1. A state may waive, by appearing, its immunity as a sovereign
from being sued by individuals. P.
290 U. S.
24.
2. But an intervention in a suit pending in a federal court,
limited to a request of the state that securities involved in that
suit be not distributed but be held in the registry until a claim
of the state in regard to them may be adjudicated in a proceeding
begun by the state in its own court, is not such an appearance as
will subject the state to a litigation of the claim in the federal
court. P.
290 U. S.
25.
3. The Eleventh Amendment is an explicit limitation upon the
judicial power of the United states, and applies to equitable
demands and remedies as well as to suits for money judgments. Pp.
290 U. S. 25,
290 U. S.
27.
Page 290 U. S. 19
4. Even for the protection of its own decree, and of property
rights thereby determined
quasi in rem, a federal court
cannot entertain a supplemental and ancillary bill against a state
which has not appeared in the litigation and does not consent to be
sued. P.
290 U. S.
27.
5. The claim that a decree of a federal court adjudicating the
ownership of private property estops the state, though not a party,
from reopening the question in later inheritance tax proceedings in
its own court, and that the decree should be given that effect as a
matter of federal right, can be set up in the state courts, and if
it be here finally denied, the decision may be reviewable by this
Court. P.
290 U. S.
29.
62 F.2d 150 reversed.
Certiorari, 289 U.S. 720, to review the reversal of a decree
dismissing a bill against the State of Missouri to enjoin it from
prosecution of a proceeding in the Probate Court. The Attorney
General and other law officials of the state were joined as
defendants in the courts below. One of these, Miller, Circuit
Attorney, joined with the state in petitioning for certiorari.
Page 290 U. S. 21
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
By an ancillary and supplemental bill of complaint in the
District Court of the United states, respondents sought an
injunction against the State of Missouri restraining the state from
prosecuting certain proceedings in the Probate Court of the City of
St. Louis in relation to the estate of Sophie Franz, deceased. The
state appeared specially and moved to dismiss the bill upon the
ground, among others, that it was a suit against the state, which
had not consented to be sued, in violation of the Eleventh
Amendment of the Federal Constitution. The District Judge granted
the motion upon that ground. The Circuit Court of Appeals reversed
the order of dismissal, holding that the Eleventh Amendment was
inapplicable, in the view that the ancillary and supplemental bill
had been brought to prevent an interference with the jurisdiction
of the federal court. 62 F.2d 150. The case comes here on
certiorari, 289 U.S. 720.
The circumstances are these: by the will of Ehrhardt D. Franz,
who died in 1898, his property was left to his
Page 290 U. S. 22
wife, Sophie Franz, for life, with remainder to his ten
children. The will was probated in the Probate Court of the City of
St. Louis. In 1909, Sophie Franz transferred certain securities, in
part belonging to her husband's estate, to trustees to hold during
her life. On its creation, the trust embraced shares, belonging to
her husband's estate, which had been increased by stock dividends;
later, these shares were exchanged for shares of a successor
corporation, and these were further increased by stock
dividends.
There has been protracted litigation in relation to this trust
and the property held by the trustees. The present suit was
brought, in 1924, in the District Court of the United states, by
one of the sons of Ehrhardt D. Franz, to determine and quiet his
remainder interest and to obtain an accounting and security for his
protection. Indispensable parties (owners of other remainder
interests) being absent, the original bill was dismissed.
Franz
v. Buder, 11 F.2d 854, 858. An amended bill was filed and the
present respondents, who are children of Ehrhardt D. Franz and not
residents of Missouri, were brought in with others. On an ancillary
bill, it appearing that the federal court had first acquired
jurisdiction over the subject matter in an action
quasi in
rem, defendants Sophie Franz and her trustees were enjoined
from prosecuting a suit in the circuit court of the City of St.
Louis for the determination of the same issues.
Franz v.
Franz, 15 F.2d 797. The present suit in the federal court then
proceeded to decree, in 1927, which, with modifications as to
security and costs, was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals in
the following year.
Buder v. Franz, 27 F.2d 101.
There is a question between the parties here as to the scope of
this decree, but we may assume, for the present purpose, that this
decree, as stated by the Circuit Court of Appeals in the decision
under review, 62 F.2d pp.
Page 290 U. S. 23
151, 153-154, determined the rights of the present respondents
by virtue of their remainders under the will of Ehrhardt D. Franz.
The decree, as thus construed, determined that certain shares, with
their increase through stock dividends, were corpus of the estate
of Ehrhardt D. Franz, and not income, and hence that Sophie Franz
had only a life interest.
Buder v. Franz, 27 F.2d, pp.
105, 113-114.
Later, in 1930, Sophie Franz died, and her estate is in the
course of administration in the probate court of the city of St.
Louis. Her executor, in view of the decree of the federal court,
did not include the shares above mentioned in his inventory of her
estate. Thereupon, in 1931, the State of Missouri procured the
issue, on behalf of the state, of a citation in the probate court
to compel the executor to inventory these shares as assets of the
estate of Sophie Franz. The State of Missouri then moved in the
federal court for leave to intervene. The state set forth the issue
of the citation in the probate court; that the respondents, and
others in interest, were seeking in the federal court to obtain
distribution of the shares of stock in question, and that, to
protect the state's right to inheritance taxes, intervention was
necessary to oppose that distribution pending the determination of
the issues involved in the proceeding in the probate court. The
application for intervention was granted.
The state then filed its intervening petition alleging that the
decree of the federal court, while finding the interests in
remainder of certain children of Ehrhardt D. Franz, made no finding
as to other children, and that the latter, including the present
respondents, although remaindermen, had,
"prior to the entry of said decree, by diverse acts and by
pleadings filed in this cause, extinguished, transferred and
assigned their remainder interest to the life tenant, Sophie
Franz;"
that the stock in question "should have been inventoried," and
was subject "to the assessment and collection of inheritance
taxes
Page 290 U. S. 24
of the State of Missouri under the terms of the will of Sophie
Franz," and that, for these taxes, the state had a lien upon this
stock. The petition prayed that a portion of the stock should be
transferred to the registry of the federal court to be held until
the probate court determined whether the stock should have been
inventoried by the executor of the estate of Sophie Franz. The
present respondents (with others) answered the petition in
intervention denying that the decree of the federal court had been
limited as alleged and setting up their rights under the decree as
res judicata. They asked that the petition be dismissed,
and that their motions for distribution be sustained.
Shortly before filing this answer, the present respondents
brought their ancillary and supplemental bill of complaint to
enjoin the State of Missouri from "prosecuting further the said
citation in the Probate Court" and "from seeking or obtaining any
order, decree, or judgment therein" until the further direction of
the District Court. The Circuit Court of Appeals, in sustaining the
jurisdiction of the District Court to entertain the bill for this
purpose, stated that the extent to which that jurisdiction should
be exercised was "the protection of the jurisdiction and decrees of
the trial court;" that it did not extend to matters not involved in
the main litigation. 62 F.2d, p. 157.
First. The first question is whether the state has
waived the immunity it now claims. Immunity from suit under the
Eleventh Amendment is a personal privilege which may be waived.
Clark v. Barnard, 108 U. S. 436,
108 U. S.
447-448;
Gunter v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co.,
200 U. S. 273,
200 U. S. 284.
It may be waived by a voluntary proceeding in intervention
(
Clark v. Barnard, supra), and the question is as to the
effect of the state's application to intervene in this suit. The
Circuit Court of Appeals held that it did not
Page 290 U. S. 25
amount to a waiver, but the respondents press the question in
supporting the decree under review.
While the motion of the state was for leave to intervene as "a
party defendant," the Circuit Court of Appeals pointed out that, by
the petition in intervention, the state did not seek the
determination "of any rights or title," that it expressly pleaded
"that such determination will take place in the Probate Court," and
that the only relief asked was that the federal court should not
distribute the stock from the trustees to the present respondents,
but should "place it in its registry to abide the result of the
determination of the rights of the state by the Probate Court." The
Circuit Court of Appeals was of the opinion that the only purpose
and result of the intervention would be to retain the stock within
Missouri in a place where it could be made to respond to the tax
claims of the state if these claims were upheld. In determining the
question presented to it on the appeal, the court was not concerned
with the propriety of allowing the intervention for that purpose or
with its legal classification as
pro interesse suo or
otherwise. As only a "temporary impounding" was sought, which was
"in no sense a matter of right, but rather partakes of grace," the
court concluded that the intervention was too limited in character
to constitute a waiver of the immunity given by the amendment, if
that immunity would otherwise exist. 62 F.2d, pp. 152-153. We think
that the Circuit Court of Appeals was right.
Second. The Eleventh Amendment is an explicit
limitation of the judicial power of the United states.
"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."
However important that power, it cannot extend into the
forbidden sphere. Considerations of convenience open no
Page 290 U. S. 26
avenue of escape from the restriction. The
"entire judicial power granted by the Constitution does not
embrace authority to entertain a suit brought by private parties
against a state without consent given."
Ex parte New York, 256 U. S. 490,
256 U. S. 497.
Such a suit cannot be entertained upon the ground that the
controversy arises under the Constitution or laws of the United
states.
Hans v. Louisiana, 134 U. S.
1,
134 U. S. 10;
Palmer v. Ohio, 248 U. S. 32,
248 U. S. 34;
Duhne v. New Jersey, 251 U. S. 311,
251 U. S.
313-314.
The ancillary and supplemental bill is brought by the
respondents directly against the State of Missouri. It is not a
proceeding within the principle that suit may be brought against
state officers to restrain an attempt to enforce an
unconstitutional enactment. That principle is that the exemption of
states from suit does not protect their officers from personal
liability to those whose rights they have wrongfully invaded.
Tindal v. Wesley, 167 U. S. 204;
Prout v. Starr, 188 U. S. 537,
188 U. S. 543;
Gunter v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co., supra; Ex parte
Young, 209 U. S. 123,
209 U. S. 150
et seq. Here, respondents are proceeding against the state
itself to prevent the exercise of its authority to maintain a suit
in its own court.
The proceeding by ancillary and supplemental bill to restrain
the state from this exercise of authority is unquestionably a
"suit." Said Chief Justice Marshall in
Cohens v.
Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264,
19 U. S.
407-408:
"What is a suit? We understand it to be prosecution or pursuit
of some claim, demand, or request; in law language, it is the
prosecution of some demand in a court of justice. . . . To commence
a suit is to demand something by the institution of process in a
court of justice, and to prosecute the suit, is, according to the
common acceptation of language, to continue that demand. By a suit
commenced by an individual against a state, we should understand
process sued out by that individual against
Page 290 U. S. 27
the state for the purpose of establishing some claim against it
by the judgment of a court, and the prosecution of that suit is its
continuance."
The fact that the motive for the adoption of the Eleventh
Amendment was to quiet grave apprehensions that were extensively
entertained with respect to the prosecution of state debts in the
federal courts cannot be regarded, as respondents seem to argue, as
restricting the scope of the amendment to suits to obtain money
judgments. The terms of the amendment, notwithstanding the chief
motive for its adoption, were not so limited. Expressly applying to
suits in equity as well as at law, the amendment necessarily
embraces demands for the enforcement of equitable rights and the
prosecution of equitable remedies when these are asserted and
prosecuted by an individual against a state. This conception of the
amendment has had abundant illustration.
Louisiana v.
Junel, 107 U. S. 711,
107 U. S. 720;
Hagood v. Southern, 117 U. S. 52,
117 U. S. 67;
In re Ayers, 123 U. S. 443,
123 U. S. 497;
Fitts v. McGhee, 172 U. S. 516,
172 U. S.
529.
Respondents' bill asserts a right to maintain their interests as
remaindermen under the will of Ehrhardt D. Franz with respect to
certain shares of stock against an attempt of the state to lay
inheritance taxes on these shares as the property of Sophie Franz,
the deceased life tenant. In order to enforce this asserted right,
respondents bring their bill to obtain the equitable remedy of
injunction against the state. This is not less a suit against the
state because the bill is ancillary and supplemental. The state had
not been a party to the litigation which resulted in the decree
upon which respondents rely. The state has not come into the suit
for the purpose of litigating the rights asserted. Respondents are
attempting to subject the state, without its consent, to the
court's process.
The question, then, is whether the purpose to protect the
jurisdiction of the federal court, and to maintain its
Page 290 U. S. 28
decree against the proceeding of the state in the state court,
removes the suit from the application of the Eleventh Amendment. No
warrant is found for such a limitation of its terms. The exercise
of the judicial power cannot be protected by judicial action which
the Constitution specifically provides is beyond the judicial
power. Thus, when it appears that a state is an indispensable party
to enable a federal court to grant relief sought by private
parties, and the state has not consented to be sued, the court will
refuse to take jurisdiction.
Cunningham v. Macon &
Brunswick R. Co., 109 U. S. 446,
109 U. S. 451,
109 U. S. 457;
In re Ayers, supra, p.
123 U. S. 489;
Christian v. Atlantic & N.C. R. Co., 133 U.
S. 233,
133 U. S. 244;
Stanley v. Schwalby, 147 U. S. 508,
147 U. S. 518;
South Carolina v. Wesley, 155 U.
S. 542,
155 U. S. 545;
Belknap v. Schild, 161 U. S. 10,
161 U. S. 20.
And, if a state, unless it consents, cannot be brought into a suit
by original bill, to enable a federal court to acquire
jurisdiction, no basis appears for the contention that a state, in
the absence of consent, may be sued by means of an ancillary and
supplemental bill in order to enforce a decree.
The fact that a suit in a federal court is
in rem, or
quasi in rem, furnishes no ground for the issue of process
against a nonconsenting state. If the state chooses to come into
the court as plaintiff, or to intervene, seeking the enforcement of
liens or claims, the state may be permitted to do so, and, in that
event, its rights will receive the same consideration as those of
other parties in interest. But, when the state does not come in and
withholds its consent, the court has no authority to issue process
against the state to compel it to subject itself to the court's
judgment, whatever the nature of the suit.
See The
Siren, 7 Wall. 152,
74 U. S. 154;
The Davis, 10
Wall. 15,
77 U. S. 19;
Georgia v. Jesup, 106 U. S. 458,
106 U. S. 462;
Cunningham v. Macon & Brunswick R. Co., supra, 109
U.S. p.
109 U. S. 452;
Ex parte New York, supra, pp.
256 U. S.
497-500.
Page 290 U. S. 29
We express no opinion upon the question whether the decree of
the District Court, entered during the lifetime of Sophie Franz,
the life tenant, in this suit to which she, her trustees, and the
remaindermen were parties, can be regarded as binding upon the
State of Missouri with respect to its subsequent claim for
inheritance taxes against the shares in controversy as a part of
the life tenant's estate. That question is not before us. Whatever
may be found to be the effect of this decree in that relation, the
result is the same so far as the present question of the right of
respondents to bring this bill against the state is concerned. If
the state, by reason of the fact that it was not a party to the
litigation, is not bound by the decree, it is manifestly free to
litigate its claim to the taxes in the proceeding it has instituted
in its own court.
United states v. Lee, 106 U.
S. 196,
106 U. S. 222;
Tindal v. Wesley, supra, p.
167 U. S. 223;
McClellan v. Carland, 217 U. S. 268,
217 U. S. 282.
But, if the decree of the federal court can be considered as
determining the ownership of the shares so as to bind the state in
later tax proceedings upon the death of the life tenant, and there
is a federal right to have that effect given to the decree, that
federal right can be specially set up and claimed in the proceeding
in the state court, and, if the right is finally denied, the
decision may be the subject of review by this Court in case the
appropriate procedure is followed.
Waterman v. Canal-Louisiana
Bank Co., 215 U. S. 33,
215 U. S. 46.
See Tilt v. Kelsey, 207 U. S. 43. The
contention that the question of ownership of the shares has been
finally determined by the federal court affords no ground for the
conclusion that the federal court may entertain a suit against the
state, without its consent, to prevent the state from seeking to
litigate that question in the state court.
The decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals is reversed, and the
cause is remanded to the District Court, with directions to dismiss
the ancillary and supplemental bill.
It is so ordered.