals, against the public policy, and in direct violation of
the positive laws of the State of Oklahoma; that the importation of
any prohibited intoxicating liquors to or to the order of any of
said persons by either or any of said defendants was and is a
public nuisance
Page 220 U. S. 295
within the State of Oklahoma, and were not importations in good
faith, intended for the use of the importer and consignee, and not
for sale within the state; that all shipments or deliveries made by
defendants by interstate shipment to any or all of the persons
named in said list were intended for and were for the violation of
the laws of the State of Oklahoma, and to commit a public nuisance
in said state; that the State of Oklahoma thereby was not
undertaking to object or restrict the defendants in the importation
of intoxicating liquors by interstate shipment to any person in
said state outside of what was formerly the Indian Territory, the
Osage Indian Reservation, and an Indian Reservation, January first,
1906, intending it for his own use, and not for sale in said state,
but that, under the law of said state, each and all of said persons
intended to use all the liquor in their possession to sell the same
in said state, in violation of its laws, and that any delivery of
prohibited intoxicating liquors to any of said persons would have
the necessary effect of aiding such consignee to violate the laws
of the State of Oklahoma, and would be a public nuisance and injury
to the said state."
"That, in addition thereto, under the terms of said Chapter 69
of the Session Laws of 1907-1908, of Oklahoma, as therein provided,
the State of Oklahoma, for the benefit of its citizens, undertook
to furnish intoxicating liquor to all persons in said state
wherever a sale of the same was by the law authorized, for reason
of necessary use of the same for preservation, or health, or like
purposes, and that, under the laws of the State of Oklahoma, the
State of Oklahoma was the sole and only person authorized to sell
liquors in said state; that the state is pecuniarily interested in
the sale of said liquors, and irreparably injured by said
importation by defendants to the persons named in said list who had
paid the special tax required by the United States of liquor
dealers, in that the said importation
Page 220 U. S. 296
to the said persons named on said list, being for the purpose of
a resale of such importations in said state, operated to the injury
to the exclusive right to the sale of intoxicating liquors in said
state, claimed and exercised by the State of Oklahoma."
"That since the sixteenth of November, 1907, after the said
notices were received by the said defendants, and up to this time,
the said defendants have continuously and continually, each and all
of them, imported to and to the order of each firm and all of the
persons named in said list as having paid a special tax, as
required by the United States of liquor dealers. And the said
persons named in said lists have continued continuously to resell
said intoxicating liquors so imported by the defendants; that the
said resale has at all times been in violation of the law of the
State of Oklahoma, and has been a cause of enormous expense and
irreparable injury to the State of Oklahoma and the inhabitants
thereof, and each and all of the counties and other municipalities
therein, in that the enforcement of the laws against the sale of
intoxicating liquors is extremely difficult, expensive, and
exhaustive, and that the importation and furnishing to said persons
named in said list by said defendants of such intoxicating liquors,
with the intent that the same shall be used for resale in the said
state, has caused a large imposition of expenses upon said state,
and a violation of its laws, and a constant source of friction and
corruption in its government, and is against the peace and dignity
of the government of said state, and totally against the public
policy thereof and good morals therein, and is a public nuisance in
said state; that the defendants, in violation of law and in injury
to the rights of the state and inhabitants thereof, have openly,
persistently, and continuously imported intoxicating liquors, whose
manufacture, sale, barter, or furnishing is prohibited by the laws
of the State of Oklahoma to each and all of the persons named in
said list by
Page 220 U. S. 297
furnishing, carrying, and conveying the same to and to the order
of each and all of the said persons named in said list, on divers
and sundry occasions, continuously, and that defendants threaten to
continue in the said violation unless restrained, and in continuing
so to do said defendants, and each of them, have committed acts
which amount to a surrender and an abandonment of their corporate
right to do business in interstate commerce in the carriage of
intoxicating liquors, and for the same the plaintiff has no
adequate remedy according to the course of the common law, for the
reason that said shipments originate outside of the state."
The relief asked is that the defendants be severally enjoined
and restrained from further introducing, conveying, and furnishing
intoxicating liquors, including ale, wine, and beer
in any form
at any place at any time, and in any manner in the state
within the limits of what was formerly the Indian Territory,
including the Osage Reservation, and other parts of the state that
existed as Indian reservations on the first day of January, 1900;
that the several defendants be further enjoined from carrying,
conveying, delivering, and furnishing intoxicating liquors,
including ale, wine, and beer, in any form and in any place at any
time or in any manner, in the state, to any or all of the persons
who have paid the special as being persons who have paid the
special tax required by the United States of liquor dealers, and
that, in default of obedience to the order of injunction prayed
for, the corporate rights of the defendants to do a business in
interstate commerce with persons in Oklahoma be forfeited.
Such is the case made by the bill, and we come now to consider
the controlling questions presented by it.
It is manifest that the object of this suit by the state is, by
means of an injunction issued by this Court, to prevent the
defendant companies from violating the penal or criminal laws of
Oklahoma. It is therefore, in its essence,
Page 220 U. S. 298
a suit to enforce those laws. But of such a suit this Court
cannot take original cognizance, although the suit is in form of a
civil nature. The Constitution, after enumerating, in the first
clause of § 2 of Article III, the cases, in law and equity, as
well as the controversies, to which the judicial power of the
United States shall extend, provides that,
"in all cases affecting ambassadors, other public ministers and
consuls, and those in which a state shall be party, the Supreme
Court shall have original jurisdiction,"
in all the other cases enumerated in the article, the court to
have appellate jurisdiction, both as to law and facts, with such
exceptions and under such regulations as Congress shall make.
The words "in which a state shall be party," literally
construed, would embrace original suits of a civil nature brought
by a state in this Court to enforce a judgment rendered for a
violation of its penal or criminal laws. But it has been adjudged
upon full consideration that that result was inadmissible under the
Constitution. This will appear from an examination of the opinion
and judgment in
Wisconsin v. Pelican Ins. Co.,
127 U. S. 265,
127 U. S. 267,
127 U. S. 290,
127 U. S. 293.
That was an original action brought in this Court by the State of
Wisconsin against the Pelican Insurance Company of Louisiana, to
recover the amount of a judgment rendered in a Wisconsin court
against that company for certain penalties incurred by it for
violating the laws of that state relating to the business of fire
insurance companies. The question was distinctly presented whether
the state could invoke the original jurisdiction of this Court to
enforce the collection of such judgment. It was argued in that case
that the suit was simply an action of debt, founded upon a contract
of record, to-wit, a judgment, and was therefore to be regarded
only as a civil suit, as distinguished from a criminal prosecution.
But that view was overruled. The Court said that, notwithstanding
the comprehensive words of
Page 220 U. S. 299
the Constitution,
"the mere fact that a state is the plaintiff is not a conclusive
test that the controversy is one in which this Court is authorized
to grant relief against another state or her citizens."
After an examination of the authorities, it was further said,
the Court speaking by Mr. Justice Gray:
"The rule that the courts of no country execute the penal laws
of another applies not only to prosecutions and sentences for
crimes and misdemeanors, but to all suits in favor of the state for
the recovery of pecuniary penalties for any violation of statutes
for the protection of its revenue or other municipal laws, and
to all judgments for such penalties. If this were not so,
all that would be necessary to give ubiquitous effect to a penal
law would be to put the claim for a penalty into the shape of a
judgment. Wharton's Conflict of Laws, § 833; Westlake,
International Law, 1st ed. § 388; Piggott, Foreign Judgments,
209, 210."
Further:
"From the first organization of the courts of the United States,
nearly a century ago, it has always been assumed that the original
jurisdiction of this Court over controversies between a state and
citizens of another state or of a foreign country does not extend
to a suit by a state to recover penalties for a breach of her own
municipal law. . . . The real nature of the case is not affected by
the forms provided by the law of the state for the punishment of
the offense. It is immaterial whether, by the law of Wisconsin, the
prosecution must be by indictment or by action, or whether, under
that law, a judgment there obtained for the penalty might be
enforced by execution, by
scire facias, or by a new suit.
In whatever form the state pursues her right to punish the offense
against her sovereignty, every step of the proceeding tends to one
end -- the compelling the offender to pay a pecuniary fine by way
of punishment for the offense. This Court therefore cannot
entertain an original action to compel the defendant to pay to the
State of Wisconsin a sum of money in satisfaction
Page 220 U. S. 300
of the judgment for that fine. The original jurisdiction of this
Court is conferred by the Constitution, without limit of the amount
in controversy, and Congress has never imposed (if, indeed, it
could impose) any such limit. If this Court has original
jurisdiction of the present case, it must follow that any action
upon a judgment obtained by a state in her own courts against a
citizen of another state for the recovery of any sum of money,
however small, by way of a fine for any offense, however petty,
against her laws could be brought in the first instance in the
Supreme Court of the United States. That cannot have been the
intention of the Convention in framing, or of the people in
adopting, the federal Constitution."
The principles announced in
Wisconsin v. Pelican Ins. Co.
supra, have been recognized in many subsequent cases.
Postal Telegraph Cable Co. v. Alabama, 155 U.
S. 482,
155 U. S. 487;
California v. Southern Pacific Co., 157 U.
S. 229,
157 U. S. 259;
Missouri v. Illinois, 180 U. S. 208,
180 U. S. 232;
Minnesota v. Northern Securities Co., 184 U.
S. 199,
184 U. S.
234-235;
Kansas v. Colorado, 206 U. S.
46,
206 U. S.
83.
Those principles must, in our opinion, determine the present
case adversely to the state. Although the state does not ask for
judgment against the defendant railroad company for the penalties
prescribed by the Oklahoma statutes for violations of its
provisions, she yet seeks the aid of this Court to enforce a
statute one of whose controlling objects is to impose punishment in
order to effectuate a public policy touching a particular subject
relating to the public welfare. The statute, viewed as a whole, is
to be deemed a penal statute. The present suit, although in form
one of a civil nature is, in its essential character, one to
enforce by injunction regulations prescribed by a state for
violations of one of its penal statutes, and is therefore one of
which this Court cannot take original cognizance at the instance of
the state.
But there is another ground which is equally fatal to the
Page 220 U. S. 301
claim that this Court may give the relief asked by an original
suit brought by the state. In the provisions of the Constitution
relating to the judicial power of the courts of the United States,
it is provided, as we have seen, that,
"in all cases affecting ambassadors, other public ministers and
consuls, and those in which a state shall be party, the Supreme
Court shall have original jurisdiction."
In
Oklahoma v. Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway
Company, ante, p.
220 U. S. 277, it
was held that a
state could not invoke the original
jurisdiction of the court by suit on its behalf where the primary
purposes of the suit was to protect its citizens
generally
against the violation of its laws by the corporations or persons
sued; that the above words "those in which a state shall be party"
were not to be so interpreted as to embrace suits of that kind. We
need not repeat what was said in the other case. Without stopping
to consider other questions discussed by learned counsel, we hold,
for the reasons stated in the opinion in that case, as well as
because this suit is, in its essence and mainly, one to enforce a
penal statute of a state, that the bill must be dismissed for want
of jurisdiction in this Court.
It is so ordered.