Kentucky sued Indiana in this Court on a contract between them
for the building, with the consent of Congress, of a bridge across
the Ohio River. Certain individuals, who were citizens, voters and
taxpayers of Indiana and who had brought a suit in an Indiana court
to restrain its officers from performing the contract upon the
ground that it was unauthorized by the law of Indiana and
Page 281 U. S. 164
void, were joined as defendants in Kentucky's bill. The bill
prayed for a decree requiring Indiana to specifically perform the
contract and enjoining the individuals from prosecuting their suit.
The individuals contested the jurisdiction of this Court and the
validity of the contract. But Indiana admitted its validity and
averred her desire to perform it, setting up as her only excuse for
delay the litigation in the Indiana court and her unwillingness to
proceed until there had been a final adjudication establishing her
right to perform, adding that, if this Court should grant the
relief prayed against her by Kentucky, she would proceed
immediately to perform the contract.
Held:
1. That a controversy between the two states is presented,
within the original jurisdiction of this Court. P.
281 U. S.
173.
2. A state sued in this Court by virtue of the original
jurisdiction over controversies between states must be deemed to
represent all its citizens, and its appropriate appearance here by
its proper officers is conclusive upon that point.
Id.
3. Citizens, voters and taxpayers of a state, merely as such and
without showing any further or proper interest, have no separate,
individual right to contest in such a suit the position taken by
the state itself.
Id.
4. An individual citizen may be made a party where relief is
properly sought against him in a suit between states, and, in such
case, he should have opportunity to show the nature of his interest
and why the relief asked against him individually should not be
granted.
Id.
5. In the present instance, since the individuals have no
interest with respect to the contract or its performance other than
that of citizens and taxpayers generally of Indiana, and since they
were joined as defendants merely for relief against them incidental
to the relief sought by the plaintiff against the defendant state,
they have no standing to litigate the validity and enforceability
of the contract as between the states. P.
281 U. S.
174.
6. Inasmuch as a decree of this Court in this suit would bind
the State of Indiana and, on being shown, would bar any
inconsistent proceedings in her courts, no sufficient ground
appears for maintaining the bill against the individual defendants,
and it should be dismissed as against them. P.
281 U. S.
175.
7. If, in accordance with the pleading of each state, the
contract be deemed authorized and valid, the mere pendency of the
suit by citizens to restrain its performance does not constitute a
defense. P.
281 U. S.
176.
Page 519 U. S. 165
8. Where states are before this Court for the determination of a
controversy between them, the Court must pass upon every question
essential to such determination, although local legislation and
questions of state authorization may be involved. P.
281 U. S.
176.
9. It being conceded by the parties that performance of the
contract is a matter of grave interest to the two states and to the
public, and that delay is causing irreparable injury to Kentucky
not remediable at law, postponement of decision merely that this
Court might have the advantage of a decision by the Indiana court
in the suit of the Indiana citizens would not be justified. P.
281 U. S.
177.
10. Upon the record in this case, it is unnecessary for the
Court to search the legislation underlying the contract in order to
discover grounds of defense which the defendant state does not
attempt to assert. P.
281 U. S.
178.
Bill dismissed as to individual defendants.
Decree for plaintiff against defendant state.
Final hearing, upon the pleadings and an agreed statement of
facts, of a suit by Kentucky for specific performance by Indiana of
a contract between them to build a bridge, and for an injunction to
restrain individual defendants from prosecuting litigation in
Indiana impeding the performance of the contract by that state.
Page 519 U. S. 169
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
In September, 1928, the Commonwealth of Kentucky and the State
of Indiana, by their respective highway commissions, entered into a
contract for the building of a bridge across the Ohio River between
Evansville, Indiana. and Henderson, Kentucky. The contract was
approved by the Governor, and, as to legality and form, also by the
Attorney General, of each state. The contract recited the acts of
Congress and of the state legislatures which were deemed to
authorize the enterprise. Acts of Congress of July 11, 1916, 39
Stat. 355, 356; March 2, 1927, 44 Stat. 1337; March 3, 1927, 44
Stat. 1398, Indiana, Act of 1919, c. 53; Act of 1927, c. 10,
Kentucky, Acts of 1928, chapters 172 and 174. The State of Indiana
immediately began the performance of the covenants of the contract
on its part, and thereupon nine citizens and taxpayers of Indiana
brought suit in the Superior Court of Marion county in that state
to enjoin the members of the highway commission and other officers
of Indiana from carrying out the contract upon the ground that it
was unauthorized and void.
The Commonwealth of Kentucky then asked leave to file the bill
of complaint in this suit against the State of Indiana and the
individuals who were plaintiffs in the suit in the state court,
seeking to restrain the breach of the contract and the prosecution
of that suit, and for specific performance. In its return to the
order to show
Page 281 U. S. 170
cause why this leave should not be granted, the State of Indiana
said that it had "no cause to show;" that the state intended
ultimately to perform the contract, if performance were permitted
or ordered by the courts in which the litigation over the contract
was pending, but that it did not intend to do so until after that
litigation had finally been disposed of favorably to its
performance; that the State of Indiana had entered into the
contract by virtue of authority of its own statutes and of the Act
of Congress of March 2, 1927; that, as there was no court having
complete jurisdiction over the parties and subject matter other
than this Court, the state yielded to the jurisdiction of this
Court, and that it was in the public interest that an early
adjudication be had which would be final and binding upon all
parties interested.
Leave being granted, the bill of complaint herein was filed. It
set forth the contract and the pertinent statutes, the pendency of
the Indiana suit (to which the Commonwealth of Kentucky was not,
and could not be made, a party), that the delay in the construction
of the bridge would cause irreparable injury to the Commonwealth of
Kentucky, and that the complainant had no adequate remedy other
than through this suit. The complaint further alleged that the
northern approach to the bridge would rest on and extend over
Indiana soil, and the southern approach would be on Kentucky soil;
that the State of Indiana as well as the Commonwealth of Kentucky
had full authority to enter into the contract under the state
statutes cited, and that the contract was also authorized by the
acts of Congress to which reference was made. The complaint was
later amended to correct an inaccurate citation.
Separate answers were filed by the State of Indiana and by the
individual defendants. The answer of the State of Indiana admitted
that the allegations of the complaint were true. The answer then
averred:
Page 519 U. S. 171
"The only excuse which the Indiana offers for failure to perform
the contract set out in plaintiff's complaint is the litigation,
mentioned in the complaint, instituted by her above-named
codefendants against the officers of the State of Indiana whose
function it is to perform said contract. The resulting delay in
performance of said contract is in breach of its terms, which
contemplate immediate and continued performance."
After stating that, as the validity of the contract had been
drawn in question in the litigation in the state court, the state
did not feel warranted in proceeding until there was a final
adjudication establishing its right to perform, the answer
added:
"The State of Indiana believes said contract is valid. If this
honorable Court shall grant the relief prayed against Indiana by
plaintiff Kentucky in either of its paragraphs of complaint, the
State of Indiana will thereupon immediately proceed with the
performance of said contract, and will continue such performance
until the objects of said contract shall have been fully attained
as contemplated by the terms thereof."
The individual defendants filed an answer and it the same time
moved to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that there was no
controversy between the two states or between the Commonwealth of
Kentucky and the individual defendants; that, under § 265 of
the Judicial Code no injunction should be granted staying
proceedings in the suit in the state court; that the proceedings
involved the interpretation of the statutes and laws of Indiana;
that the contract was not binding on the State of Indiana, being
made without authority of law, and that the Commonwealth of
Kentucky had an adequate remedy at law. The answer of the
individual defendants admitted the making of the contract, but
denied its validity. The parties, pursuant to a stipulation,
Page 281 U. S. 172
moved to submit the case upon the pleadings and briefs,
including the separate motion of the individual defendants to
dismiss. The motion to submit was denied, the motion to dismiss was
postponed, and the case was assigned for oral argument. Later, the
Commonwealth of Kentucky moved to strike out the answers and for a
decree
pro confesso.
After hearing argument, the Court overruled the motion to
dismiss insofar as it questioned the jurisdiction of the Court to
entertain the bill of complaint and to proceed to a hearing and
determination of the merits of the controversy, and directed that
all other questions sought to be presented by that motion be
reserved for further consideration at the hearing upon the
merits.
A statement of facts, to which the complainant, the defendant
state, and the individual defendants agreed was then filed. It
admitted the allegations of the complaint with respect to the
enactment of the various statutes mentioned and the making of the
contract. It set forth that the State of Indiana, by its highway
commission and proper officers, was "now ready and anxious to
perform said contract," but would not do so until there was a final
adjudication by the Supreme Court of Indiana or by this Court; that
it was of great interest and concern to both states that the
litigation should be determined as early as possible consistently
with the convenience of the Court; that the failure of the State of
Indiana promptly to perform the covenants of the contract on its
part had caused and will cause the Commonwealth of Kentucky injury
and damage for which no adequate remedy at law exists, and that the
Commonwealth of Kentucky was, and had been, "ready, able and
willing" to perform the covenants of the contract on its part. It
was also stated that all the allegations made by the State of
Indiana in its answer were true. There was further
Page 281 U. S. 173
agreement to the effect that the blueprints and drawings filed
herein correctly showed the location approved for the bridge by
both states, the boundary line between the states, the location of
the spans, bridge structure, and approaches, the high water lines,
and the topography at the site of the bridge. It was agreed that
the individual defendants were citizens, voters, and taxpayers of
Indiana and the operators of automobiles on which they paid license
fees to that state. Pursuant to a stipulation, the Highway
Commission of Indiana filed a statement showing the appropriations
made by that state bearing upon the construction of the bridge.
A motion to set the cause for hearing upon the pleadings and the
agreed statement of facts was granted, and the cause has been
heard.
The question of the jurisdiction of this Court was determined on
the hearing of the motion to dismiss. The State of Indiana, while
desiring to perform its contract, is not going on with its
performance because of a suit brought by its citizens in its own
court. There is thus a controversy between the states, although a
limited one.
A state suing, or sued, in this Court by virtue of the original
jurisdiction over controversies between states must be deemed to
represent all its citizens. The appropriate appearance here of a
state by its proper officers, either as complainant or defendant,
is conclusive upon this point. Citizens, voters, and taxpayers,
merely as such, of either state, without a showing of any further
and proper interest, have no separate individual right to contest
in such a suit the position taken by the state itself. Otherwise,
all the citizens of both states, as one citizen, voter, and
taxpayer has as much right as another in this respect, would be
entitled to be heard. An individual citizen may be made a party
where relief is properly sought as against him, and, in such case,
he should have
Page 281 U. S. 174
suitable opportunity to show the nature of his interest and why
the relief asked against him individually should not be
granted.
If the controversy within the original jurisdiction of this
Court is over a contract alleged to have been made between two
states, to which an individual defendant is not a party, it is
manifest that such an individual defendant, merely as a citizen,
voter, and taxpayer of the defendant state, is not entitled to
enter upon a separate contest in relation to the merits of the
controversy so far as it relates to the making of the contract by
the two states and the obligations that the contract imposes upon
his state, and does not relate to any separate and proper interest
of his own. The fact that an individual citizen in such a case is
made a party defendant in order that the complainant may obtain
some particular relief against him, which is merely incidental to
the complete relief to which the complainant would be entitled if
it should prevail as against the defendant state, gives such an
individual defendant no standing to litigate on his own behalf the
merits of a controversy which, properly viewed, lies solely between
the states, but only to contest the propriety of the particular
relief sought against him in case the decision on the merits is
against his state. This gives an individual defendant in such a
suit between states full opportunity to litigate the only question
which concerns him individually, as distinguished from the
questions which concern him only in common with all the citizens of
his state.
In the present instance, there is no showing that the individual
defendants have any interest whatever with respect to the contract
and its performance other than that of the citizens and taxpayers,
generally, of Indiana -- an interest which that state in this suit
fully represents. The individual defendants have presented no
defense
Page 281 U. S. 175
other than that which they seek to make on behalf of their state
with respect to the making of the contract by that state and the
obligations thereby imposed upon it. The particular relief asked
against them is sought only as an incident to the relief which the
Commonwealth of Kentucky seeks against the State of Indiana. The
individual defendants were made parties solely for the purpose of
obtaining an injunction against them restraining the prosecution of
the suit in the state court. Such an injunction is not needed, as a
decree in this suit would bind the State of Indiana, and, on being
shown, would bar any inconsistent proceedings in the courts of that
state. As no sufficient ground appears for maintaining the bill of
complaint against the individual defendants, it should be dismissed
as against them.
The question, then, is as to the case made by the Commonwealth
of Kentucky against the State of Indiana. By admitting in its
answer that the allegations of the complaint are true, the State of
Indiana admits the making of the contract and the authority of its
officers to make it under the applicable legislation. Not only are
the allegations of fact in the complaint conceded to be true, but
there is also no dispute as to the legal import of these facts.
Instead of presenting any legal ground for contesting the validity
of the contract, the State of Indiana expressly asserts in its
answer that it believes the contract is valid. There is no
suggestion of any inadvertence in the answer. On the contrary, it
is the deliberate statement of the position of the State of Indiana
in the light of the litigation in the state court and of the
questions there sought to be raised. The only suggestion of a
defense for its failure to perform the contract -- that is, what
the State of Indiana in its answer characterizes as its "only
excuse" -- is the pendency of this litigation in the state court.
The State of Indiana avers that it
Page 281 U. S. 176
does not feel warranted in proceeding in the absence of a final
determination establishing its right to proceed under the
contract.
It is manifest that if, in accordance with the pleading of each
state, the contract for the building of the bridge is deemed to be
authorized and valid, the mere pendency of a suit brought by
citizens to restrain performance does not constitute a defense. In
that aspect, the question would be not as to a defense on the
merits, but whether this Court should withhold a final
determination merely because of the fact that such a suit is
pending. This question raises important considerations. It cannot
be gainsaid that, in a controversy with respect to a contract
between states as to which the original jurisdiction of this Court
is invoked, this Court has the authority and duty to determine for
itself all questions that pertain to the obligations of the
contract alleged. The fact that the solution of these questions may
involve the determination of the effect of the local legislation of
either state, as well as of acts of Congress, which are said to
authorize the contract, in no way affects the duty of this Court to
act as the final constitutional arbiter in deciding the questions
properly presented. It has frequently been held that, when a
question is suitably raised whether the law of a state has impaired
the obligation of a contract in violation of the constitutional
provision, this Court must determine for itself whether a contract
exists, what are its obligations, and whether they have been
impaired by the legislation of the state. While this Court always
examines with appropriate respect the decisions of state courts
bearing upon such questions, such decisions do not detract from the
responsibility of this Court in reaching its own conclusions as to
the contract, its obligations and impairment, for otherwise the
constitutional guaranty could not properly be enforced.
Larson
v. South Dakota, 278 U. S. 429,
278 U. S. 433,
and cases there cited. Where the
Page 281 U. S. 177
states themselves are before this Court for the determination of
a controversy between them, neither can determine their rights
inter sese, and this Court must pass upon every question
essential to such a determination, although local legislation and
questions of state authorization may be involved.
Virginia v.
West Virginia, 11 Wall. 39,
78 U. S. 56;
220 U. S. 220 U.S.
1,
220 U. S. 28. A
decision in the present instance by the state court would not
determine the controversy here.
It is nonetheless true that this Court might await such a
decision, in order that it might have the advantage of the views of
the state court, if sufficient grounds appeared for delaying final
action. The question is as to the existence of such grounds in this
case. The gravity of the situation cannot be ignored. The injury to
the Commonwealth of Kentucky by the delay in the performance of the
contract by the State of Indiana is definitely alleged, and
expressly admitted. That injury is concededly irreparable, without
adequate remedy at law. It is specifically set forth in the agreed
statement of facts that
"it is of great interest and concern to the States of Indiana
and Kentucky and the United States and the citizens thereof
generally who will travel said Route 41 [the highway through the
states which will be made continuous by the construction of the
bridge] to have as early determination of this litigation as is
possible."
In these circumstances, there would appear to be no adequate
ground for withholding the determination of this suit because of
objections raised by individuals, merely in their capacity as
citizens, voters, and taxpayers of Indiana, objections which the
state itself declines to sponsor.
It would be a serious matter, where a state has entered into a
contract with another state, the validity of the contract not being
questioned by either state, if individual citizens could delay the
prompt performance which was admittedly important not only to the
complainant
Page 281 U. S. 178
state, but to the people of both states, merely by bringing a
suit. It is not difficult to institute suits, and contracts between
states, of increasing importance as interstate interests grow in
complexity, would be at the mercy of individuals, if the action of
the latter, without more, unsupported by any proper averments on
the part of the state itself questioning its obligations, should
lead this Court to stay its hand in giving the relief to which the
complainant state would otherwise be entitled, and of which it
stood seriously in need.
On such a record as we have in this case, it is unnecessary for
the court to search the legislation underlying the contract in
order to discover grounds of defense which the defendant state does
not attempt to assert. The State of Indiana concludes its answer by
saying that, if a decree goes against it as prayed for, the state
will at once proceed with the performance of the contract and fully
complete that performance according to its terms.
We conclude that the controversy between the states is within
the original jurisdiction of this Court; that the defendant state
has shown no adequate defense to this suit; that nothing appears
which would justify delay in rendering a decree, and that the
Commonwealth of Kentucky is entitled to the relief sought against
the State of Indiana.
The complainant and the defendant state will be accorded twenty
days within which to submit a form of decree to carry these
conclusions into effect. Costs will be divided equally between the
states.
Dismissed as to individual defendants.
Decree for complainant against the defendant state.