1. The judicial power of the Court of Claims is not vested in
virtue of Art. III of the Constitution, so as to bring its judges
within the protection of that Article as to tenure of office and
compensation.
Ex parte Bakelite Corp., 279 U.
S. 438. Expressions in
United
States v. Klein, 13 Wall. 128, and other cases
criticized. Pp.
289 U. S.
567-568,
289 U. S.
581.
2. The Court of Claims, originally an administrative or advisory
body, is, under the existing laws, a court exercising judicial
power and capable of rendering final judgments reviewable by this
Court. P.
289 U. S.
564.
3. Judicial power, apart from that defined by Art. III of the
Constitution, may be conferred by Congress upon legislative courts
as well as upon constitutional courts; which is exemplified in the
instances of territorial courts, and also of state courts when
sitting in naturalization proceedings. P.
289 U. S.
565.
4. The judicial power of Art. III does not attach to the Court
of Claims in virtue of the consent of the United States to be sued
therein coupled with the clause of that Article extending the
judicial power of the United States to "controversies to which the
United States shall be a party." Expressions in
Minnesota v.
Hitchcock, 185 U. S. 373, and
Kansas v. United States, 204 U. S. 331,
disapproved. Pp.
289 U. S. 571,
289 U. S.
577.
Page 289 U. S. 554
5. Article III, § 2, cl. 1 of the Constitution declares
that the judicial power of the United States shall extend to "all"
of some of the classes of cases named therein, but omits the word
"all" in naming other classes, including "controversies to which
the United States shall be a party." The omission was not
accidental, but expresses,
ex industria, a limitation of
meaning. P.
289 U. S.
572.
6. In expounding the Constitution, every word must have its due
force and appropriate meaning, and no word is to be regarded as
unnecessarily used or needlessly added. P.
289 U. S.
573.
7. In the light of the rule of sovereign immunity from suit,
which was well settled and understood when the Constitution was
framed, the proposition that Art. III intended to include suits
against the United States is inadmissible.
Chisholm v.
Georgia, 2 Dall. 419, and
Hans v.
Louisiana, 134 U. S. 1,
involving suits against states, discussed. P.
289 U. S.
573.
8. That clause must be construed in accord with the construction
put upon it by the first Judiciary Act, as though it read
"controversies to which the United States shall be a party
plaintiff or petitioner." Pp.
289 U. S. 573,
289 U. S.
577.
9. Controversies to which the United States may by statute be
made a party defendant, at least as a general rule, lie wholly
outside the scope of the judicial power vested by Art. III in the
constitutional courts. P.
289 U. S.
577.
10. Where a controversy is of such a character as to require the
exercise of the judicial power
defined by Art. III,
jurisdiction thereof can be conferred only on courts established in
virtue of that Article, and Congress is without power to vest that
judicial power in any other judicial tribunal, or, of course, in an
executive officer or administrative or executive board, since "they
are incapable of receiving it."
American
Ins. Co. v. Canter, 1 Pet. 511. P. 578.
11. Since all matters made cognizable by the Court of Claims are
equally susceptible of legislative or executive determination, they
are matters in respect of which there is no constitutional right to
a judicial remedy, and the authority to inquire into and decide
them may constitutionally be conferred on a nonjudicial officer or
body. P.
289 U. S.
579.
12. A power which may be devolved at the will of Congress upon
any of the three departments plainly is not within the doctrine of
the separation and independent exercise of governmental powers
contemplated by the tripartite distribution of such powers P.
289 U. S.
580.
Page 289 U. S. 555
13. The jurisdiction of the Court of Claims to award
compensation for property taken by power of eminent domain, and its
jurisdiction to adjudicate setoffs, etc., claimed by the United
States, are consistent with its status as a legislative court. P.
289 U. S.
581.
14.
Obiter dicta may be respected, but ought not to
control the judgment in a subsequent suit when the very point is
presented for decision. P.
289 U. S. 568.
Response to questions certified by the Court of Claims, arising
in a suit brought in that court by one of its judges against the
United States for the purpose of testing the constitutionality of a
reduction of his official salary.
Cf. the preceding report
of
O'Donoghue v. United States, ante, p.
289 U.
S. .516. This case was argued with that one.
Page 289 U. S. 559
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
Plaintiff is, and since November 11, 1929, has been, a judge of
the Court of Claims of the United States. Since his entry upon the
duties of his office, and until June 30, 1932, he received a salary
at the rate of $12,500 per annum, as fixed by the Act of December
13, 1926, c. 6, § 1, 44 Stat. 919. Since that date, he has
been paid at the rate of $10,000 per annum under a ruling of the
Comptroller General of the United States.
Compare O'Donoghue v.
United States, ante, p.
289 U. S. 516.
Page 289 U. S. 560
The Legislative Appropriation Act of June 30, 1932 (c. 314, 47
Stat. 382, 402) in part provides:
"Sec. 107. (a) During the fiscal year ending June 30, 1933
--"
"
* * * *"
"(5) the salaries and retired pay of all judges (except judges
whose compensation may not, under the Constitution, be diminished
during their continuance in office), if such salaries or retired
pay are at a rate exceeding $10,000 per annum, shall be at the rate
of $10,000 per annum."
The Comptroller General, as the basis for his ruling, took the
view that the Court of Claims is a "legislative" court, and not a
"constitutional" court created under Art. III, § 1, of the
Constitution, which provides:
"The judicial Power of the United States, shall be vested in one
Supreme Court and in such inferior Courts as the Congress may from
time to time ordain and establish. The Judges, both of the Supreme
and inferior Courts, shall hold their Offices during good Behavior,
and shall at stated Times receive for their Services a Compensation
which shall not be diminished during their continuance in
office."
On February 8, 1933, this suit was brought in the Court of
Claims to recover the amount of the difference between the
statutory rate of $12,500 and the smaller amount paid under the
ruling of the Comptroller General. The suit was brought by
plaintiff in the court of which he is a member because, as it is
averred, no other court or remedy was open to him. Plaintiff's
petition rests upon the contention that the Court of Claims is a
constitutional court, created in virtue of the power of Congress to
constitute tribunals inferior to the Supreme Court, whose
judges
"shall hold their offices during good behavior, and shall at
stated times receive for their services a compensation which shall
not be diminished
Page 289 U. S. 561
during their continuance in office."
The government demurred to the petition upon the ground that the
judges of the Court of Claims are not judges of an "inferior court"
within the meaning of that constitutional provision. The Court of
Claims, without passing upon the demurrer, certified to this Court
the following questions, upon which it desires instructions, under
§ 3(a) of the Act of February 13, 1925, c. 229, 43 Stat. 936,
939:
"I. Does Section 1, Article III of the Constitution of the
United States apply to the Court of Claims and forbid a reduction
of the compensation of the Judges thereof during their continuance
in office?"
"II. Does the provision of Section 2, Article III, of the
Constitution, wherein it is stated that 'The Judicial Power shall
extend . . . to controversies to which the United States shall be a
party,' apply to the Court of Claims, and does this provision
authorize the creation and establishment of that Court?"
"III. Can the compensation of a judge of the Court of Claims be
lawfully diminished during his continuance in office?"
In the
O'Donoghue case, supra, we have discussed in
some detail the purposes which led the framers of the Constitution
to incorporate in that instrument the provisions in respect of the
permanent tenure of office and the undiminishable character of the
compensation of the judges, and have pointed out that the judges of
the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia
plainly come within the spirit and reason of the compensation
provision, and must be held to fall within its intent unless that
conclusion is precluded by other considerations. Much of what is
there said may also be said in respect of the Court of Claims. It
is a court of great importance, dealing with claims against the
United States which, in the aggregate, amount to a vast sum every
year. The questions which it considers call for
Page 289 U. S. 562
the exercise of a high order of intelligence, learning, and
ability. The preservation of its independence is a matter of public
concern. The sole function of the court being to decide between the
government and private suitors, a condition, on the part of the
judges, of entire dependence upon the legislative pleasure for the
tenure of their offices and for a continuance of adequate
compensation during their service in office, to say the least, is
not desirable.
But these considerations, though obvious enough, are not
sufficient, standing alone, to support a conclusion that the Court
of Claims comes within the reach of the judicial article in respect
of tenure of office and compensation. The integrity of such a
conclusion must rest not upon its desirability, but upon its
conformity with the provisions of the Constitution.
For reasons which are set out in the
O'Donoghue
opinion, the courts of the territories are legislative courts,
while the superior courts of the District of Columbia are
constitutional courts. The Court of Claims differs so essentially
from both that its status in respect of the question under
consideration must be determined from an entirely different point
of view.
That court was first established by the Act of February 24,
1855, c. 122, 10 Stat. 612, entitled, "An Act to establish a Court
for the Investigation of Claims against the United States." It was
to consist of three judges, to hold their offices during good
behavior. The act provided that the court should hear and determine
certain claims against he government of the United States, and also
all claims which might be referred to the court by either house of
Congress. The court was to keep a record of its proceedings in each
case and make a report to Congress for the action of that body. By
the Act of March 3, 1863, c. 92, 12 Stat. 765, the court was for
the first time authorized to render final judgments, from which an
appeal was allowed in certain cases. Section 14 of that act
provided:
Page 289 U. S. 563
"That no money shall be paid out of the Treasury for any claim
passed upon by the Court of Claims till after an appropriation
therefor shall be estimated for by the Secretary of the
Treasury."
Because of that provision, it was held in
Gordon v.
United States, 2 Wall. 561, that, under the
Constitution, no appellate jurisdiction could be exercised by this
Court. The reasons for that conclusion are stated in an undelivered
opinion written by Chief Justice Taney, and, with approval,
published for the first time in 117 U.S.Appx. 698-699. It was there
stated that, in view of § 14, the power of the Court of Claims
and of this Court was merely to certify their opinion to the
Secretary of the Treasury, and whether the claim was paid in
accordance with the opinion depended not on the decision of either
court, but upon the future action of the Secretary and of Congress.
So far as the Court of Claims is concerned, it was said there is no
objection to these provisions, since Congress undoubtedly may
establish tribunals to examine testimony and decide in the first
instance upon the validity and justice of any claim against the
United States, subject to the supervision and control of Congress
or the head of an executive department. Such authority was likened
to that of an auditor or comptroller, and the circumstance that the
tribunal was called a court and its decisions called judgments
could not alter its character or enlarge its power. But, in respect
of this Court, different principles were said to apply, since this
Court is created by the Constitution, and represents one of the
three great divisions of power in the government,
"to each of which the Constitution has assigned its appropriate
duties and powers and made each independent of the other in
performing its appropriate functions. The power conferred on this
Court is exclusively judicial, and it cannot be required or
authorized to exercise any other."
The conclusion, therefore, was that Congress could neither
Page 289 U. S. 564
confer nor impose on this Court the authority or duty of hearing
or determining an appeal from such a tribunal, nor authorize or
require this Court to express an opinion on a case where its
judicial power could not be exercised and where its judgment would
not be final and conclusive upon the rights of the parties.
These observations, without adverting to others which have been
disavowed, have since met with the uniform approval of this
Court.
The decision of the
Gordon case in 2 Wallace was
announced on March 10, 1865. At the next session of Congress §
14 was repealed. Chapter 19, 14 Stat. 9. Since that time, it never
has been doubted that Congress may authorize an appeal to this
Court from a final judgment or decree of the Court of Claims,
United States v. Jones, 119 U. S. 477,
119 U. S.
478-479;
In re Sanborn, 148 U.
S. 222,
148 U. S. 225;
Luckenbach S.S. Co. v. United States, 272 U.
S. 533,
272 U. S. 536
et seq., or that the judgment of this Court rendered on
such appeal constitutes a final determination of the matter.
United States v.
O'Grady, 22 Wall. 641,
89 U. S. 647.
It is equally certain that the judgments of the Court of Claims,
where no appeal is taken, under existing laws are absolutely final
and conclusive of the rights of the parties unless a new trial be
granted by that court as provided by law.
Id. Indeed, as
appears from the cases already cited and others, such finality and
conclusiveness must be assumed as a necessary prerequisite to the
exercise of appellate jurisdiction by this Court.
In 1887, Congress gathered together the preceding acts in
respect of suits against the government in what is called the
Tucker Act. Ch. 359, 24 Stat. 505. By that act, the Court of Claims
was given jurisdiction to hear and determine, among other matters,
all claims upon any contract, express or implied, with the
government of the United States, or for damages, liquidated or
unliquidated, in cases not sounding in tort,
"in respect of which claims
Page 289 U. S. 565
the party would be entitled to redress against the United States
either in a court of law, equity, or admiralty if the United States
were suable."
By § 2 of the act, as amended and supplemented by §
24(20) of the Judicial Code, concurrent jurisdiction was conferred
upon the federal District Courts in all matters as to which the
Court of Claims had jurisdiction where the amount involved did not
exceed $10,000. U.S.Code, title 28, § 41(20).
By these provisions, it is made plain that the Court of Claims,
originally nothing more than an administrative or advisory body,
was converted into a court in fact as well as in name, and given
jurisdiction over controversies which were susceptible of judicial
cognizance. It is only in that view that the appellate jurisdiction
of this Court in respect of the judgments of that court could be
sustained, or concurrent jurisdiction appropriately be conferred,
upon the federal District Courts. The Court of Claims therefore
undoubtedly, in entertaining and deciding these controversies,
exercises judicial power, but the question still remains -- and is
the vital question -- whether it is the judicial power defined by
Art. III of the Constitution.
That judicial power apart from that article may be conferred by
Congress upon legislative courts, as well as upon constitutional
courts, is plainly apparent from the opinion of Chief Justice
Marshall in
American Insurance Co. v.
Canter, 1 Pet. 511,
26 U. S. 546,
dealing with the territorial courts. "The jurisdiction," he
said,
"with which they are invested is not a part of that judicial
power which is defined in the 3d article of the Constitution, but
is conferred by Congress, in the execution of those general powers
which that body possesses over the territories of the United
States."
That is to say (1) that the courts of the territories (and, of
course, other legislative courts) are invested with judicial power,
but (2) that this power is not conferred by the third article of
the Constitution, but by Congress in the execution of other
provisions of that
Page 289 U. S. 566
instrument. The validity of this view is borne out by the fact
that the appellate jurisdiction of this Court over judgments and
decrees of the legislative courts has been upheld and freely
exercised under acts of Congress from a very early period, a
practice which can be sustained, as already suggested, only upon
the theory that the legislative courts possess and exercise
judicial power -- as distinguished from legislative, executive, or
administrative power -- although not conferred in virtue of the
third article of the Constitution.
The authority to naturalize aliens has been vested in the courts
from the beginning of the government, and it cannot be doubted
that, in discharging this function, the courts exercise judicial
power. But the courts of the states, with the acquiescence of all
the departments of the federal government, have also exercised the
same jurisdiction during this long period of time, and their
authority to do so must be regarded as conclusively established.
Levin v. United States, 128 F. 826, 830-831. In that case,
Judge Sanborn, in a very carefully drawn opinion, pointed out that
Congress cannot vest any portion of the judicial power granted by
§ 1 and defined by § 2 of the third article of the
Constitution in courts not ordained and established by itself;
* that the
judicial power there granted and defined necessarily extended only
to the trial of the classes of cases named in § 2, but that
these sections neither expressly nor impliedly prohibited Congress
from conferring judicial power upon other courts. "Thus," he
says,
"the authority granted
Page 289 U. S. 567
to territorial courts to hear and determine controversies
arising in the territories of the United States is judicial power.
But it is not a part of that judicial power granted by § 1,
and defined by § 2, of Art. III of the Constitution.
Nevertheless, under the constitutional grant to Congress of power
to 'make all needful rules and regulations respecting the territory
. . . belonging to the United States' (Art. IV, § 3), that
body may create territorial courts not contemplated or authorized
by Art. III of the Constitution, and may confer upon them plenary
judicial power, because the establishment of such courts and the
bestowal of such authority constitute appropriate means by which to
exercise the congressional power to make needful rules respecting
the territory belonging to the United States. . . . The grant by
the Congress of the United States of the judicial power to admit
aliens to citizenship, and to hear and decide the various questions
which do not arise in the cases specified in Art. III of the
Constitution, but which a proper exercise of the powers granted by
that instrument to the executive or to the legislative department
of the Government requires to be judicially decided, was neither
expressly nor impliedly prohibited by that article. The
congressional power to make such a grant and to vest judicial
authority in state courts and officers in such cases exists by
virtue of the established rule that the grant of a power to
accomplish an object is a grant of the authority to select and use
the appropriate means to attain it."
If the power exercised by legislative courts is not
judicial power, what is it? Certainly it is not
legislative or executive or administrative power, or any imaginable
combination thereof.
With the foregoing principles in mind, we come, then, to a
consideration of the crucial question here involved -- is the
judicial power exercised by the Court of Claims
Page 289 U. S. 568
vested in virtue of the third article of the Constitution so as
to bring its judges within the protection of that article as to
tenure of office and compensation?
It must be conceded at the threshold that this Court in several
cases has expressed, more or less irrelevantly, its opinion in the
affirmative. Thus, in
United States v.
Klein, 13 Wall. 128,
80 U. S. 145,
after reference to the legislation with respect of the Court of
Claims, the view is expressed that such court was thus constituted
one of those inferior courts which Congress authorizes. In
United States v. Union Pacific R. Co., 98 U. S.
569,
98 U. S. 603,
it was said that, under the authority of Art. III, Congress had
created the District Courts, the Circuit Courts, and the Court of
Claims, and vested each of them with a defined portion of the
judicial power found in the Constitution. In
Minnesota v.
Hitchcock, 185 U. S. 373,
185 U. S. 386,
the Court, after directing attention to the fact that the United
States could not be sued without its consent, said that, with its
consent, it might be sued, in which event the judicial power of the
United States extended to such a controversy, and added: "Indeed,
the whole jurisdiction of the court of claims rests upon this
proposition."
See also Kansas v. United States,
204 U. S. 331,
204 U. S. 342;
United States v. Louisiana, 123 U. S.
32,
123 U. S.
35.
None of these cases involved the question now under
consideration, and the expressions referred to were clearly
obiter dicta, which, as said by Chief Justice Marshall in
Cohens v.
Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264,
19 U. S. 399,
"may be respected, but ought not to control the judgment in a
subsequent suit, when the very point is presented for
decision."
On the other hand, this Court, in
Ex parte Bakelite
Corp., 279 U. S. 438, in
a fully considered opinion holding that the Court of Customs
Appeals was a legislative court, definitely took the opposite view.
The status of the Court of Claims is there discussed at length, and
the conclusion reached that it likewise is a legislative court.
"It
Page 289 U. S. 569
was created, and has been maintained," we there said,
"as a special tribunal to examine and determine claims for money
against the United States. This is a function which belongs
primarily to Congress as an incident of its power to pay the debts
of the United States. But the function is one which Congress has a
discretion either to exercise directly or to delegate to other
agencies."
The opinion then points out that the Court of Claims is, and
always has been, as Congress declared at the outset, "a court for
the investigation of claims against the United States;" that none
of the matters made cognizable by the court inherently or
necessarily requires judicial determination, but, on the
contrary,
"all the matters which are susceptible of legislative or
executive determination and can have no other save under and in
conformity with permissive legislation by Congress."
It is noted as significant that the act constituting the court
dispenses with trial by jury, a provision which was distinctly
upheld in spite of the Seventh Amendment in
McElrath v. United
States, 102 U. S. 426.
With respect to the status of the court, the opinion concludes (pp.
279 U. S.
454-455):
"While what has been said of the creation and special function
of the court definitely reflects its status as a legislative court,
there is propriety in mentioning the fact that Congress always has
treated it as having that status. From the outset, Congress has
required it to give merely advisory decisions on many matters.
Under the act creating it, all of its decisions were to be of that
nature. Afterwards, some were to have effect as binding judgments,
but others were still to be merely advisory. This is true at the
present time. A duty to give decisions which are advisory only, and
so without force as judicial judgments, may be laid on a
legislative court, but not on a constitutional court established
under Art. III."
"In
Gordon v. United States, 117 U.S.Appx. 697, and
again in
In re Sanborn, 148 U. S. 222, this Court
plainly was of
Page 289 U. S. 570
opinion that the Court of Claims is a legislative court
specially created to consider claims for money against the United
States, and, on that basis, distinctly recognized that Congress may
require it to give advisory decisions. And, in
United States v.
Klein, 13 Wall. 128,
80 U. S.
144-145, this Court described it as having all the
functions of a court, but being, as respects its organization and
existence, undoubtedly and completely under the control of
Congress."
"In the present case, the court below regarded the recent
decision in
Miles v. Graham, 268 U. S.
501, as disapproving what was said in the cases just
cited and holding that the Court of Claims is a constitutional,
rather than a legislative, court. But, in this,
Miles v.
Graham was taken too broadly. The opinion therein contains no
mention of the cases supposed to have been disapproved; nor does it
show that this Court's attention was drawn to the question whether
that court is a statutory court or a constitutional court. In fact,
as appears from the briefs, that question was not mooted. Such as
were mooted were considered and determined in the opinion.
Certainly the decision is not to be taken in this case as
disturbing the earlier rulings or attributing to the Court of
Claims a changed status.
Webster v. Fall, 266 U. S.
507,
266 U. S. 511."
"That court was said to be a constitutional court in
United
States v. Union Pacific R. Co., 98 U. S.
569,
98 U. S. 602-603, but this
statement was purely an
obiter dictum, because the
question whether the Court of Claims is a constitutional court or a
legislative court was in no way involved. And any weight the
dictum, as such, might have is more than overcome by what has been
said on the question in other cases where there was need for
considering it."
It is true that the foregoing views expressed in the
Bakelite case were likewise not strictly necessary to
the
Page 289 U. S. 571
decision, but, unlike previous and contrary expressions of
opinion on the same subject, they are elucidated and fortified by
reasoning and illustration, and, moreover, are the result of a
careful review of the entire matter. It is also true that, in the
O'Donoghue case,
supra, we have rejected the
dictum in the
Bakelite case as to the status of the
Supreme Court and Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, but
a reference to the discussion in the
O'Donoghue case will
make apparent the difference in force between the dictum there
involved and the one here involved. In addition to this, whatever
may be said in respect of the
obiter character of the
opinion as to the Court of Claims, the status of the Court of
Customs Appeals, as a purely legislative court, was definitely
adjudged. And neither by brief nor in argument here is any serious
attempt made to differentiate, in respect of the question now being
considered, between the Court of Claims and the Court of Customs
Appeals, and we have been unable to discover any ground for such a
differentiation.
Further reflection tends only to confirm the views expressed in
the
Bakelite opinion as to the status of the Court of
Customs Appeals, and we feel bound to reaffirm and apply them. And,
giving these views due effect here, we see no escape from the
conclusion that, if the Court of Customs Appeals is a legislative
court, so also is the Court of Claims. We might well rest the
present case upon that determination, but must not do so without
considering another view of the question, which seems to find
support in some expressions of this Court -- namely, that when the
United States consents to be sued, the judicial power of Art. III
at once attaches to the court upon which jurisdiction is conferred
in virtue of the clause which in comprehensive terms extends the
judicial power to "controversies to which the United States shall
be a party."
Page 289 U. S. 572
In
Minnesota v. Hitchcock, supra, at
185 U. S.
384-386, it was said:
"This is a controversy to which the United States may be
regarded as a party. It is one, therefore, to which the judicial
power of the United States extends. It is, of course, under that
clause, a matter of indifference whether the United States is a
party plaintiff or defendant. It could not fairly be adjudged that
the judicial power of the United States extends to those cases in
which the United States is a party plaintiff, and does not extend
to those cases in which it is a party defendant."
"
* * * *"
"While the United States as a government may not be sued without
its consent, yet, with its consent, it may be sued, and the
judicial power of the United States extends to such a
controversy."
See also Kansas v. United States, supra, at
204 U. S.
342.
This conception of the application of the judicial article of
the Constitution, which at first glance seems plausible, will be
found upon examination and consideration to be entirely
fallacious.
We first direct attention to the carefully chosen words of
§ 2, cl. 1, Art. III. By that clause, the judicial power is
extended to all cases in law and equity arising under the
Constitution, etc.; to all cases affecting ambassadors, other
public ministers and consuls, and to all cases of admiralty and
maritime jurisdiction. Then the comprehensive word "all" is
dropped, and the enumeration continues in terms to apply to
controversies (but not to "all") to which the United States shall
be a party; to controversies between two or more states, etc. The
use of the word "all" in some cases, and its omission in others,
cannot be regarded as accidental under the rule stated in an early
case,
Holmes v.
Jennison, 14 Pet. 540,
39 U. S.
570-571, 614, and ever since fully accepted, that,
"In expounding the
Page 289 U. S. 573
Constitution of the United States, every word must have its due
force and appropriate meaning, for it is evident from the whole
instrument that no word was unnecessarily used or needlessly added.
The many discussions which have taken place upon the construction
of the Constitution have proved the correctness of this proposition
and shown the high talent, the caution, and the foresight of the
illustrious men who framed it. Every word appears to have been
weighed with the utmost deliberation, and its force and effect to
have been fully understood."
See also Myers v. United States, 272 U. S.
52,
272 U. S.
151.
The significance of the use of the word "all" in some instances
and its omission in others is commented upon by Mr. Justice Story
in
Martin v. Hunter's
Lessee, 1 Wheat. 304,
14 U. S.
333-336, and it is there suggested that the word "all,"
which is used in the earlier part of § 2 of the judicial
article, was dropped in the latter
ex industria, and that
from this difference of phraseology, perhaps, a difference of
constitutional intention may with propriety be inferred.
See
also 2 Story on the Constitution. 4th ed., p. 458, § 1674
et seq.
We are here immediately concerned only with that provision of
Art. III which extends the judicial power to "Controversies to
which the United States shall be a Party." Literally, this includes
such controversies whether the United States be party plaintiff or
defendant; but, in the light of the rule, then well settled and
understood, that the sovereign power is immune from suit, the
conclusion is inadmissible that the framers of the Constitution
intended to include suits or actions brought against the United
States. And here the omission to qualify "controversies" by the
word "all," as in some other instances, becomes peculiarly
suggestive.
The Judiciary Act of 1789 has always been regarded as
practically contemporaneous with the Constitution, and, as
Page 289 U. S. 574
such, of great value in expounding the meaning of the judicial
article of that instrument.
Martin v. Hunter's Lessee,
supra, at
14 U. S.
351-352;
Cohens v. Virginia, supra at
19 U. S. 420;
Borrs v. Preston, 111 U. S. 252,
111 U. S.
256-257;
Wisconsin v. Pelican Ins. Co.,
127 U. S. 265,
127 U. S. 297.
Section 11 of that act, c. 20, 1 Stat. 73, 78, confers jurisdiction
on the Circuit Courts, under specified conditions, of suits "where
. . . the United States are plaintiffs, or petitioners. . . ." And
in
Cohens v. Virginia, supra, at
19 U. S.
411-412, Chief Justice Marshall said:
"The universally received opinion is that no suit can be
commenced or prosecuted against the United States; that the
Judiciary Act does not authorize such suits."
The judicial clause also extends the judicial power (again
omitting the word "all") to controversies "between a state and
citizens of another state." The question as to whether this
authorized a suit against a state by a citizen of another state was
considered in
Chisholm v.
Georgia, 2 Dall. 419. Opinions were delivered
seriatim, four justices, then constituting a majority,
agreeing that such a suit could be maintained. Justice Iredell
dissented in a vigorous opinion. He pointed out that, prior to the
adoption of the Constitution, a sovereign state, without its
consent, was not amenable to suit at the hands of an individual,
and concluded that this rule had not been abrogated by the
constitutional provision, in spite of the generality of its
language. The immediate response to this decision was the
submission and adoption of the Eleventh Amendment, which
provides:
"The judicial power of the United States shall not be construed
to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted
against one of the United States by citizens of another state, or
by citizens or subjects of any foreign state."
In terms, this amendment includes only citizens or subjects of
another or of a foreign state, not citizens of the
Page 289 U. S. 575
state called to account. And, in December, 1884, a suit was
brought in a federal circuit court against the State of Louisiana
by a citizen of that state to recover the amount of certain unpaid
coupons annexed to an issue of state bonds.
Hans v.
Louisiana, 24 F. 55. The Circuit Court dismissed the suit upon
the ground that the state could not be sued without its consent.
The case then came to this Court on error, and the judgment was
affirmed.
Hans v. Louisiana, 134 U. S.
1. The precise question considered and determined was
does the judicial power of the United States extend to a case
arising under the Constitution or laws thereof, brought against a
state by one of its own citizens? Mr. Justice Bradley delivered the
opinion of the Court. Plaintiff in error contended that, being a
citizen of Louisiana, the Eleventh Amendment presented no obstacle
to his suit, since that amendment prohibits suits against a state
only when brought by citizens of another state, or by citizens or
subjects of a foreign state. This Court, conceding that the
amendment so reads, said that, if there were no other reason or
ground for abating the suit, it might be maintainable, with the
anomalous result that a state might be sued in the federal courts
by its own citizens, though it could not be sued for a like cause
of action by citizens or subjects of another or foreign state. But,
it said, such a result would be no less startling and unexpected
than was the decision in
Chisholm v. Georgia, which in
effect had been overruled by the Eleventh Amendment, and the
dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Iredell, which was characterized
as able, was distinctly approved. As opposed to the decision in
Chisholm v. Georgia, attention also was called to the
utterances of Hamilton and others, pending the adoption of the
Constitution, to the precise contrary. Hamilton repudiated the
suggestion that the citizens of one state would be enabled, under
the original draft of
Page 289 U. S. 576
the Constitution, to prosecute suits against another state in
the federal courts. He said (p.
134 U. S.
13):
"It is inherent in the nature of sovereignty not to be amendable
to the suit of an individual without its consent. This is the
general sense and the general practice of mankind, and the
exemption, as one of the attributes of sovereignty, is now enjoyed
by the government of every state in the Union. Unless, therefore,
there is a surrender of this immunity in the plan of the
convention, it will remain with the states, and the danger
intimated must be merely ideal. . . . The contracts between a
nation and individuals are only binding on the conscience of the
sovereign, and have no pretension to a compulsive force. They
confer no right of action independent of the sovereign will."
The words of Madison and of Marshall in the Virginia Convention
were quoted, the former to the effect that the only operation which
the provision of the judicial clause then under discussion could
have was that, "if a state should wish to bring a suit against a
citizen [of another state], it must be brought before the federal
court;" and those of Marshall:
"I hope that no gentleman will think that a state will be called
at the bar of the federal court. . . . It is not rational to
suppose that the sovereign power should be dragged before a court.
The intent is to enable states to recover claims of individuals
residing in other states. . . . I see a difficulty in making a
state defendant which does not prevent its being plaintiff."
This Court then declared (p.
134 U. S. 14)
that,
"looking at the subject as Hamilton did, and as Mr. Justice
Iredell did, in the light of history and experience and the
established order of things, the views of the latter were clearly
right, and that the views expressed by them applied as well to the
then pending case as to that of
Chisholm v. Georgia.
Refusing to adhere to the mere letter of the Eleventh Amendment,
the Court said that to do so would be to strain
Page 289 U. S. 577
the Constitution to a construction never imagined or dreamed of,
and then added:"
"The truth is that the cognizance of suits and actions unknown
to the law, and forbidden by the law (that is to say, as applied to
the present case, of suits against the United States) was not
contemplated by the Constitution when establishing the judicial
power of the United States."
This language applies with equal force to suits against a state
and those brought against the United States. The doctrine of
sovereign immunity is fully discussed in
Hans v.
Louisiana, and in the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice
Iredell in
Chisholm v. Georgia. We need not repeat that
discussion here. Mr. Justice Holmes, speaking for the court in
Kawananakoa v. Polyblank, 205 U.
S. 349,
205 U. S. 353,
tersely said:
"A sovereign is exempt from suit not because of any formal
conception of obsolete theory, but on the logical and practical
ground that there can be no legal right as against the authority
that makes the law on which the right depends."
It is enough to say that, in the light of the settled and
unvarying rule upon that subject, it is not reasonably possible to
assume that it was within the contemplation of the framers of the
Constitution that the words "Controversies to which the United
States shall be a party" should include controversies to which the
United States shall be a party defendant. That clause must be
construed, in accordance with the practical construction put upon
it by the first Judiciary Act, as though it read "controversies to
which the United States shall be a party plaintiff or petitioner,"
and, thus read, controversies to which the United States may be
statute be made a party defendant, at least as a general rule, lie
wholly outside the scope of the judicial power vested by Art. III
in the constitutional courts.
See United States v. Texas,
143 U. S. 621,
143 U. S.
645-646.
The view, therefore, that, when congressional consent has been
given to the maintenance of suits against the
Page 289 U. S. 578
United States, it
ipso facto becomes a matter of
indifference whether the United States is a party plaintiff or
defendant, because the judicial power as defined in Art. III
immediately and automatically extends to such suits, must be
rejected. It cannot be reconciled with the settled principle that,
where a controversy is of such a character as to require the
exercise of the judicial power defined by Art. III, jurisdiction
thereof can be conferred only on courts established in virtue of
that article, and that Congress is without power to vest that
judicial power in any other judicial tribunal, or, of course, in an
executive officer, or administrative or executive board, since, to
repeat the language of Chief Justice Marshall in
American
Insurance Company v. Canter, supra, "they are incapable of
receiving it."
The rule is stated in
Ex parte Randolph, 2 Brock, 447,
20 Fed.Cas. pp. 242, 254, No. 11,558, by Chief Justice Marshall,
sitting on the circuit. That case involved the legality of an
arrest by virtue of a distress warrant issued from the Treasury
Department, under an act of Congress which provided for the issuing
of such a warrant by the agent of the Treasury against all military
and naval officers, etc., charged with the disbursement of the
public moneys, who should fail to pay and settle their accounts
with the Treasury Department. Under the act, the Treasury
Department had settled the account and ascertained the sum due to
the government. The act was attacked as unconstitutional on the
ground that it violated the first section of the third article of
the Constitution. As preliminary to the determination of the
question, Chief Justice Marshall said:
"If this ascertainment of the sum due to the government, and
this issuing of process to levy the sum so ascertained to be due,
be the exercise of any part of the judicial power of the United
States, the law which directs it, is plainly a violation of the
first section of the third article of the constitution, which
declares, that"
"the judicial power
Page 289 U. S. 579
of the United States shall be vested in one supreme court, and
in such inferior courts as congress shall from time to time ordain
and establish. The judges, both of the supreme and inferior courts,
shall hold their offices during good behaviour."
"The judicial power extends to 'controversies to which the
United States shall be a party.' The persons who are directed by
the act of congress to ascertain the debt due from a delinquent
receiver of public money, and to issue process to compel the
payment of that debt, do not compose a court ordained and
established by Congress, nor do they hold offices during good
behaviour. Their offices are held at the pleasure of the President
of the United States. They are, consequently, incapable of
exercising any portion of the judicial power, and the act which
attempts to confer it is absolutely void."
In
Murray's Lessee v. Hoboken
Land & Improvement Co., 18 How. 272,
59 U. S. 284,
it was declared to be beyond the power of Congress either to
"withdraw from judicial cognizance any matter which, from its
nature, is the subject of a suit at the common law, or in equity,
or admiralty" or, on the other hand, to
"bring under the judicial power a matter which, from its nature,
is not a subject for judicial determination. At the same time,
there are matters, involving public rights, which may be presented
in such form that the judicial power is capable of acting on them,
and which are susceptible of judicial determination, but which
congress may or may not bring within the cognizance of the courts
of the United States, as it may deem proper."
See also United States v. Duell, 172 U.
S. 576,
172 U. S. 582,
589.
Since all matters made cognizable by the Court of Claims are
equally susceptible of legislative or executive determination,
Bakelite case, supra, pp.
279 U. S. 452,
279 U. S. 458,
they are, of course, matters in respect of which there is no
constitutional right to a judicial remedy,
United States v.
Babcock, 250 U. S. 328,
250 U. S. 331,
and the authority to inquire
Page 289 U. S. 580
into and decide them may constitutionally be conferred on a
nonjudicial officer or body. In
United
States v. Ferreira, 13 How. 40,
54 U. S. 48, this
Court, referring to an act of Congress (passed in pursuance of a
treaty), directing that judges of the territorial courts of Florida
should examine and adjudge certain claims against the United States
for losses suffered as the result of military operations, with
power of review reserved to the Secretary of the Treasury, held
that the power conferred, although judicial in nature, was nothing
more than the power ordinarily given by law to a commissioner
appointed to adjust claims under a treaty. "A power of this
description," it was said,
"may constitutionally be conferred on a Secretary as well as on
a commissioner. But [it] is not judicial in either case in the
sense in which judicial power is granted by the Constitution to the
courts of the United States."
The view under discussion -- that, Congress having consented
that the United States may be sued, the judicial power defined in
Art. III at once attaches to the court authorized to hear and
determine the suits -- must then be rejected, for the further
reason, or, perhaps, what comes to the same reason differently
stated, that it cannot be reconciled with the limitation
fundamentally implicit in the constitutional separation of the
powers -- namely, that a power definitely assigned by the
Constitution to one department can neither be surrendered nor
delegated by that department nor vested by statute in another
department or agency.
Compare Springer v. Philippine
Islands, 277 U. S. 189,
277 U. S.
201-202. And since Congress, whenever it thinks proper,
undoubtedly may, without infringing the Constitution, confer upon
an executive officer or administrative board, or an existing or
specially constituted court, or retain for itself, the power to
hear and determine controversies respecting claims against the
United States, it follows indubitably that such power, in whatever
guise or by whatever agency exercised, is no
Page 289 U. S. 581
part of the judicial power vested in the constitutional courts
by the third article. That is to say, a power which may be devolved
at the will of Congress upon any of the three departments plainly
is not within the doctrine of the separation and independent
exercise of governmental powers contemplated by the tripartite
distribution of such powers.
Compare Kilbourn v. Thompson,
103 U. S. 168,
103 U. S.
190-191.
We find nothing which militates against the foregoing views in
the requirement that the Court of Claims, in cases properly brought
before it in respect of property expropriated in the exercise of
the power of eminent domain, must award just compensation under the
Fifth Amendment, or in the provision of the Tucker Act (U.S.Code,
Title 28, § 252) requiring the court in cases brought against
the government also to consider and decide setoffs and other claims
made by the government against the petitioner and award judgment
accordingly. In the former case, the requirement is one imposed by
the Constitution, and equally applicable whether jurisdiction be
exercised by a legislative court or a constitutional court, and the
latter is simply a provision which the claimant must accept as a
condition upon which he may avail himself of the privilege of suing
the government in the special court organized for that purpose.
McElrath v. United States, supra, at p.
102 U. S.
440.
From whatever point of view the question be regarded, the
conclusion is inevitable that the Court of Claims receives no
authority, and its judges no rights, from the judicial article of
the Constitution, but that the court derives its being and its
powers and the judges their rights from the acts of Congress passed
in pursuance of other and distinct constitutional provisions. The
questions propounded will be answered accordingly.
Question No. 1, No.
Question No. 2, No.
Question No. 3, Yes.
* The lack of authority in Congress to devolve any part of the
judicial power defined by Art. III upon courts other than those
created by itself must not be confused with its authority to vest
jurisdiction in respect of some cases in courts whose judicial
power is otherwise derived.
Compare Robertson v. Baldwin,
165 U. S. 275,
165 U. S.
278-280;
Claflin v. Houseman, 93 U. S.
130,
93 U. S. 136,
et seq.; Second Employers' Liability Cases, 223 U. S.
1,
223 U. S. 55,
et seq.