REPORTS OF OASES ARGUED AND ADJUDGED IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES. FEBRUARY TERM 1819. B/HENRY WHEATON, V COUNSELLOR AT LAW. VOL. IV. FOURTH EDITION. EDITED, WITH NOTES AND REFERENCES TO LATER DECISIONS, BY FREDERICK C. BRIGHTLY, AUTHOR OF THE “FEDERAL DIGEST,” ETO. NEW YORK: BANKS & BROTHERS, LAW PUBLISHERS, No. 144 NASSAU STREET. ALBANY: 4 75 BROADWAY. 1883. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1883, By BANKS & BROTHERS, In the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. JUDGES OF THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES. DURING THE PERIOD OF THESE REPORTS. Hon. John Marshall, Chief Justice. “ Bushrod Washington, “ William Johnson, ** Brockholst Livingston, > Associate Justices. lt Thomas Todd,1 f< Gabriel Duvall, “ Joseph Story, William Wirt, Esq., Attorney-General. * iii * iii 1 Mr, Justice Todd was absent the whole of this Term, on account of indisposition. iii A TABLE OF THE NAMES OF THE CASES REPORTED IN THIS VOLUME. The references are to the Star *pages. A •page Astor v. Wells.............. 466 B Bank of Cumberland v. Okely.. 236 Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors.................... 1 Barr v. Gratz.___............ 213 Biddle, Sergeant v............ 508 Boyd’s Lessee v. Graves....... 513 Browder, McArthur v......... 488 Brown v. Gilman.............. 255 Buel, Van Ness v............. 74 C Caldwell, W eightman v........ 85 Caledonian, The.............. 100 Caridad, The................. 497 Crowninshield, Sturges v........ 122 D Dartmouth College v. Woodward 518 Divina Pastora, The............ 52 E Eliason v. Henshaw............. 225 Estrella, The................. 298 ♦PAGK Evans v. Phillips............ 73 Experiment, The.............. 84 F Friendschaft, The........... 105 G General Smith, The.......... 438 Gilman, Brown v.............. 255 Gratz, Barr v................. 213 Graves, Boyd’s Lessee v....... 513 H Hamilton, Somerville v......... 230 Hart’s Executors, Baptist Association v................... 1 Henshaw, Eliason v.......... 225 Hodgson, Orr v.............. 453 Howland,United States v...... 108 L Langdon Cheves, The......... 193 M McArthur v. Browder......... 488 McCulloch v. State of Maryland. 316 McIver v. Walker.............445 [v] vi CASES REPORTED. ♦PAGE McMillan v. McNeill.......... 209 Miller v. Nicholls........... 311 N Nicholls, Miller v........... 311 O Okely, Bank of Columbia v.... 235 Orr v. Hodgson................453 P Peyton’s Lessee, Williams v.... 77 Phillips, Evans v............. 13 R Rice, United States v........ 246 S Sergeant v. Biddle........... 508 Sexton, Wheaton v.............503 ♦page Smith, The General..........438 Somerville v. Hamilton...... 230 Sturges v. Crowninshield.... 122 Sybil, The.................. 98 U United States v. Howland..... 108 United States v. Rice.......246 y Van Ness v. Buel............ 74 W Walker, McIver v............444 Weightman v. Caldwell....... 85 Wells, Astor v............. 466 Wheaton v. Sexton.......... 503 Williams v. Peyton’s Lessee.... 77 I Woodward, Dartmouth College v. 518 A TABLE OF THE CASES CITED IN THIS VOLUME. The references are to the Star * pages. A ♦page Adams v, Lambert.................4 Co. 104.......................app. 9 Adams v. Storey..................1 Paine 79....................135, 212 Addy v. Grix.....................8 Ves. 504...................... 95 Adeline, The.....................9 Cr. 244, 284.................60, 63 Adlington v. Cann................3 Atk. 141.................... app. 14 Alerta, The......................9 Cr. 359, 364...........61, 71, 72 Allen v. Bennett.................3 Taunt. 169.................... 94 Anderson v. Scott..............1 Camp. 235................*....... 90 Anon.............................2 Vent. 349...................... 6 Anon...........................1 Ch. Cas. 267.............51c, 5le, app. 8 Anon.............................3 Atk. 276 ................... 5,m Ariadne, The.....................2 Wheat. 143................... 101 Arnold v. Chapman................1 Ves. 108....................app. 16 Ashby v. White...................2 Ld. Raym. 938.........572, 701, 704 Atkinson v. Maling............ 2 T. R. 462..................... 90 Attorney-General v. Bains........Free. Ch. 270..........51a, app. 13, 14 Attorney-General v. Baxter........ 1 Vern. 248....................6, 11 Attorney General v. Berryman... .1 Dick. 168..............51b, app. 10 Attorney-General v. Bishop of Chester..................1 Bro. C. C. 444... .51c, 51o, app. 12, 18 Attorney-General v. Boultbee.....2 Ves. jr. 380 51a, 51b, app. 12,15 Attorney-General v. Bowyer.3 Ves. jr. 714, 725-7... 6, 9, 11, 16, 42, 51b, 51c, 51d, 51h, 51m, 691, app. 5, 12, 13 Attorney-General v. Brereton...2 Ves. 425.........................app. 9 Attorney-General v. Brewers’ Co. .1 Meriv. 495................... 51m Attorney-General v. Burdet.....2 Vern. 755................51c, app. 13 Attorney-General v. City of London.3 Bro. C. C. 171; 1 Ves. jr. 243. 51c, 51m, 611, 614, 704, 706, app. 12, 17 Attorney-General v. Clare College.3 Atk. 662..................... 674 Attorney-General v. Combe........2 Ch. Cas. 18..............app. 12, 14 [vii] viii CASES CITED. ♦page Attorney-General v. Corporation of Carmarthen....................Cooper 30.,,....................... 676 Attorney-General v. Dixie.......13 Ves. 519........51k, 676, 704, app. 8 Attorney-General v. Downing.....Ambl. 550, 571........... .51c, app. 12 Attorney-General v. Earl of Clarendon...........................17 Ves. 493........51k, 676-7, app. 8, 21 Attorney-General v. Foundling Hospital...........................2 Ves. jr. 47 .........565, 676, app. 21 Attorney-General v. Gleg........1 Atk. 356.....................app. 15 Attorney-General v. Graves......Ambl. 158......................app. 16 Attorney-General v. Green.......2 Bro. C. C. 492..........51b, app. 12 Attorney-General v. Guise.......2 Vern. 266...............51b, app. 11 Attorney-General v. Harrow School.2 Ves. 552...............app. 9, 21 Attorney-General v. Herrick.....Ambl. 712.......................11, 51c Attorney-General v. Hewer.......2 Vern. 387...............8, 12, app. 8 Attorney-General v. Hewett......9 Ves. 232............................ 13 Attorney-General v. Hickman.....2 Eq. Cas. Abr. 193...7, 19, 51a, app. 10 Attorney-General v. Hicks.......High. Mortm. 336, 353.........app. 16 Attorney-General v. Hudson......1 P. Wms. 675......................... 12 Attorney-General v. Hughes......2 Vern. 105............................ 6 Attorney-General v. Jackson.....11 Ves. 365, 367..........51a, app. 10 Attorney-General v. Jean es.....1 Atk. 355............................app. 9 Attorney-General v. Lock........3 Atk. 164.......................... 676 Attorney-General v. Matthews... .2 Lev. 167............51d, 511, app. 20 Attorney-General v. Mayor of Coventry ..........................7 Bro. P. C. 235...............app. 21 Attorney-General v. Middleton... .2 Ves. 327, 328.. ,51f, 566, 674-6, app. 9 Attorney-General v. Minshull....4 Ves. 11, 14.............51a, app. 15 Attorney-General v. Newcombe.. .14 Ves. 1, 7......................... 51m Attorney-Generaly. Newman.......1 Ch. Cas. 157.........51b, 51e, app. 8 Attorney-General v. Oglander....3 Bro. C. C. 166.......6, 51c, app. 12 Attorney-General «. Parker....... 1 Ves. 43....................app. 9 Attorney-General v. Peacock.....Cas. temp Finch 45................. 51a Attorney-General v. Pearce......2 Atk. 87..................51, 574, 670 Attorney-General v. Platt.......Cas. temp Finch 221.32, 51c, app. 12, 15 Attorney-General v. Price.......17 Ves. 371.......................... 51m Attorney-General v. Price.......3 Atk. 108..........51, 676, app. 9, 20 Attorney-General v. Rye.........2 Vern. 453. .7, 18, 51c, 51g, app. 12, 13 Attorney-General«. Smart........1 Ves. 72..................app. 9, 21 Attorney-General«. Stepney......10 Ves. 22............................app. 15 Attorney-General«. Stewart......2 Meriv. 143..........................app. 22 Attorney-General «. Syderfen....1 Vern. 224.. ..11, 51b, 51c, app. 11, 12 Attorney-General «. Tancred.....1 W. Bl. 90....................51e, 51g Attorney-General «. Utica Insurance Co.........................2 Johns. Ch. 371 ........676, app. 21 Attorney-General «. Wansay......15 Ves. 231...............51m, app. 20 Attorney-General «. Whitechurch. 3 Ves. 141...............51a, app. 15 Attorney-General «. Whittley....11 Ves. 241, 247...............app. 9 Attorney-General «. Wherwood.. .1 Ves. 534........................... 668 Aurora, The.....................1 Wheat. 96, 103.................... 444 Austin v. Halsey................6 Ves. jr. 475. .... * ........ 294 CASES CITED. ix •page Aylet v. Dodd..................2 Atk. 238....................... 6 Ayliff v. Tracy................2 P. Wins. 65..................... 92 B Babcock v. Weston..............1 Gall. 168...................... 212 Bailey v. Ogden................3 Johns. 399................86, 94, 98 Baker v. Wheaton...............5 Mass. 509...,..,............... 212 Ballantine v. Golding..........Co. Bank. L. 347................. 212 Ballard v. Walker..............3 Johns. Cas. 60................86, 94 Balford v. Lenthal.............2 Atk. 550. — .................app. 8 Baylis v. Attorney-General.....2 Atk. 239..................8, 21, 51c Beekman v. Frost................. 18 Johns. 566................. 485 Bender v. Fremberger...........4 Dall. 436...................... 232 Bennett v. Hull................10 Johns. 364..................... 89 Bergen v. Bennett..............1 Caines Cas. 1, 15.............. 700 Berkhampstead Free School......2 Ves. & B. 134 ................. 676 Bidleson v. Whytel.............3 Burr. 1548..................... 163 Binstead v. Coleman............Bunb. 65.......................... 93 Blackburn v. Gregson...........1 Bro. C. C. 420.............. 293 Bladsdale v. Babcock...........1 Johns. 517................. 232 Blanchard v. Russell...........13 Mass. 1.. .127, 129, 130, 134, 136, 212 Blenkinsop v. Clayton..........1 Moore 328..................... 91 Boggs v. Teackle...............5 Binn. 332...................... 212 Bond v. Kent...................2'Vern. 281................... 294-5 Box v. Bennet..................1 H. Bl. 432...................... 74 Boydell v. Drummond............11 East 142....................... 93 Bradford v. Farrand............13 Mass. 18........,............. 212 Brodie v. St. Paul.............1 Ves. jr. 433 .................90, 93 Brotherton v. Hatt.............2 Vern. 574. ...............472, 480—1 Brown v. Yeale.................1 Ves. 50 n.................8,23, 51h Buckland v. Fowcher............10 Co. 27, 28...............>.... 691 Buckmaster v. Harrop...........9 Ves. 341...................... 97 Burford v. Lenthall............2 Atk. 550.....51f, 51k, 511, app. 19, 20 Burrows v. Jemino..............2 Str. 733..................... 212 Burton v. Hinde................5 T. R. 174.................... 705 C Calder v. Bull.................3 Dall. 386.................558, 606-7 Call v. Haggerd................. .8 Mass. 423................... 134 Calvin’s Case..................7 Co. 27....................-.... 707 Campbell v. Radnor.............1 Bro. C. C. 171.,........51n, app. 18 Cary v. Abbot..................7 Ves. 490.........11, 51a, 51b, app. 11 Cator v. Bolingbroke...........1 Bro. C. C. 302................. 264 Champion v. Plummer............4 Bos. & Pul. 252...............85, 94 Chaplin v. Rogers..............1 East 195........................ 90 Chapman v. Tanner..............1 Vern. 267...................... 269 Chirac v. Chirac...............2 Wheat. 259.................... 180 Chitty v. Parker...............4 Bro. C. C. 38.................. 51m Christ’s College Case..........1 W. Bl. 90, 91.......4,11, 51c, app. 12 X CASES CITED. ♦PAGB Christ’s Hospital v. Hanes......Duke 317......................app. 13 Clark v. Wright.................1 Atk. 12........................ 92 Clarke v. Grant.................14 Ves. 524.................... 93 Clason v. Bailey................14 Johns. 484..................92, 94 Clayton v. Andrews..............4 Burr. 2101.................... 89 Clifford v. Francis.............1 Freem. 330..............51c, app. 12 Clina v. Cooke.........'........1 Sch. & Lef. 22................92-3 Colchester v. Lowten............1 Ves. & B. 226................ 676 Colchester, Mayor of, v. Seabet.... 3 Burr. 1866................ 614 Cole v. Scot....................2 Wash. 141....................271, 296 Coleman v. Upcott...............5 Vin. 527...................... 92 Coles v. Jones .................1 Vern. 692.................... 263 Coles v. Frecothick.............9 Ves. 234, 239, 250...........92, 95—7 Collison’s Case.................Hob. 136..............32, 51c, 51e, 51g, app. 13, 14 Colt v. Netterville.............2 P. Wms. 307.................... 89 Commonwealth v. Bird............12 Mass. 443.................... 605 Cooper v. Elston................7 T. R. 14.....................89, 90 Cooth v. Jackson................6 Ves. 39...................... 90 Coppin v. Coppin ...............2 P. Wms. 291............... 293 Corbyn v. French................4 Ves. 418..................... 51a Cotton v. Lee...................2 Bro. C. C. 564.............. 94 Coventry v. Attorney-General....7 Bro. P. C. 235............... 677 Cowell v. Simpson...............16 Ves. 276..................... 297 Cox v. Basset...................3 Ves. 155...................... 51h Crittenden v. Jones.............5 Hall L. J. 520..............134, 186 Cuff v. Penn ................... 1 M. & S. 21.................... 93 Curtis v. Hutton................14 Ves. 537...............51n, app. 18 D Daner’s Case....................Moore 872.................app. 13, 14 Dash v. Van Kleeck..............7 Johns. 477.................... 135 Davis v. Austen.................1 Ves. Jr. 247 ...............263, 274 De Costa v. De Pas...............Ambl. 228............11, 51b, app. 11 De Garcin v. Lawson.............4 Ves. jr. 433.................. 51o Del Col v. Arnold...............3 Dall. 233....................69, 70 De Lovio v. Boit................2 Gallis. 400, 468, 475......... 442 Divina Pastora, The.............4 Wheat. 52..................... 502 Donaldson v. Chambers...........2 Dall. 100..................... 212 Downing’s Case.. '............... Ambl. 592....................... 6 Downing College Case............Wilmot 1......................... 11 Duffield v. Scott...............3 T. R. 374..................... 232 Duroure v. Jones................4 T. R. 300..................... 461 E Eden v. Foster..................2 P. Wms. 325.................674, 676 Edinburgh v. Aubery.............Ambl. 236.............51m, 51n, app. 18 Edward, The......................1 Wheat. 261.................... 63 Eenroom, The....................5 Rob. 8.....••.................. 63 CASES CITED. xi ♦page Egerton v. Mathews..............6 East 307....................91-2, 94 Elliot v. Edwards...............3 Bos. & Pull. 181........264, 271, 295 Ellis v. Marshall...............2 Mass. 277...............560, 593, 709 Elxnore v. Stone................1 Taunt. 458...................... 90 Emmerson v. Heelis..............2 Taunt. 38....................... 97 Empson v. Bathurst..............Winch. 20, 50.................... 253 Estrella, The...................4 Wheat. 298..................... 502 Exchange, The...................7 Cr. 116.....................70, 395 Eyre v. Countess of Shaftesbury. .2 P. Wms. 119..........* * *. .4, 11, 51 F Falkland v. Bertie..............2 Vern. 342............12, 511, app. 19 Fama, The.......................5 Rob. 106 ...................... 253 Farmers’ and Mechanics’ Bank v. Smith ........................3 S. & R. 63...................136, 212 Fawell v. Heelis................Ambl. 724.....................270, 295 Fielding v. Bond................2 Vern. 230...................app. 16 Fletcher v. Peck................6 Cr. 89......259, 267, 590, 592, 606-8, 655, 682 Flood’s Case....................Hob. 136......................app. 14 Foltina, The....................1 Dods. 450..................... 253 Forth v. Stanton................1 Saund. 211................ 684 Fortuna, The....................1 Dods. 284 .................... 60 Fowler v. Freeman...............2 Ves. 351....................... 94 Franklin v. Esgood..............2 Johns. Cas. 1................. 699 Frier v. Peacock................1 Vern. 225, Cas. temp. Finch 245.. 11, 51b, app. 12 Frost v. Beekman................1 Johns. Ch. 288, 302.....264, 273, 485 G Garcia v. Lawson................4 Ves. jr. 433 ..............app. 18 Garson v. Green.................1 Johns. Ch. 308.............264, 293 Gelston v. Hoyt............... 3 Wheat. 324..................... 65 George, The......................1 Wheat. 408..................... 84 Georgerat v. McCarty............1 Dall. 366..................... 212 Gibbons v. Baddall...............2 Eq. Cas. Abr. 682............. 293 Glass v. The Betsy....... ......3 Dall. 6, 16.................... 66 Golden v. Prince................3 W. C. C. 313..........129* 134, 212 Gooch’s Case................... 5 Co. 60........................ 484 Grant v. Mills............... .2 Ves. & B. 306......264, 271, 296-7 Gray v. Portland Bank............2 Mass. 364 ................... 605 Green v. Liter..................8 Cr. 229, 245...............222, 267 Green v. Rutherforth............1 Ves. 462, 472.. .51k, 565-6, 571, 622, n , 675, app. 8 Greenough v. Emory....... . ,3 Dall. 370........................ 212 Groves v. Duck..................3 M. & S. 178................... 89 xii CASES CITED. H ♦pack Hamersley v. Lambert............2 Johns. Ch. 511.............. 212 Hamilton v. Cutts...............1 Mass. 353................... 232 Hannay v. J acobs...............MS............................. 135 Harden v. Fisher................1 Wheat. 300.................. 464 Harris v. Mandeville............2 Dall. 256................... 212 Harrison v. .Harrison...........8 Ves. 185.................... 95 Harrison v. Sterry..............5 Cr. 289, 301...............120-1 Hassels v. Simpson............ 1 Doug. 92.................. 140 Hatton v. Gray..................2 Johns. Ch. 164....*........... 94 Hayman v. Neal..................2 Camp. 337..................... 96 Heath v. Rose...................12 Johns. 140................. 470 Heister v. Fortner..............2 Binn. 40..................... 478 Hicks v. Brown..................12 Johns. 142................. 212 Hildreth v. Sands...............2 Johns. Ch. 35................ 474 Hilliard v. Greenleaf...........5 Binn. 336.................... 212 Hinde v. Whitehouse.............7 East 558...................90, 96-7 Hodgson v. Hutchinson...........5 Vin. 522...................... 92 Holmes v. Lansing...............3 Johns. Cas. 73........134, 190, 196 Hughes v. Kearney...............1 Sch. &Lef. 132. .264, 271,293, 295, 297 Huguenin v. Baseley.............14 Ves. 288.................... 474 Hunt v. Adamson.... ............5 Mass. 358 .................... 91 I Indiana, The................. .5 Rob. 44..................... 106 Inglee v. Coolidge..............2 Wheat. 363.................. 314 Inglis v. Sailors’Snug Harbor...3 Pet. 99...................... 51 Invincible, The.......... .1 Wheat. 238, 258 ; 2 Gallis. 29. .60, 68, 70, 73, 307 J Jackson v. Janson...............6 Johns. 73.................... 699 Jackson v. Pierce...............2 Johns. 22/4................... 90 James v. Allen.. ...............1 Dall. 188.................... 212 Jannor v. Harper................Prec. Ch. 389................app. 13 Jennings v. Mbore...............2 Vern. 609..................471, 480 Jones v. Shore..................1 Wheat. 462...................75-6 Jortin, Ex parte................7 Ves. 340...................app. 16 Joseph, The.....................8 Cr. 451..................... 104 Joynos v. Stratham..............3 Atk. 388..................... 93 K Keating v. Price................1 Johns. Cas. 22............... 93 Kelly v. Harrison...............2 Johns. Cas. 29............. 707 Kempland v. Macauley............ .4 T. R. 436................. 74 Kenson’s Case...................Hob. 136 ...;................ .app. 13 CASES CITED. xiii *PAGH Kent v. Huskinson..............3 Bos. & Pul. 233................. 90 King v. Askew..................4 Burr. 2200..................593, 708 King v. Bury...................1 Ld. Raym. 5.................... 672 King v. Miller.................6 #T. R. 277.................. 594 King v. Pasmore................3 T. R. 244.. .560, 593-4, 604, 613, 658, 663, 675, 688, 707 King v. St. Catherine’s Hall...4 T. R. 233...................567, 703 King v. Vice-Chancellor of Cam- bridge ......................3 Burr. 1656.............560, 592, 707 Kipp v. Bingham..........'.....6 Johns. 158..................... 232 Kirkby Ravensworth Hospital.___16 Ves. 304............51k, 676, app. 8 Knight v. Crockford............1 Esp. 190...................... 95 L Lamayne v. Stanley.............3 Lev. 1.......................... 95 Lawrenson v. Butler............1 Sch. & Lef. 13...............94, 96 Le Neve v. Le Neve.............Ambl. 438..............471-2, 474, 480 Leonard v. Vredenburg...........8 Johns. 29..................... 86 Lisette, The.................. 6 Rob. 387..................... 104 Livingston v. Van Ingen.........9 Johns. 572..................148-9 Lowther v. Carlton..............2 Atk. 139..................... 480 Lutterell’s Case...............4 Co. 87...............L......... 614 Lyle v. Ducomb.................5 Binn. 585...................... 479 M McDonough v. The Mary Ford.. .3 Dall. 188, 198.................. 68 Mackintosh v. Townsend.........16 Ves. 330..............51n, app. 18 Mackreth v. Symmons............15 Ves. 329........263-4, 275, 292-3-4 Man v. Ballet.......... »......1 Vern. 42....................app. 15 Martin v. Hunter...............1 Wheat. 304..................... 314 Martindale v. Martin...........Cro. Eliz. 288................... 51d Meres v. Ansell................3 Wils. 275....................... 93 Merrit v. Clason...............12 Johns. 102..................92, 96 Mertins v. Jolliffe............Ambl. 311........................ 263 Middleton’s Case...............Moore 889........................ 51g Millar v. Hall.................1 Dall. 229..................... 212 Mills v. Farmer................1 Meriv. 55,94.51a, 51b, 51h, 511, app. 4, 8, 10-13, 17, 20 Mines v. Stacey................1 Holt 153........................ 91 Mogg v. Hodges.................2 Ves. 52.....................app. 16 Moggridge v. Thackwell.........7 Ves. 36, 6’9, 1 Id. 464....4, 8, 10, 21,45, 46, 51a, 51b, 51h, 511, 51m, app. 4, 8, 10, 11, 15, 18, 19, 20, 22 Monell v. Lawson...............2 Eq. Cas. Abr. 167........... 13, 51m Moodie v. The Alfred...........3 Dall. 307................... 69 Moodie v. The Phoebe Anne...... 3 Dall. 319................... 69 Moore v. Hart..................1 Vern. 110..................... 92 Morice v. Bishop of Durham.....9 Ves. 399, 10 Id. 522... .7, 8, 9, 24, 45, 51c, 51h, app. 6, 7 XIV CASES CITED. ♦page Morison v. Tumour..............18 Ves. 175..................... 95 Murray v. Finster............. 2 Johns. Ch. 155.................. 485 Murray v. Lilburn.......... .2 Johns. Ch. 441.................. 274 Mussell v. Cooke...............Prep, in Ch. 533..................... 89 N Nairn v. Prowse................6 Ves. 752.......................293-4-5 Nancy, The.....................1 Rob. 14, 15....................... 106 Nason v. Thatcher..............7 Mass. 398......................... 705 Nelly, The.....................1 Rob. 219.......................... 101 New Jersey v. Wilson..’........7 Cr. 164................591, 606, 608 Newman v. Wallace..............2 Bro. C. C. 143 ................... 480 O Oliphant v. Hendrie............1 Bro. C. C. 571.....51m, 51n, app. 18 Ormond v. Anderson.............2 Ball & B. 370...................... 94 Owen v. Bean...................Cas. temp. Finch 395.....51c, app. 12 • p Paice v. Archbishop of Canterbury. 14 Ves. 364, 372.51b, 51c, 511,51m, app. 20 Parker v. Rule.................9 Cr. 64............................. 83 Parkhurst v. Van Cortlandt.....1 Johns. Ch. 273................... 93 Parteriche v. Powlet...........2 Atk. 383 .......................... 93 Partridge v. Walker............4 Co. 116......................... 51d Patton v. Easton...............4 Wheat. 476........................ 234 Pawlet v. Clark................9 Cr. 292.....................275, 695 Penniman v. Meigs..............9 Johns. 325........................ 212 Philips v. Bury................2 T. R. 346. .568,571,659, 668,670,674-5 Pickering v. Appleby...........Com. 354............................. 89 Pigot v. Penrice...............2 Eq. Cas. Abr. 191.............7, 19 Pollexfen v. Moore.............3 Atk. 272................. .264, 270 Porter’s Case..................1 Co. 22.......4, 8, 10, 23, 33> 5 Id, 668 Porter v. Brown................5 East 124.......................... 212 Powell v. Edmunds..............12 East 6............................ 93 Preston v. Merceau.............2 W. Bl. 1249........................ 93 Prince v. Bartlett.............8 Cr. 431.....................120, 145 Proctor v. Moore...............1 Mass. 198....................... 130 R Raymond v. Squire..............11 Johns. 47........................ 700 Reading v. Lane................Duke 81.......................... 51 Redfearn v. Ferrier............1 Dow. 50......................... 274 Rex v. Larwood.................Comb. 316........................... 707 Rex v. Watson..................2 T. R. 199......................... 676 Rich v. Jackson................4 Bro. C. C. 514..................... 93 Rivett’s Case..................Moore 890.7, 18, 51b, 51c, 51g, app. 12,13 Robinson v. Campbell...........3 Rob. 212............................ 5 Roget v. Merrit................2 Caines 117................... ■. 94 CASES CITED. xv *PAGK Rondeau v. Wyatt................2 H. Bl. 63,..................89, 96 Rose v. Cunningham..............1 Ves. 550............................ 92 Rose v. Himely..................4 Cr. 292............................... 65 Rucker v. Camay er..............1 Esp. 105............................. 96 Russell -y. Clarke..............7 Cr. 98.............................. 113 S Samuel, The.....................1 Wheat. 13.............................. 63 Saunderson y. Jackson...........2 Bos. & Pul. 236.......85, 92, 94-5 Schneider v. Norris.............2 M. & S. 286,.........................94-5 Searle v. Keeves................2 Esp. 598.............................. 90 Sears v. Brink..................3 Johns. 210............’................ 91 Seton v. Slade..................7 Ves. 265.............................. 94 Simon v. Motivos................3 Burr. 1921...........................96-7 Slingerland v. Morse............7 Johns. 463............................ 86 Smart v. Prugean................6 Ves. 567...............................app. 9 Smith v. Brown..................3 Binn. 201............................. 212 Smith v. Buchanan...............1 Esp. 6.....................130, 212 Smith y. Smith..................2 Johns. 235............................ 212 Smith v. Stowell................1 Ch. Cas. 195...............app. 14 Society for the Propagation of the Gospel y. Wheeler.............2 Gallis. 139................135, 577 St. Dunstan v. Beauchamp.......1 Ch. Cas. 193.........51e, 51k, app. 8 St. John’s College v. Todington.. .1 W. Bl. 84, 1 Burr. 200.. .566, 668, 674 Stapp v. Lill...................1 Camp. 242...................86, 92 Stead y. Course.................4 Cr. 403.............................. 82 Stevens y. The Sandwich.........1 Pet. Adm. 233 ....................... 442 Stokes v. Moore.................1 P. Wms. 771........................... 95 Story v. Ld. Winsor.............2 Atk. 630............-................. 473 Stuart y. Laird.................1 Cr. 299.............................. 166 Sturges y. Crowninshield........4 Wheat. 122............331, 355, 361 Susa, The.......................2 Rob. 255............................. 106 Sutton Hospital Case............10 Co. 1, 23......10, 25, 671, 675, 694 Symonds v. Ball.................8 T. R. 151...................85, 97 T Talbot y. Jansen................3 Dall. 159.............60, 61, 67, 71 Tai ver y. West.................1 Holt 175............................. 90 Tauney y. Crowther..............3 Bro. C. C. 191, 318........ 92 Tay y. Slaughter................Prec. Ch. 61.................app. 13 Taylor y. McDonald..............2 Bibb 420...................478, 485 Terasson’s Case.................Cooper Bank. L. 30, app.... 212 Terrett y. Taylor...............9 Cr. 43. .575, 591, 606, 609, 663, 695, 707 Thelusson y. Smith..............2 Wheat. 396, 424..........120-1, 145 Thetford School Case............8 Co. 130.................... ’ 5 Id Thirty Hogsheads of Sugar y. Boyle...........................9 Cr. 191...................... 253 Thomas Gibson, The..............8 Cr. 421............................... 101 xvi CASES CITED. ♦page Thompson v. Young.............1 Dall. 294..................... 212 Tourville v. Nash.............3 P. Wins. 307...............473, 484 Towers v. Osborne.............1 Str. 506....................... 89 Townsend, Marquis of, v. Stan- « groom.......................6 Ves. 328...................... 93 Tuffnell v. Page..............2 Atk. 37....................app. 13 Two Friends, The..............1 Rob. 283...................... 101 U United States v. Arnold.......1 Gallis. 348................... 253 United States v. Fisher.......2 Cr. 358, 390, 391, 395.....113, 119, 120-1, 145 United States v. Haywood......2 Gallis. 501.............•..... 253 United States v. Hooe.........3 Cr. 73, 90............113, 120-1, 145 United States v. Palmer.......3 Wheat. 610, 634, 635....59, 63, 302, 304, 502 United States v. Peters.......3 Dall. 121...................66, 70 United States v. Rice.........4 Wheat. 246.................... 395 United States v. Vowell.......5 Cr. 368....................... 253 pniversity v. Foy.............2 Hayw. 310.-................. 575 V Van Raugh v. Van Arsdaln......3 Caines 154.................... 212 Van Reimsdyke v. Kane.........1 Gallis. 371................... 212 W Wain v. Warlters..............5 East 10..................85, 91, 93 Walden v. Gratz...............1 Wheat. 292.................... 224 Wales v. Stetson..............2 Mass. 143, 146................ 708 Waldo v. Caley................16 Ves. 216.............51m, app. 20 Walker v. Constable...........1 Bos. & Pul. 306................ 97 Waller v. Childs..............Ambl. 524......................... 6 Walsh v. Farrand............... .13 Mass. 19.................. 212 Walsh v. Whitcomb.............2 Esp. 565...................... 700 Wankford v. Fottherly.........2 Vern. 322.................... 92 Warren v. Stagg...............3 T. R. 591...................... 93 Warwick v. Warwick............3 Atk. 291, 294............... 480 Welford v. Beazeley...........3 Atk. 503....................92, 95 Weller v. Foundling Hospital.... Peake 154 ................612, 704 West v. Knight................1 Ch. Cas. 134, 135. .51b, 51c, app. 8, 12 Western v. Russell............3 Ves. & B. 192.........•......... 94 White v. Proctor..............4 Taunt. 208..................... 97 White v. White................. .1 Bro. C. C. 12, 15..4, 5, 8, 12, 44, 51a, app. 10, 12 Widmore v. Woodroffe..........Ambl. 636, 640..............7, 15, 51e Woodruff v. The Levi Dearborne. .4 Hall L. J. 97.............. 442 CASES CITED. xvii ♦page Woodlam v. Hearn............7 Ves. 211.................. 94 Wright v. Dannah............2 Camp. 203.................... 98 \ Wright v. Wakefield...*.....17 Ves. 454... *.**. ........ 95 Y Young v. Bank of Alexandria.... 4 Cr. 384............ 245 4 Wheat.—B CASES DETERMINED IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES. FEBRUARY TERM, 1819. Trustees of the Philadelphia Baptist Association et al. v. Hart’s Executors.1 Charitable uses. In the year 1790, S. H., a citizen of Virginia, made his last will, containing the following bequest : “ Item, what shall remain of my military eertif&ares, at the time of my decease, both principal and interest, I give and beqmf^th to the Baptist Association that, for ordinary, meets at Philadelphia, annually, which to be a fir^etual fund for the education of youths of the Baptist denomination, who rfydl appearrffomising for the ministry, always giving a preference to the descendants of np^father’s farkity.” In 1792, the legislature of Virginia, passed an act repealing all English statutes ; in^9o, the tesUtor died. The Baptist Association in question had existed as a regularly organized bods^Jibr many years before the date of his will; and in 1797, was incorporated b^Ke legislative of Pennsylvania, by the name of “ The Trustees of the Philadelphia Baptis^Association.” Held, that the Association, irot being incorporated at the testator’s decease, could not take this trust, as a society. «21 *That the bequest could not be taken by the individuals who composed the Association at the death of the testator. That there were no persons to whom this legacy, were it not a charity, could be decreed. And that it could not be sustained, in this court, as a charity. Charitable bequests, where no legal interest is vested, and which are too vague to be claimed by those for whom the beneficial interest was extended, cannot be established by a court of equity, either exercising its ordinary jurisdiction, or enforcing the prerogative of the king as parens patrice, independent of the statute 43 Eliz. If, in England, the prerogative of the king, as parens patrice, would, independent of the statute of Elizabeth, extend to charitable bequests of this description : Qucere ? How far this principle would govern in the courts of the United States ? Held, that it was unnecessary to enter into this inquiry, because it could only arise where the attorney-general is made a party. In the year 1790, Silas Hart, a citizen and resident of Virginia, made his last will in writing, which contains the following bequest: “ Item, what shall remain of my military certificates, at the time of my decease, both This case was practically overruled in Vidal y. Girard’s Executors, 2 How. 127; for though it is there stated to have been decided upon the 4 Wheat.—1 local law of Virginia, where the English statute of 43 Eliz., ch. 4, was not in force, yet the? court came to the conclusion, in the latter ease, that 1 2 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. principal and interest, I give and bequeath to the Baptist Association that, for ordinary, meets at Philadelphia, annually, which I allow to be a perpetual fund for the education of youths of the Baptist denomination, who shall appear promising for the ministry, always giving a preference to the descendants of my father’s family.” In 1792, the legislature of Virginia passed an act, repealing all English statutes, including that of the 43 Eliz., c. 4. In the year 1795, the testator died. The Baptist Association which met annually at Philadelphia, had existed as a regularly organized body, for many years before the date of this will, and was composed of the clergy of several Baptist churches, of different * , states, and of an annual deputation of laymen from *the same churches. ' J It was not incorporated, until the year 1797, when it received a charter from the legislature of Pennsylvania, incorporating it by the name of “ The Trustees of the Philadelphia Baptist Association.” The executors having refused to pay the legacy, this suit was instituted in the circuit court for the district of Virginia, by the corporation, and by those individuals who were members of the association at the death of the testator. On the trial of the cause, the judges of that court were divided in opinion, on the question, whether the plaintiffs were capable of taking under this will ? Which point was, therefore, certified to this court. The Attorney- General, for the plaintiffs, argued, that the peculiar law of charitable bequests did not originate in the statute of the 43 Eliz., which was repealed in Virginia, before the death of the testator. If lands had been conveyed in trust, previous to the statute, for such purposes as are expressed in this will, the devise would have been held good at law; and consequently, the court of chancery would have enforced the trust, in virtue of its general equity powers, independent of that statute. The statute does not profess to give any validity to devises or legacies of any description, not before valid ; but only furnishes a new and more convenient mode for discovering and enforcing them ; but the case before the court is such as requires the interposition only of the ordinary powers of a court of equity. Devises equally vague and indefinite, have been sustained in courts of com-$ _ mon law, before the statute of Elizabeth, *and would, d fortiori, J have been supported in courts of equity. Porter's Case, 1 Co. 22 b ; Plowd. 522. And the court of chancery, exercising the prerogative of the king as parens patriae, has been constantly in the habit of establishing charitable bequest^ .of this nature. “ In like manner,” says Lord Chancellor the jurisdiction of the chancery over charitable uses was not derived from the statute, it appearing from the publication of the ancient English records, to have been exercised, in many cases, long before the statute was passed ; and, of course, the argument derived from the repeal of all English statutes by the legislature of Virginia, fell to the ground. See Fontain v. Ravenel, 17 How, 394. In Perin v. Carey, 24 Ibid, 501, the court admitted, that whatever doubts on that subject had been expressed in the Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors, they had been removed by later and more satisfactory 2 sources of information. So also in Kain v. Gibboney, 101 U. S. 367, Mr. Justice Strong, says, that “ trusts for charitable uses are not dependent for their support upon that statute; before its enactment, they had been sustained by the English chancellors, in virtue of their general equity powers, in numerous cases, and generally, in this country, it has been settled, that courts of equity have an original and inherent jurisdiction over charities, though the English statute is not in force, and independent of it.” This, however, is not the law of Virginia. Ibid. 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 4 Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. Macclesfield, “ in the case of charity, the king, pro bono publico, has an original right to superintend the case thereof, so that, abstracted from the statute of Eliz., relating to charitable uses, and antecedent to it, as well as since, it has been every day’s practice, to file informations in chancery, in the attorney-general’s name, for the establishment of charities.” Eyre n. Countess of Shaftsbury, 2 P. Wins. 119. So also, Lord Keeper Henley says, “ and I take the uniform rule of this court, before, at, and after the statute of Elizabeth, to have been, that where the uses are charitable, and the person has in himself full power to convey, the court will aid a defective conveyance to such uses. Thus, though devises to corporations were void under the statute Hen. VIII., yet they were always considered as good in equity, if given to charitable uses.” Case of Christ?s College, Cambridge, 1 W. Black. 91. The powers of the court of chancery over these subjects, are derived from, and exercised according to the civil law. 3 Bl. Com. 476 ; White n. White, 1 Bro. C. C. 15 ; Moggridge v. Thackwell, 7 Ves. 36. Lord Thurlow says, “ the cases have proceeded upon notions adopted from the Roman and civil law, which are very favorable to charities, that legacies given to public uses, not ascertained, shall be applied to some *proper object.” White v. White, 1 Bro. C. C. 15. By that law, bequests for charit-able purposes, adpios usos, are not void for uncertainty. Swinb. pt. 1, § 16 ; pt. 7, § 8. But even supposing all the powers of the English court of chancery over charities to have been originally derived from the statute of Elizabeth, still it does not follow, that the courts of the United States have not all the powers which the English courts of equity possessed, when this country was separated from the British empire. The chancery system originated in various sources ; in the peculiar jurisprudence of the court, which may be denominated its common law ; in statutes ; and in the authority of the chancellor, as keeper of the king’s conscience. It is difficult to find any chancery decisions wholly purified from the influence of statutory provisions. The grant of equity powers in the constitution, to the national judiciary, extends “ to all cases in equity.” It is not limited to those cases which arise under the ordinary jurisdiction of the court of chancery. This is not a question of local law, nor can the equity jurisdiction of the United States courts depend upon the enactment or repeal of local statutes. This court has already determined, that the remedies in the court of the United States, in equity, are to be, not according to the practice of state courts, but according to the principles of equity as known and practised in that country from which we derive a knowledge of those principles. Robinson v. Campbell, 3 Wheat. 212. In England, this bequest would, unquestionably, be sustained. The association, which was *the object of the r testator’s bounty, though unincorporated at the time, was certainly as *-definite a body as the “sixty pious ejected ministers,” in one case (Attorney-General v. Baxter, 1 Vern. 248 ; Attorney-General v. Hughes, 2 Ibid. 105), or, “ the charitable collections for poor dissenting ministers living in any county in England,” in another. Waller v. Childs, Amb. 524. Nor was it necessary that they should be incorporated, in order to take. A devise by an impropriator, directly “ to one who served the cure, and all who should serve it after him,” &c., has been carried into effect. Anon., 2 Vent. 349. So, if the devise be to a charitable use, though the object be not in esse, and ’though it depend on the will of the crown, whether it shall ever be called 3 6 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. into existence, equity will establish it. Lady Downing's case, Airibl. 592 ; AyletN. Dodd, 2 Atk. 238 ; Attorney-General v. Oglander, 3 Bro. C. C. 166 ; Attorney-General n. Bowyer, 3 Ves. jr. 725. Leigh, contra, contended, that the association could not take the bequest, either in their individual or in their collective capacity. Not as individuals ; because the persons composing the association were continually fluctuating, and were not designated, nor indeed known, at the time of the bequest. No personal benefit was intended to them. The testator’s intent was, to constitute the association, in its collective capacity, trustee of the fund, for this charitable purpose ; and whether the trust can be carried into sj-H-i effect or not, they cannot take individually *to their own use. ALor-J ice n. Bishop of Durham, 9 Ves. 399 ; s. c. 10 Ibid. 522. Nor can they so take in their collective capacity, because not incorporated at the time: and the subsequent incorporation does not help their case. 8 Vin. Abr. tit. Devise H. pl. 1 ; Widmore v. Woodroffe, Ambl. 636. Therefore, this is to be regarded as a bequest to charitable uses, without the intervention of trustees to take the legal estate and fulfil the uses. According to the law of Virginia, which must govern in this case, such a trust cannot be carried into effect by any court in any mode. Had such a case occurred in England, it is admitted, that the court of chancery would carry the trust into effect, by supplying legal and capable trustees, to take and hold the fund for the objects of the testator’s charity ; or, if those objects were not designated in the testator’s will with sufficient certainty, would execute it, upon the doctrine of cy pres, for objects egusdem generis, according to a scheme digested by the master. But the court of chancery in England exercises such powers solely in virtue of the statute of the 43 Eliz. All ancient precedents of the exercise of such powers, to effect such charitable uses, are expressly stated to be founded on that statute. Attorney-General v. Bye, 2 Vern. 453 ; BiveWs case, Moor 890 ; Pigot v. Penrice, 2 Eq. Cas. Abr. 191, pl. 6 ; Attorney-General n. Hickman, Ibid. 193, pl. 14. As all the early decisions are founded on the statute, so the more modern cases are founded on the authority of the ancient; with this only extension * n of their principle, that although the statute merely provides that J *charitable donations shall be applied to such of the charitable uses therein expressed, for which they were appointed by the donors or founders, the court of chancery has gone a step farther, and held, upon the equity of the statute, that where objects of charity are in any way pointed out, however vaguely and indefinitely, the court will apply the fund to charitable uses of the same kind with those intended by the donor, according to a scheme digested by the master. Baylis n. Attorney-General, 2 Atk. 239 ; White v. White, 1 Bro. C. C. 12 ; ALoggridge v. Thackwell, 3 Ibid. 517, s. c. 1 Ves. jr. 464 ; s. c. 7 Ibid. 36. All the elementary writers and compilers concur in deducing the jurisdiction of the English court of chancery over charitable bequests from the statute of Eliz. ; tracing all the powers of the court, as a court of equity, over this subject, to that source ; its liberality and favor toward charitable donations ; its practice of supplying all the defects of conveyances to charitable uses ; of substituting trustees where those named by the donor fail, before the vesting of the legal estate ; and of taking on itself the execution of the trust, where incapable, or no trustees 4 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 8 Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors., are appointed by the donors. 2 Bl. Com. 376 ; 2 Fonbl. Eq. 213 ; Roberts on Wills 213, 214 ; 1 Bac. Abr., tit. Ch. Uses ; 5 Vin. Abr. same tit. ; 1 Burn’s Eccles. Law, same tit. Indeed, no donation is considered in England as a donation to charitable uses, unless for such uses as are enumerated in he statute of Eliz., or such as are analogous. Attorney- General v. Hewer, 2 Vern. 387 ; Brown n. Yeale, 7 Ves. 50, note c ; Morice n. Bishop of Durham, 9 Ibid. 399 ; s. c. 10 Ibid. 540. The very signification of *the words charity and charitable use are derived from that statute. In L the case last cited, Sir W. Grant said, “ In this court, the signification of charity is derived principally from the statute of Elizabeth. Those purposes are considered charitable which that statute enumerates, or which, by analogies, are deemed within its spirit and intendment.” Morice v. Bishop of Durham, 9 Ves. 399. Lord Eldon, in rehearing the same case, confirms the doctrine. “ I say, with the master of the rolls, a case has not yet been decided, in which the court has executed a charitable purpose, unless the will contains a description of that which the law acknowledges to be a charitable purpose, or devotes the property to purposes of charity in general.” s. c. 10 Ves. 540. In a previous case, Lord Loughborough had said, “It does not appear that the court, before that period (the 43 Eliz.), had cognisance of informations for the establishment of charities. Prior to the time of Lord Ellesmere, so far as tradition in times immediately following goes, there were no such informations, but they made out the case as well as they could at law.” Attorney-General v. Bowyer, 3 Ves. 726. The repeal of the English statute of charitable uses by the legislature of Virginia, must be considered as almost, if not entirely, repealing that whole head of equity. The effect of this repeal may be estimated, by recurring to the history of the system of equitable jurisprudence. Every part of that system has been built up since the 43d year of Elizabeth, and there is not a single chancery case, touching charitable bequests, prior to the *stat- p10 ute of that year. The court is then driven to ascertain, either the *• common-law method of effecting charitable uses, or the jurisdiction of the English chancery, independent of the statute. Lord Loughborough says, that it had no jurisdiction whatever of the matter, before the statute, and that they made out the case as well as they could at law ; and he instances certain cases. Porter's Case, 1 Co. 23 ; Sutton Hospital Case, 10 Ibid. 1. The jurisdiction of the court of chancery, in England, abstracted from, and independent of, the statute of the 43* Eliz., may be inferred from the course of the court, in cases where the donors of charities, failing to point out any object -of charity, or designating improper, impolitic or illegal objects, the statute gives the court no authority to direct the charity to any definite purpose. In all such cases, the disposition of the funds belongs to the king, as parens patrice, and is made by him under his sign manual. In Moggridge V. Thackwell, 7 Ves. 36, Lord Eldon, after reviewing all the cases (acknowledging that they conflicted with each other, and that his own mind was perplexed with doubts), came to this general conclusion, which he deemed the most reconcilable to authorities ; that when the execution of the trust for a charity is to be by a trustee, with general, or some, objects pointed out, there the court will take upon itself the execution of the trust: but where there is a general indefinite purpose, not fixing itself on any object, the disposition is to be made by the king’s sign manual. A due attention to 5 »11 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. *tbe' cases there collected by Lord Eldon, will show that the first class of cases are those over which the statute of the 43 Eliz. gives the court a jurisdiction, and which it will consequently exercise ; and that the second class consists of those which belong to its jurisdiction, abstracted and independent of the statute, and in which the disposition belongs to the king. Attorney- General v. Syderfen, 1 Vern. 224 ; Frier v. Peacock, there cited ; Attorney-General v. Herrick, Ambl. 712. So, if the donation be to a charitable use, but one which is deemed unlawful or impolitic, the disposition belongs to the king. Attorney-General v. Baxter, 1 Vern. 248 ; De Costa n. De Pas, Ambl. 228 ; Caryv. Abbott, 1 Ves. 490. And were it not for the statute, all charitable donations, whatever, would be subject to the disposition of the king, as parens patrice. It is true, there are some dicta, which, at first sight, seem to support a different doctrine. Such is that of Lord Keeper Henley, in tlje case of Christ's College, 1 W. Black. 91. But this dictum is directly contradicted by Lord Loughborough, in the Attorney-General v. Bowyer, 3 Ves. 726. Lord Keeper Henley cites no authority for,this dictum ; but Lord Chief Justice Wilmot having, in the case of Downing College (Wilm. Notes 1), said something of the same kind, cites the authority which, doubtless, Lord Keeper Hunley had in his mind, which is what fell from Lord Macclesfield, in Eyre v. The Countess of Shaftsbury. “And in like manner, in case of charity, the king, pro bono publico, has an original *right to super- J intend the care thereof; so that, abstracted from the statute of Elizabeth relating to charitable uses, and antecedent to it, as well as since, it has been every day’s practice to file an information in chancery, in the name of the attorney general, for the establishment of charities.” 2 P. Wms. 118-19. Whence it appears, that the information which might be filed in the attorney-general’s name, for the establishment of charities, abstracted from, and independent of, the statute, related to such as depended on the disposition of the king as parens patriae. This explanation is corroborated by what is said by Lord Somers, in the case of Lord Falkland, v. Bertie, 2 Vern. 342. Lord Thurlow’s dictum, in White v. White (1 Bro. C. C. 15), that “ the cases had proceeded on notions derived from the Roman and civil law,” cannot be construed to extend to the entire adoption of the civil law on charities. By the civil law, if a man make a will containing a charitable bequest, and afterwards cancel the will, the bequest to charity is not thereby revoked. It is otherwise by the law of England. So, in case of a deficiency of assets, the civil law gave a preference to charitable legacies ; but in the English court of chancery, they abate in proportion. Attorney- General v. Hudson, 1 Coxe’s P. Wms. 675, and note. The conclusion, then, is, that in every case of charty, wherein the English. court of chancery has not jurisdiction to direct the application of the * »charity, either by the words or the equity of the statute 43 Eliz., the J disposition belongs to the king, as parens patriae, and the court of chancery is only resorted to, in order to enforce his disposition. That statute being repealed in Virginia, and no similar one enacted in that state, the disposition of all charitable donations is in the parens patriae of Virginia. The courts of the United States cannot direct this charity, or carry it into effect. It is the government of Virginia which is the parens patriae of that state. At the revolution, all the rights of the crown devolved on the common- 6 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 13 Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. wealth ; and still remain in the commonwealth, except such as are delegated to the United States by the national constitution. But none of the rights that appertain to the state government, as parens patriae, are delegated to the United States. Can this, or any other court of the United States, pretend to the care or guardianship of infants, lunatics and idiots ? If not, neither can they undertake the direction of a charity, which stands on the same footing as belonging to that government which is parens patriae. Even, therefore, if it were admitted, that the court of chancery of Virginia could carry this bequest to charitable uses into effect, the courts of the United States cannot. Another objection to the jurisdiction of those courts is, that the attorneygeneral (that is, of Virginia) representing the parens patriae, must be made a party. Mitf. Plead. 7, 93 ; Cooper’s Plead. 219 ; Anon., 3 Atk. 277 ; 2 Ibid. 87 ; ALonell v. Lawson, 1 Eq. Cas. Abr. 167 ; Attorney- General v. Hewett, 9 Ves. 432. But *to make the attorney-general of Virginia, „ that is, the state of Virginia, a party defendant, would be contrary to *-the constitution of the United States. There is a further, and an insurmountable objection to the jurisdiction of the United States courts in cases of charity, where there is no trustee appointed, or (which is the same thing) unascertain able and incapable trustees are appointed. If not the *whole jurisdiction of the English court of chancery, at least so much of it as is abstracted from, and independent of, the statute 43 Eliz., belongs neither to its ordinary nor extraordinary jurisdiction, but to the Lord Chancellor personally, as delegate to the king. But by the constitution and laws of the United States, the only branch of the English chancery jurisdiction which is vested in the courts of the United States, is the ordinary or equity jurisdiction of the court of chancery in England. Finally, it is impossible to give effect to this charity in any mode. Not only are the trustees uncertain and unascertainable, but the objects of the charity are also uncertain, and not ascertainable by this court. The very idea of the court attempting to execute the trust, cy pres, and referring it to the master to digest a scheme for that purpose, is absurd and impracticable. The Attorney- General, in reply, insisted, that if it were necessary to show the capacity of the plaintiffs as trustees, it could be done. Id certum est quod certum reddi potest: and the court might direct the money to be paid to those who constituted the association at *the time of the be- [*15 quest. But this association was incorporated shortly after the death *-of the testator ; and it is sufficient to support the charity, that its objects may be in esse. The first of the two cases, cited to show that the devise must take effect at the time, or not at all, was a devise of lands to the priests of a chantry or college in the church of A.; and there were none such, neither chantry, college nor priests. 8 Vin. Abr. tit. Devise, H. But suppose there had been, as in the case now before the court, would their want of a corporate character have defeated the devise ? But this case is entirely inapplicable. The objects designated did not exist, even under the description which the testator used. Nor did they exist, at the time of the decision, so as to present the question as to the efficacy of the devise in that respect ; and all that the court said upon this subject, must be regarded as extrajudicial The whole question was on a devise of lands, on the rigid rules 7 15 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. of the common law. The case of Widmore v. Woodroffe, Ambl. 63d, was a bequest of money to the corporation of Queen Anne’s Bounty to augment poor vicarages, which was held to be void by the statute of mortmain, as the corporation were bound by their rules to lay out their donations in lands. It does not touch the question, whether a devise of a charity must take effect at the death of the testator, or not at all. But if the court should think, that the Baptist Association were incapable of taking, as trustees, at the death of the testator, and that there must be some person then in esse, to hold the legal estate, the *executors will be considered, by a court of -* equity, as trustees, whether so named or not. 1 Bridg. Index 761. So also, the court will regard the heir as a trustee for the same purpose. 2 Ibid. 607. The case of the Attorney- General n. Bowyer, was decided on this very principle. The law had thrown the legal title on the heir, but he was held responsible for the intermediate profits, in the imputed character of a trustee. 3 Ves. 726. The position, that the English court of chancery derives the jurisdiction now in question from the statute of Eliz., is denied. The title of the act is, “ Commissioners authorized to inquire of misemployment of lands or goods, given to hospitals, &c., which, by their orders, shall be reformed.” The preamble recites, that whereas, lands, &c., had been theretofore given, limited, appointed and assigned, to various objects which are specified, which lands, &c., had not been employed “ according to the charitable intent of the givers and founders thereof, by reason of frauds, breaches of trust, and negligence in those that should pay, deliver and employ the same.” It is clear, from this preamble, that no new validity was intended to be given to these donations. Their previous validity is admitted ; and the mischief was, that they had been defeated by the frauds, breaches of trust, and negligence of those who should have paid them. Frauds and breaches of trust were, at this time, known heads of the equitable jurisdiction of the court of chan- H-i eery ; but the statute proceeds to provide a new remedy for *the J mischief announced in the preamble. This is the appointment of commissioners, with powers to institute an inquisition to detect the frauds which had been practised ; authorizing the commissioners, conformable to the title of the act, to make orders to carry the intention of the donor into effect ; and allowing the party injured by such orders, to complain to the chancellor for an alteration or reversal of such orders. Even supposing the statute did profess to confer on the court of chancery a new jurisdiction, it is merely an appellate jurisdiction from the decrees of the commissioners ; and this appeal is given to one party only, he who is charged with the fraud. So that, it is neither an original jurisdiction, nor is it a jurisdiction to enforce a charitable trust. The eighth and ninth sections of the act direct the commissioners to certify their decrees into the high court of chancery of England, and the chancery of the Palatinate of Lancaster, and direct the chancellors to take such order for the due execution of the decrees (of the commissioners) as to them shall seem fit and convenient. This is not a power to make a decree, but to execute the decrees made by the commissioners. Thé 10th section reiterates the appellate power of the chancellor, recognised by the 1st section. The only principles the 10th section prescribes for the regulation of the chancellor on these appeals, are so far from being new to 8 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 17 Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. the court, that they have existed ever since its equitable jurisdiction commenced. If, then, the jurisdiction of the court of chancery over charitable bequests cannot be derived from the letter of the statute of Eliz., can it be supported *from ancient adjudged cases, interpretative of that statute ? Even if it could, this would be but a frail support ; because the court of L chancery was then in the infancy of its existence, and grasping at everything to enlarge that jurisdiction, which time and usage have since consecrated ; and because, if its jurisdiction to enforce a charity by original bill, is to depend upon the statute, it has been shown from the statute itself, that it cannot be sustained. But the adjudged cases do not support the position, that the jurisdiction of the court over charities is derived from the statute. It is necessary, however, to distinguish between the two questions, whether a particular charity is within the statute? and whether the original jurisdiction of the court of chancery is derived from thè statute ? The first question properly arises, where the commissioners have acted, and the court is reviewing their decree in its appellate character. As the commissioners derive their whole authority from the statute, and are, therefore, confined to the cases enumerated in it, the first question, upon the threshold of thé appeal, is, whether the case on which they have acted, be within the statute. Of this description are the cases cited on the other side, as being the ancient cases upon the authority of which the modern cases have been decided. The cases of the Attorney- (renerai v. Rye, 2 Vern. 453, and Rivett's Case, Moor 890, are expressly stated by the reporters to have come before the chancellor on exceptions to the orders of the *commissioners. Pig got v. Pen- r*. q rice, 2 Eq. Cas. Abr. 191, is given by the editor on the authority of L another reporter. Gilb. Eq. Rep. 137. On looking into the original report, it will be seen, that the question of the statute was not involved in case as it stood before the Chancellor. The only questions before him were, 1st. Whether any estate in lands passed to an executor by the words, “ I made my niece Gore, since married to Sir Henry Penrice, executrix of all my goods, lands and chattels”? and 2d. What writing would amount to a revocation of a will ? At the end of the report, there is a note in these words: “ Note, the testatrix, by her second will, gave part of these lands to charitable uses, and they were decreed, at the rolls, to be good, as an appointment upon the act of parliament, notwithstanding there was no revocation ; but that point was not now in question.” (Ibid.) How this question came before the Master of the Rolls does not appear ; but all that is, decided is, that the charity is within the statute, which leaves the question of the original jurisdiction of the court over charities untouched. The last ancient case cited is that of the Attorney- General v. Hickman, • 2 Eq. Cas. Abr. 193. A testator gave his estate to B. and his heirs, &c., by a will duly executed ; and by a codicil, not attested by three witnesses, declared the use in these words : “ I would have the same employed for the encouraging such non-conformist ministers as preach God’s word, and in places where the people are not able to allow them a sufficient maintenance ; and for encouraging the *bringing up some to the work of the min-istry who are designed to labor in God’s vineyard among the dissent- *-ers. The particular method how to dispose of it, I prescribe not, but leave to their discretion, designing you (B.) to take advice of C. and D.” This 9 20 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. bequest, analogous to that now before the court, though much more vague and general, was confirmed, and the money decreed to be distributed immediately, and not made a perpetual charity. But nothing is said of the statute of Elizabeth, either in the argument, or in the opinion of the court. The question was, whether B., and his testamentary advisers, C. and D., having all died before the testatator, the court could supply trustees. The counsel who contended for this power in the court, supported it, not by the statute, but by the general authority of the court ; instancing a legacy bequeathed in trust, and the death of the trustee, which, in equity, would not defeat the bequest. The court sustained its authority, without assigning any particular ground ; and it may, therefore, be fairly inferred, that the court adopted the ground assumed in the argument. The case is cited from a manuscript report, and another note of the case, in the margin, goes no further than to say, that it was considered as being within the description of the statute of Elizabeth, but does not profess to found the power of the court over the case upon that statute. Nor do’the cases cited to show that the power of the court to give effect to a vague devise, by the rule of cy pres, is founded upon the statute, support ’ , that position. In the case of Baylis v. * The Attorney- General (2 J Atk. 239), 200Z. were given under the will of Mr. Church, “ to the ward of Bread street, according to Mr.---, his will.” Lord Hardwicke, after rejecting testimony to fill the blank, proceeds thus : “ Though the aiderman and inhabitants of a ward are not, in point of law, a corporation, yet, as they have made the attorney-general a party, in order to support and sustain the charity, I can make a decree that the money may, from time to time, be disposed of in such charities as the aiderman, for the time being, and the principal inhabitants, shall think the most beneficial to the ward.” Nothing is said of the statute ; and the circumstance of making the attorney-general a party points rather to the exercise of the king’s prerogative, as parens patriae, which is independent of the statute. In White v. White, 1 Bro. C. C. 12, the testator bequeathed one moiety of the residue of his personal estate to the Foundling, and the other to the Lying-in-Hospital, and if there should be more than one of the latter, then to such of them as his executors should appoint. The testator struck out the name of his executor, and never appointed another. Lord Thurlow held, that this was no revocation of the legacy, and referred it to a master, to which of the lying-inhospitals it should be paid ; but he does not countenance the idea of the power thus exercised by him being derived from the statute of Eliz. On the contrary, he refers it to notions derived from the Roman and civil law. JMoggridge v. Thackwell, 3 Bro. C. C. 517, was a gift of a residue to * I. Vaston, *to such charitable uses as he should appoint, but recom- J mending poor clergymen with large families and good characters ; I. V. died in the testator’s lifetime. The charity was sustained and executed by the court ; but there is no allusion to the statute in the opinion of Lord Eld. n. He says : “Vaston, if alive, could not claim this property for his own use. All the rules, both of the civil and common law, would repel him from taking the property in that way. This reduces it to the common case • of the death of a trustee, which cannot defeat the effect of a legacy.” The second report of the same case does not vary the ground taken by the court. 1 Ves. jr. 464. In the report of the case, on the rehearing, all the cases are 10 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 22 Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. collated, yet nothing is delivered at the bar, or from the bench, referring the power of the court to the statute of Eliz. 7 Ves. 36. Lord Eldon, speaking of former decisions, says : “ In what the doctrine (of cy pres) originated, whether as supposed by Lord Thurlow, in White and White, in the principles of the civil law as applied to charities, or in the religious notions entertained in this country, I know not.” Ibid. 69. A strange doubt, if the doctrine originated in the statute ! Nor are the elementary writers and compilers understood as deducing the jurisdiction from the statute. Blackstone, who is cited for this purpose, is treating of a different subject in the passage of his commentaries referred to. 2 Bl. Com. 376. Having stated in a preceding page, that corporations were excepted from the statutes of wills of 32 Hen. VIII., c. 1., and 34 Hen. VIII., c. 5, he says, in the page cited, that the statute *of 43 Eliz., c. 4, is considered as having * repealed that of Hen. VIII., so far as to admit a devise to a corpora- *• tion for a charitable use ; he then speaks of the liberal construction which had been given to devises under this statute, by force of the word appointment ; but does not even insinuate that it was the origin of the chancery jurisdiction. All the other elementary writers and compilers cited are equally remote from proving the position assumed. Their remarks are directed to the liberal construction put upon the word appoint, under the statute of Eliz. ; but the principles to be extracted from all the cases cited by them are the principles of the civil law, by which the court had been guided, antecedent to, and independent of, the statute. The Attorney- General v. Her er, 2 Vern. 387, which is cited to prove that no donation is considered in England as a charitable donation, unless for the uses enumerated in the statute, or for analagous uses, was a devise to a school; and the lord keeper decided, that not being a free school, the charity was not within the statute, and consequently the inhabitants had not a right to sue in the name of the attorney-general. This is a very different position from that which the case was cited to prove ; and it is an unfounded position : for the statute authorizes no proceeding in the name of the attorney-general; and it is admitted, that the attorney-general might, and had, informed in the name of the king as parens patriae previous to, and independent of, the statute. Brown v. Yeale is merely stated in a note, and settles nothing. 7 Ves. 50, note a. It is true, the *statute of r# Eliz., having enumerated charities, gave a new technical name to a L portion of the uses and trusts recognised by the civil law. It is this idea which the master of the rolls pursues in Morice v. The Bishop of Durham, 9 Ves. 399. The trust before the court was for such objects of benevolence and liberality, as her executor, in his own discretion, should most approve of. Sir W. Grant determined, that this was not within the description of charitable trusts under the statute : that purposes of liberality and benevolence do not necessarily mean the same as objects of charity. With regard to charities, he says, that it had been settled upon authorities which it was too late to controvert, that they should not fail on account of their generality, but that in some cases, their particular application should be directed by the king, and in others by the court. But he does not say that the king or the court derived this power of direction from the statute. The statute is looked at, to see if the bequest be a charity within it; but the powers of control and direction in the king and the court are derived 11 24 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. from the original respective authority of the one, as parens patriot, and of the other, as a court of equity. It is admitted, by the clearest implication, that although the bequest was not a charity within the statute, yet if any definite object had been indicated by the will for which the money could have been decreed, it would have been so decreed. On the rehearing of the same case, Lord Eldon merely confirms the same principles. 10 Ves. 522. , But Lord Loughborough is supposed to have *attributed the -* jurisdiction to the statute, in express terms, in the case of the Attorney-General n . Bowyer, 3 Ves. 726. But to understand his words correctly, it is necessary to observe, that the 43d of Elizabeth’s reign, was the year 1601, and that Lord Ellesmere received the seals in 1603, the epoch of her decease, and of the accession of James I. The point under Lord Loughborough’s consideration was the title to intermediate rents and profits, in the case of a trust to take effect in futuro. He first considers the question as to the legal right, and introduces Porter’s case (1 Co. 226), and that of the Sutton Hospital, 10 Co. 1. The case of Porter, he says, was upon a devise before the statute of wills (32 Hen. VIII., c. 1), and before the statute of uses (27 Hen. VIII., c. 10), and consequently, before the statute of Eliz. “ It does not appear, that the court, before that period, had cognisance of informations for the establishment of charities.” At what period ? Not the 43d Eliz., as has been contended ; but either the period of the devise, which was in the 32d of Hen. VIII., or of the decision, which was in the 34th of Elizabeth. The chancellor proceeds, “ prior to the time of Lord Ellesmere, as far as the tradition in times immediately following goes, there was no such information as that upon which I am now sitting, but they made out the case as well as they could at law.” The phrase, “prior to the time of Lord Ellesmere,” cannot be considered as equivalent to prior to the 43d of Eliz. ; for there is no coincidence in point of time. The idea is singularly expressed, if he meant to deduce the practice and authority J *of informations from the statute of the 43d of Elizabeth. All that he really meant was, to affirm, that the practice of proceeding on informations by the attorney-general grew up in the time of Lord Ellesmere. But this position is contradicted by Lord Keeper Henley (1 W. Bl. 91), by Lord Macclesfield (2 P. Wms. 119), by Lord Somers (2 Vern. 342), by Lord Thurlow (1 Bro. C. C. 15); and finally, by the admission on the opposite side, that the proceeding of the attorney-general, was as representing the king in his character of parens patriae. The chancellor next proceeds to establish the validity of these devises at common law, and consequently, independent of the statute ; and coming to the exercise of the equitable jurisdiction, he expressly founds it on the general power of the court over trusts. It results, then, that by the civil law, devises to pious and public uses were liberally expounded, and not suffered to fail by their uncertainty ; that the ecclesiastical courts, and courts of equity, acting on ecclesiastical subjects, when called upon to take cognisance of a devise to pious or public uses, exercised all the powers, before the statute, which have been since exercised; that the statute of Eliz. came, and following up the principle of the civil law, made an enumeration of those gifts to pious and public uses, under the new name of charitable uses ; not to give them new validity, but to discover them by inquisition, and to effectuate them upon civil-law principles. After the statute, the new name of charitable uses, became the fashion of the 12 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. *27 Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. court; and the word appointment *was extended, to produce the same effect which Swinburne had ascribed to the civil law before. It became unnecessary to look back beyond the statute, for the exercise of power over a charitable use : the case was brought within the statutory description, and if found within it, the constructive power of the word appointment was brought to bear upon it. Whatever be the origin of the powers of the court of chancery, in England, whether derived from the peculiar law of the court itself, from statutes, or from the extraordinary jurisdiction of the chancellor, they are all vested in the courts of the United States, by the constitution giving to them jurisdiction of all suits in equity between citizens of different states. There is no necessity that the attorney-general of Virginia should be made a party, because that is only required where the objects of the charity contravene the policy of the law ; nor is it necessary that the court should superintend the execution of the trust, since the trustees are appointed by the testator ; nor that the court shonld refer it to a master to digest a scheme for its application, as the objects are clearly designated in the will. Marshall, Ch. J., delivered the opinion of the court.—It was obviously the intention of the testator, that the Association should take in its character as an association ; and should, in that character, perform the trust created by the will. The members composing it must be perpetually changing ; but however they might change, it is “ The Baptist Association that, *for ordinary, meets at Philadelphia annually,” which is to take rsjs and manage the “ perpetual fund,” intended to be created by this *-will. This association is described with sufficient accuracy to be clearly understood ; but not being incorporated, is incapable of taking this trust as a society. Can the bequest be taken by the individuals who composed the association at the death of the testator ? The court is decidedly of opinion, that it cannot. No private advantage is intended for them. Nothing was intended to pass to them but the trust; and that they are not authorized to execute as individuals. It is the association for ever, not the individuals, who, at the time of his death, might compose the association, and their representatives, who are to manage this “ perpetual fund.” At the death of the testator, then, there were no persons in existence who were capable of taking this bequest. Does the subsequent incorporation of the association give it this capacity ? The rules of law compel the court to answer this question in the negative. The bequest was intended for a society which was not, at the time, and might never be, capable of taking it. Acccording to law, it is gone for ever. The legacy is void ; and the property vests, if not otherwise disposed of by the will, in the next of kin. A body corporate, afterwards created, had it even fitted the description of the will, cannot divest this interest, and claim it for their corporation. There being no persons who can claim the right to execute this trust, are there any who, upon the *general principles of equity, can entitle themselves to its benefits ? Are there any to whom this legacy, were L it not a charity, could be decreed ? This question will not admit of discussion. Those for whose ultimate benefit the legacy was intended, are to be designated and selected by the trustees. It could not be intended for the education of all the youths of the Baptist denomination, who were designed 13 29 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. for the ministry; nor for those who were the descendants of his father, unless, in the opinion of the trustees, they should appear promising. These trustees being incapable of executing this trust, or even of taking it on themselves, the selection can never be made, nor the persons designated who might take beneficially. Though this question be answered in the negative, we must still inquire, whether the character of this legacy, as a charity, will entitle it to the protection of this court ? That such a legacy would be sustained in England, is admitted. But it is contended, for the executors, that it would be sustained in virtue of the statute of the 43 of Elizabeth, or of the prerogative of the crown, or of both ; and not in virtue of those rules by which a court of equity, exercising its ordinary powers, is governed. Should these propositions be true, it is further contended, that the statute, of Elizabeth does not extend to the case, and that the equitable jurisdiction of the courts of the Union does not extend to cases not within the ordinary powers of a court of equity. *anl *On the part of the plaintiffs, it is contended, that the peculiar J law of charities does not originate in the statute of Elizabeth. Had lands been conveyed in trust, previous to the statute, for such purposes as are expressed in this will, the devise, it is said, would have been good at law ; and, of consequence, a court of chancery would have enforced the trust, in virtue of its general powers. In support of this proposition, it has been said, that the statute of Elizabeth does not even profess to give any validity to devises or legacies, of any description, not before good, but only furnishes a new and more convenient mode for discovering and enforcing them ; and that the royal prerogative applies to those cases only, where the objects of the trust are entirely indefinite ; as a bequest generally to charity, or to the poor. It is certainly true, that the statute does not, in terms, profess to give validity to bequests, acknowledged not before to have been valid. It is also true, that it seems to proceed on the idea, that the trusts it is intended to enforce, ought, in conscience, independent of the statute, to be carried into execution. It is, however, not to be denied, that if, at the time, no remedy existed in any of the cases described, the statute gives one. A brief analysis of the act will support this proposition. It authorizes the chancellor to appoint commissioners to inquire of all gifts, &c., recited in the act, of the abuses, &c., of such gifts, &c. ; and upon such inquiry, to make such order as that the articles given, &c., may be duly and faithfully employed, to and * -I for the charitable uses and intents, before rehearsed *respectively, for J which they were given, &c. The statute then proceeds, “ which orders, judgments and decrees, not being contrary or repugnant to the orders, statutes or decrees of the donors or founders, shall, by the authority of this present parliament, stand firm and good, according to the tenor and purport thereof, and shall be executed accordingly, until the same shall be undone or altered by the Lord Chancellor of England,” &c. Subsequent sections of the act direct these decree«, &c., to be certified to the chancellor, who is to take such order for their execution as to him shall seem proper ; and also give to any person aggrieved the right to apply to chancery for redress. It is not to be denied, that if any gifts are enumerated in this statute, which were not previously valid, or for which no previous remedy existed, the 14 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 81 Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. statute makes them valid, and furnishes a remedy. That there were such gifts, and that. the statute has given them validity, has been repeatedly determined. The books are full of cases, where conveyances to charitable uses, which were void by the statute of mortmain, or were, in other respects, so defective, that, on general principles, nothing passed, have been sustained under this statute. If this statute restores to its original capacity, a conveyance rendered void by an act of the legislature, it will, of course, operate with equal effect on any legal objection to the gift, which originates in any other manner, and which a statute can remove. The authorities to this point are numerous. In the case of the Attorney-General, on behalf of St. John's * College, in Cambridge, v. Platt (Cas. r**» temp. Finch 221), the name of the corporate body was not fully *-expressed. This case was referred by the chancellor to the judges, who certified, that though, according to the general principles of law, the devise was void ; yet it was good under the statute of Elizabeth. This casé is also reported in Cases of Chancery 267, where it is said, the judges certified the devise to be void at law, but the chancellor decreed it good under the statute. So, in Chancery Cases 134, it 'was decided, that a bequest to the parish of Great Creaton was good, under the statute. Though this case was not fully nor clearly reported, enough appears, to show that this bequest was sustained only under' the statute of Elizabeth. The objections to it were, that it was void on general principles, the parish not being incorporated.; and that it would not be decreed, under the statute, the proceedings not being before commissioners, but by original bill. The Master of the Rolls ordered precedents to be produced ; and on finding one in which four judges had certified that a party might, under the statute, proceed in chancery, by original bill, he directed the legacy to be paid. Could this bequest have been sustained, on doctrines applicable to charities, independent of the statute, no question could have arisen concerning the rights to proceed by original bill. In Collison's case, Hob. 136, the will made John Bruet and others, “feoffees of a home, to keep it in reparation, and to bestow the rest of the profits on reparation of *certain highways.” On a reference by the chancellor, the judges declared, that “ this case was within the relief of the 43d *-of Elizabeth ; for though the devise were utterly void, yet it was, within the words, limited and appointed for charitable uses.” In these cases, it is expressly decided, that the bequests are void, independent of the statute, and good under it. It furnishes no inconsiderable additional argument, that many of the gifts recited in the 43 Eliz., would not, in themselves, be considered as charitable ; yet they are all governed by the same rule. No dictum has been found, indicating an opinion that the statute has no other effect than to enable the chancellor to inquire, by commission, into cases before cognisable in this court by original bill. It may, then, with confidence be stated, that whatever doubts may exist in other points which have been made in the cause, there is none in this : The statute of the 43 Eliz. certainly gave validity to some devises to charitable uses, which were not valid, independent of that statute. Whether this legacy be of that description, is a question of more difficulty. The objection is, that the trust is void ; and the description of the cestui trust so vague, that no person can be found whose interest can be sustained. The counsel for the plaintiff insists, that cases equally vague have 15 33 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. been sustained in courts of common law, before the statute ; and would à fortiori, have been sustained in courts of equity. He relies on Porter’s case, 1 Co. 226, and on Plowd. 522. Porter’s case is this : Nicholas Gibson, in the , 32 *Hen. VIII., devised a wharf and house to his wife, upon condi-J tion, that she should, on advice of learned counsel, in all convenient speed, after his decease, assure, give and grant the said lands and tenements, for the maintenance for ever of a free school the testator had erected, and of alms-men and alms-women attached to it. The wife entered into the property, and instead of performing the condition, conveyed it, in the 3 Edw. VI., by a lease for forty years. Afterwards, in the 34 Eliz., the heir-at-law entered for a condition broken, and conveyed to the queen. On the validity of this entry and conveyance, the cause depended. On the part of Porter, who claimed under the lease, it was contended, that the use was against the act of the 22 Hen. VIII., c. 10, and therefore, void, on which the estate of the wife became absolute. On the part of the queen, it was argued, 1st. That the statute of Hen. VIII. avoided superstitious, and not charitable uses. But if it extended to this, still, that it made the use, and not the conveyance, void. The devisee, there being no considération, would stand seised to the use of the heir. 2. That in case the devise is to the wife, on condition that she would, by the advice of learned counsel, assure his lands for the maintenance of the said free-school, and alms-men and alms-women, this might be done lawfully, by procuring the king’s letters-patent incorporating them, and afterwards, a letter of license to assure the lands to them. Upon these reasons, the court was of opinion, that *the con- J dition was broken, and that the entry of the heir was lawful; In this case, no question arose concerning the possibility of enforcing the execution of the trust. It was not forbidden by law ; and therefore, the trustee might execute it. On failing so to do, the condition on which the estate was given was broken, and the heir might enter ; but it is not suggested that the cestui que trust had any remedy. An estate may be granted on any condition which is not against law, as that the grantee shall go to Rome ; and for breach of that condition, the heir may enter, but there are no means of compelling the journey to Rome. In the argument of Porter’s case, the only mode suggested for assuring to the school the benefit intended, is by an act of incorporation, and a letter of license. In considering this case, it seems impossible to resist the conviction, that chancery could, then, afford no remedy to the cestui que trust. It is not probable, that those claiming the beneficial interest would have waited, without an effort, from the 32 Hen. VIII., when the testator died, or, at any rate from the 3 Edw. VL, when the condition was conclusively broken, by the execution of the lease, until the 34 Eliz., and then have resorted to the circuitous mode of making an arrangement with the heir-at-law, and procuring a conveyance from him to the queen, on whose will the charity would still depend, if a plain and certain remedy had existed, by a direct application to the chancellor. •If, as there is much reason to believe from this, and from many other cases of the same character *which were decided at law, anterior to J the statute of Eliz., the remedy in chancery was not then afforded, it would go far in deciding the present question ; it would give much countenance to the opinion, that the original interference of chancery in charities, where the cestui que trust had not a vested equitable interest which might 16 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 36 Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. be asserted in a court of equity, was founded on that statute, and still depends on it. These cases, and the idea they suggest, that at the time chancery afforded no i'emedy for the aggrieved, account for the passage of the statute of the 43 Elizabeth, and for its language, more satisfactorily than any other cause which can be assigned. If, as has been contended, charitable trusts, however vague, could then, as now, have been enforced in chancery, why pass an act to enable the chancellor to appoint commissioners to inquire concerning them, and to make orders for their due execution, which orders were to be revised, established, altered, or set aside, by him? If the chancellor could accomplish this, and was in the practice of accomplishing it, in virtue of the acknowledged powers and duties of his office, to what purpose pass the act ? Those who might suppose themselves interested in these donations, would be the persons to bring the case before the commissioners ; and the same persons would have brought it before the chancellor, had the law afforded them the means of doing so. The idea, that the commissions were substituted for the court, as the means of obtaining intelligence not otherwise attainable, or of removing inconveniences in prosecuting claims by original bill, which had been found so *great as to obstruct the course of justice, is not war- r* H ranted by the language of the act, and is disproved by the efforts 1 which were soon made, and which soon prevailed, to proceed by way of original. The statute recites, that whereas, lands, money, &c., had been heretofore given, &c., some for the relief of aged, impotent and poor people, &c., which lands, &c., “ nevertheless, have not been employed according to the charitable intent of the givers and founders thereof, by reason of ”—what ? of the difficulty of discovering that such trusts had been created ? or of the expensiveness and inconvenience of the existing remedy? No. “By reason of frauds, breaches of trust, and negligence in those that should pay, deliver and employ the same that is, by reason of fraud, breach of trust and negligence of the trustees. The statute then proceeds to give a remedy for these frauds, breaches of trust and negligences. Their existence was known, when the act passed, and was the motive for passing it. No negligence or fraud is charged on the court, its officers, or the objects of the charity ; only on the trustees. Had there been an existing remedy for their frauds and negligences, they could not, when known, have escaped that remedy. There seem to have been two motives, and they were adequate motives, for enacting this statute : The first and greatest was, to give a direct remedy to the party aggrieved, who, where the trust was vague, had no certain and safe remedy for the injury sustained ; who might have been completely defeated by any compromise between the heir of the feoffer *and the trustee, and who had no means of compelling the heir to perform the trust, should he enter for the condition broken. The second, to remove the doubts which existed, whether these charitable donations were included within the previous prohibitory statutes. We have no trace, in any book, of an attempt in the court of chancery, at any time, anterior to the statute, to enforce one of these vague bequests to charitable uses. If we have no reports of decisions in chancery at that early period, we have reports of decisions at common law, which notice points referred by the chancellor to the judges. Immediately after the passage of the statute, we find, that ques- 4 Wheat.—2 17 38 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. tions on the validity of wills containing charitable bequests, were propounded to, and decided by, the law judges. Collison's case was decided in the 15 James I., only seventeen years after the passage of the act, and the devise was declared to be void at law, but good under the statute. Two years prior to this, Griffith Flood's case, reported in Hobart, was propounded by the court of wards to the judges ; and, in that case too, it was decided, that the will was void at law, but good under the statute. Had the court of chancery taken cognisance, before the statute, of devises and bequests to charitable uses, which were void at law, similar questions must have arisen, and would have been referred to the courts of law, whose decisions on them would be found in the old reporters. Had it been settled, before the statute that such devises were good, because the use was charitable, these *qq1 questions could not have arisen *afterwards ; or had they arisen, J would have been differently treated. Although the earliest decisions we have, trace the peculiar law of charities to the statute of Elizabeth, and although nothing is to be found in our books to justify the opinion, that courts of chancery, in the exercise of their ordinary jurisdiction, sustained, anterior to that statute, bequests for charitable uses, which would have been void on principles applicable to other trusts, there are some modern dicta, in cases respecting prerogative, and where the proceedings are on the part of the king, acting as parens patriot, which have been much relied on at the bar, and ought not to be overlooked by the court. In 2 P. Wms. 119, the Chancellor says, “ In like manner, in the case of charity, the king, pro bono publico, has an original right to superintend the care thereof ; so that, abstracted from the statute of Elizabeth, relating to charitable uses, and antecedent to it, as well as since, it has been every day’s practice to file informations in chancery, in the attorney-general’s name, for the establishment of charities.” “ This original right,” of the crown, “ to superintend the care ” of charities, is no more than that right of visitation, which is an acknowledged branch of the prerogative, and is certainly not given by statute.” The practice of filing an information in the name of the attorney-general, if, indeed, such a practice existed in those early times, might very well grow out of this prérogative, and would by no means prove, that, prior to the statute, the law respecting charities was what it has been * , since. These *words were uttered for the purpose of illustrating the -> original power of the crown over the persons and estates of infants, not with a view to any legal distinction between a legacy to charitable and other objects. Lord Keeper Henley, in 1 W. Black. 91, says, “I take the uniform rule of this court before, at, and after the statute of Elizabeth, to have been, that where the uses are charitable, and the person has in himself full powei* to convey, the court will aid a defective conveyance to such uses. Thus, the devises to corporations were void under the statute of Hen. VIII. ; yet they were always considered as good in equity, if given to charitable uses.” We think, we cannot be mistaken, when we say, that no case was decided between the statute of mortmain, passed in the reign of Hen. VIII., and the statute of Elizabeth, in which a devise to a corporation was held good. Such a decision would have overturned principles uniformly acknowledged in that court. The cases of devises in mortmain, which have been held I 18 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. 40 good, were decided since the statute of Elizabeth, on the principle, that the latter statute repeals the former so far as relates to charities. The statute of Geo. II. has been uniformly construed to repeal, in part, the statute of Elizabeth, and charitable devises comprehended in that act have, ever since its passage, been declared void. On the same reason, similar devises must, subsequent to the statute of Henry VIII., and anterior to that of Elizabeth, have been also declared void. It is remarkable *that, in this very case, the Lord Keeper declares one of the charities to be void, because it is *-contrary to the statute of mortmain, passed in the reign of Geo. II. All the respect we entertain for the reporter of this case, cannot prevent the opinion, that the words of the Lord Keeper have been inaccurately reported. If not, they, were inconsiderately uttered. The principles decided in this case are worthy of attention : “ Two questions,” says the report, “arose, 1st. Whether this was a conveyance to charitable uses, under the statute of Elizabeth, and therefore, to be aided by this court ? 2d. Whether it fell within the purview of the statute of mortmain, 9 Geo. IL, and was, therefore, a void, disposition ?” It is not even suggested, that the defect of the conveyance could be remedied, otherwise than by the statute of Elizabeth. The Lord Keeper says, “ the conveyance of the 22d of June 1721, is admitted to be defective, the use being limited to certain officers of the corporation, and not to the corporate body ; and therefore, there is a want of persons to take in perpetual succession.” (The very defect in the conveyance under the consideration of this court.) “ The only doubt,” continues the Lord Keeper, “ is, whether the court should supply this defect, for the benefit of the charity, under the statute of Elizabeth.” It is impossible, we think, to understand this declaration, otherwise than as an express admission, that a conveyance to officers, who compose the corporate body, instead of the corporate body itself, or in other words, a conveyance to any persons not incorporated *to take in succession,. * although for charitable purposes, would be void, if not supported by L the statute of Elizabeth. After declaring the conveyance to be good, the Lord Keeper proceeds : “ The conveyance, therefore, being established under the statute of Elizabeth, we are next to consider how it is affected under the statute of the 9 Geo. II.” The whole opinion of the judge in this case, turns upon the statute of Elizabeth. He expressly declares the conveyance to be sustained by that statute, and in terms, admits it to be defective, without its aid. The dictum, therefore, that before that statute, courts were in the habit of aiding defective conveyances to charitable uses, either contradicts his whole opinion on the point before him, or is misreported. The probability is, that the judge applied this dictum to cases which occurred, not to cases which were decided before the statute. Tbis application of it would be supported by the authorities, and would accord with his whole opinion in the case. In the case of the Attorney- General v. Bowyer, 3 Ves. 725, the chancellor, speaking of a case which occurred before the passage of the statute of wills, says, “It does not appear that this court, at that period, had cognisance upon information for the establishment of charities. Prior to the time of Lord Ellesmere, as far as tradition in times immediately following goes, there were nd such informations as this on which I am now sitting, but they made °ntthe case as well as they could by law.” 19 *43 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. * Without attempting to reconcile these seemingly contradictory dicta, the court will proceed to inquire, whether charities, where no legal interest is vested, and which are too vague to be claimed by those to whom the beneficial interest was intended, could be established by a court of equity, either exercising its ordinary jurisdiction, or enforcing the prerogative of the King as parens patriae, before the 43 Elizabeth? The general principle, that a vague legacy, the object of which is indefinite, cannot be established in a court of equity, is admitted. It follows-, that he who contends that charities formed originally an exception to the rule, must prove the proposition. There being no reported cases on the point, anterior to the statute, recourse is had to elementary writers, or to the opinions given by judges of modern times. No elementary writers sustain this exception as a part of the law of England. It may be considered as a part of the civil code, on which our proceedings in chancery are said to be founded ; but that code is not otherwise a part of the law of England than as it has been adopted and incorporated by a long course of decisions. The whole doctrine of the civil law, respecting charities, has certainly not been adopted. For example, by the civil law, a legacy to a charity, if there be a deficiency of assets, does not abate ; by the English law, it does abate. It is not, therefore, enough to show that, by the civil law, this legacy would be valid. It is necessary to go further, and to show that this principle of * the civil law has been engrafted *into the jurisprudence of England, J and been transplanted into the United States. In White v. White, 1 Bro. C. C. 15, the testator had given a legacy to the Lying-in-Hospital which his executor should appoint, and afterwards struck out the name of the executor. The legacy was established, and it was referred to a master to say to which Lying-in-Hospital it should be paid. In giving this opinion, Lord Thurlow said, “ the cases have proceeded upon notions adopted from the Roman and civil law, which are very favorable to charities, that legacies given to public uses not ascertained, shall be applied to some proper object.” These expressions, apply perhaps exclusively, to that class of cases in which legacies given to one charity have, since the statute of Elizabeth, been applied to another ; or, in which legacies given so vaguely as that the object cannot be precisely defined, have been applied by the crown, or by the court, acting in behalf of the crown, to some charitable object of the same kind. White n. Whitt was itself of that description ; and the words “ legacies given to public uses not ascertained,” “ applied to some proper object,” seem to justify this construction. If this be correct, the sentiment advanced by Lord Thurlow, would amount to nothing more than that the cases in which this extended construction was given to the statute of Elizabeth, proceed upon notions adopted from the Roman and civil law; *. But if Lord Thurlow used this language, under the *impression J that the whole doctrine of the English chancery, relative to charities, was derived from the civil law, it will not be denied, that his opinions, even when not on the very point decided, are entitled to great respect. Something like the same idea escaped Lord Eldon, in the case of Moggridge v. ThacTwoell,'*1 Ves. 36. Yet, upon other occasions, different opinions have been advanced, with an explicitness, which supports the idea, that the court of chancery in England does not understand these dicta as they have been 20 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 45 Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. understood by the counsel for the plaintiff. In the case of Morice v. The Bishop of Durham^ 9 Ves. 399, where the devise was to the bishop, in trust, to dispose of the residue “ to such objects of benevolence and liberality as he, in his own discretion, should most approve,” the bequest was determined to be void, and the legacy decreed to the next of kin. The master of the rolls said, “ In this court, the signification of charity is derived principally from the statute of Elizabeth. Those purposes are considered charitable, which that statute enumerates, or which, by analogies, are deemed within its spirit and intendment.” This case afterwards came before the chancellor, who affirmed the decree, and said, “ I say, with the master of the rolls, a case has not yet been decided, in which the court has executed a charitable purpose, unless the will contains a description of that which the law acknowledges to be a charitable purpose, or devotes the property, to purposes of charity in general.” 10 Ves. 540. The reference made by the chancellor to the words of the master of the rolls, whose language he adopts, *proves that he used the term “law ” r*. _ as synonymous with “ the statute of Elizabeth.” Afterwards, in the *■ same case, speaking of a devise to charity, generally, the chancellor says, ‘fit is the duty of the trustees, or of the crown, to apply the money to charity, in the sense which the determinations have affixed to the word in this court: viz., either such charitable purposes as are expressed in the statute, or to purposes analogous to those.” He adds, “charitable purposes, as used in this court, have been ascribed to many acts described in that statute, and analogous to those, not because they can with propriety be called charitable, but as that denomination is, by the statute, given to all the purposes described.” It has been also said, that a devise to a charity generally is good, because the statute of Elizabeth uses that term. These quotations show that Lord Eldon, whatever may have been the inclination of his mind, when he determined the case of Moggridge v. Thack-well, was, on more mature consideration, decidedly of opinion, that the doctrines of the court of chancery, peculiar to charities, originated not in the civil law, but in the statute of Elizabeth. This opinion is entitled to the more respect, because it was given, after an idea, which might be supposed to conflict with it, had been insinuated by Lord Thurlow, and in some degree followed by himself; it was given in a case which required an investigation of the question ; it was given, too, without any allusion to the dicta uttered by Lord Thurlow and himself; a circumstance which would scarcely have occurred, had he understood those dicta as advancing opinions he was then denying. It is the more to be respected, *-because it is sustained by all the decisions which took place, and all the opinions expressed by the judges soon after the passing of the statute of Elizabeth. In 1 Ch. Cas. 134, a devise to the Parish of Great Creaton, the parish not being a corporation, was held to be void, independent of the statute, but good under it. So, in the same book, p. 267, on a devise to a corporation, which was misnamed, the Lord Keeper decreed the charity, under the statute, though, before the statute, no such devise could have been sustained. The same point is decreed in the same book, p. 195, and in many other of the early cases. These decisions are totally incompatible with the idea, that the principles on which they turned were derived from the civil law. 21 47 SUPREME COURT Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. [Feb’y There can be no doubt, that the power of the crown to superintend and enforce charities existed in very early times ; and there is much difficulty in marking the extent of this branch of the royal prerogative, before the statute. That it is a branch of the prerogative, and not a part of the ordinary power of the chancellor, is sufficiently certain. Blackstone, in vol. 3, p. 47, closes a long enumeration of the extraordinary powers of the chancellor, with saying, “ he is the general guardian of all infants, idiots, lunatics ; and has the general superintendence of all charitable uses in the kingdom ; and all this, over and above the vast and extensive jurisdiction which he exercises in his judicial capacity in the court of chancery.” In the same volume, p. 487, he says, “the king, ^parens *patrice, has the J general superintendence of all charities, which he exercises by the keeper of his conscience, the chancellor; and. therefore, whenever it is necessary, the attorney-general, at the relation of some informant, files, ex officio, an information in the court of chancery, to have the charity properly established.” The author of “ A Treatise of Equity ” says, “ so, anciently, in this realm, there were several things that belonged to the king as parens patriae, and fell under the care and direction of this court : as, charities, infants, idiots, lunatics, &c.” Cooper, in his chapter on the jurisdiction of the court, says, “the jurisdiction, however, in the three cases of infants, idiots or lunatics, and charities, does not belong to the court of chancery as a court of equity, but as administering the prerogative and duties of the crown.” Cooper’s Eq. Pl. 27. It would be waste of time, to multiply authorities to this point, because the principle is familiar to the profession. It is impossible to look into the subject, without perceiving and admitting it. Its extent may be less obvious. We now find this prerogative employed in enforcing donations to charitable uses, which would not be valid, if made to other uses ; in applying them to different objects than those designated by the donor; and in supplying all defects in the instrument by which the donation is conveyed, or in that by which it is administered. It is not to be admitted, that legacies, not *4.qi valid in themselves, can be made so by force of prerogative, *in vio- J lation of private rights. This superintending power of the crown, therefore, over charities, must be confined to those which are valid in law. If, before the statute of Elizabeth, legacies like that under consideration would have been established, on information filed in the name of the attorney-general, it would furnish a strong argument for the opinion, that some principle was recognised, prior to that statute, which gave validity to such legacies. But although we find dicta of judges, asserting, that it was usual, before the statute of Elizabeth, to establish charities, by means of an information filed by the attorney-general ; we find no dictum, that charities could be established on such information, where the conveyance was defective, or the donation was so vaguely expressed, that the donee, if not a charity, would be incapable of taking ; and the thing given would vest in the heir or next of kin. All the cases which have been cited, where charities have been established, under the statute, that were deemed invalid independent of it, contradict this position. In construing that statute, in a preceding part of this opinion, it was shown, that its enactments are sufficient to establish charities not previously 22 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 49 Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. valid. It affords, then, a broad foundation for the superstructure which has been erected on it. And although many of the cases go, perhaps, too far ; yet, on a review of the authorties, we think, they are to be considered as constructions of the statute, not entirely to be justified, rather than as proving the existence of some other principle, concealed in a dark and remote *antiquity, and giving a rule in cases of charity, which forms an ex- r*$Q ception to the general principles of our law. L But even if, in England, the power of the king as parens patriae would, independent of the statute, extend to a case of this description, the inquiry would still remain, how far this principle would govern in the courts of the United States ? Into this inquiry, however, it is unnecessary to enter, because it can arise only where the attorney-general is made a party. The court has taken, perhaps, a more extensive view of this subject than the particular case, and the question propounded on it, might be thought to require. Those who are to take this legacy beneficially, are not before the court, unless they are represented by the surviving members of the Baptist Association, or by the present corporation. It was, perhaps, sufficient to show, that they are not represented by either. This being the case, it may be impossible, that a party plaintiff can be made, to sue the executor, otherwise than on the information of the attorney-general. No person exists who can assert any interest in himself. The cestui que trust can be brought into being, only by the selection of. those who are named in the will to take the legacy in trust, and those who are so named, are incapable of taking it. It is, perhaps, decisive of the question propounded to this court to say, that the plaintiffs cannot take. But the rights of those who claim the beneficial interest, have been argued at great length, and with great ability; and there would have *been some difficulty in explaining r*,. satisfactorily, the reasons why the plaintiffs cannot take, without dis- *■ cussing also, the rights of those for whom they claim. The court has, therefore, indicated its opinion on the whole case, as argued and understood at the bar. Story, Justice.1—Charitable donations were of great consideration in the civil law, and bequests to pious uses were deemed privileged testaments. Swinburne, pt. 1, § 16, p. 103 ; Ibid. pt. 7, § 8, pt. 908 ; 2 Domat 160, 161, 163. There can be little doubt, that the authority of the Roman code, combining with the religious notions of former times, coutributed in no small decree to engraft the principles of that law respecting charities into the common law. This was manifestly the opinion of Lord Thurlow ( White v. White, 1 Bro. C. C. 12); and Lord Eldon, in assenting to it, has added, that as, at an early period, the ordinary had authority to apply a portion of every man’s estate to charity, when afterwards the statute compelled a distribution, it is not impossible, that the same favor should have been extended to charity in the construction of wills, by their own force, purporting to authorise such a dis- 1 This opinion was prepared, at the time, by Justice Story, but not delivered. It was published in the appendix to the first edition of 3 Peters’ reports ; but omitted in the subsequent editions, most probably, because Judge Story had then changed his opinion as to the origin of the jurisdiction of the court of chancery over charitable bequests. It is, however, worth preserving, as a part of the history of the case, and as containing much learning upon a very interesting legal question. 23 51a SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. tribution. Moggridge v. Thackwell, 7 Ves. 36, 69 ; mills v. Farmer, 1 Merivale 55, 94. Be this as it may, it cannot be denied, that many of the privileges given to charitable testaments by the civil law have been, for ages, incorporated into the common law. For instance, one privilege was, that no such testament was void for uncertainty, either as to persons or objects. Hence, if a testator* gave his goods to be distributed among the poor, or made the poor his executors, the legacy was not void ; although it would have been otherwise, if charity had not been the legatee. Swinburne, pt. 1, § 16, p. 104, 59 ; 2 Domat, lib. 4, tit. 2, § 6, p. 161, 162, 163. And the same rule has been adopted into the common law, at least, ever since the statute of charitable uses. 43 Eliz., ch. 4. Indeed, at one period, the constructions in respect to charitable bequests werp pushed to a most extravagant length; and the good sense of succeeding times has lamented, and so far as it consistently could, has endeavored to abridge the ancient doctrine to something like a rational system, (a) It is now too late to contend, that a disposition in favor of charity can be construed according to the rules which are applicable to individuals. In the first place, the same words in a will, when applied to individuals, may require a very different construction, if applied to the case of a charity. If a testator give his property to such person as he shall hereafter name to be his executor, and afterwards appoint no executor ; or if, having appointed an executor, he dies in his lifetime, and no other is appointed in his place ; in either of these cases, as to individuals, the testator must be held intestate, and his next of kin will take the estate. But to give effect to a bequest in favor of charity, chancery will, in both instances, supply the place of an executor, and carry into effect that which in the case of individuals must have failed altogether. Mills v. Farmer, 1 Merivale 55, 94 ; Moggridge v. Thackwell, 7 Ves. 36; Attorney-General v. Jackson, 11 Ibid. 365, 367. Again, in the case of an individual, if an estate is devised to such person as the executor shall name, and no executor is appointed, or one being appointed dies in the testator’s lifetime, and no one is appointed in his place2 the bequest amounts to nothing. Yet such a bequest to charity would be good, and the court of chancery would in such case assume the office of executor. Mills v. Farmer, 1 Merivale 55, 96 ; Moggridge v. Thackwell, 7 Ves. 36. So, if a legacy be given to trustees, to distribute in charity, and they die in the testator’s lifetime, although the legacy is lapsed at law (and if they had taken to their own use it would have been gone for ever), yet, in equity, it will be enforced. Attorney-General v. Hickman, 2 Eq. Cas. Abr. 193; Moggridge v. Thackwell, 3 Bro. C. C. 517 ; s. c. 1 Ves. jr. 464 ; 7 Ibid. 36; Mills v. Farmer, 1 Merivale 55, 100 ; White v. White, 1 Bro. C. C. 12. Again, although in carrying into execution a bequest to an individual, the mode in which the legacy is to take effect must be of the substance of the legacy, yet where charity is the legatee, the court will consider it as the whole substance of the bequest; and in such cases only, if the mode fail, will (a) See what is said on this subject in Moggridge v. Thackwell, 1 Ves. jr. 464; s. c. 7 Ves. 36; Mills v. Farmer, 1 Merivale 55; Corbyn ®. French, 4 Ves. 418; Attorney-General v. Minshull, Ibid. 11; Attorney-General ®. Boultbee, 2 Ibid. 380; Attorney-General v. Whitchurch, 3 Ibid. 141; Cary v. Abbot, 7 Ibid. 490; Attorney-General ®. Bains, Free. Ch. 270. 24 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 515 Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. provide a mode by which that legatee shall take, but by which no other than charitable legatees can take. Mills v. Farmer, 1 Merivale 55, 100 ; Moggridge v. Thackwell, *1 Ves. 36; Attorney-General v. Ferryman, 1 Dick. 168 ; 2 Roper on Legacies 130. A still stronger case is, that if the testator has expressed an absolute intention to give a legacy to charitable purposes, but has left uncertain, or to some future act, the mode by which it is to be carried into effect, there, the court of chancery, if no mode is pointed out, will of itself supply the defect, and enforce the charity. Mills v. Farmer, 1 Merivale 55, 95; Moggridge v. Thackwell, 7 Ves. 36 ; White v. White, 1 Bro. C. C. 12. Therefore, it has been held, that if a man devises a sum of money to such charitable uses as he shall direct, by a codicil to be annexed to his will, or by a note in writing, and afterwards leaves no direction by note or codicil, the court of chancery hath power to dispose of it to such charitable uses as it shall think fit. Attorney-General v. Syderfen, 1 Vern. 224; s. c. 2 Freem. 261, recognised as law in Mills v. Farmer, 1 Merivale 55, and Moggridge v. Thackwell, *1 Ves. 36, 70, &c. So, if a testator bequeath a sum for such a school as he should appoint, and he appoints none, the court may apply it for what school it pleases. 2 Freem. 261; Moggridge v. Thackwell, 7 Ves. 36, 73, 74. The doctrine has gone yet further, and established, that if the bequest denote a charitable intention, but the object to which it is to be applied is against the policy of the law, the court will lay hold of the charitable intention, and execute it for the purpose of some charity, agreeable to the law, in the room of that contrary to it. Da Costay. De Pas, Ambl. 228; Moggridge v. Thackwell, 7 Ves. 36, 73, 75 ; Cary v. Abbot, Ibid. 490 ; Attorney- General v. Guise, 2 Vern. 266. Thus, a sum of money bequeathed to found a Jew’s synagogue, has been taken by the court, according to this principle, and transferred to the benefit of a foundling hospital. Ibid., and Mills v. Farmer, 1 Merivale 55, 100. And a bequest for the education of poor children in the Roman Catholic faith, has been decreed to be disposed of according to the pleasure of the king, under his sign manual. Gary v. Abbot, *1 Ves. 490. Another principle, equally well established, is, that if the bequest be for charity, it matters not how uncertain the objects or persons may be ; or, whether the bequest can be carried into exact execution or not ; or whether the persons who are to take be in esse or not; or whether the legatee be a corporation capable in law to take or not; in all these and the like cases, the court will sustain the legacy, and give it effect, according to its own principles, and where a literal execution becomes inexpedient or impracticable, will execute it by ey pres. Attorney-General y. Oglander,3Fro.C. C. 166 ; Attor-_ W’ General y. Green, 2 Ibid. 492 ; Frier v. Peacock, Rep. temp. Finch 245 ; Attoney- General v. Doultbee, 2 Ves. jr. 380 ; Duke 108-113. Thus, a demise of lands to the church-wardens of a parish (who are not a corporation capable of taking lands), for a charitable purpose, though void at law, w’ill be sustained in equity. 1 Burn’s Eccles. Law 226 ; Duke 33, 115 ; Com. Dig. Chancery, 2, N, 2 • liivetCs Case, Moore 890 ; Mills v. Farmer, 1 Meriv. 55 ; Attorney-General v. Fowyer, 3 Ves. 714 ; West v. Knight, 1 Ch. Cas. 135 ; Moggridge v. Thackwell, 7 Ves. 36. So, if the corporation for whose use it is designed, is not in esse, and cannot come into existence, but by some future act of the crown, as for instance, a gift to found a new college, which requires an incorporation, the gift is valid, and the court will execute it. 51c SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. White v. White, 1 Bro. C. C. 12 ; Attorney ■ General v. Downing, Ambl. 550, 571 ; Attorney-General v. Bowyer, 3 Ves. 714, 727. So, if a devise be an existing corporation, by a misnomer, which makes it void at law. Anon., 1 Ch. Cas. 267 ; Attorney-General v. Platt, Rep. temp. Finch 221. So where a devise was to the poor generally, the court decreed it to be executed in favor of three public hospitals in London. Attorney- General v. Peacock, Rep. temp. Finch 45 ; Owen v. Bean, Ibid. 395 ; Attorney- General v. Syderfen, 1 Vern. 224 ; Clifford v. Francis, 1 Freem. 330. So, a legacy towards establishing a bishop in America was held good, though none was yet appointed. Attorney- General v. Bishop of Chester, 1 Bro. C. C. 444. And where a charity is so given, that there can be no objects, the court will order a different scheme of the charity; but it is otherwise, if objects may, though they do not at present, exist {Attorney- General n. Oglander, 3 Bro. C. C. 166) ; and when objects cease to exist, the court will new model the charity. Attorney-General v. City of London, 3 Bro. C. C. 171 ; s. c. 1 Ves. jr. 243. And in aid of these principles, the court will, in all cases of charities, supply all defects in the conveyances, where the donor hath a capacity and a disposable estate, and his mode of donation does not contravene the provisions of any statute. Case of Christ’s College, 1 W. Bl. 90 ; s. c. Ambl. 351 ; Attorney-General v. Bye, 2 Vern. 453 ; Bivett’s Case, Moore 890 ; Attorney-General v. Burdet, 2 Vern. 755 ; Attorney-General v. Bowyer, 3 Ves. jr. 714; Mills n. Farmer, 15 Merivale 55 ; Collison’s Case, Hob. 136 ; Moore 822. Some of these doctrines may seem strange to us, as they have also seemed to Lord Eldon ; but he considered the cases too stubborn to be shaken, without doing that in effect, which no judge will in terms take upon himself, to reverse decisions that have been acted upon for centuries. Mog-gridge v. Thackwell, 7 Ves. 36, 87. If, therefore, the present case had arisen in England, since the statute of charitable uses, 43 Eliz., ch. 4, there can be no doubt, that it would have been established as a valid bequest, notwithstanding it is given to an unincorporated society, (a) The only question would have been, whether it ought to be administered by a scheme under the direction of the court of chancery, or by the king himself, as parens patriae, under his sign-manual. As to this, the rule which has been drawn by Lord Eldon, from a most learned and critical examination of all the authorities is, that where there is a bequest to trustees for charitable purposes, the disposition must be in chancery, under- a scheme to be approved by a master ; but where the object is charity, and no trust is interposed, it must be by the king, under his sign-manual; for in such cases, the king, as parens patriae, is deemed the constitutional trustee. Moggridge v. Thackwell, 7 Ves. 36, 86 ; Paice v. Archbishop of Canterbury, 14 Ibid. 372 ; Attorney-General n. Herrick, Ambl. 712; Morice v. Bishop of Durham, 9 Ves. 399 ; s. c. 10 Ibid. 522, 541 ; Clifford v. Francis, 1 Freem. 330 ; Attorney- General v. Syderfen,. ^ Ibid. 261; s. c. 1 Vern. 224 ; 7 Ves. 69, 70 ; 2 Maddock’s Ch. 63 ; Highmore on (, in 34 & 35 Elizabeth. See also, a like decision in Partridge v. Walker, cited 4 Co. 116 I) i Martindale v. Martin, Cro. Eliz. 288 ; Thetford School, 8 Co. 13'0, which was a devise of lands devisable by custom, to thè testators’s wife in fee, upon condition, that she should assure the lands devised for the maintenance and continuance of a free school and certain alms-men • and alms-women ; and it appeared, that the heir had entered for condition broken, and conveyed the same lands to the queen. It was held, that the use being for charity, was a good and lawful use, and not void by the statutes against superstitious uses, and that the queen might well hold the land for the charitable uses. Lord Eldon, in commenting on this case, has observed, “ it does not appear that this court (a. e., chancery), at that period, had cognisance upon informations for the establishment of charities. Prior to the time of Lord Ellesmere, (a) so far as the-tradition of times immediately following goes, there were no such informations as that upon which I am now sitting (». e., an information to establish a charity) ; but they made out their case as well as they could by law.” Attorney- General v. Bowyer, 3 Ves. 714, 726. So that the result of Lord Eldon’s researches on this point is, that until about the period of enacting the statute of Elizabeth, bills were not filed in chancery to establish charities ; and it is remarkable, that Sir Thomas Egerton and Lord Coke, who argued Porter’s case for the queen, though they cited many antecedent cases, refer to none which were not decided at law. And the doctrine established by Porter’s case is, that if a feoffment be made to a general legal use, not superstitious, though indefinite, though no person is in esse, who could be the cestui que use, yet the feoffment is good ; and if the use was bad, the heir of the feoffor would be entitled to enter, the legal estate remaining in him. 3 Ves. jr. 726. The absence, therefore, of all authority derived from equity decisions, on an occasion when they would probably have been used, if existing, certainly does very much favor the conclusion of Lord Eldon ; and if we might hazard a conjecture, it would be that Porter’s case having established charitable uses, not superstitious, to be good at law, chancery, in analogy to other cases of trusts, immediately held the feoffees to such uses accountable in equity for the due execution of them ; and that the inconveniences felt in resorting to («) Sir Thomas Egerton was made lord chancellor in 39 Elizabeth, 1596, and was created Lord Ellesmere in 1 James I., 1603. 27 51 e SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. this new and anomolous proceeding, from the indefinite nature of some of the uses, gave rise within a very few years to the statute of 43 Elizabeth, (a) This view would have a great tendency to reconcile the language used on other occasions by other chancellors, in reference to the jurisdiction of chancery over charities, with that of Lord Eldon ; as it would show, that cases of feoffments to charitable uses, bills to establish those uses might in fact have been introduced by Lord Ellesmere, about five years before the statute of Elizabeth ; which might be quite consistent with the fact, that such bills were not sustained, where the donation was to charity generally, and no trust was interposed, or legal estate devised, to support the uses, and it is very certain, that at law, a devise to charitable uses, generally, without interposing a trustee, or a devise to a non-existing corporation, or to an unincorporated society, would have been, and, in fact, was held, utterly void, for want of a person having a sufficient capacity to take as devisee. Anon., 1 Chan. Cas. 267 ; Attorney- General v. Tancred, 1 W. Bl. 90 ; s. c. Ambl. 351 ; Collinson's Case, Hob. 136 ; s. c. Moore 888 ; Widmore v. Woodroffe, Ambl. 636, 640 ; Com. Dig.'Devise, K. The statute of Elizabeth in favor of charitable uses cured this defect, Com. Dig. Charitable Uses, N, 11 ; Ibid. Chancery, 2, N, 10 ; and provided (as we shall hereafter have occasion more immediately to consider), a new mode of enforcing such uses, by a commission, under the direction of the court of chancery. Shortly after this statute, it became a matter of doubt, whether the court could grant relief by original bill, in cases within that statute, or was not confined to the remedy by commission. That doubt remained, until the reign of Charles II., when it was settled in favor of the jurisdiction by original bill. Attorney- General v. Newman, 1 Ch. Cas. 157 ; s. c. 1 Lev. 284 ; West v. Kniyht, 1 Ch. Cas. 134 ; Anon., Ibid. 267 ; 2 Fonb. Eq. b. 3, pl. 2, ch. 1, § 1 ; Parish of St. Dunstan v. Beauchamp, 1 Ch. Cas. 193. But on one occasion, in which this very question was argued before him, Lord Keeper Bridgman declared, “ that the king, as pater patriae, may inform for any public benefit for charitable uses, before the statute of 39 of Elizabeth, for charitable uses ; but it was doubted, the court not, by bill, take notice of that statute, so as to grant a relief, according to that statute, upon a bill.” Attorney-General v. Newman, 1 Ch. Cas. 157. On another occasion, soon afterwards, where the devise was to a college, and held void at law by the judges, fora misnomer, and on a bill to establish the devise as a charity, the same question was argued ; Lord Keeper Finch (afterwards Lord Nottingham) held the devise good, as an appointment under the statute of Elizabeth, and “ decreed the charity, though before the statute, no such decree could have been made.” Anon., 1 Ch. Cas. 267. It would seem, therefore, to have been the opinion of Lord Nottingham, that an original bill would not, before the statute of Elizabeth, lie, to establish a charity, where the estate did not pass at law’, to which the charitable uses attached. In Eyre v. Shaftesbury, 2 P. Wms. 103, 118 (cited also, 7 Ves. jr. 63, 87), Sir Joseph Jekyll said, in the course of his reasoning on another point, “ in like manner, in the case of charity, the king, pro bono publico, has an original right to superintend the care thereof, so that, ab- (a) There was, in fact, an act passed respecting charitable uses in 39 Elizabeth, ch. 9; but it was repealed by the act of 43 Eliz., ch. 4. Com. Dig. Charitable Uses, N, 14. 28 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 51/ Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. stracted from the statute of Elizabeth relating to charitable uses, and antecedent to it, as well as since, it has been every day’s practice, to file informations in chancery, in the attorney-general’s name, for the establishment of charities.” In the Bailiffs, <&c. of Burford v. Lenthdll, 2 Atk. 550 (1743), Lord Hardwicke is reported to have said, “the courts have mixed the jurisdiction of bringing informations in the name of the attorney-general, with the jurisdiction given them under the statute of Elizabeth, and proceed either way, according to their discretion.” In a subsequent case, Attorney-G-eneral v. Middleton (1751), 2 Ves. 327, which was an information filed by the attorney-general against the master and governors of a school, calling them to account in chancery, as having the general superintendency of all charitable donations, the same learned chancellor, in discussing the general jurisdiction of chancery on this head, and distinguishing the case before him from others, because the trustees or governors were invested with the visitatorial power, said, “ consider the nature of the foundation ; it is at the petition of two private persons, by charter of the crown, which distinguishes this case from cases of the statute of Elizabeth on charitable uses, or cases before that statute, in which this court exercised jurisdiction of charities at large. Since that statute, where there is a charity for the particular purposes therein, and no charter given by the crown to found and regulate it, unless a particular exception out of the statute, it must be regulated by commission. But there may be a bill by information in this court, founded on its general jurisdiction; and that is from necessity, because there is no charter to regulate it, and the king has a general jurisdiction of this kind. There must be somewhere a power to regulate, but where there is a charter, with proper powers, there is no ground to come into this court to establish that charity ; and it must be left to be regulated in the manner the charter has put it, or by the original rules of law. Therefore, though I have often heard it said in this court, if an information is brought to establish a charity, and praying a particular relief and mode of regulation, and the party fails in that particular relief, yet that information is not to be dismissed, but there must be a decree for the establishment; that is, always with this distinction, where it is a charity at large, or in its nature before the statute of charitable uses ; but not in the case of charities incorporated and established by the king’s charter, under the great seal, which are established by proper authority allowed.” And again, “ it is true, that an information in the name of the attorney-general, as an officer of the crown, was not a head of the statute of charitable uses, because that original jurisdiction was exercised in this court'before, but that was always in cases now provided for by that statute, that is, charities at large, not properly and regularly provided for in charters of the crown.” It was manifestly, therefore, the opinion of Lord Hardwicke, that, independently of the statute of Elizabeth, the court of chancery did exercise original jurisdiction, in cases of charities at large, which he explains to mean, charities not regulated by charter ; but it does not appear, that his attention was called to discriminate between such as could take effect at law, by reason of the interposition of a feoffee or devisee capable of taking, and those where the purpose was general charity, without the interposition of any trust to carry it into effect ; and the same remark applies to the 29 517/ SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. dictum by Sir Joseph Jekyll. In a still later case, Attorney- General v. Tancred, 1 W. Bl. 90 ; s. c. Ambl. 351 ; 1 Eden 10, which was an information to establish a charity, and aid a conveyance in remainder, to certain officers of Christ’s college, to certain charitable uses, Lord Keeper Henley (afterwards Lord Northington) is reported to have said, “ the conveyance is admitted to be defective, the use being limited to certain officers of the corporation, and not to the corporate body ; and therefore, there is a want of proper persons to take in perpetual succession. The only doubt is, whether the court shall supply this defect, for the benefit of the charity, under the statute of Elizabeth. And I take the uniform rule of this court, before, at and after the statute of Elizabeth, to have been, that where the uses are charitable, and the person has in himself full power to convey, the court will aid a defective conveyance to such uses. Thus, though devises to corporations were void, under the statute of Henry VIII., yet they were always considered as good, in equity, if given to charitable uses.” And he then proceeds to declare, that he is obliged, by the uniform course of precedents, to assist this conveyance, and therefore, establishes the conveyance, expressly under the statute of Elizabeth. There is some reason to question, if the language here imputed to Lord Northington be minutely accurate. His Lordship manifestly aids the conveyance, as a charity, in virtue of the statute of Elizabeth ; and there is no doubt, that it has been the constant practice of the court, since that statute, to aid defects in conveyances to charitable uses. But there is no case in which such defects were aided, before that statute. The old cases, though arising before, were deemed to be within the reach of that statute, by its retrospective language, and expressly decided on that ground. Collinson’s Case, Hob. 136 ; s. c. Moore 888 ; Ibid. 822 ; Sir Thomas Middleton’s Case, Ibid. 889 ; Rivett’s Case, Ibid. 890, and the cases cited in Raithby’s note to Attorney-General v. Rye, 2 Vern. 453 ; Duke 74, 77, 83, 84 ; Bridg. Charit. 366, 379, 380, 370; Duke 105 to 113. And the very case put, of devises to corporations, which are void under the statute of Henry VIII., and are held good, solely by the statute of Elizabeth, shows that his Lordship was looking to that statute ; for it is plain, that a devise, void by statute, cannot be made good, upon any principles of general law. What, therefore, is supposed to have been stated by him, as being the practice before the statute, is probably founded in the mistake of the reporter. The same case is reported in Ambler 351, where the language is, “ the constant rule of the court has always been, where a person has a power to give, and makes a defective conveyance to charitable uses, to supply it as an appointment ; as, in Jesus’ college, Collinson’s case, in Hobart 136.” Now Collinson’s case was expressly held to be sustainable, only as an appointment under the statute of Elizabeth ; and this shows that the language is limited to cases governed by that statute. In a very recent charity case, Sir Arthur Piggott, in argument, said, “ the difference between the case of individuals and that of charities, is founded on a principle which has been established ever since the statute of charitable uses, in the reign of Elizabeth, and has been constantly acted upon from those days to the present and Lord Eldon adopted the remark, and said, “ I am fully satisfied as to all the principles laid down in the course of this argument, and accede to them all.” His Lordship then proceeds to 30 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 51 h Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. discuss the most material of the principles and cases from the time of Elizabeth, and builds his reasoning, as, indeed, he had built it before, upon the supposition, that the doctrine in chancery, as now established, rested mainly on that statute. Mills v. Farmer, 1 Meri vale 55, 86, 94, 100; Moggridge v. Thackwell, 7 Ves. 36 ; Attorney-General v. Bowyer, 3 Ibid. 714, 726. And his • Lordship’s opinion, in the case alluded to, Attorney- General v. Bowyer, 3 Ves. 714, 726, when commenting on Porter's case, is entitled to the more weigh v, because it seems to have been given after a very careful examination of the whole judicial history of charities. These are all the cases which the researches of the court and of counsel have enabled them to find, where the jurisdiction of chancery over charities, antecedent to the statute of Elizabeth, has been directly or incidentally discussed. The circumstance that no cases prior to that time can be found in equity; the tradition that has passed down to our own times, that original bills to establish charities were first entertained in the time of Lord Ellesmere ; and the fact that the cases immediately succeeding that statute, where devises, void at law, were held good as charities, might have been argued and sustained, upon the general jurisdiction of the court, if it existed, and yet were exclusively argued and decreed upon the footing of that statute ; do certainly afford a very strong presumption, that the jurisdiction of the court to enforce charities, where no trust was interposed, and where no devisee was in esse, or where the charity was general and indefinite both as to persons and objects, mainly rests upon constructions (whether ill or well founded, is now of no consequence) of that statute. It is very certain also, that since the statute of Elizabeth, no bequests are deemed within the authority of chancery to establish and regulate, except bequests for those purposes which that statute enumerates as charitable, or which, by analogies are deemed within its spirit and intendment. A bequest may be, in an enlarged sense, charitable, and yet not within the purview of the statute. Charity, as the master of the rolls has justly observed, in its widest sense, denotes all the good affection men ought to bear towards each other ; in its more restricted and common sense, relief to the poor. In neither of these senses, is it employed in the court of chancery. Morice n. Bishop of Durham, 9 Ves. 399 ; s. c. 10 Ibid. 522 ; Brown v. Yeall, 7 Ibid. 59, note a; Moggridge v. Thackwell, Ibid. 36; Attorney-General v. Bowyer, 3 Ibid. 714, 726 ; Cox v. Basset, Ibid. 155. In that court, it means such only as are within the letter and the spirit of the statute of Elizabeth ; and therefore, where a testatrix bequeathed the residue of her personal estate to the bishop of D., to dispose of the same “ to such objects of benevolence and liberality as the bishop, in his own discretion, shall most approve of,” and appointed the bishop her executor ; on a bill to establish the will and declare the residuary bequest void, the court held the bequest void, upon the ground, that objects of benevolence and liberality were not necessarily charitable, within the statute of Elizabeth, and were, therefore, too indefinite to be executed. The court further declared, that no case had yet been decided, in which the court had executed a charitable purpose, unless the will contained a description of that which the law acknowledges a charitable purpose, or devoted the property to purposes of charity, in general, in' the sense in which that word is used in the court. 1 hat the case was, therefore, the case of a trust of so indefinite a nature, 31 51z SUPREME COURT Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. [Feb’y that it could not be under the control of the court, so that the administration of it could be reviewed by the court, or if the trustee died, the court itself could execute the trust. That it fell, therefore, within the rule of the court, that where a trust is ineffectually declared, or fails, or becomes incapable of taking effect, the party taken shall be a trustee, if not for those who were to take by the will, for those who take under the disposition of the law ; and the residue was accordingly decreed to the next of kin. So that it appears, since the statute of Elizabeth, the court of chancery will not establish any trusts for indefinite purposes of a benovelent nature not charitable within the purview of that statute, although there be an existing trustee in whom it is vested ; but will declare the trust void, and distribute the property among the next of kin : and yet, if there was an original jurisdiction in chancery over all bequests, charitable in their own nature, and not superstitious, to establish and regulate them, independent of the statute, it is not easy to perceive, why an original bill might not be sustained in such court, to establish such bequest, especially, where a trustee is interposed to effectuate it; for the statute does not contain any prohibition of such bequests. An argument may, therefore, be -fairly drawn from this source, against a general jurisdiction in chancery over charities of an indefinite nature, prior to the statute. And the statute itself may be resorted to, as affording an additional argument in corroboration of the opinion already expressed. It begins, by a recital, that lands, goods, money, &c., had been given, &c., heretofore, to certain purposes, which it enumerates in detail, which lands, &c., had not been employed according to the charitable intent of the givers and founders, by reason of frauds, breaches of trusts, and negligence in those that should pay, deliver and employ the same. It then enacts, that it shall be lawful for the lord chancellor, &c., to award commissions, under the great seal, to proper persons, to inquire, by juries, of all and singular such gifts, &c., breaches of trusts, &c., in respect to such gifts, &c., heretofore given, &c., or which shall hereafter be given, &c., “ to or for any the charitable and godly uses before rehearsed and upon such inquiry, to set down such orders, judgments and decrees, as the lands, &c., may be duly and faithfully employed to and for such charitable uses before rehearsed, for which they were given “which orders, judgments and decrees,not being contrary to the orders, statutes or decrees of the donors or founders, shall stand firm and good, according to the tenor and purpose thereof, and shall be executed accordingly, until the same shall be undone and altered by the lord chancellor, &c., upon complaint by any party grieved, to be made to them.” Then follow several provisions, excepting certain cases from the operation of the statute, which are not now material to be considered. The statute then directs the orders, &c., of the commissioners to be returned under seal, into the court of chancery, &c., and declares, that the lord chancellor, &c., shall and may “ take such order for the due execution of all or any of the said judgments, orders and decrees, as to them shall seem fit and convenientand lastly, the statute enacts, that any person aggrieved with any such orders, &c., may complain to the lord chancellor, &c., for redress therein ; and upon such complaint, the lord chancellor, &c., may, by such course as to their wisdom shall seem meetest, the circumstances of the case considered, proceed to the examination, hearing and determining thereof ", 32 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 51£ Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. “ and upon hearing thereof, shall and may annul, diminish, alter or enlarge the said orders, judgments and decrees of the said commissioners, as to them shall he thought to stand with equity and good conscience, according to the true intent and meaning of the donors and founders thereof and may tax and award costs against the person complaining, with just and sufficient cause, of the orders, judgments and decrees before mentioned, (a) From this summary statement of the contents of the statute, it is apparent, that the authority conferred on the court of chancery, in relation to charitable uses, is very extensive ; and it is not at all wonderful, considering the religious notions of the times, that the statute should have received the most liberal, not to say, in some instances, the most extravagant, interpretation. And it is very easy to perceive, how it came to pass, that as power was given to the court, in the most unlimited terms, to annul, diminish, alter or enlarge the orders and decrees of the commissioners, and to sustain an original bill in favor of any party grieved by such order or decree, the court arrived at the conclusion, that it might, by original bill, do tjiat, in the first instance, which it certainly could do circuitously upon the commission.^) And as in some cases, where the trust was for a definite object, and the trustee living, the court might, upon its ordinary jurisdiction over trusts, compel an execution of it, by an original bill, independent of the statute (Attorney- General v. Dixie, 13 Ves. 519 ; Kirkby Ravensworth Hospital, 15 Ibid. 305 ; Green v. Rutherforth, 1 Ibid. 462 ; Attorney- General v. Earl of Clarendon, 17 Ibid. 491, 499 ; 2 Fonb. Eq. b. 63, pt. 2, ch. 1, § 1, note a ; Cooper’s Eq. Pl. 292), we are at once let into the origin of the practice of mixing up the jurisdiction by original bill, with the jurisdiction under the statute, which Lord Hardwicke alluded to in the passage already quoted, Bailiffs, Ac., of Durford v. Lenthall, 2 Atk. 550 ; and which, at that time, was inveterately established. And this mixture of the jurisdictions serves also to illustrate the remark of Lord Nottingham in the case already cited ; Anon., 1 Ch. Cas. 267, where, upon an original bill, he decreed a devise to charity, void at law, to be good in equity, as an appointment, though before the statute of Elizabeth, no such decree could have been made. Upon the whole, it seems to me, that the jurisdiction of the court of chancery over charities, where no trust is interposed, or there is no person in esse capable of taking, or where the charity is of an indefinite nature, is not to be referred to the general jurisdiction of that court, but sprung up, after the statute of Elizabeth, and rests mainly on its provisions. See Cooper Eq. Pl. 102, 103.' This opinion is supported by the weight of authorities speaking to the point, and particularly, by those of a very recent date, which appear to have been most thoroughly considered. The language, too, of the statute lends a confirmation to the opinion, and enables us to trace what would otherwise seem a strange anomaly, to a legitimate origin. If so, there is no pretence, that by the law of Virginia, at the period when this will took effect, the statute of Elizabeth was then in force ; or that any court of equity of that state could sustain the bequest, in equity, as a charity, if it (®) See the statute 43 Eliz., ch. 4, at large, 2 Inst. 707 ; Bridg. on Duke Char., ch. h pl. 1. (&) See the Poor of St. Dunstan v. Beauchamp, 1 Ch. Cas. 193 ; 2 Inst. 711 ; Bailiffs, &c., of Burford ®. Lenthall, 2 Atk. 551 ; 15 Ves. 305. .. 4 Wheat.—3 33 51Z SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. 4 was void at law. And that it was void at law, cannot be seriously doubted; for the legatees were not then a corporate society, capable of taking it. Com. Dig., Devise, K ; 1 Roll. Abr. 609; Com. Dig., Chancery, 2, N, 1, &c. And it is a maxim, that the legacy must take effect at the death of the testator, or be void at that time, and the right vest in another. Per Lord Hard-wicke, Widmore v. Woodroffe, Ambl. 636, 640. And if a court of chancery could not, in virtue of its general jurisdiction, take cognisance of, or sustain the bequest in this suit, neither can the circuit court of the United States. If we could surmount the objection already considered, that this bequest is, under the present law of Virginia, deemed void, both in law and equity, and therefore, incapable of being decreed by this court, we might entertain the other questions which have been made in this court. One of these questions is, whether this court, as a court of equity, has a right to administer any charities, the administration of which would properly belong to the government of Virginia as parens patriae. It is certainly stated in books of authority, that the king, as parens patriae, has the general superintendence of all charities, not regulated by charter .(3 Bl. Com. 427 ; 2 Fonb. Eq. b. 2, pt. 2, ch. 1, § 1, and note a), which he exercises by the keeper of his conscience, the ’chancellor ; and therefore, the attorney-general, at the relation of some informant, when it is necessary, files, ex officio, an information in the court of chancery, to have the charity properly established. And it is added, that the jurisdiction thus exercised does not belong to the court of chancery, as a court of equity, but as administering the prerogative and duties of the crown. Cooper’s Eq. Pl. xxvii.; 2 Fonb. Eq. b. 2, ch. 1, § 1; Pord Falkland n . Bertie, 2 Vern. 342 ; Mitf. Eq. Pl. 29 ; Bailiffs, &c., of Burford v. Lenthall, 2 Atk. 551. It may safely be admitted, that the government of a state, as parens patriae, has a right to enforce all charities of a public nature, by virtue of its general superintending authority over the public interests, where no other person is intrusted with it; and it seems also to be held, that the jurisdiction vested by the statute of Elizabeth over charitable uses, is personal to the lord chancellor, and not in his ordinary or extraordinary jurisdiction in chancery, like that, in short, which he exercises as to lunatics and idiots. Bailiffs of Burford v. Lenthall, 2 Atk. 551; 2 Fonb. Eq. b. 3, pt. 2, ch. 1, § 1, and note a. It may also be admitted, that where money is given to charity, generally and indefinitely, without trustees or objects selected, the king, as par&M patriae, is the constitutional trustee, and may apply it as he pleases, under his sign-manual, and not under a decree of chancery. Moggridge v. Thach-well, 7 Ves. 36, 83, 85, 86 ; Mills v. Farmer, 1 Merivale 55 ; Paice v. Arch-1 bishop of Canterbury, 14 Ves. 364 ; Attorney-General v. Matthews, 2 Lev. 167. Where, however, the execution is to be by a trustee, with general, or some, objects pointed out, or to a trustee for indefinite and general charity, the court of chancery will take the administration of the trust. Moggridge v. Thackwell,A Ves. 36, 86 ; Mills v. Farmer, 1 Merivale 55. Whether, in such a case, upon an original bill to establish the’charity, the lord chancellor acts as the personal delegate of the crown, administering its prerogative in analogy to the authority personally given to him by the statute of charitable uses, under a commission ; or whether, as a court of equity, in virtue of its general powers, may, perhaps, upon the authorities, admit of some ques-34 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 51m Baptist Association v. Hart’s Executors. tion : though my opinion is, that it belongs to the court, as a court of equity, exercising jurisdiction to enforce a trust recognised and enforced by the law of the land ; and I think this opinion is corroborated by the better authorities. Ibid.; Paice v. Archbishop of Canterbury, 14 Ves. 364 ; Attorney-General v. Wansay, 15 Ibid. 231; Attorney- General v. Price, 17 Ibid. 371 ; Waldo v. Galey, 16 Ibid. 206. Be this as it may, where there is a trust for a definite object, and the trust is, in point of law sustainable, there seems no reason why a court of equity, as such, may not take cognisance of such trust at the suit of any competent party, whether the attorney-general, or a private interested relator, as well as of any other trust whose execution is sought. 2 Fonb. Eq. b. 3, pt. 2, ch. 1, § 1, note a, § 2, § 3, note i; Mogg-ridge v. ThackweU, 'I Ves. 36 ; Attorney-General v. Brewer’s Company, 1 Merivale 495 ; Attorney- General v. Bowyer, 3 Ves. 714 ; 2 Vern. 387 ; Attorney-Generals. Newcombe, 14 Ves. 1, 7 ; White v. White, 7 Ibid. 423. If, therefore, by the law of Virginia, the bequest in this case had been valid in law or equity, the trustees being marked out, and the objects being definite, there does not seem any reason why, at their instance, it might not have been executed in this as well as in any other court of equity. The court, in such a case, would carry into effect the intention of the testator; nothing would be left to its discretion; and it would, therefore, do precisely what a state court of chancery must do, acting as such, or administering the prerogative of the government as parens patriae. In respect to another question, whether the attorney-general be not a a necessary party to a bill in equity to establish a charity, or carry it into effect, that must depend upon circumstances. If the charity be indefinite, or there be no trustees, or no persons competent to take, or the objects be of a general and public nature, it would clearly be proper, that the government to whom the superintendency of such charities belongs, should be made a party to the bill by their attorney-general. This seems to have been the general course established by the authorities. Cooper’s Eq. Plead. 21, 22, 102, 163 ; Monell v. Lawson, 2 Eq. Cas. Abr. 167, pl. 13 ; 4 Vin. 500, pl. 11; Attorney- General v. Pearce, 2 Atk. 87. But where the charity is definite in its nature, and trustees are appointed to take or execute it, it is not perceived, why a suit at the instance of such trustees may not properly be maintained, without the government being a party. Monell v. Lawson, 2 Eq. Cas. Abr. 167, pl. 13 ; .4 Vin. 500, pl. 11 ; Bridg. Duke, Charit. 385, 386 ; Chitty v. Parker, 4 Bro. C. C. 38 ; Anon., 3 Atk. 276 ; Attorney- General v. Newcombe, 14 Ves. 1, 7 ; Waldo v. Caley, 16 Ibid. 206. Another Question which has been discussed in the argument is, whether a court of court of equity, sitting within one jurisdiction, can execute any charitable bequests for foreign objects, in another jurisdiction ; and it is said, m a technical sense, to be against the public policy of Virginia, to sustain or execute such bequests. There is no statute of Virginia making such bequests void; and therefore, if against her policy, it can be only because it would be against the general policy of all states governed by the common law. The case of the Attorney-General v. The City of London, 3 Bro. C. C. 171 ; s. c. 1 Ves. jr. 243 (Provost, Ac., of Edinburgh v. Au-bery, Ambl. 236 ; Oliphant v. Hendrie, 1 Bro. C. C. 571), is relied on to establish the general proposition. It was an information to establish a new scheme for a charity of Mr. Boyle, who by his will, in 1691, gave the resi- 35 51 n SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Baptist Association, v. Hart’s Executors. due of his. fortune to be laid out by his executors for charitable and other pious and good uses, at their discretion, but recommended that the greater part should be laid out for the advancement of the Christian religion among infidels. The charity had been established under a decree of the court, and the property conveyed to the City of London, upon trust to lay out the rents and profits, in the advancement of the Christian religion, as the bishop of London, for the time being, and Lord Burlington should appoint. The trustees appointed the rents and profits to be paid to an agent in London, for the college of William and Mary, in Virginia, for this purpose, that the college should maintain and educate in the Christian religion so many Indian children, as far as the fund would go, and that the president, &c., thereof, should transmit accounts, and should be subject to rules given them, until altered. This arrangement was ratified by the court. After the revolution, the present bill was filed for the purpose of taking away the charity from the college, because emancipated from the control of the court, and to have it disposed of by a new scheme. Upon hearing the cause, a decree was made accordingly, upon the ground, that the trusts to the college to convert neighboring infidels, ceasing for want of objects (there being now, as the court said, no neighboring infidels), the charity must be applied anew. 3 Bro. C. C. 171, 177. There was also an intimation, at the argument, that the corporation was not now an existing corporation, and at all events, was not within the control of the court. But the ground of the decision was as above stated. It is observable in this case, that the charity of Mr. Boyle was not, in terms or substance, limited to foreign countries or objects ; but the application to foreign objects was originally under the decree of the court. It certainly then furnishes no argument against, but an argument in favor, of the power of a court of equity, to apply even a general charity to foreign objects. But we need not rest here. There are other cases directly in point, in which bequests for foreign charitable objects have been sustained in equity. In the Provost, - 15 term of our jurisprudence, in any book of authority. No one will pretend, that these words are drawn from any English statute, or from the states’ statutes, before the adoption of the constitution. Were they, then, furnished from that great treasury and reservoir of rational jurisprudence, the Roman law ? We are inclined to believe this. The tradition is, that Mr. Justice Wilson, who was a member of the convention, and a Scottish lawyer, and learned in the civil law, was the author of this phrase, (a) If, then, these terms were borrowed from the civil code, that code presents us with a sys-«em insolven°y *h R8 c&ssio bonorum ; and yet, as it is said by Gibbon, the goddess of faith was worshipped, not only in the temples, but in the lives 0 the Romans.” The rights of creditors, we know, were protected by em, with the utmost vigilance and severity. They did not, however, it eems, conceive that a cessio bonorum was inconsistent with the rights of creditors, or impaired the obligation of contracts. England also anxiously (a) See Reid’s Essay, vol. 4, p. 188. 83 151 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Sturges v. Crowninshield. guards the rights of creditors. On commerce, on the integrity of her merchants and manufacturers, her best reputation and interest depends. And yet, England, more than any other country, has her system of insolvency and bankruptcy. Good sense, in all ages, in all countries, is the same ; as in Rome, in England, and in all other commercial countries, so in this, bankrupt and insolvent laws have never been considered as impairing the obliga-*1 wl tion a contract- If included in the literal *acceptation of the words J of this clause of the constitution, from the nature of things, they form an implied exception. Insolvent laws are based upon the confessed and physical inability of a party to perform a pecuniary contract, otherwise than by a surrender of all he has. How idle, then, to make a provision in respect to such laws, guarding against the impairing a contract; that is, providing for its strict, adequate and undiminished performance, when the impossibility of any performance is pre-supposed. The total, physical inability of the individual, is his exemption, and this is tacitly and necessarily reserved and implied in every contract. This is the doctrine of Vattel, of a nation, as to a public treaty (Vattel, lib. 3, ch. 6, § 91); and is it not the law of nations, that the obligations of a treaty shall not be impaired ? To impair an obligation has reference to the faculty of its being performed. The obligation of a contract, and a remedy for its performance, are different things. Whether a contract shall be fit matter for judicial coercion, is a different question, from its being preserved perfect and undiminished where it is. When the courts do take cognisance, they shall not adjudge less, nor differently, either as to the amount, or other tprms and conditions of the contract. The performance of the contract shall be exact; imprisonment is the remedy for enforcing it: but where there is a confessed and adjudicated inability, the society withholds the power to protract indefinitely and miserably, what can -„I never be an effectual remedy, but only a vindictive punishment. *The J moral obligation of a contract may, perhaps, remain for ever, but misfortune and extreme indigence put an end to the legal obligation, as war does to a treaty ; as revolution does to a pre-existing government; as death does to personal duties. The impossibility of payment discharges from contracts, as insanity does from crimes : “ Impossibilium” says even the severe Bynkershoek, “ nulla est obligatio.” To impair means, as to individuals, you shall not pay less ; you shall not have an extension of time in which to pay ; you shall not pay in goods, when your contract is cash ; you shall not pay in depreciated coin, or even current bank-notes, when your contract binds you to the payment of pure coin ; interest shall not.be diminished : in fine, there shall be no alleviation of its terms, or mitigation of its conditions. The facts as to which you engage shall remain the same. The insolvent law is something independent of the obligation of the contract, and extraneous to it. It is a matter of peremptory nonsuit to the action ; or rather a bar, having reference to nothing inherent in the contract, but to something exterior and posterior to it. The insolvent law, so far from impairing the contract, sets it up, admits its obligation, and endeavors to enforce it, so far as it is possible, consistently with the misfortunes of the debtor, to enforce it. If it was meant, by these words of the constitution, to prohibit the passage of insolvent lawTs, why not, in plain terms, have said so ? It would have been as clearly understood, as the plain prohibition, that no state shall grant any title of nobility. ‘ It could not have been meant to bury such a meaning 84 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. *154 Sturges v. Crowninshield. under such *obscurity. To suppose, that the framers of the constitution were designedly obscure on this delicate and dangerous subject, is an impeachment of their integrity ; to suppose, that they had so little command of appropriate and perspicuous language as to employ such terms to express such a thought, is an unjust imputation upon their acknowledged talents. Upon the construction contended for, statutes of limitation would be repugnant to the constitution ; statutes of limitation take away the remedy, after six years ; the insolvent law, at once. But suppose, the statute of limitation confined the remedy to sixty days, or six days ; it would be an indiscreet, impolitic and unwise, but not an unconstitutional law. If such statutes be valid, it must be, because they do not impair the obligation of a contract. Yet the one law has the same effect on the contract as the other. They both take away the remedy, and neither annuls the obligation : for a subsequent promise, in both cases, revives the debt. If the contract was annulled, or its obligation impaired, a promise to pay would be void ; because it would be without consideration, and would be contrary to the very law that destroyed it. The writers on the civil law most clearly express the difference between the obligation of a contract, and the legal remedy for its performance, (a) Ayliffe, among other instances, refers to the very subject now under discussion : “ Neither a civil nor a natural obligation,” says he, “ is dissolved by a cessio bonorum; though it produces a good exception in law, and suspends the force of an obligation *for a time ; the extinguishment of an obligation being one thing, and the cessa- -* tion of it another ; for when the cessation of an obligation is once extinct, it never revives again.” This is leaving the matter untouched and unregulated, as we contend it is, by the great fundamental law, to be provided for by ordinary legislation. If the states, influenced by the eloquent reasoning of Burke and Johnson, were to abolish imprisonment for debt entirely, could their right be disputed ? And yet this might prevent the creditor from getting his money. The contract would remain to be enforced by other, but perhaps, not equally efficacious, means. This reasoning, as to the distinctness of the remedy from the contract, is applicable to cases even where insolvency does not interfere ; with how much more force, where it does. It would be monstrous, to parade the show, or urge the violence of a nominal remedy, when it could be none in reality. You must submit to necessity. When the sages of the convention inserted this clause in our constitution, they meant no more, or less, than the inviolability of contracts ; and what system of religious faith nor of ethics, or of jurisprudence, ever meant less ? But they likewise meant, that this salutary, but universal principle, should be subjected to the salutary and indispensable exceptions to it, which always had prevailed, and always must prevail, very contract must be subjected to, limited, and interpreted by, the law of nature, which everywhere forms a part, and the best part, of the municipal code ; and it is the primary canon of that code, that necessity (physical, moral necessity), knows no law, but itself. Laws or ^constitutions * cannot create property in the individual ; and in a certain sense, in L 156 t e absence of all fraud, where there is no property, there can be no injustice ; of course, no violation of a contract. Locke, in endeavoring to prove (a) Ayliffe’s Civ. Law. lib. 4, tit. 1; Dig. 46, 3, 98, 8. 85 156 SUPREME COURT [Eeb’y Sturges v. Crownlnshield. that the principles of morals are susceptible of as strict demonstration as those of mathematics, says, where there is no property, there can be no. injustice ; for the idea of property being a right to anything, and that the idea of injustice being an invasion of that right, it is evident, that these ideas being thus established, and these names annexed to them, we can as certainly know these propositions to be true, as nat a triangle has three angles, equal to two right angles. Locke’s Works, lib. 4. p. 258 (fol. eel.). And the civil law, perhaps the most exact, consistent and comprehensive code the sagacity of man ever framed and systematised, expressly asserts the same principle : Nam is videtur nullam actionem habere cui propter inopiam adversarii inanis actio est. Desinit debitor esse is, qui nactus est exceptionem justam, nec ab naturali equitati abhorrentem. Ayliffe 506; Dig. lib. 4, tit. 3, § 6. The states, then, in exercising the natural, inherent and indispensable power of discharging poverty, distress, and absolute indigence and inability from payment, have not only conducted themselves lawfully and constitutionally, but the omission to have done it, would have been impiously absurd; and it is an unjust imputation upon the constitution of the United States, to suppose a prohibition against the exercise of such a power somewhere in society. As to insolvencies, congress connot exercise it; as to bankruptcies, * *they refuse ; the states, therefore, must exercise this power. The J obligations of natural law, and the injunctions of our religion, which religion is a part of our common law, impose it as a duty, that the wants of the poor should be relieved. Strange, indeed, is it, that the laws should, at the same moment, press upon society two duties, so inconsistent and contradictory, as that of exacting for the payment of his debts, what the impoverished and imprisoned debtor has not ; and obliging those who have something, to give him a share of what they have, to save him from suffering or death. Although it has been strenuously insisted, that the abstraction of the remedy is a violation of the contract, yet it has also been intimated, that if erroneous in this particular, the substance of the argument on the other side would still remain correct, inasmuch as not only the person of the debtor, but the debt itself, was discharged. It may, perhaps, be doubted, whether, though the person be discharged from the debt, the debt itself be extinguished. At the utmost, the tendency of the doctrine contended for, would be, but to give the creditor a right to the miserable chance of the future acquisitions of the insolvent, by a future action ; and that chance, rendered the more desperate by the consideration, that arrest, that is, imprisonment, is almost the only mode of instituting actions in the United States. Grant that the remedy may be given, or withheld or modified, by the legislatures of the states, and the difference between us, in practical result, is not worth contending for. This could not be what the convention had in view. According to the doctrine on *the other side, you dis- J charge the debtor from prison, to condemn him to work in the mines, and that too, with his chains upon him. You remit the lesser, to inflict the greater punishment. You take him from a life of listless indolence, where you are obliged to maintain him, and doom him to a life of labor, without hope. Nay, worse, you so place him as to have every step watched by a lynx-eye avarice ; every morsel he puts into his mouth counted and weighed; every personal indulgence censured ; every family sympathy scanned and 86 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 158 Sturges v. Crowninshield. reprimanded. Well was it said by a learned judge, that such freedom would be a mockery : nay, worse, it would be aggravated slavery and complicated misery ! It is admitted, that the state has a right to the service of its citizens. It may open its prison-doors even to criminals ; what services can ever’ be rendered by him who is pressed down to the earth by a poverty that must be hopeless and interminable ? The state wants the services of its citizens, to fight its battles on thd land and ocean, to cultivate its fields, to enlarge its industry, to promote its prosperity, to signalize its fame. It does not want a heartless, purposeless, mindless being—but half a man—a worse than slave ; it wants a citizen, with all his worth and all his energies of body, mind and soul. The line of distinction drawn by the opposite counsel, between bankrupt and insolvent laws, is wholly mistaken. So far from the difference between them consisting in the circumstance of the bankrupt law discharging the debt itself, whilst the insolvent law discharges the person of the debtor only, it is an historical *fact, that the early English statutes of bank-ruptcy did not provide for the discharge either of the debt or of the L person. Discharge is not mentioned, nor in any way provided for, until the 4th or 5th of Anne ; that is, after the system of bankruptcy had been established almost two centuries. But it is expressly provided for, it is the object and intention of the first regular insolvent law of England, in the time of Charles IL, and of the act of 1755, which served as a model for colonial legislation. The law of New York of 1755, and that of Rhode Island of 1756, were copied almost verbatim from this last. There is, even now, no discharge, in the case of a second bankruptcy, unless the debtor pays seventy-five per cent, of his debt, and in England, none at all, if he has even had the benefit of an act of insolvency. Cullen’s Bank. Law 395, in notis; Act of Congress of 1800, ch. 173, § 57. A construction merely technical ought not to be given to such an instrument as a constitution of government. If any instrument ought to receive an equitable and liberal interpretation, affected by the events which preceded, it is that of a great treaty of confederation between various states, who were compressed into union by obvious motives and considerations, of common wrongs sustained, mutual errors committed, and equal advantages to be gained. Our interpretation of such an instrument ought, at least, to be as liberal as of a remedial statute. We ought to be as unshackled as in the interpretation of a last will and testament, where the intention of the testator is the polar star to direct us ; *where we have a right, if the words are r*jgQ ambiguous, to seek for illustration from the condition and circum- *-stances of the testator’s family. What was the condition of the American family ? What were the evils which this article of the constitution was intended to remedy ? Undoubtedly, those acts of desperation and violence, to which many of the states, in a paroxysm of revolution, resorted, and those acts of impolitic and selfish injustice to which they continued to resort, in that more dangerous moment, after the effect of mighty impulses had eeased, and was succeeded by inevitable relaxation and debility. These plainly indicate what were the evils, and demonstrate for what this remedy was intended. As to the effects of poverty, of indigence, of natural and moral impossibility to perform contracts, neither foreign nations, nor our own citizens complained. These must, and do, from the vicissitudes of human life, and the long catalogue of human ills, exist in all countries and societies. 8.7 160 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Sturges v. Crowninshield. This provision of the constitution is applicable to those cases which suppose a freedom from imprisonment, and ability of payment, and a fraudulent evasion of it. They suppose the case of a man who would pay all his debts, but that, from the course of events, if his contracts were literally interpreted, and immediately’ enforced, he would pay too much, if he paid according to its terms. The apology for these laws, which the constitution intended to interdict, was, that he contracted the debt, when society was peaceful and prosperous ; when land was high ; when coin was in circulation ; when * markets for produce were open, and the whole course *of commercial intercourse free and unembarrassed ; and he was called upon to pay,, when every particular, in this state of things, was reversed. In providing a remedy for this terrible fluctuation of affairs, after a storm, and the subsidence of the agitated ocean of society, into that dangerous calm which always succeeds, the states erred extravagantly : they issued paper money; they set off barren lands, by an arbitrary appraisement, for the payment of debts; they curtailed interest; they made specific articles a tender ; they altered the contract as to its facts, its terms, its conditions ; they revoked their own grants ; they interfered in private concerns—not, as they had a right to do, by the equal pressure of a general and permanent system, granting relief to avowed insolvency and distress, but by extending indulgences in particular cases, and arming debtors with privileges against their creditors. In reviewing the history of the period referred to, it will be seen, that insolvent laws were complained of by no one as the evil of the times, except by Mr. Hammond, the British minister, in his correspondence with Mr. Jefferson, who indignantly and eloquently repelled the imputation that they were a violation of treaty ; and yet the words of the treaty of 1783 were, on a similar subject, stronger and plainer, perhaps, than the words of the constitution : British creditors were to “ meet with no lawful impediment to the recovery of the full value of their debts in sterling money.” Waite’s State Papers, vol. 1, p. 287. In the 'debates of the various conventions, no *1621 opposition *was started, that this clause of the constitution was pro-hibitory of the accustomed relief to poverty, by insolvent laws ; and no amendment was offered for the purpose of avoiding this possibly lurking danger, except in the convention of Rhode Island, the last that acted upon the constitution ; and there it was rejected, on the ground, that the passage of insolvent laws was nowhere prohibited in the constitution, and that the contrary apprehension was a dream of distempered jealousy. The practice of passing insolvent laws, which had begun so early in colonial times, which had uninterruptedly continued, and was then in daily unblamed operation, was not even referred to as an evil. This is expressive silence—this is a negative argument of conclusive force. They have since been sanctioned by upwards of thirty years’ practice ; by the absence of all complaint; by the decisions of state and federal courts ; by the acquiescence of congress, and what is more, by the acquiescence of creditors. It has taken upwards of thirty years of curious inspection to discover this occult meaning, covered under the mystical veil of constitutional language. The constitution had reference to those acts which had palpably caused discontent and shame, and were, unfortunately for us, peculiar to our history. To have inserted them in odious detail, would have disfigured the constitution, and have etei-nized a disgrace upon the most brilliant page of our history. Against paper 88 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 162 Sturges v. Crowninshield. money, the convention had provided. They then guarded against the other expedients of wrong. They did not mean the insertion of an abstract dogma, indefinite in its extent, of *sweeping and dangerous generality. They anticipated, that discreet expositors would arrive at their meaning, *-from the previous history of the country, and from the consideration of the well-known evils which they intended to remedy. For if we were to give only a technical common-law construction to this article of the constitution, innumerable absurdities would thicken upon us; we should frequently lose the benefit, in the plainest case for which it was intended ; and be obliged to apply it in others, from which the instinctive feeling and irresistible common sense of mankind would repel it. For instance, if we are to be bound in verbal fetters, what shall we do with a judgment? The judges of England have declared that a judgment is no contract. Bidleson v. Whytel, 3 Burr. 1548. What an inlet this to fraud and evasion ! The creditor has merged his contract in a judgment; hut arriving at this point, he is unprotected by the constitution. What shall we do with marriage, which is a contract, the most solemn and sacred of all, by its very terms indissoluble and eternal ; but yet the states impair it by divorces d menso et thoro, and dissolve it, “by divorces d vinculo matrimonii. If it impairs the obligation of a contract, for a living insolvent not to pay all his debts, why is the case altered when he is dead ? Can a different rule take effect with regard to his substitute, his executor or administrator ? This would not be more unreasonable, than what is pretended to be done in the case of the living man, whose contract you make to be, that he will, at all events, be able to pay ; you *make it an insurance against accident, against misfortune, against irresistible force, wide- L wasting calamity, inevitable necessity ; against the decrees and acts of God himself. Let, then, the rule of interpretation, as to insolvent laws, be the common sense of mankind, the universal agreement of those who have been affected, who may be affected by them. A whole nation, on such a subject, cannot be in the wrong. The parties contracted with the full knowledge of these laws, and the practice of the states upon them. Every creditor knows he is liable to be paid only so far forth as the property of a distressed debtor, on a legal and bond fide surrender, can pay. The universal consent of the nation and its public authorities is strongly shown by the practice of congress itself, whose privileges, it is said, the states are usurping. According to the argument on the other side, congress, in the only bankrupt law it 6ver passed, impaired the dbligation of contracts, since it made the discharge of the debtor referrible to past as well as future contracts. Is it, indeed, to be said, that congress has power to do this, and that the prohibition of this power to the states is an implied permission of it to the United States ? Is a different rule of right and ethics to be applied to these different authorities ? Certainly not. Where, indeed, mere political power is prohibited to the states, congress may exercise , that power exclusively. For instance, congress may emit bills of credit. But the matter is different in a moral prohibition. Congress have no more right to impair the obligation of a contract than the states.1 It is a preposterous presumption, that congress 1 But see Evans v. Eaton, Pet. C. C. 322 ; Knox v. Lee, 12 Wall. 457 ; Savage v. United States, 8 Ct. of Claims 545 ; Ex parte Smith, 6 Chicago Leg. News 33, and cases there cited. 89 *165 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Sturges v. Crowninshield. *meant, by its bankrupt law, to violate the injunction of the constitution, when they left they payment of debts, according to the undeviating course of the civilized world, to be discharged out of the surrendered estate, rather than by the imprisoned person of the debtor ; communis error facit jus. In a most important matter in the constitution of this very court, a co-ordinate branch of the government, in giving a construction to its own powers and organization, it has chosen to collect an interpretation of the constitution from acts of congress, from the uninterrupted and unimpeached practice under them, rather than from the bare literal words. The constitution of the United States has said, “ there shall be one supreme court, and such inferior courts as 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,” &c. Depending solely on the plain signification of the words, one can hardly conceive of language that establishes, with more distinctness, two separate judicial departments. One court, existing in unity and supremacy ; other courts, multifarious and inferior. One original, the other appellate ; and yet, both congress and this court have decided, that it is, at the same time, one and many ; inferior and supreme, original and appellate : nay, more ; that with a commission, which, framed in the words of the constitution, has only reference to one appointment, nevertheless, you hold both. But communis error facit jus ; and all these apparent inconsistencies were reconciled by the propriety of acquiescing in a construc-*i6fil tion *the constitution, which had been fixed by a practice under J it; for a period of several years. Stuart v. Laird, 1 Cranch 299. D. JS. Ogden, on the same side, argued, that, supposing the law of New York in question to be a bankrupt law, there is nothing contained in the constitution of the United States, to prohibit the legislature of that state from passing such a law. There is no express prohibition to be found in the constitution ; and if any prohibition exists, it must be sought for either in the clause giving congress power “ to establish a uniform rule of naturalization, and uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcies throughout the United States,” or in the clause which prohibits the states from passing “ any ex posto facto law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts.” 1. Does the first clause, which has been mentioned, prohibit the states from passing bankrupt laws ? The constitution, after giving certain powers to congress, in some cases prohibits, by express words, the states from exercising those powers, and in other cases, it contains no such prohibition. Why should the convention insert express prohibitions as to some powers, and not as to all, if it was intended that all should be prohibited ? dhe mention of one in the prohibition, is the exclusion of all others, not mentioned, from it. The constitution first declares what powers congress shall have ; and then, what powers the states shall no longer have. Among the Powers thus taken from the states, this of passing bankrupt *laws is J not enumerated. Is it not a fair conclusion from this, that the convention did not intend to take this power from the states ? Would they not have expressly done so, as they did in the case of other powers, where such was their intention ? And let it be remembered, that this subject of bankruptcies was brought immediately to the view of the convention, in a preceding article, in which the powers of congress are enumerated. The powers 90 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 167 Sturges v. Crowninshield. given to congress by the constitution, may be divided into three classes : 1st. Those which are national in their nature, and which are vested in congress, as the sovereign power of the nation or Union. 2d. Those powers which are given to congress, and from the exercise of which the states are expressly excluded. 3d. Those which are given to congress, and from the exercise of which the states are not excluded. Under the first class may be enumerated —the power to borrow money on the credit of the United States ; to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the several states ; to provide for the punishment of counterfeiting the securities and current coin of the United States ; to constitute tribunals inferior to the supreme court of the United States ; to define and punish piracies and felonies committed on the high seas, and offences against the law of nations ; to declare war, grant letters of marque and reprisal, and to make rules concerning captures on land and water; to raise and support armies; to provide and maintain a navy; to provide for organizing, arming and disciplining the militia, &c. Most of the powers which have been enumerated, could manifestly never *be exercised fyy the states, because they apply to the Union, for which .. * the legislature of no one state ever could legislate. The remainder L of them regard our intercourse with foreign nations, and therefore, necessarily concern the whole nation collectively, and no one part of it in particular. There was no necessity for the constitution to prohibit the states from exercising these powers, because, from their very nature, they could only be exercised by the general government. 2d. Those powers, which are given to congress, and from the exercise of which the states are expressly excluded, are, the power to levy and collect duties and imposts ; to coin money and regulate the value thereof ; and to this class might, perhaps, be also added, the powers to raise armies and maintain a navy, which have been before stated in the first class of powers, but from the exercise of which the states are in terms prohibited, in time of peace. Under the third class of powers, or those which are given to congress, and from the exercise of which the states are not precluded, are the powers to levy and collect taxes and excises; to establish a uniform rule of naturalization, and uniform laws upon the subject of bankruptcies throughout the United States ; to regulate the value of foreign coins, and fix the standard of weights and measures ; to establish post-offices and post-roads ; to promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing, for limited times, to authors and inventors, the exclusive right to their writings and discoveries. From the exercise of any of these powers, the states are neither expressly, nor by any *fair rule of construction, excluded. To levy and collect taxes and excises, is a *-power given to congress. Is it taken from the individual states ? If it were, the state governments must have expired at the moment the general government came into existence. Without the power of levying and collecting taxes, no government can exist. If this power to levy and collect taxes and excises, which is given to congress, be not an exclusive power, why should the others be so? Every argument which has been used, applies with equal force to this, as to the other powers. The power is expressly given to congress, and if it be true, as it has been contended, that every power given to congress is necessarily exclusive, this must be so ; and if it be not exclusive, there is nothing in the argument of the counsel for the plaintiff. But it may be asked, do, then, the government of the United States, and 91 169 SUPREME COURT [Feh’y . Sturges v. Crowninshield. of the individual states, both possess these powers ? And have they a concurrent right to exercise them? We answer, that they have a concurrent power on the subjects; they may both legislate in any of this class of powers. Congress and the individual states may both tax the same article of property, and both taxes must be paid. Congress has passed laws imposing a land-tax : was it ever supposed, that their exercising that power necessarily took from the state legislatures their right of exercising it ? Congress has power to establish a uniform rule of naturalization : is this an exclusive power? The power of admitting foreigners to the rights and privileges of natural-born citizens, was a right which had been exercised by every state in the * *Union, from the date of their independence down to the adoption of 1 the federal constitution. With a targe portion of their territory uncultivated and uninhabited, except by savages, the power and right of encouraging the emigration of foreigners had become a sort of common law of the country; it originated with our fathers, when they first settled in the country, and had continued ever since ; it formed a prominent feature in the system of taws in every state in the Union. Suppose, congress had never thought proper to exercise the power given to it, of establishing a uniform rule of naturalization; was it intended by the convention, that the states should no longer exercise that power, and that the omission of congress to legislate on the subject, should operate as a bar to the admission of foreigners to the right and privileges of citizens, and thus put an end to emigration ? The first act of congress, entitled, “an act to establish a uniform rule of naturalization,” wras passed in March 1790, and prescribed the mode in which a foreigner might become a citizen of the United States ; but it did not declare that the mode therein prescribed should be uniform throughout the United States, and no state should thereafter admit foreigners to the rights of citizenship. After the passage of this taw, some of the states, Virginia and Pennsylvania, the former certainly, and it is believed, the tatter, continued to exercise this power of naturalization, until January 1795, when congress passed an act, entitled, “ an act to establish a uniform rule of naturalization, and to repeal the act heretofore passed on that subject;’ *1711 *which ac^’ ^or the purpose “of carrying into complete effect the -I power given by the constitution to establish a uniform rule of naturalization throughout the United States,” declares, that any alien may be admitted to become a citizen of the United States, or any of them, upon the conditions contained in the said act, “ and not otherwise.” After congress had thus legislated upon the subject, and had established, what by the constitution it had a right to establish, a uniform system of naturalization, no state could legislate, and none ever attempted to legislate, on the subject. Wherever a power is exercised by congress, and there is nothing incompatible in its exercise by the states, they may both exercise it, and the laws passed by both are binding and constitutional. If congress has a power, and exercises it in such a way that the exercise of the same power by the individual states would be incompatible with its exercise by congress, then the state taw must give way; it must yield to the law of congress : not because the taw of the state is unconstitutional, and therefore, void, but because the power of congress is supreme, and where the state taws interfere with it, they must yjeld. The 6th article of the constitution declares, that “ this constitution, and the taws of the United States, which shall be made in pur- 92 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 171 Sturges v. Crowninshield. suance thereof, and all treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the land ; and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby, anything in the constitution or laws of any state to the contrary notwithstanding.” From this clause, the convention evidently *supposed, that the laws of the United States, and of the individual states, might, in some cases, conflict with each L other (which they never could do, if they could never legislate upon the same subject), and meant to provide, when they did conflict, that the state laws should yield, and the laws of the United States be supreme. But until congress does legislate, and in such a way as to preclude the states, the states retain their power to legislate, on the class of cases we are now considering. Congress has power to fix the value of foreign coins. If it had never legislated upon that subject, were the states prohibited from fixing the value of foreign coins ? Congress has power to fix a standard of weights and measures. If it should never exercise that power, were the individual states to be left without any standard of weights and measures? But it is said, that an act of legislation is an act of the sovereign authority of the society, and that it -would be a strange act of sovereign authority, whose power can be put an end to, whenever congress choose to legislate, and is to revive again, when congress choose no longer to legislate. This is said to be an anomaly in political science, and absurd upon the face of it. But we ask, whether our whole form of government is not new and unheard of, until established here ? Is not our constitution an anomaly ? Is it, therefore, not to be executed ? To a person unacquainted with the nature, power and extent of our political institutions, before and at the time the constitution of the United States was formed and established, many parts of it would be wholly unintelligible, and no proper construction could be given to *it, without bearing in mind the political condition of the people who L 7 ordained and established it. Citizens of separate and independent governments, they adopted this constitution, not because they had no government, but because they had several governments ; to secure to themselves those blessings of peace and independence which they had earned by their common sufferings, and which were the reward of their common blood and treasure. Fearing the approaches of those petty jealousies, which are always engendered in petty states, and which might soon array against each other those arms, which had been so lately united against the common enemy, they established this constitution. It is without example ;. and it is no argument against it, to say, that the powers vested by it in congress, and left by it in the several states, are novelties. If the construction, for which we contend, be given to it, there is perfect harmony in all its parts. But another argument has been stated, and urged with some earnestness against us, which is founded upon the declaration in the constitution, that the rule of naturalization and the laws of bankruptcy are to be uniform throughout the United States. The argument is this : the constitution says, the system of bankruptcy shall be uniform throughout the United States. If the several states have power to legislate on the subject, the systems would be multiform ; it is, therefore, evident, that the convention intended that congress should alone have the power of establishing the system of bankruptcy, and that the states were to be excluded from the exercise of r-*- . any such power. Now, if there be any solidity in this argument, *it *■ 93 174 SUPREME COURT Sturges v. Crowninshield. [Eeb’y would prove, that whenever the convention declares that any laws passed by congress shall be uniform throughout the United States, the power of passing such laws is necessarily exclusive. But congress has the power of levying and collecting duties, imposts and excises ; and the convention declares, that “ all duties, imposts and excises shall be uniform throughout the United States and yet it never has been contended, that this power is exclusive. As to excises, many, and it is believed, most of the states, have always exercised, and still do exercise, the power of levying and collecting excises. And so far was the convention from considering the power given to congress to levy and collect duties, imposts and excises, as an exclusive powrer, because they were to be uniform, that in the next article of the constitution, the states are, in express words, prohibited from levying and collecting imposts and duties. Why was this prohibition inserted, if the states were already prohibited from the exercise of that power ? If the power of establishing uniform laws as to duties, imposts and excises, vests no exclusive power in congress, in relation to those subjects, why should the power of establishing uniform laws of bankruptcy and naturalization exclude the states from the exercise of those powers ? It has been said, that every power given to congress is necessarily exclusive and unlimited, unless it be expressly limited in the constitution ; or unless, from the power itself, it is necessarily a limited power. If this be true, then it follows, that if the constitution had *1751 Siven Power congress to pass a law establishing a rule of naturaliza- J tion,*and a system of bankruptcy, the power would have been exclusive, and the states would have retained no power to legislate on those subjects. Why, then, was it thought necessary by the convention, to declare that the laws upon these subjects should be uniform ? Not because the power was to be an exclusive one, but because, as each state retained the power of legislation upon these subjects, a variety of laws and systems might and necessarily would be, introduced, which might, and probably would, have an effect upon the general commerce of the country, and be attended with consequences unfavorable to the general welfare and prosperity ; and therefore, power was given to congress, whenever they thought proper, to put an end to these various and discordant systems, by establishing one uniform system, to pervade the whole United States. So far, therefore, from the insertion of the word “uniform,” in this clause of the constitution, affording any argument in favor of the exclusive power of congress to make laws upon the subject of bankruptcies and naturalization, it was the existence and probable exercise of the power of the states to legislate upon those subjects, which induced the convention to give power to congress to establish a uniform system throughout the United States. A system of bankruptcy is the creature of commerce ; its end and its object are, at once, to give and support commercial credit. Some of the United States are, from their situation, habits and pursuits, commercial : others are agricultural. To the one, a systein o bankruptcy may be very convenient, if not essential; to the other, such a * system may not only *be unnecessary, but ruinous. Hence, the di- -* ficulty which was foreseen, and is now felt, of establishing any uni form system, to pervade the Union, and hence would have been the mani est impropriety of taking from the states all power of legislating upon the su ject, and vesting that power exclusively in congress. It is said, that as congress has the power to legislate upon this subject of bankruptcies, an 94 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. Sturges v. Crowninshield. 176 omits to exercise it, it is an expression of the opinion of congress, that no such system ought to exist. The omission of congress to legislate, amounts to a declaration, that they do not think a uniform system is necessary ; and they, therefore, leave the states to legislate upon the subject, whenever they may think it proper and expedient to do so. That congress considers the states as possessing this power, is evident, from the 61st section of the bankrupt law of 1800. 2. The second question is, whether this law of New York is repugnant to that clause of the constitution which prohibits the states “ from passing any ex, post facto law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts?” We have already endeavored to show, that the individual states have the power of passing bankrupt laws. What is a bankrupt law ? It is a statute which, upon a surrender of the property of the bankrupt, discharges both his person and his future-acquired property from the payment of his debts. This discharge from all future liability is one of the principal objects in all bankrupt laws, which, for the benefit of the creditors, provide by heavy penalties, for a fair and full surrender of the debtor’s property ; and *for * the benefit of the unfortunate debtor and his family, leaves him to ■- 1 ' the full enjoyment of whatever his talents and industry may enable him to earn for the future advancement of himself and family. If, then, the constitution recognises the right and power of the states to pass bankrupt laws, it seems to follow, that the clause of the constitution, which prohibits the states from passing laws impairing the obligation of contracts, does not include a prohibition to pass bankrupt laws. Whether this law of the state of New York is to be considered as an insolvent law or a bankrupt law, it is unnecessary for us to inquire ; because, though great pains have been taken to prove that is a bankrupt law, we do not think it necessary to show that it is not. If it be a bankrupt law, the state had a right to pass it. If it be an insolvent law, it is equally within the scope of our reasoning ; because, if an insolvent law, which discharges the person and future property of the insolvent, be a law impairing the obligation of a contract, within the mean-nmg of the constitution; so is a bankrupt law, which does the same thing. But we have shown that the states have the power of passing bankrupt laws. They have, therefore, the power to declare that an unfortunate debtor, upon the compliance with certain conditions, shall be discharged from all liability to the payment of his debts ; unless, indeed, it can be supposed that the convention intended to leave to the states the power of passing a bankrupt law, and yet, intended to deprive them of the power of incorporating into that law a provision, without which no system of bankruptcy could exist. Is a bankrupt *law, a law impairing the obligation of contracts, within r the meaning of the constitution ? We insist, that a bankrupt law, *-so far from being considered as a law impairing the obligation of contracts, ought to be regarded as a mode of enforcing the performance of contracts. The first object of a bankrupt system is to enforce and secure the rights of creditors, to save them from the consequences of fraudulent and secret conveyances of the debtors ; and to give them the benefit of all the debtor’s property, and thus, compelling the debtor, as far as he is able, to pay Ifts debts and perform his contracts. It acknowledges the existence of the contract ; and the binding force of the contract is the very ground upon which it proceeds. Insolvent laws, and insolvent laws discharging as well the per- 95 178 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Sturges v. Crcwninshield. son as the future acquisitions of a debtor, from the payment of his debts, had been passed by many of the states, both before and after the revolution, and many of them were in force, when the constitution was adopted. The nature and existence of these laws was well known to the- convention, in which were some of the greatest lawyers in the country. If they had intended to deprive the states of this power, so long exercised, and so well understood, would they not have expressed that intention in direct terms, instead of leaving it to be inferred from words of doubtful import ? or can it be contended, that the convention intended, that the states, by construction, should be deprived of their power, and were afraid to deprive them of it by express words, for fear that if such deprivation was understood by the $ states, they would not consent to it ? *No such motive can or ought -* to be attributed to the convention : and if not, then it is inconceivable, that they should not have expressly included insolvent laws in the prohibition, if they had intended they should be iucluded in it. It has already been shown, that congress has acted upon the supposition, tbat the states were not deprived of the power in question. What then, it will be asked, did the convention mean, by prohibiting the states from passing a law impairing the obligation of contracts ? We answer, that they meant to include in their prohibition all those unusual, and perhaps, unwise laws, which the exigencies of the times had originated ; which the distress and difficulties of the revolution seemed to have rendered necessary, protecting individuals from the payment of their just debts, either by allowing them to make a deduction from the amount of interest due on them, by protracting the payment, or by permitting them to withhold their property from their creditors. They meant to put a check upon the sovereign authority of the states themselves, by preventing them from breaking their own contracts, from revoking their own grants, and violating the chartered rights of corporations. In short, they meant to suppress all those interferences with private rights, which are not within the proper province of legislation, the evils of which had been felt in an uncommon degree in this country. But they did not mean to repeal all those laws, or to prevent the enactment of other similar laws, which have existed in every civilized age and country, for the protec-*iro1 ti°n unfortunate debtors, and the punishment of *frauds upon -I creditors ; which do not impair the obligation of contracts, but enforce it in the only mode the nature of things will permit ; and which congress itself has the power, though not the exclusive power of passing. Hopkinson, for the plaintiff, in reply, insisted, that the construction of the constitution contended for by the defendant’s counsel was fallacious ; and even if sound, would be insufficient for their purpose. That the power of passing uniform laws on the subject of bankruptcies, was, from its very nature, a national power ; and must, therefore, even according to the opposite argument, be exclusively vested in the national government. That the power of passing naturalization laws is exclusively vested in congress has already been determined by the court. Chirac n. Chirac, 2 Wheat. 259. Yet both this, and the power of legislating on the subject of bankruptcies, are contained in the same clause, and expressed in similar terms ; and it is argued, on the other side, that the interpretation must be the same as to both. It is also said, that the power of congress to pass uniform laws on 96 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 180 Sturges v. Crowninshield. the subject of bankruptcies is consistent with the states passing laws, to operate until congress act upon the same subject. But we give a different interpretation to the word uniform. When the constitution declares, that « congress shall have power to pass uniform laws,” it implies, that none but uniform laws shall exist: that congress alone shall establish a bankrupt system, and that this system shall be uniform. *One of the principal motives for adopting the constitution was to raise the credit of the L country, by establishing a national government, with adequate powers to redress the grievances of foreigners, instead of compelling them to rely upon the capricious and contradictory legislation of the several states. The laws on the subject of bankruptcies, from their very nature, ought to be the same throughout the Union. A merchant has seldom all his creditors confined to one place or state ; and a discharge, local in its nature, gives rise to various intricate questions of the lex loci contractlls, the difficulties of which are all avoided by uniformity in the laws. It is impossible to maintain, that this law of New York, or any other state bankrupt law, can be limited in its operation to the state where it is passed. If it be constitutional, it must operate extra-territorially, so far as it may, consistently with the principles of universal law. Nor is the power of congress confined to the enacting of a bankrupt law between the states. This power, like all the other powers of the national government, operates directly and universally upon all the citizens of the Union. The 61st section of the bankrupt law of 1800, c. 173, gives nothing to the states which they did not before possess. If it intended to recognise in them an authority not reserved by the constitution, it was ineffectual for such a purpose. Congress could not give them what the constitution had not given them ; nor does the silence of congress on the subject, since the act of 1800 was repealed, manifest the opinion of that body, that there should be various laws on the subject throughout the *Union : it only shows, that congress has deemed it expedient that there should be no law on the subject. If such have hitherto been •-the views of congress, although we may suppose them to be mistaken views, m what other mode could they be made known, but by silence—by omitting to do what, perhaps, wiser views might induce congress to do ? The only other mode in which congress could secure the country against the evils of numerous and inconsistent bankrupt laws, would be, by establishing a uniform bankrupt law, against its own opinions and judgment. If the states have the power contended for, when congress does not exercise the authority vested in it, then congress must keep up a continual claim, by maintaining, at all times, a bankrupt system, which it thinks inexpedient, for the purpose of preventing the evils and confusion that spring from various laws on such a subject. But we believe that the convention expected that congress would exercise the power, and in that way a bankrupt system would be produced. But still this is left to the discretion of congress, and to that body must such considerations be addressed, since it is evident, that the individual states cannot produce a uniform system, by their separate laws. That the aw of New York in question is a bankrupt law, or a law on the subject of ankruptcies, there can be no doubt. It has the distinguishing feature of a ankrupt law ; it discharges the party from the obligation of the debt entirely ; whilst an insolvent law discharges only his person from imprison-Ment. Such is the distinction in England between the permanent bankrupt 4 Wheat.—7 97 *183 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Sturges v. Crowninshield. system, and *the* insolvent laws which are occasionally passed (commonly called the Lords’ acts), for the relief of debtors, as to the imprisonment of their persons, upon their making an assignment of all their property for the benefit of their creditors. The same distinction prevails on the continent of Europe, between the bankrupt system, which discharges both the person and future property, and the cessio bonorum, which discharges the person only, leaving the future acquisitions of property liable for the debt. If this, law of New York were an insolvent law, it might co-exist with a uniform bankrupt code : but the provisions of this law are such that it cannot co-exist with a uniform system of bankruptcy. It, therefore, follows, that it is a bankrupt law, in the sense of the constitution. If the power of making laws on the subject of bankruptcies be exclusive, its nature, as such, was irrevocably fixed, at the establishment of the new constitution. On the other hand, if it be a concurrent power, it has always been, and must always be, concurrent. There is nothing contingent in it; nor can it shift and alternate. But whether this be a bankrupt or an insolvent law, and whether the power of passing bankrupt laws be exclusive or concurrent, we insist, that this law is repugnamt to the constitution, as being a law impairing the obligation of contracts. It has been urged, that parties contracting in a state where a bankrupt law is in force, make their contract with a view to that law, so that the law makes a part of the contract. But this is assuming the law to be constitutional; for if it be unconstitutional, it is a void law, as *1841 being repugnant *to the supreme law : and parties cannot be pre- -* sumed to contract with a view to acts of the local legislature, which, though clothed with the forms of law, are nullities, so far as they attempt to impair the obligation of contracts. The idea of a contract made with reference to a law which impairs the obligation of contracts, is absurd and incomprehensible. The constitution was intended to secure the inviolability of contracts, according to the immutable principles of justice. To restrict the operation of the clause of the constitution which prohibits the states from making any law impairing the obligation of contracts, to laws affecting contracts existing at the time the law is passed, would be to confine the operation of this salutary prohibition within very narrow limits. Is it credible, that the convention meant to prohibit the states from making laws impairing the obligation of past contracts, and to leave them free to impair the obligation of future contracts ? The prohibition against thus impairing existing rights of property, would have been almost superfluous, since the principles of universal jurisprudence had already prohibited such retrospective, legislation upon vested rights. ( now vested in the trustees of the New England Mississippi *Company itself, as -* part of its common stock, and not in the individual holders. The equitable lien of the vendor of land, for unpaid purchase-money, is waived, by any of the parties showing that the lien is not intended to be retained, as by taking separate securities for the purchase-money.1 An express contract, that the lien shall be retained to a specified extent, is equivalent to a waiver of the lien to any greater extent. Where the deed itself remains in escrow, until the first payment is made, and is then delivered as the deed of the party, and the vendor consents to rely upon the negotiable notes of the purchaser, indorsed by third persons, for the residue of the purchase-money, this is such a separate security as extinguishes the lien. Gilman v. Brown, 1 Mason 191, affirmed. Appeal from the Circuit Court of Massachusetts. This cause was by consent heard upon the bill, answer, and exhibits in the case. The material facts were these: In the month of January 1796, sundry persons, and among them William Wetmore, purchased of the agents of certain persons in Georgia, called the Georgia Mississippi Company, then in Boston, a tract of land, then in the state of Georgia, and now in the Mississippi territory, estimated to contain 11,380,000 acres, at ten cents per acre ; which tract the Georgia Mississippi Company had purchased of the state of Georgia, and had received a grant thereof in due form of law. The conditions of the purchase were, that the pUrchase-money should be paid as follows, viz., two cents thereof on or before the first day of May 1796 ; one cent more, on or before the first day of October 1796 ; two and a half cents more, on or before the first day of May 1797 ; two and a half cents more, on or before the first day of May 1*798 ; and the remaining two *cents, on or before the first day of May J 1799. The whole of the purchase-money was to be secured by negotiable notes of the several purchasers, with approved indorsers, to be made payable to Thomas Cumming, president of the Georgia Mississippi Company, or order, payable at the bank of the United States, at Philadelphia, or at the branch bank at Boston, and to be delivered to the agents, upon the execution of the deed of conveyance by them. It was further agreed, that the deed, when executed, should be placed in the hands of George R. Minot, Esq., ns an escrow, to be delivered over by him to the grantees, upon the first pay' 1 See Bayley v. Greenleaf, 7 Wheat. 46. 132 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. Brown v. Gilman. 257 ment of two cents, payable in May 1796, for which first payment, and for that only, the purchasers agreed to hold themselves jointly responsible. Accordingly, a deed of conveyance was executed by the agents, dated the 13th day of February 1796, to certain grantees named by the purchasers, to wit, William Wetmore, Leonard Jarvis and Henry Newman, in trust for the purchasers; and the same was duly placed in the hands of Mr. Minot, as an escrow, and negotiable notes, with approved indorsers, were duly delivered to the agents, by all the purchasers, for their respective shares of the purchase-money. And afterwards, the first payment of two cents having been satisfactorily made to the agents, the said deed was, with their consent, delivered over to the grantees, as an absolute deed ; and a deed of confirmation thereof was, afterwards, in February 1797, duly executed and delivered to the grantees by the Georgia Mississippi Company. After the purchase, and before the delivery of the deed, *the pur- r) it was provided, that the claimants of the lands *9„ might file in *the office of the secretary of state, a release of all their J claims to the United States, and an assignment and transfer to the United States of their claim to any money deposited or paid into the treasury of Georgia, such release and assignment to take effect, on the indemnification of the claimants, according to the provisions of the act. Commissioners were to be, and were, accordingly, appointed under the act, who were authorized to adjudge and determine upon the sufficiency of such releases and assignments, and also to “ adjudge and determine upon all controversies arising from such claims so released as aforesaid, which may be found to conflict with, and to be adverse to each other.” And the sum of $1,550,000, to be issued in public stock, was appropriated by the act, to indemnify the claimants, claiming in the name of, or under, the Georgia Mississippi Company. The New England Mississippi Land Company duly executed the release and assignment, required by the act of congress ; and presented the claims of the whole company before the commissioners. The commissioners awarded the company the sum of $1,083,812 in stock, certificates for which were duly issued, under the act of congress, and received by the treasurer of the company. A further claim was made for the whole amount of the original share of Mr. Wetmore, but the board of commissioners decided, that the Georgia Mississippi Company had a lien in equity on the land sold and conveyed to said Wetmore, for the purchase-money due and unpaid by said Wetmore, and that the indemnity under the act of congress should follow that lien, and be awarded to said *Georgia Mississippi J Company to the amount thereof. And inasmuch as the said Sarah Waldo was the holder of certain certificates issued by said trustees, on account of said Wetmore’s original purchase, 'the commissioners further awarded, that the sum of $40,000 of the purchase-money (which had been paid or satisfied by her for said Wetmore, on her indorsement) should be applied first to make good the scrip or certificates so issued to her ; and that if there was any surplus, after making her scrip or certificates good, such surplus could not be applied to the scrip or certificates held under Robert Williams, who did not become the assignee of the said Wetmore,’ until after the said sum was paid. And the commissioners further decided, that, the certificates, issued by the trustees on account of any of the original purchasers, who failed to make payment of the purchase-money to the Georgia Mississippi Company, were bad, and that the parties claiming under them must lose their indemnity under the act of congress. By this award of the commissioners, the claim of the New England Mississippi Land Company, for the amount of the share of the plaintiff, was completely excluded. But the plaintiff claimed her share of the stock actually received, as a proprietor (a) See the history of this case in Fletcher v. Peck, 6 Cranch 89, and in the public documents of Congress, 1809. (&) Act of 23d of January 1815, ch. 706; Act of 3d of March 1815, ch. 778. 134 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 261 Brown v. Gilman. in the New England Mississippi Land Company, notwithstanding the award of the commissioners, and to establish this claim, the present suit was brought; and in her bill she averred, that she was a bond fide purchaser, for a valuable consideration, without notice of the non-payment of the purchase-money *by Mr. Wetmore, which averment was not denied by the answer. The court below decreed, that the complainant was entitled to the relief she claimed, and the cduse was brought by appeal to this court. February 13th. Jones, for the appellants, argued, that the decision of the commissioners was correct in principle. The "property acquired by the New England Company, under their purchase from the Georgia Company, was not a legal, but a mere equitable interest, unassignable at law. Even if the Georgia Company had a legal estate, their deed to the New England Company does not pass such estate, according to the local law of Georgia ; it never having been acknowledged, proved and recorded. It amounted only to a covenant to stand seised to uses, an agreement to sell, which a court of equity would enforce. The rescinding act of Georgia has a double effect; one to annul the contract; the other to render all deeds conveying the property incapable of being recorded. It is only as to the first effect that the court has pronounced, or could pronounce, the act to be unconstitutional and void. The states have an unquestionable right to regulate the mode of conveying real property and the rule of evidence as to land titles. Even supposing the trustees to have acquired a legal estate, the cestuis que trust have acquired an equitable interest only. The claim of the vendor for unpaid purchase-money is the prior equity, which must be preferred. If the subsequent purchaser acquires a mere equitable interest, *he is ejiti-tied to no notice of the vendor’s lien. The assignee of a chose in ac- *-Hon, which is not assignable at law, has a mere equitable interest, and takes' subject to the same equity as the assignor. Finch 9, 34 ; Davies v. Austin, 1 Ves. jr. 247 ; Coles v. Jones, 2 Vern. 692 ; Ibid. 765 ; 1 Ves. sen. 123 ; 1 Bro. C. C. 302 ; Mackreth v. Symmons, 15 Ves. 329. But even if notice be necessary, the lien of the vendor is sustainable, because there was notice either actual or constructive, and notice to the trustees of the New England Company, was notice to the individuals whom they represented. Sugd. on Vend. 492, 498 ; Mertins v. Jolliffe, Ambl. 311. But all discussion on this point is , cut short by the well-established principle, that the purchaser who sets up the want of notice must positively deny the notice in her plea, and swear to it. Sugd. on Vend. 510-13. Here, the pleadings, so far from denying notice, impliedly admit it ; and the rule of presumption against the party omitting to deny notice, is to be applied d fortiori in a case like the present, where the person insisting on the want of notice is the party plaintiff. Nor has there been in this case any waiver of the equitable lien for the purchase-money. All the facts of the case repel the presumption of a waiver of the lien. The notes, with approved indorsers, taken from the individual purchasers, cannot furnish such a presumption. The case of Fawell v. Ueelis, Ambl. 734 ; 3 Bro. C. C. 422, n., which will be relied on to support this position, has been repeatedly overruled. Sudg. on Vend. 252, et infra. *The taking of personal security is not considered as a waiver of the lien. Hughes v. *-Kearney, 1 Sch. & Lef. 132 ; Mackreth v. Symmons, 15 Ves. 329 ; Grant v. Mills, 2 Ves. & B. 306 ; Elliot v. Edwards, 3 Bos. & Pul. 181. It is not 135 264 SUPREME COURT Brown v. Gilman. [Feb’y necessary to prove affirmatively the intent to retain a lien. It is a natural equity ; and he who would repel it must show that the vendor agreed to rely on the personal security, and to abandon the lien. Frost v. Beekman, 1 Johns. Ch. 288 ; Garson v. Green, Ibid. 308 ; Mackreth v. Symmons, and the cases there cited, 15 Ves. 329. As to the lex loci of Massachusetts, which does not recognise the equitable lien on land for unpaid purchasemoney, it has nothing to do with the question ; for the record does not show that the deed was executed in that state ; and even if it did, the lex loci rei sitae of Georgfh must govern the case, according to a well-known rule. But even supposing the award of the commissioners to be erroneous, it is still conclusive upon the parties. The commissioners had jurisdiction of the subject-matter, under the act of congress by which the board was established, to determine upon all controversies arising from adverse claims to these lands. There is no analogy between this claim, and the lien of a judgment. It is a real interest in the land ; an equitable mortgage ; a charge upon it, which descends, and is assigned with it. Gator v. Bolingbrook, 1 Bro. C. C. 302 ; Ibid. 424 ; Pollexfen v. Moore, 3 Atk. 272. The decision of the commissioners, then, has the force of res judicata. * -■ * Amory, contri, insisted, that Mrs. Gilman was not the assignee J of Mr. Wetmore, and did not hold his title. She could not be an assignee, without a privity, either in fact or in law, which did not exist in this case. The intention of the associates, from the beginning, was to render the certificates of the trustees the only evidence of the title ; for which purpose, the legal title was vested in the trustees, and a new title, in all the property, was derived from them. The certificate possessed by Mrs. Gilman does not contain the name of Wetmore, nor was the certificate originally issued in his name ; it could not have expressed a trust upon the portion, or title, acquired by him, and conveyed to the trustees ; but such a certificate must have expressed a general interest, or title, pervading the whole land. Inasmuch as the trustees derived their title, not from Wetmore only, but from different sources, it must be presumed and intended, that their certificates were to operate generally on all the right and title which they possessed, without reference to the mode of acquirement. If Mrs. Gilman, or any holder of certificates, was obliged to search into the title, this estate would be attended with all the consequences and incidents of other titles. But that difficulty was expressly intended to be avoided by the 12th art. of association, which declares, that such certificate shall be complete evidence; thereby announcing to any purchaser, that the common rules of real property were dispensed with. Shall the trustees and associates now be permitted, contrary to their express stipulation, to depart from this rule of Pr0Perty, which they *themselves created, and thus entrap a bond fide purchaser, without notice ? This association was not incorporated ; but the parties intended, so far as they could by law, to give it those facilities, and in some decree, to convert this real estate into personal estate. The title at law was to vest in the trustees, until bond fide sales of the land were actually made. It is the proceeds of such sales only, or money acquired therefrom, that is assured to the holders of the certificates. The trustees and original purchasers undertook to examine each other’s title, and precluded all further inquiries in relation to it. Wetmore gave a quit-claim 136 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 266 Brown v. Gilman. deed only ; the quality of his title, the associates or trustees could judge of, of which they had as much knowledge as he had ; and such deed of quitclaim, whether it conveyed a good or a bad title, constituted a good consideration for the compact with the associates and trustees. If the doctrine of lien for the purchase-money, without mortgage, obtains in Georgia; the contract being made in Massachusetts, where the intention of both parties must be considered as constituting the contract, the laws of Massachusetts ought to construe such a contract, in preference to those of Georgia. We contend, that this doctrine of lien is only a creature of equity, and refers only to such estates or rights of real property as are especially recognised by that tribunal, and which do not derive their support from the ordinary rules of law. The title, in order to be what is commonly denominated equitable, must be, such a one as is not recognised by law ; such as the assignment of a chose in action, * which cannot r*9fi/7 be assigned by law ; or the title must be equitable, from the inefficient mode adopted for its transfer, such as the conveyance of real estate by an instrument without seal, or by an executory contract. The conveyance of land, in this case, did not pass an equitable title merely; the cases of Fletcher v. Peck, 6 Cranch 89, and Green v. liter, 8 Ibid. 229, show, that, notwithstanding the Indian title be not extinguished, the freehold and seisin may be transferred ; and in this case, the most solemn deeds and instruments, duly acknowledged, were adopted for the conveyance of the title ; and it is sustained by every legal form. Even in courts of equity, this lien is only raised by implication; and where other circumstances resist this implication, showing that the parties did not mean to rely on the estate sold for security, the lien is waived. This transaction is filled with circumstances repugnant to such implication. The design of the parties to sell the land, instead of cultivating the same, whereby to pay the notes, expressly excludes the idea of such a lien, as no man would have purchased, who knew that such a note was given for the first purchase, without seeing that his money was appropriated to extinguish the notes ; and the strongest circumstance, to repel such a lien for the consideration, consists in this, that the sum of five dollars only is expressed as the pecuniary consideration. Any purchaser, therefore, making inquiry concerning the purchase-money’s being p^aid or not, is at once checked in the pursuit; and no *case of lien for the purchase-money, can be shown, where the sum is not expressed in the deed of sale. It is also a doctrine in equity, that the vendee has a lien on the land, in case the title be defective, and proper conveyance not made to him ; thus making the right reciprocal. But in this deed, express provision is made, that the consideration-money shall not be refunded by the vendor, for any cause whatsoever ; thus essentially distinguishing the present case from those in which such lien is maintained. It is said, that the commissioners, having a right to decide upon adverse titles, here conclusively decided on our claims; but the adverse titles or claims, on which they were to decide, were adverse claims to the stock from e treasury of the United States, and between such persons as released t eir claims to the United States. Mrs. Gilman did not release any claim o the United States, or demand any money from the treasury ; of course, er rights or claims could not be adjudged by the commissioners ; her 137 268 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Brown v. Gilman. claim is not on the government, but on her associates and trustees. The commissioners were bound to decide, to whom the money or stock from the treasury should be paid ; not the use the receiver should afterwards make of that money, or the obligations he might be under in relation to it. Decrees affect only those who are parties to the suit; and an opinion incidentally given by the commissioners, ought not to control the plaintiff’s right. The Attorney- General, on the same side, contended, that no such lien, as insiste<^ upon, existed, *even as to Mr. Wetmore’s title ; much -1 less was Mrs. Gilman’s affected by it. The question whether the legal title passed from the Georgia Company to the New England Company, cannot be raised in the appellate court; because, so far from being raised in the court below, the pleadings admit the fact that the legal title did pass, and the catise was argued upon that ground in the court below. But supposing it were otherwise; as a bond fide purchaser, without notice, Mrs. Gilman cannot be affected with the equitable lien for purchase-money unpaid by the original vendee, because a distinct personal security was taken, and all the other circumstances of the case combine to show, that the original vendors did not mean to rely on the lien. It is worthy of observation, that this doctrine of lien for unpaid purchasemoney,, which has grown to its present extravagant height, seems to have originated in the inaccuracies and mistakes of some of the earlier chancery reporters. The first case is that of Chapman n. Tanner, 1 Vern. 267, which is erroneously reported. According to the reporter, it was the case of a bankrupt, who purchased land, and the purchase-money not being paid, the assignees would have had the vendor come in as a creditor under the commission, for the. remainder of his purchase-money : “ Per Cur.—In this case, there is a natural equity that the land should stand charged with so much of the purchase-money as was not paid ; and that without any special *2701 agreement f°r that purpose.” But Lord *Apsley says, “ Chapman n. Tanner (1 Vern. 267), according to the report, is in point ; but it appears, by the register’s book, that the vendor retained the title deeds till he was paid ; the court said, that a natural equity arose, from his having the title deeds in his custody.” Farnell v. Heelis, Ambl. 724. In the case of Pollewfen v. Moore, 3 Atk. 372( (which is also said, in the last-mentioned case, by Lord Apsley, to be badly reported), the title deeds were also kept back by agreement; and it was impossible for a court of equity to doubt, in either of these cases, that the lien was retained. But it is from them that the doctrine, as now understood, has originated ; and even according to the modern cases, it is nothing more than a lien raised by equity on the presumed intention of the parties. Sugd. on Vend. 358. This presumption, however, may be repelled by evidence of a contrary intention. Among other circumstances to repel this presumption, is the delivering an absolute deed to the purchaser. Although this circumstance may not be considered strong enough to repel the presumption, as between vendor and vendee, it is so, as to a bond fide purchaser, under the latter, without notice ; otherwise, such a deed would be a fraud on the public. In such a case, this circumstance, connected with that of taking a distinct security, must certainly be deemed sufficient to repel the presumed intention to rely on the lien. The rule is accurately laid down by President 138 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. *271 Brown v. Gilman. Pendleton. ♦“ The doctrine that the vendor of land not taking a security, nor making a conveyance, retains a lien upon the property, is so well settled, as to be received as a maxim. Even if he hath made a conveyance, yet he may pursue the land, in the possession of the vendee, or of a purchaser with notice. But if he hath taken a security, or the vendee hath sold to a third person, without notice, the lien is lost.” Cole v. Scott, 2 Wash. 141. It has been much contested in England, whether passing the legal title to the vendee, and taking his bond or note alone, will not defeat the lien. But there has been no case, where, after passing an absolute deed, and taking the security of a third person, the lien has been held still to exist. In Hughes v. Kearney, 1 Sch. & Lef. 132, the note was that of the vendee merely ; and Lord Redesdale is understood to admit, that taking a distinct security would discharge the lien. Grant v. Mills, 2 Ves. & B. 306, is also relied on to show that the taking of the security of a third person would not discharge the lien ; but the bills of exchange, in that case, were not considered as the security of a third person, but as a mode of payment merely : Sir W. Grant, distinctly admitting that the security of a third person would repel the lien. In Hlliot v. Edwards. 3 Bos. & Pul. 181, which was a case at law, the point was not decided ; and it depended upon its own peculiar circumstances ; the surety himself might seem to have stipulated for the lien, by *requiring a covenant against the assignment of the P272 premises, without the joint consent of himself and the vendor. *- If further circumstances are necessary, in the present case, to remove the presumtion, that the vendor intended to rely upon the lien, they will be found to exist. Holding back the deed, or what is equivalent, depositing it as an escrow, until after the first payment, has always been considered as indicating the intention to rely upon the lien : and if so, the delivery of'the deed, after the first payment was made, equally manifests an intention to relinquish the lien. The counsel then proceeded to argue, that, from other circumstances and facts in the case, it never could have been the intention of the parties, that the lien should exist. But even supposing the lien did exist, as against Mr. Wetmore, the original purchaser, would it follow the shares, through every variety of modification, into the hands of a remote purchaser, without notice ? But it is said, that Mrs. Gilman .has not denied notice. Nor could she deny notice in the manner’ pointed out by the authorities—that is, upon oath, being the party plaintiff. But the same authorities lay down the rule, that if notice is neither alleged by the bill, nor proved, and the defendant by his answer denies notice, the court will not grant an inquiry to affect him with notice. Sugd. on Vend. 512. This rule has more analogy to the present case ; for the answer does not charge the plaintiff with notice ; and it is denied in the bill. We insist, that where the legal estate has passed from the vendor, a bond fide purchaser, *without notice, even though he has no deed, will overreach the implied lien for unpaid purchase- L money. Mr. Sugden, after reviewing all the cases, expresses the opinion, that even an equitable mortgage, created by the vendee depositing deeds with a third party, bond fide, and without notice, will give him a preferable equity, and will overreach the vendor’s equitable lien for any part of the purchase-money. Sugd. on Vend. 366. Now, a mortgage is a mere 139 273 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Brown v. Gilman. ( security for a debt, and the same conclusion is much stronger in the case of an absolute purchaser. But supposing the lien to exist: according to Frost v. Beekman, 1 Johns. Ch. 288, it only exists to the amount of the consideration expressed on the face bf the deed ; which, in this case, is only five dollars. And even if it exists to any extent, according to the law of the English court of chancery, that is not the law of this case ; the contract being made in Massachusetts, relative to lands in Georgia. It is admitted, that the law of Massachusetts, recognises no such lien ; but it is said, that it is not the lex loci contractus, which is to govern, but the lex loci rei sitae ; and that the law of Georgia adopts the English principle. We do not deny that the lex loci rei sitae is to govern as to the transfer of real property ; but we insist, that the intention of the contracting parties is to be gathered from the law of the place where the contract is made. Admitting, however, that the law of Georgia is to give the rule, it remains to be shown, on the other side, that this pecu-* liar doctrine of the English courts of equity is *adopted in that state. -I We insist, we are not concluded by the decision of the commissioners, under the acts of congress, because their power extended only to legal or equitable claims to the lands ; such equitable elaims as enabled the holder to call for the legal title, and such as conflict with each other ; which not being the case here, the commissioners had no jurisdiction to determine this question. Webster, for the apellants, in reply, insisted, that the title was no better in the plaintiff’s hands, than it was in the hands of Mr. Wetmore. The purchaser of an equity must abide by the case of the person from whom he buys. He must take the estate, subject to all incumbrances. Want of notice, or payment of a valuable consideration, will not enable him to raise himself higher than his vendor. Lord Thurlow says, he takes that to be a universal rule. Davis v. Austen, 1 Ves. jr. 247. See also Murray v. Lilburn, 2 Johns. Ch. 441 ; Redfearn v. Ferrier, 1 Dowl. 50. It is unnecessary to say, whether the commissioners were well-founded in the decision they have pronounced. No fraud or negligence is, at any rate, imputable to the defendants. They have used'due diligence, and sought to increase the fund, by obtaining from the commissioners the stock which would have belonged to the original purchase of Wetmore, if his title had been deemed valid. In this they have failed, but without any fault of their own. The commissioners have decreed, that that portion of Wetmore’s purchase, which was _ conveyed to Williams, *through whom the plaintiff derives her title, is not entitled to any indemnification. They proceed on the ground that the original Georgia vendors had a lien for the purchase-money, and that they, if anybody, the purchase-money not being paid, are entitled to the indemnity provided by the act of congress. That the vendor has m equity a lien for the purchase-money against the vendee, and all purchasers under him with notice, if it be a legal estate ; and against all persons purchasing, with or without notice, if it be an equitable estate; could not be denied as a general doctrine. The English cases on this point, are all considered by Lord Eldon in Mackreth v. Symmons, 15 Ves. 329. There may be a relinquishment of this lien ; and the evidence of such relinquishment may result from the nature of the transaction, and the circumstances attending it. How far such evidence existed here, it was the duty of the commissioners to con- 140 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. Brown v. Gilman. 275 sider. If they have erred in judgment, the consequences of that error ought not to be thrown on the defendants. The stock, which the commissioners were to issue, may be considered as the product of the estate vested in the trustees. The bill does not complain, that the defendants have injured the plaintiff, by surrendering the estate to the United States. In this, they are admitted to have done precisely what they ought to have done. The complaint is, that a just distribution has not been made of the proceeds. But the plaintiff’s estate has produced no proceeds. The *commissioners were rii empowered by the act to adjudge between adverse claims. They L have decided against tlfe claim of the plaintiff ; and it would be manifestly unjust and unreasonable, that, having a bad claim herself, she should partake with others in the benefit of their claims, which are good, unless she clearly proves an agreement to form this sort of partnership. And, indeed, if it were proved, that Wetmore and others agreed to form this partnership, each at the same time covenanting for the title of what he himself brought to the common stock, he could not claim, in equity, a proportionate share of the proceeds of the whole, having broken his own covenant, and the general proceeds being thereby diminished in an amount equal to what he undertook to convey to the trustees. If the plaintiff could recover in this case against the defendants, one of whom is the surviving trustee, that trustee must have his action against Wetmore on the covenants of his deed of trust. But it is not the course in equity, to treat covenants as distinct and independent, but to require of plaintiffs to allege and prove performance, or readiness to perform, on their part. 2 Fonbl. 383. If the land, or its proceeds, have been taken from the trustee by some one, whose title has been adjudged better than that of the cestui que trust, is it possible, that the cestui que trust can have any claim on the trustee ? The plaintiff relies on the articles of association, which say that the certificate shall be complete evidence of the title. So it may be ; but they do not *say what title the holder of the certificate shall be taken to have. riI. The articles mean no more than that the certificate should be evidence *-of the transfer. Whatever the vendor could sell, he might assign, by indorsing the certificate. But in this, there is no agreement to assure the title. The certificate itself refers to the articles of association, and the deeds of trust, to show the nature and condition of the property. These articles and deeds prove clearly, that the original purchasers stand on their several distinct purchases, and decline all mutual responsibility. She must, therefore, be taken to have known what she purchased, as the reference in the certificate to the deed and articles, was sufficient to put her on inquiry. Where one has sufficient information to lead him to the knowledge of the fact, he shall be deemed conusant of it. Sugd. on Vend. 498, and cases there cited. Even if her estate had been a legal, and not an equitable interest, this constructive notice would have prevented her from standing in any better condition than those under whom she held. February 24th, 1819. Marshall, Ch. J., delivered the opinion of the court.—The question to be decided is, whether, under all the circumstances of this case, the New England Mississippi Land Company, or Mary Gilman, shall lose the sum awarded by the commissioners to the Georgia Mississippi 141 277 SUPREME COURT Brown v. Gilman. [Feb’y Company, in satisfaction for the lien that company was supposed to retain , on the lands they sold, for the *non-payment of the notes of Wil-J liam Wetmore, given for the purchase-money on his interest in the purchase ? In examining this question, the nature of the contract, the motives of the New England Mississippi Company, and their acts, are all to be considered. The contract was made in January 1796, for 11,380,000 acres of land, lying within the country occupied by the Indians, whose title was not extinguished. The purchase-money, amounting to Si,380,000, was to be divided into five instalments, the first of which, amounting to $113,800, was to be paid on the 1st of May 1796, and the last on fhe 1st of May 1799. It is obvious, that this purchase could not have been made with a view to hold all the lands. The object of the purchasers must have been to make a profit by reselling a great part of them. Accordingly, we find them making immediate arrangements to effect this object. In February 1796, before the legal title was obtained, the purchasers formed an association, by which it was, among other things, agreed, that the land should conveyed to three of their partners, Leonard Jarvis, Henry Newman and William Wetmore, for the use and benefit of the company. It was also agreed, that seven directors should be appointed, with power to manage their affairs, and after the company should be completely organized, as prescribed in the articles of association, to sell their lands for the common benefit of the proprietors. In addition to this mode of selling the lands themselves, which might be slow in its operation, it was agreed, that each proprietor might transfer his interest, in whole or in part; and to facilitate *this transfer, the whole purchase -• was divided into 2276 shares, and it was determined, that an assignable certificate should be granted to each proprietor, or to such person as he should appoint, stating the amount of his interest in the company. No certificate was to issue for less than one share. It is of great importance, to inquire, how far the company pledged itself, to the assignee of this certificate ; and how far it was incumbent on him to look beyond the certificate itself, in order to ascertain the interest which it gave him in the property of the company ? In pursuing this inquiry, we must look, with some minuteness, into the state, of the property, and the articles of association, as well as into the language of the paper which was to evidence the title of the holder. Although the association was formed, before the lands were conveyed, no certificate was to issue, until the legal title in the company should be as complete as it could be made. It was obviously necessary for the purchasers, before they proceeded to sell, to examine well their title, and to use every precaution which prudence could suggest, for its security. This appears to have been done. On the 13th of February 1796, a deed was executed by. the Georgia Company, purporting to convey the lands to William Wetmore, Leonard Jarvis and Henry Newman ; and afterwards, in February 1797, a deed of confirmation was executed and delivered. By these deeds the Georgia Company certainly “tended to *pass, and the New England Company expected to receive, J the legal title. The articles of association direct these trustees to convey the purchased lands to the proprietors, as tenants in common, who are immediately to reconvey them to Leonard Jarvis, Henry Newman and William Hull, in trust, to 142 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 280 Brown v. Gilman. be disposed of according to the articles. The certificate granted to each proprietor, for the purpose of enabling him to dispose of his interest, certifies, that he is entitled to the trust and benefit of a certain specified proportion of the property contained in the trust deed, “ to hold said proportion or share, to him, his heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, according to the terms, conditions, covenants and exceptions contained in the said deed of trust, and in certain articles of agreement entered into by the persons composing the New England Mississippi Land Company.” This certificate purports on its face to be transferable by indorsement. If it amounted to no more than a declaration, that the holder had a right to sell a specified part of the common property, it would be difficult to maintain, that the company could afterwards charge this part exclusively with a pre-existing incumbrance. But the certificate proceeds further, and declares, that the share or shares, thus transferred, shall be held according to the terms, &c., of the deed of trust, and of the articles of agreement. So far, therefore, as that deed, or those articles, incumber the property, it certainly remains in-cumbered in the hands of the assignee. To what *extent does either of those instruments affect the case ? [ ¿ol The deed from the proprietors to Jarvis, Newman and Hull, recites the grant of the state of Georgia, the conveyance of the grantees to Wetmore, Jarvis and Newman, in trust for the New England Company, the conveyance of those trustees to the members of the company, to hold as tenants in common, according to their respective interests, and adds, that it is found necessary and expedient, that the premises should be conveyed “ in trust to Leonard Jarvis, Henry Newman and William Hull, Esquires, to have and to hold the same, subject to all the trusts, provisions, restrictions, covenants and agreements, contained in certain articles of agreement, constituting the New England Mississippi Land Companytherefore, and in consideration of ten dollars, the parties of the first part, severally “ remise, release and for ever quit-claim to the said Jarvis, Newman and Hull, all the interest, &c., which they have, or ever had, or of right ought to have, in the premises, subject, however, to and foi' the purposes mentioned in the agreement constituting the New England Mississippi Land Company. ' The parties of the first part, each for himself,” and no further, covenant, that the premises are free and clear of all incumbrances, by him made or suffered to be made, and warrant the same against himself and all claiming under him. A separate conveyance was made by Wetmore, Jarvis and Newman, to John Peck, who conveyed *to Jarvis, Newman and Hull. But these r*989 conveyances are not supposed to vary the case. In this deed of trust, *■ each proprietor covenants for his own title, not for that of his copartners. Phis has been supposed to give notice to the assignee of each certificate issued by the company, that the property conveyed did not constitute a common stock in the hands of the trustees, out of which each holder was to draw in proportion to his interest, as expressed in the face of his title paper ; but that the interest of each copartner was limited to the product of his own share, as under the original purchase, and that the holder of every certificate was bound to trace his title through the particular original purchaser under whom he claims, and in whose place he stands. We do not think the fact will sustain the argument. This deed conveys the estate of each partner to the company, and the covenants it contains 143 282 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Brown v. Gilman. ascertain the extent of each partner’s liability for the title it passes. The lands thus conveyed are held by the company, in like manner as if they had been conveyed by persons who were not members of it. The legal title is in the company ; the power to sell is in the company ; and if it was intended that the right of each individual to dispose of his interest, should depend on the validity of the title he had made, and that the purchaser of such interest took it subject to any incumbrance with which the estate conveyed might have been burdened, previous to its conveyance, it would have been unneces-*9ooi saryto make any *pro vision respecting the sale of such interest. The -* right of sale is connected with the right of property, and without any regulation whatever, each member would have possessed it, to the extent of his property. The object for granting the certificate seems to have been, to enable each shareholder to sell, unobstructed by those entangling embarrassments which may attend a mere equitable title. This object, in which every member was equally concerned, could not be effected, without giving to each some evidence of his title, which should make it unnecessary for the purchaser to look further, in order to ascertain his interest in the general fund, whatever that fund might be. The history of the title, as well as the words of the certificate, would confirm this opinion. From its origin, every step of its progress was marked out and controlled by the company. The legal title was, by their order, conveyed to three persons, selected by themselves, and the deed contains no allusion to the interest of other purchasers. By this order also, the title which was then made to the several purchasers, was immediately reconveyed to trustees in whom the company confided, to uses and purposes expressed in certain articles of agreement which the company had formed. They guarded the title against incumbrances from individuals, and this watchfulness was for the double purpose of enabling their agents to sell the lands themselves, for the common benefit, and enabling each member to sell to the best advantage his particular interest in that fund. It was scarcely possible for any individual to have incumbered the title, after it was received by the *2841 ^rst aSents*°f the company, and against defects in the title conveyed -* by the Georgia company, the certificate does not profess to engage. The article of agreement, to which also the certificate refers, explain fully the views of the company. The great object of the association is to sell their lands to advantage ; this is too plainly expressed to be mistaken. The words “terms, conditions, covenants and exceptions,” contained in the certificate, refer chiefly to provisions respecting the sale of lands, and to others which recognise the absolute control over the property, which each member had ceded to the whole body. It is unnecessary to recite the particular articles which tend to this general result ; it is the spirit which pervades the whole association. Only those articles which relate to the certificate need be adverted to. The 11th article divides the whole purchase into 2276 shares. The 12th directs that a transferrible certificate shall be given to each proprietor, prescribes its form, directs it to be recorded, and declares that it shall be complete evidence to such person, of his right in the purchase. No assignee is admitted as a member, to vote in the affairs of the company, until his assignment shall be recorded. The 13th declares, that no certificate shall issue for less than one share, and that the holder of any certificate for a larger quantity, may, at any time, surrender it to the trustees, and 144 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 284 Brown v. Gilman. take out others for such quantities as he may choose. The 16th obliges the directors to pay over to the Respective proprietors, their propor-tions of the moneys received from any and every sale, as soon after *-the receipt thereof as may be. It is not more apparent, that the general object of the association was to promote the sale of their lands, than it is that the particular object of this certificate, and of the articles which relate to it, was to enable every proprietor to avail himself of his individual interest, and to bring it into circulation. On no other principle, can we account for subdividing the stock of the company into such small shares; for issuing the certificate itself; for making it assignable ; for declaring that it shall be complete evidence of title to that quantity of interest which is expressed on its face; for enabling every holder, by surrendering his certificate, to divide it as his convenience might suggest; and for declaring that each holder shall receive his proportion of the money arising from the lands which might be sold. All these provisions tend directly to the same object, and are calculated for the single purpose of affording to each member of the company every possible facility in selling his share of the stock. In this operation all were equally interested ; every member of the company was alike concerned in removing every obstruction to the free circulation of his own certificate, which could only be done, by making it complete evidence of title ; an advantage which, to be acquired hy him, must be extended to all. In the particular benefit accruing to each member of the company from this arrangement, a full consideration was received for his joining in it. It is a mutual assurance, in which all the *members pledge themselves for each, that he is really entitled to r4s sell what he offers for sale. •- The articles of agreement, then, strengthen, instead of weakening, the language of the certificate. They prove that the company must have intended to give it all the credit they could bestow on it, and to give to the assignee all the assurance they could give him, that he would stand on the same ground with other members, and was liable to no casualty to which they were not all exposed. It was scarcely possible, for any member, unless it Be one of the original agents, to have eluded the precautions of the company, and have parted with, or incumbered any portion of his estate. But suppose the fact to have happened, and a certificate to have issued, from any accident whatever, to him, for a larger interest than that to which he was really entitled, would an assignee, without notice, have been affected by this error on the part of the company? We think it clear, that he would not. The company has itself undertaken to judge of his title ; and for its own purposes, for the advantage of all its members, to certify what that title is. The object and effect of that certificate is to stop inquiry. The company has pledged its faith, that the title under this certificate shall not be questioned. This is not all; the articles require that an assignee shall have his assignment recorded ; here is a second confirmation of title. We find a number of persons associated together for the purpose of purchasing an immense body of land, which they expect to resell upon a profit, they watch the progress of the title, direct its course, leave no ri|e power to individuals over their individual shares, but keep the whole L nnder the control of the company, until they are perfectly satisfied with the 4 Wheat.—10 145 287 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Brown v. Gilman. state in which they have placed it. The legal title is, by their order, vested in three trustees, who are to be controlled by seven directors. Then, in order to enable each proprietor to dispose of any portion of his interest which he may incline to sell, assignable certificates are issued, declaring that the holder is entitled to a specified share of the land. This certificate refers to certain laws of the company, and these laws declare, that such certificate shall be complete evidence of title, that the assignee shall become a member of the company, authorized to vote, on having his assignment recorded in books kept for that purpose. These certificates are offered to the public; confiding to the promise they contain, an individual becomes a purchaser, has his assignment recorded, and is received, without objection, as a member. If any latent defect exists in the title of one of the original purchasers, which was unknown to the company, when the certificate issued, we think the company cannot set up this latent defect against an assignee. The company possessed the means of obtaining full information of all circumstances which could affect the title, so far as information was attainable. They undertook to judge of it, and to assert unconditionally, that the holder of the certificate was entitled to the quantity of interest it specified. However true it may be, that the individual in whose default this defect origin-* , ated, *might be held accountable for it, we cannot agree that the J assignee stands in his place. The company which would set it up against him, has inquired into the title ; has, for its own purposes, assured him that it is perfect, and, upon the faith of this assurance, he has purchased. Had he taken an equitable interest in trust, relying upon the faith of the vendor, his equity, it is conceded, would not be better than that of the vendor; but he had relied upon the company. He has mounted up to the source of the equitable title, and is there assured of its goodness. The company can never be permitted to say, that being themselves mistaken, they have imposed innocently upon him; and that, therefore, they will throw the loss from themselves on him. If, then, Mr. Wetmore had really, by any act of his, diminished the estate he carried into the common stock,, and if the deduction of his share from the sum awarded to the company had been proper, he would have been personally answerable to the company for such diminution ; but we do not think this liability passes with the certificate to his assignee without notice. We do not think the company could be permitted to assert against the assignee, the right they might assert against Mr. Wetmore. But this is not a defect in the title itself, created, voluntarily created, by Mr. Wetmore. It is a still weaker case on the part of the company. A sum of money, equal to the claim of the plaintiff, has been awarded to the Georgia, instead of the New England company, by the commissioners, under the idea, that so much of the original purchase-money *remained unpaid, J and that a lien on the lands they sold was still retained by the Georgia company. As this failure was on the part of Mr. Wetmore, the New England company claim the right of subjecting to this loss the shares of Mis. Gilman, which were derived from certificates issued on the stock of Mr. Wetmore. On the part of Mrs. Gilman it is contended, 1. That this lien did not exist; and if it did, 2. That it affects her only as a member of the company. The commissioners determined in favor of the lien, because they consi 146 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. Brown v. Gilman. 289 ered the New England company as holding only an equitable estate. The deeds from the Georgia to the New England company certainly purport to pass, and were intended to pass, the legal title. The only objection we have heard to their having the operation intended by the parties, is, that they were not recorded, and that the legislature of Georgia passed an act which forbid their being recorded. But by the laws of Georgia, a deed, though not recorded within the time prescribed by law, remains valid between the parties; and were it even otherwise, it might well be doubted, whether this deed would not retain all the validity it possessed, when executed, since its being recorded is rendered impossible by act of law. Could it even be admitted, that the deeds passed only an equitable estate, it might well be doubted, whether the Georgia compapy, as plaintiffs in equity, could, under all the circumstances of this case, stand on better ground, than if their deed had operated as they intended it should operate.1 *But the court considers the title at law as passing by the deeds r*9qq to the New England company, and remaining with them, although *-those deeds were not recorded. If this opinion be correct, even admitting the law of England respecting the lien of vendors for the purchase-money, after the execution of a deed, to be the law of Georgia, a point which we do not mean to decide, we think it perfectly clear, that no lien was retained, and none intended to be retained, in this case. It must have been well known to the Georgia company, that the purchase was made for the purpose of reselling the lands ; and of consequence, that it was of great importance to the purchasers, to have a clear unincumbered title; and the event that the property might pass into other hands, before the whole purchase-money was paid, was not improbable. In the original agreement, an express stipulation is made, that the property shall remain liable for the first payment, but that separate securities shall be taken for the residue of the purchase-money. The deed itself remains an escrow, until the first payment shall be made, and is then to be delivered, as the deed of the parties ; after which, the vendors consent to rely on the several notes of the respective purchasers. This is equivalent to a mortgage of the premises, to secure the first payment, and a consent to rely on the separate notes of the purchasers for the residue of the purchase-money. The express contract, that the lien shall be retained to a *specified extent, is equivalent to a waiver of that lien to any r*9qi greater extent. The notes, too, for which the vendors stipulated, are *• to be indorsed by persons approved by themselves. This is a collateral security, on which they relied, and which discharges any implied lien on the land itself for the purchase-money. We think this, on principles of English law, a clear case of exemption from lien. Could this be doubted, it would not alter the obligation of the New England company to Mrs. Gilman. If they were in the situation of purchasers with notice, it must be with a very ill grace that they set up against her particular interest, after having induced her to perchase, by the assurance that she came into company on equal terms. If they were purchasers without notice, the lien is gone. We are unanimously of opinion, that the sum deducted from the claim As the effect of the decision of the board of commissioners, see Brown v. Jackson, 7 Wheat. 218. 147 291 SUPREME COURT Brown v. Gilman. [Feb’y of the New England company, by the commissioners, is chargeable on the fund, generally, not on the share of Mrs. Gilman particularly. Some doubt was entertained, on the question, whether Mrs. Gilman should Recover from the parties to this suit, her proportion of the money received by them, or her proportion, after deducting therefrom, the sum she would be entitled to receive from those members, who obtained an order from the commissioners, by which they received directly, and not through the agents of the company, the sums to which they were entitled, The majority of the *2021 court directs me to say, that in this respect also, the *decree is right, J and that the company, or their agents, have the right to proceed against those members for what they have received beyond their just proportion of the whole sum awarded to the company. Decree affirmed, with costs, (a) (a) This subject of lien for unpaid purchase-money, is so fully discussed in the opinion of the court below in this case, that the following extract from that opinion, in Mr. Mason’s reports, may be useful to the reader. “ The doctrine, that alien exists on the land for the purchase-money, which lies at the foundation of the decision of the commissioners, as well as of the present defence, deserves a very deliberate consideration. It can hardly be doubted, that this doctrine was borrowed from the text of the civil lawand though it may now be considered as settled, as between the vendor and the vendee, and all claiming under the latter, with notice of the non-payment of the purchase-money, yet its establishment may be referred* to a comparatively recent period. Lord Eldon has given us an historical review of all the cases, in Mackreth v. Symmons, 15 Ves. 29, from which he deduces the following inferences. 1st. That, generally speaking, there is such a lien. 2d. That in those general cases, in which there would be a lien, as between vendor and vendee, the vendor will have the lien against a third person, who had notice, that the money was not ♦oqq I paid. These two points, he adds, seem to be clearly settled; and the *same J conclusion has been adopted by a very learned chancellor of our own country. Garson®. Green, 1 Johns.,Ch. 308. The rule, however, is manifestly founded on a supposed conformity with the intentions of the parties, upon which the law raises an implied contract; and therefore, it is not inflexible, but ceases to act, where the circumstances of the case do not justify such a conclusion. What circumstances shall have such an effect, seems, indeed, to be matter of a good deal of delicacy and difficulty; and the difficulty is by no means lessened, by the subtle doubts and distinctions of recent authorties. It seems, indeed, to be established, that primd facie the purchase-money is a lien on the land; and it lies on the purchaser to show, that the vendor agreed to waive it (Hughes ®. Kearney, 1 Sch. & Lef. 132; Mackreth ®. Symmons, 15 Ves. 329; Garson ®. Green, 1 Johns. Ch. 308); and a receipt for the purchase-money, indorsed upon the conveyance, is not sufficient to repel this presumption of law. But how far the taking a distinct security for the purchase-money shall be held to be a waiver of the implied lien, has been a vexed question. “ There is a pretty strong, if not decisive, current of authority, to lead us to the conclusion, that merely taking the bond, or note, or covenant, of the vendee himself, for 1 “ Quod vendidi non aliter accipientis quam si aut pretium nobis solutum sit, aut satis eo nomine factum, vel etiam fidem habuerimus emp-tori sineulla sa tisfactione." Dig. lib. 18, tit. 1, 1. 19. Domat, lib. 1, tit. 2, § 3, 1. 1. But this lien was lost, by the civil law, not only by taking a separate security from the purchaser, as a surety or pledge, &c., but also by giving a term of credit to him. For Justinian, after laying down the rule in the Institutes thus, “ Vendit« vero res et traditœ, non aliter emptori acquirun tur, quam si is venditori pretium solvent, v alio modio ei satisfecebit, veluti expromissors ant pignore dato," &c., adds, “ sed si is qui vendi it fidem emptoris sequutus fuerit, dicendum es statim rem emptoris fieri." Inst. 1. 2, t. 1, Herum Divis. § 41. Pothier, De Venie, o. 322, 323, Pothier’s Pandects, tom. 3, p. 107- 148 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. Brown v. Gilman. 293 the purchase-money, will not repel the lien; for it may be taken to countervail the receipt of the payment usually indorsed on the conveyance. (Hughes v. Kearney, 1 Sch. & Lef. 132; Nairn®. Prowse, 6 Ves. 752; Mackreth ®. Symmons, 15 Ibid. 329; Blackburn ®. Gregson, 1 Bro. 0. C. 420; Garson ®. Green, 1 Johns. Ch. 308; Gibbons ®. Baddall, 2 Eq. Cas. Abr. 682; Coppin «. Coppin, 2 P. Wms. 291; Oases cited in Sugden on Vendors, ch. 12, p. 352, &c.) But where a distinct and independent security is taken, either of property, or of the responsibility of third persons, it certainly admits of a very different consideration. There, the rule may properly apply, that expressum facit cessare taciturn; and where the party has carved out his own security, the law will not create another in aid. This was manifestly the opinion of Sir William Grant in a recent case; where he asks, “If the security be totally distinct and independent, will it not then become a case of substitution for the *lien, instead r*9Q. of a credit given because of the lien?” And he then puts the case of a mort- *■ gage on another estate for the purchase-money, which he holds a discharge of the lien, and asserts, that the same rule must hold with regard to any other pledge for the purchase-money. Nairn ®. Prowse, 6 Ves. 752. And the same doctrine was asserted in a very early case, where a mortgage was taken for a part only of the purchase-money, and a note for the residue. Bond ®. Kent, 2 Vern. 281. Lord Eldon, with his characteristic inclination to doubt, has hesitated upon the extent of this doctrine. He seems to consider, that whether the taking of a distinct security will have the effect of waiving the implied lien, depends altogether upon the circumstances of each case, and that no rule can be laid down universally; and that, therefore, it is impossible for any purchaser to know, without the judgment of a court, in what cases a lien would, and in what cases it would not, exist. His language is, “If, on the other hand, a rule has prevailed (as it seems to me), that it is to depend, not upon the circumstance of taking a security, but upon the nature of the security, a,s amounting to evidence (as it is sometimes called), or to declaration plain, or manifest intention (the expression used on other occasions) of a purpose to rely not any longer upon the estate, but upon the personal credit of the individual; it is obvious, that, a purchaser taking a security, unless by evidence, manifest intention, or declaration plain, he shows his purpose, cannot know the situation in which he stands, without the judgment of a court, how far that security does contain the evidence, manifest intention, or declaration plain, upon that point.” Mackreth ®. Symmons, 15 Ves. 329, 342; Austin ®. Halsey, 6 Ibid. 475. “If, indeed, this be the state of the law upon this subject, it is reduced to a most distressing uncertainty. But on a careful examination of all the authorities, I do not find a single case, in which it has been held, if the vendor takes a personal collateral security, binding' others as well as the vendee, as, for instance, a bond or note, with a surety or an indorser, or a collateral security by way of pledge or mortgage, that under such circumstances, a lien exists on the land itself. The only case, *that looks that way is Elliot ®. Edwards, 3 Bos. & Pul. 181; where, as Lord Eldon says, the point was not decided; and it was certainly a case depending upon its own peculiar circumstances, where the surety himself might seem to have stipulated for the lien, by requiring a'covenant against an assignment of the premises, without the joint consent of himself and the vendor. Lord Redesdale, too, has thrown out an intimation (Hughes ®. Kearney, 1 Sch. & Lef. 132), that it must appear, that the vendor relied on it as security; and he puts the case, “Suppose, bills given as part of the purchase-money, and suppose them drawn on an insolvent house, shall the acceptance of such bills discharge the vendor’s lien? They are taken, not as a security, but as a Mode of payment.” In my humble judgment, this is begging the whole question, •u, upon the contract of purchase, the money is to be paid in cash, and bills of ex-ange are afterwards taken in payment, which turn out unproductive, there the receipt o the bills may be considered as a mere mode of payment. But if the original con-act is, that the. purchase-money shall be paid at a future day, and acceptances 0 third persons are to be taken for it, payable at such future day, or a bond, with surety, payable at such future day, I do not perceive how it is possible to assert, that e acceptances or bond are not relied on as security. It is sufficient, however, that the 149 295 SUPREME COURT Brown v. Gilman. [Feb’y case was not then before his Lordship; and that he admits, that taking a distinct security would be a waiver of the lien. On the other hand, there are several cases in which it is laid down, that if other security be taken, the implied lien on the land is gone. To this effect certainly the case of Farwell ®. Heelis, Ambl. 724, s. c. 2 Dick. 485, is an authority, however, it may, on its own circumstances, have been shaken; and the doctrine is explicitly asserted and acted upon in Nairn v. Prowse, 6 Ves. 752: see also, Bond v. Kent, 2 Vern. 381. In our own country, a very venerable judge of equity has reognised the same doctrine. He says, “the doctrine that the vendor of land, not taking a security, nor making a conveyance, retains a lien upon the property, is so well settled, as to be received as a maxim; even if he hath made a conveyance, *29fil he may pursue the land in the possession of the vendee, or of a *purchaser J with notice; but if he hath taken a security, or the vendee hath sold to a third person without notice, the lien is lost. Cole v. Scott, 2 Wash. 141. Looking to the principle, upon which the original doctrine of lien is established, I have no hesitation to declare, that taking the security of a third person for the purchase-money, ought to be held a complete waiver of any lien upon the land; and that, in a case standing upon such a fact, it would be very difficult to bring my mind to a different conclusion. At all events, it is prima facie evidence of a waiver, and the onus is on the vendor to prove by the most cogent and irresistible circumstances, that it ought not to have that effect. ‘ ‘ Such was the result of my judgment upon an examination of the authorities, when a very recent case before the Master of the Rolls first came to my knowledge. I have perused it with great attention, and it has not, in any degree, shaken my opinion. The case there was, of acceptances of the vendee, and of his partner in trade, taken for the payment of the purchase-money. It was admitted, that there was no case of a security given by a third person, in which the lien had been held to exist. But the Master of the Rolls, without deciding what would be the effect of a security, properly so denominated, of a third person, held, in conformity to the opinion of Lord Redesdale, that bills of exchange were merely a mode of payment, and not a security. This conclusion he drew from the nature of such bills, considering them as mere orders on the acceptor to pay the money of the drawer to the payee; and that the acceptor was to be considered, not as a surety for the debt of another, but as paying the debt out of the debtor’s funds in his hands. Grant ®. Mills, 2 Ves. & B. 306. With this conclusion of the Master of the Rolls, I confess myself not satisfied, and desire to reserve myself for the case, when it shall arise in judgment. It is founded on very artificial reasoning, and not always supported, in point of fact, by the practice of the commercial world. The distinction, however, on which it proceeds, admits, by a very strong implication, that the security of a third person would repel the lien. If, indeed, the point were new, there *2Q71 wou^ be much reason to contend, that a distinct security *of the party himself would extinguish the lien on the land, as it certainly does the lien upon personal chattels. (Cowell v. Simpson, 16 Ves. 276). In applying the doctrine to the facts of the present case, I confess, that I have no difficulty in pronouncing against the existence of a lien for the unpaid part of the purchase-money. The property was a large mass of unsettled and uncultivated lands, to which the Indian title was not as yet extinguished. It was, in the necessary contemplation of all parties, bought on speculation, to be sold but to sub-purchasers, and ultimately to settlers. The great objects of the speculation would be materially impaired and embarrassed, by any latent incumbrance, the nature and extent of which it might not always be easy to ascertain, and which might by a sub-division of the property, be apportioned upon an almost infinite number of purchasers. It is not supposable, that so obvious a consideration should not have been within the view of the parties; and viewing it, it is very difficult to suppose, they could mean to- create such an incumbrance. A distinct and independent security was taken, by negotiable notes, payable at a future day. There is no pretence, that the notes were a mere mode of payment, for the indorsers were, by the theory of the law, and in fact, conditional sureties for the payment; and in this respect, the case is distinguishable from that of receiving bills of exchange, where, by the theory of the law, the acceptor is not a surety, but merely pays the money of the drawer in pursuance of 150 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 297 The Estrella. his order. (Hughes ®. Kearney, 1 Sch. & Lef. 132; Grant ®. Mills, 2 Ves. & B. 306.) The securities themselves were, from their negotiable nature, capable of being turned immediately into cash, and in their transfer from hand to hand, they could never have been supposed to draw after them, in favor of the holder, a lien on the land for their payment. But I pass over these, and some other peculiar circumstances of this case, and put it upon the broad and general doctrine, that here was the security of a third person, taken as such, and that extinguished any implied lien for the purchase-money.” (1 Mason 212.)1 *The Estrella : Hernandez, Claimant? [*298 Revolutionary government.—Neutrality. The seal to the commission of a new government, not acknowledged by the government of the United States, cannot be permitted to prove itself ; but the fact that the vessel cruising under such commission, is employed by such government, may be established by other evidence, without proving the seal. Where the privateer, cruising under such a commission, was lost, subsequent to the capture in question, the previous existence of the commission on board, was allowed to be proved by parol evidence. Where restitution of captured property is claimed, upon the ground, that the force of the cruiser making the capture has been augmented within the United States, by enlisting men, the burden of proving such enlistment is thrown upon the claimant ; and that fact being proved by him, it is incumbent upon the captors to show, by proof, that the persons so enlisted were subjects or citizens of the prince or state under whose flag the crusier sails, transiently within the United States, in order to bring the case within the proviso of the 2d section of the act of June 5th, 1794, and of the act of the 20th April 1818.® The right of adjudicating on all captures and questions of prize, exclusively belongs to the courts of the captors’ country : but it is an exception to the general rule, that where the captured vessel is brought, or voluntarily comes, infra præsidia of a neutral power, that power has a right to inquire whether its own neutrality has been violated by the crusier which made the capture ; and if such violation has been committed, is in duty bound, to restore to the original owner, property captured by cruisers illegally equipped in its ports.4 No part of. the act of the 5th of June 1794, is repealed by the act of the 3d of March 1817 ; the act of 1794 remained in force, until the act of the 20th of April 1818, by which all the provisions respecting our neutral relations were embraced, and all former laws on the same subject were repealed. In the absence of any act of congress on the subject, the courts of the United States would have authority, under the general law of *nations, to decree restitution of property captured r in violation of their neutrality, under a commission issued within the United States, or under an armament, or augmentation of the armament, or crew, of the capturing vessel, within the same. Appeal from the District Court of Louisiana. This vessel and her cargo were libelled in the district court for the Louisiana district, by the alleged former Spanish owner. The libel stated, that he was owner of the schooner and cargo, which sailed from Havana, for the coast of Africa, on the 23d of April 1817 ; that on the next day, she was lawlessly and piratically captured on the high seas, and held as prize, by an armed schooner, called the Constitution, of Venezuela, and forcibly brought within the jurisdiction of the United States, when she was re-captured by the United States ketch, the Surprise, and conducted to New Orleans. That the captors had no lawful commission from any sover- 1 And see Fish v. Howland, 1 Paige 20 ; Vail Foster, 4 N. Y. 312. See The Neustra Señora de la Curidad, post, p. 497. 3 The Santissima Trinidad, 7 Wheat. 283. 4 The Gran Para, 7 Wheat. 471. 151 299 SUPREME COURT The Esta ella. [Feb’y eign state to commit hostilities at sea ; but that the said schooner and cargo, until their re-capture, were forcibly withheld from the libellant, in open violation and contempt of the law of nations. That if they had such commission, the same was issued, or delivered, within the waters and jurisdiction of the United States, with intent that the said vessel, the Constitution, should be employed in the service of Venezuela, to commit hostilities at sea against the subjects of the king of Spain, with whom the United States •then were, and now are, at peace, in violation of their laws, and of the laws of nations. The libel further stated, that the Constitution had, previously to her cruising, been fitted out and *armed, or increased or augmented J in force, within the jurisdiction and waters of the United States ; and also, that she had been manned by sundry citizens or residents of the United States, with the intent that she should be employed to commit hostilities, as aforesaid, in violation of the laws aforesaid. For these causes, the libellant prayed a restitution to him of the Estrella and cargo. A claim was interposed by J. F. Lamoureux, prize-master of the Estrella, which stated that the Constitution was duly commissioned by the Republic of Venezuela, and authorized to capture all vessels belonging to its enemies, under which authority, she had captured the Estrella, which, with her cargo, belonged to the enemies of the said republic. That before he could receive his prize commission, the Constitution upset, in a gale, and her commission and papers, with the greater part of the crew, were lost. The claimant further represented, that as he was carrying the Estrella into port, to have her condemned before a court of competent jurisdiction, she was captured by the United States ketch Surprise, and conducted to New Orleans: and therefore, claimed, that the Estrella and cargo might be adjudged to be restored to him. It appeared, from the transcript of the proceedings in this case, that the Estrella was also libelled on the part of the United States, although it was not stated for what cause such libel was filed, but the same was dismissed ; from which decree there was no appeal. *It appeared in evidence, that the Constitution had a commission 301J £rom government of Venezuela, at the time the capture was made, which was issued and delivered at Carthagena; but that the same was lost by the sinking of the privateer, immediately after the capture. There was some contradictory testimony as to her having increased her armament in the United States, and it was proved, that she had augmented the number of her crew, in the port of New Orleans. On the libel filed by the Spanish owner, decree was made, that the claim of Lamoureux, the prize-master, be dismissed, with costs, and that the Estrella and cargo be delivered up and restored to the libellant; from which sentence, the cause was brought, by appeal, to this court. February 18th. C. J. Ingersoll, for the appellant and captor, argued, that the law of nations gave to the court of the captor’s country the exclusive cognisance of questions of prizes made under its authority; and that t e only exceptions to this general rule were to be found in the acts of congress for preserving our neutral relations. In the present case, there was no su -cient evidence, that the armament of the capturing vessel had been increase within the United States, so as to give our courts jurisdiction to restore the 152 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 301 The Estrella. captured property, upon this ground ; and that the 2d section of the act of the 5th of June 1794, c. 226, which prohibited the enlistment of men within our territory, was impliedly repealed by the act of March 3d, 1817, c. 58, which contained *no such prohibition, and which was the law in force at the time this case occurred. But even if it were otherwise, the L 02 only proof of an increase of the crew was the hearsay of interested witnesses; and supposing their testimony to establish the fact, still the onus probandi was upon the claimant, to show that the persons so enlisted were not citizens of Venezuela, transiently within the United States, and so coming within the proviso of the 2d section of the act of 1794, c. 226. The existence of a commission, regularly issued by the government of Venezuela, within its own territory, which was on board the privateer, previous to the capture, was sufficiently proved; and the court has already determined, that the same testimony which would be sufficient to prove that a cruising vessel is in the service of an acknowledged state, is sufficient to prove that it is in the service of a newly-created government, like that of Venezuela. United States v. Palmer, 3 Wheat. 610, 635. Sergeant, contra, argued, upon the facts, that the right of the original Spanish owner to restitution, was established by satisfactory proof, both of the increase of the armament and crew of the privateer within the United States. He insisted, that the act of 1794, c. 226, was not repealed by that of 1817, c. 58; and that, even if it were, the right to restitution depended upon the general law of nations and treaties. 1 Wheat. 244 n. ; Sir L. Jenkins’ Works, vol. 2, p. 727; Ibid. 780. The claimant having proved the fact of *an increase of the crew in New Orleans, the onus probandi of showing that the persons enlisted were citizens of Venezuela, tran- L siently within the United States, was thrown upon the captors. The commission, under which the capture was professedly made, being that of a new government, not yet acknowledged by the United States, its commission ought to have been produced, and the seal proved ; and if actually lost with the privateer, an exemplified copy ought to have been obtained, duly authenticated by the proper officers of that government. All the circumstances of the ease combined to show, that this was not a capture in the regular exercise of the rights of war; but a piratical seisure, in breach of our neutrality, aggravated by an intention to violate the revenue laws, which was evinced, by the fact of the vessel having been found hovering on the coast of Louisiana, instead of being conducted to the ports of Venezuela for adjudication. March 2d, 1819. Livingston, Justice, delivered the opinion of the court. The first allegation of the Spanish owner is, that the Constitution had no lawful commission from any sovereign state, to commit hostilities at sea; and he contends, that the commission, in the present case, if any there was, being that of a government not acknowledged by the United States, ought to have been produced, and its seal proved; or that if the vessel carrying it had been lost, yet an exemplification of it ought to have been obtained from the proper department of the state which issued it. The court is satisfied with the proof which has been made, of the Constitution having had a commission, at the time of making the *■ capture, and that such commission was granted by the government of Vene- 153 304 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y The Estrella. zuela ; and also, that the same was lost with the privateer herself, a very short time after the prize-crew took possession of the Estrella. The fact of the sinking of the Constitution is not disputed ; and that she had, at the time she went down, a commission on board, is also fully made out, which commission there is no reason to believe was any other than the one which the collector of New Orleans says was on board, when she arrived in that port from Carthagena. This was some time in the month of October, in the year 1816 : Mr. Chew then saw the commission, and describes it as a very regular one from the Venezuelan republic, signed, as others were, by Bolivar. Although the court, in another case, has said, that the seal of a government, unacknowledged, cannot be permitted to prove itself; it has, in the same case, said, that the fact of a vessel being so employed may be established, without proving the seal. United States n. Palmer, 3 Wheat. 635. But if the Constitution had a commission on board, it is next alleged, that the same was issued or delivered within the waters of the United States, with intent that she should be employed in the service of Venezuela, to commit hostilities, at sea, against the subjects of the king of Spain, with whom the United States were at peace. This allegation is not supported *3051 by any evidence ; *on the contrary, the same witnesses who declare -* that the Constitution was a commissioned vessel, and whose testimony has already been adverted to, establish, beyond controversy, that the same was obtained abroad, and not issued or delivered within the United States. The libel next alleges, that the Constitution, previous to her last cruise, had been fitted out and armed, or that her force had been increased or augmented, within the jurisdiction and waters of the United States, and also, that she had there been manned by sundry citizens or residents of the United States, with the same intent. Whatever doubt there may be as to the augmentation of the armament of the Constitution within the United States, the court is satisfied, that a very considerable addition was made to her crew, at New Orleans, after her arrival at that port ; one of the customhouse officers declares, that at that time, she had only from twenty to twenty-five men ; another of these officers, who went on board, on her first arrival, states the number of her crew at about twenty ; and a witness by the name of Guzman, totally unconnected with this transaction, mentions by name two persons who entered on board, while she was lying there. Several of the original crew of the Estrella have also been examined to this point, who state, that after the capture, they had many conversations with the officers and seamen, who composed the prize-crew, by whom they were informed that the Constitution, when she left Carthagena, had but few *3061 bands °n board ; that at New *Orleans, she shipped almost the whole J of her crew, which, at the time oi the Estrella’s capture, amounted to sixty or seventy men. This species of testimony has been objected to, as being hearsay, and proceeding from a source entitled to no great credit: although there may be something in this objection, it is no reason for rejecting the evidence altogether. If the testimony be hearsay, it must be recollected, that the declarations proceeded from persons very much interested in giving a different representation of the transaction ; and as to the witnesses themselves, although they formed a part of the Estrella’s crew, and may have felt some little interest in the question, they were the only persons who could give any account of the armament or crew of the Constitution, at the time 154 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 306 The Estrella. of her making the capture. It may be also remarked, that the testimony of these men is, in this respect, corroborated by that of other witnesses, who are liable to no objection, and that their declarations, if untrue, might, have been disproved by the claimant, by showing where and when the crew of the Constitution had been entered. But if any of the crew of the Constitution were enlisted or entered within the jurisdiction of the United States, they may, it is said, have been citizens or subjects of the republic of Venezuela, who were transiently in the United States, at the time of her arrival, and had, therefore, a right, within one of the provisoes of the second section of the act of congress of the 7th of June 1794, c. 226, to enlist or enter themselves on board of her ; and it is insisted, that the libellant should have shown, that they were not persons of this description. The court is not of this opinion. On r*,, . the libellant, in the first instance, lay the onus of showing that the crew of the Constitution had been increased within the United States ; having done this, it became incumbent on the captors, if they wanted to establish their innocence, to show, as was in their power, if the fact was so, that they had done nothing contrary to law, by bringing their case within the proviso that has been mentioned. The allegation, then, in the libel, being made out, that the Constitution, being a privateer commissioned by the republic of Venezuela, was manned within the United States, previous to the cruise on which she captured the Estrella, by sundry citizens or residents of the United States ; it remains to see, whether the libellant has not made out a case for restitution. It has been attempted, but without success, to distinguish this case, in principle, from several which have already been decided in this court. We have been told, as heretofore, that to the courts of the nation to which the captor belongs, and from which his commission issues, exclusively appertains the right of adjudicating on all captures and questions of prize. This is not denied; nor has the court ever felt any disposition to intrench on this rule ; but on the contrary, whenever an occasion has occurred, as in the case of The Invincible, 1 Wheat. 238, it has been governed by it. Not only is it a rule well established by the Customary *and conventional law of r*ofto nations, but it is founded in good sense, and is the only one which is *• salutary and safe in practice. It secures to a belligerent the independence to which every sovereign state is, entitled, and which would be somewhat abridged, were he to condescend so far as to permit those who bear his commission to appear before the tribunals of any other country, and submit to their interpretation or control, the orders and instructions under which they have acted. It insures also, not only to the belligerent himself, but to the world at large, a great decree of caution and responsibility, on the part of the agents whom he appoints ; who not only give security to him for their good behavior, but will sometimes be checked in a lawless career, by the consideration that their conduct is to be investigated by the courts of their own nation, and under the very eye of the sovereign, under whose sanction they are committing hostilities. In this way, also, is a foundation laid for a claim by other nations, of an indemnity against the belligerent, for the injuries which their subjects may sustain, by the operation of any unjust or improper rules, which he may think proper to prescribe for those who act under his authority. 155 308 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y The Estrella. But general, and firmly established, as this rule is, it is not more so, than some of the exceptions which have grown out of it. A neutral nation, which knows its duty, will not interfere between belligerents, so as to obstruct them in the exercise of their undoubted right to judge, through the medium of their own courts, of the validity of every captu're made under their respective commissions, and to decide, on every question of prize law which *onQ-] may *arise in the progress of such discussion. But it is no departure J from this obligation, if, in a case in which a captured vessel be brought, or voluntarily comes, infra præsidia, the neutral nation extends its examination so far as to ascertain whether a trespass has been committed on its own neutrality, by the vessel which has made the capture. So long as a nation does not interfere in the war, but professes an exact impartiality towards both parties, it is its duty, as well as right, and its safety, good faith and honor demand of it, to be vigilant in preventing its neutrality from being abused, for the purposes of hostility against either of them. This may be done, not only by guarding, in the first instance, so far as it can, against all warlike preparations and equipments in its own waters, but, also, by restoring to the original owner such property as has been wrested from him, by vessels which have been thus illegally fitted out. In the performance of this duty, all the belligerents must be supposed to have an equal interest, and a disregard or neglect of it, would inevitably expose a neutral nation to the charge of insincerity, and to the just dissatisfaction and complaints of the belligerent, the property of whose subjects should not, under any such circumstances, be restored. The United States, instead of opening their ports to all the contending parties, when at peace themselves (as may be done, if not prevented by antecedent treaties), have always thought it the wisest and safest course, to interdict them all from fitting out or furnishing vessels of war, within their limits, and to ' punish those who may contribute to such equipments. *^iol *r^° enf°rce a general and strict observance of this neutrality, on the J part of our own citizens, and of others who reside among us, a law passed, as early as the year 1794, making it penal, among other things, for any one, within the jurisdiction of the United States, to enlist in the service of any foreign prince or state, as a soldier, marine or seaman, on board of any vessel of war, letter of marque or privateer. This law, it is supposed, was not in force at the time when the crew of the Constitution was increased at New Orleans, having been repealed, as is alleged, by the act of the 3d oi March 1817, c. 58. But this act contains no repealing clause of this or any other section of the former law ; and having made no provision on the subject of enlistment, it must have been the intention of the legislature to leave in full force all those parts of the first law which had undergone no alteration, in the one which was then passing, and we, therefore, find no repeal of the act in question, until the 20th of April 1818, when all the provisions respecting our neutral relations were embraced by one act, and all former laws on the same subject were repealed. But whether the act of 1794, c. 226, were in force or not, would make no difference ; for it did not, in terms, contain, nor did any of the others, which have, from time to time, been passed, contain, a provision for the restitution of property captured on the ocean, by vessels which might be thus illegally fitted out or manned in our ports. It is true, they recognise a right in the 156 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 310 Miller v. Nicholls. courts of the United States to make restitution, when these laws have been disregarded, and impart *to the courts a power to punish those who p are concerned in such violations. But in the absence of every act of congress in relation to this matter, the court would feel no difficulty in pronouncing the conduct here complained of, an abuse of the neutrality of the United States; and although, in such case, the offender could not be punished, the former owner would, nevertheless, be entitled to restitution. Nor is our opinion confined to the single act of an illegal enlistment of men, which is the only fact proved in this case ; for we have no hesitation in saying, that for any of the other violations of our neutrality, alleged in the libel, if they had been proved, the Spanish owner would have been equally entitled to restitution. Sentence affirmed, with costs. Miller, for the use of the United States, v. Nicholls. Error to state court.—Record. Where a cause is brought to this court, by writ of error, or appeal, from the highest court of law or equity bf a state, under the 25th section of the judiciary act of 1789, upon the ground that the validity of a statute of the United States was drawn in question, and that the decision of the state court was against its validity, &c., or that the validity of a statute of the state was drawn in question, as repugnant to the constitution of the United States, and the decision was in favor of its validity; it must appear from the record, that the act of congress, or the constitutionality of the state law, was drawn into question. But it is not required, that the record should in terms, state a misconstruction * of the act ~ of congress, or that it was drawn into question. It is sufficient, to give this court jurisdic- *-tion of the cause, that the record should show that an act of congress was applicable to the case. Error to the Supreme Court of the State of Pennsylvania. The case agreed in the court below, stated, that William Nicholls, collector, &c., being indebted to the United States of America, on the 9th of June 1798, executed a mortgage to Henry Miller, for the use of the United States, in the sum of $59,444, conditioned for the payment of $29,271, payable, $9757 on or before the 1st of January 1799 ; $9757 on or before the 9th of June 1799 ; and $9757 on or before the 9th of September 1799. A scire facias was issued upon the said mortgage, returnable to September term of the said supreme court of Pennsylvania, in the year 1800, and judgment thereupon entered up, in the said supreme court, on the 6th of March 1802, and thereupon, a levari facias issued, and was levied upon the property of the said William Nicholls, and the same being sold to the highest bidder, for the sum of $14,530, the same was brought into court, and is now deposited in the hands of the prothonotary of said court, subject to the orders of the same court. That, on the 22d of December 1797, the accounts of the said William Nicholls with the commonwealth of Pennsylvania were settled by the comptroller and register-general of the commonwealth. {Prout account and settlement.) That an appeal from said settlement was filed in the office of »the prothonotary of the said supreme court, on the 9th day of March 1798, and judgment thereupon entered in favor of the com- L monwealth, against the said William Nicholls, in the said supreme court, on the 6th of September 1798, for the sum of $9987.15. Upon the preceding statement, the following question is submitted to 157 313 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Miller v. Nicholls the consideration of the court: Whether the said settlement of the said public accounts of the said William Nicholls, as aforesaid, on the 22d of December 1797, was, and is, a lien,- from the date thereof, upon the real estate of the said William Nicholls, and which has since been sold as aforesaid. A. J. Dallas, for the United States. J. B. McKean, for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. December 2d, 1803. The supreme court of Pennsylvania, on the 21st of March 1805, on motion of Mr. McKean, attorney-general of the said commonwealth, made a rule on the plaintiff in error, to show cause why the amount of the debt due to the said commonwealth should not be taken out of court. And on the 22d of March 1805, Alexander James Dallas, the attorney of the United States for the district of Pennsylvania, came into court and suggested, “ that the commonwealth of Pennsylvania ought not to be permitted to have and receive the money levied and produced by virtue of the execution in the $ 1 suit, because the said *attorney, on behalf of the United States, saith, J that as well by virtue of the said execution, as of divers acts of congress, and particularly of an act of congress, entitled ‘ an act to provide more effectually for the settlement of accounts between the United States and receivers of public moneys,’ approved the 3d of March, 1797, the said United States are entitled to have and receive the money aforesaid, and not the said commonwealth of Pennsylvania. A. J. Dallas.” The record then proceeds as follows : “And now, to wit, this 13th day of September 1805, the motion of the attorney-general, to take the money out of court, was granted by the unanimous opinion of the court.” (See 4 Yeates 251.) The proceedings were afterwards brought before this court by writ of error. March 9th, 1819. Sergeant, for the defendant in error, moved to dismiss the writ of error, in this cause, for want of jurisdiction, under the judiciary act of the 24th of September 1789, § 25 ; it nowhere appearing, upon the face of the record, that any question arose respecting the validity of any treaty or statute of the United States, or of any statute of the state, upon the ground of its repugnancy to the constitution or laws of the United States. Martin v. Hunter's Lessee, 1 Wheat. 304 ; Inglee v. Coolidge, 2 Ibid. 363. The Attorney- General, contra. *Marshall, Ch. J., delivered the opinion of the court. The -> question decided in the supreme court for the state of Pennsylvania respected only the construction of a law of that state. It does not appear, from the record, that either the constitutionality of the law of Pennsylvania, or any act of congress was drawn into question. It would not be required, that the record should, in terms, state a misconstruction of an act of congress or that an act of congress was drawn into question. It would have been sufficient, to give this court jurisdiction of the cause, that the record should show that an act of congress was applicable to the case. That is not shown by this record. The act of congress which is supposed to have been disregarded, and which, probably, was disregarded by the state court, is that which gives the United States priority in cases of 158 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 315 McCulloch v. Maryland. insolvency. Had the fact of insolvency appeared upon the record, that would have enabled this court to revise the judgment of the supreme court of Pennsylvania. But that fact does not appear. No other question is presented than the correctness of the decision of the state court, according to the laws of Pennsylvania, and that is a question over which this court can take no jurisdiction. The writ of error must be dismissed. Writ of error dismissed. *McCulloch V. State of Maryland et al. [*316 United States Bank.—Implied power.—Taxing power. Congress has power to incorporate a bank. The government of the Union is a government of the people ; it emanates from them ; its powers are granted by them ; and are to be exercised directly on them, and for their benefit. The government of the Union, though limited in its powers, is supreme within its sphere of action, and its laws, when made in pursuance of the constitution, form the supreme law of the land. There is nothing in the constitution of the United States, similar to the articles of confederation, which excludes incidental or implied powers. If the end be legitimate, and within the scope of the constitution, all the means which are appropriate, which are plainly adapted that end, and which are not prohibited, may constitutionally be employed to carry it into effect.1 The power of establishing a corporation is not a distinct sovereign power or end of government, but only the means of carrying into effect other powers which are sovereign. Whenever it becomes an appropriate means of exercising any of the powers given by the constitution to the government of the Union, it may be exercised by that government. If a certain means to carry into effect any of the powers, expressly given by the constitution to the government of the Union, be an appropriate measure, not prohibited by the consitution, the degree of its necessity is a question of legislative discretion, not of judicial cognisance. The act of the 10th April 1816, c. 44, to “ incorporate tjie subscribers to the Bank of the United States,” is a law made in pursuance of the constitution. The bank of the United States has, constitutionally, a right to establish its branches or offices of discount and deposit within any state. The state, within which such branch may be established, cannot, without violating the constitution, tax that branch. The state governments have no right to tax any of the constitutional means employed by the government of the Union to execute its constitutional powers.1 2 *The states have no power, by taxation or otherwise, to retard, impede, burden, or in any r>„ . manner control the operations of the constitutional laws enacted by congress to carry into •-effect the powers vested in the national government. This principle does nojj extend to a tax paid by the real property of the Bank of the Upited States, in common with the other real property in a particular state, nor to a tax imposed on the proprietary interest which the citizens of that state may hold in this institution, in common with other property of the sdhie description throughout the state. Error to the Court of Appeals of the State of Maryland. This was an action of debt, brought by the defendant in error, John James, who sued as 1 See Hepburn v. Griswold, 8 Wall. 603; Knox «• Lee, 12 Id. 533. 2 But it is competent for congress to confer on the state governments the power to tax the shares of the national banks, within certain limitations; the power of taxation under the constitution, is a concurrent one. Van Allen fl- The Assessors, 3 Wall. 585, Nelson, J. But, says the learned judge, congress may, by reason of its paramount authority, exclude the states from the exercise of such power. Ibid. It is difficult, however, to perceive in what part of the constitution, the power is conferred on congress to erect a multitude of moneyed corporations, in the several states, absorbing $400,000,000 of the capital of the country, and to exempt it from state taxation. 159 317 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. well for himself as for the state of Maryland, in the county court of Baltimore county, in the said state, against the plaintiff in error, McCulloch, to recover certain penalties, under the act of the legislature of Maryland, hereafter mentioned. Judgment being rendered against the plaintiff in error, upon the following statement of facts, agreed and submitted to the court by the parties, was affirmed by the court of appeals of the state of Maryland, the highest court of law of said state, and the cause was brought, by writ of error, to this court. It is admitted by the parties in this cause, by their counsel, that there was passed, on the 10th day of April 1816, by the congress of the United States, an act, entitled, “ an act to incorporate the subscribers to the Bank of the United States and that there was passed on the 11th day of February 1818, by the general assembly of Maryland, an act, entitled, “an act to impose a tax on all banks, or branches thereof, in the state of Maryland, not chartered by the legislature,” *which said acts are made part of J this statement, and it is agreed, may be read from the statute books in which they are respectively printed. It is further admitted, that the president, directors and company of the Bank of the United States, incorporated by the act of congress aforesaid, did organize themselves, and go into full operation, in the city of Philadelphia, in the state of Pennsylvania, in pursuance of the said act, and that they did on the--day of------1817, establish a branch of the said bank, or an office of discount and deposit, in the city of Baltimore, in the state of Maryland, which has, from that time, until the first day of May 1818, ever since transacted and carried on business as a bank, or office of discount and deposit, and as a branch of the said Bank of the United States, by issuing bank-notes and discounting promissory notes, and performing other operations usual and customary for banks to do and perform, under the authority and by the direction of the said president, directors and company of the Bank of the United States, established at Philadelphia as aforesaid. It is further admitted, that the said president, directors and company of the said bank, had no authority to establish the said branch, or office of discount and deposit, at the city of Baltimore, from the state of Maryland, otherwise than the said state having adopted the constitution of the United States and composing one of the states of the Union. It is further admitted, that James William McCulloch, the defendant below, being the cashier of the said branch, or office of dis-,1. .. count and *deposit, did, on the several days set forth in the declara- J tion in this cause, issue the said respective bank-notes therein described, from the said branch or office, to a certain George Williams, in the city of Baltimore, in part payment of a promissory nòte of the said Williams,, discounted by the said branch or office, which said respective bank-notes were not, nor was either of them, so issued, on stamped paper, in the manner prescribed by the act of assembly aforesaid. It is further admitted, that the said president, directors and company of the Bank of the United States, and the said branch, or office of discount and deposit, have not, nor has either of them, paid in advance, or otherwise, the sum of Si5,000, to the treasurer of the Western Shore, for the use of the state of Maryland, before the issuing of the said notes, or any of them, nor since those periods. And it is further admitted, that the treasurer of the Western Shore of Maryland, under the direction of the governor and council of 160 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 319 McCulloch v. Maryland. the said state, was ready, and offered to deliver to the said president, directors and company of the said bank, and to the said branch, or office of discount and deposit, stamped paper of the kind and denomination required and described in the said act of assembly. The question submitted to the court for their decision in this case, is, as to the validity of the said act of the general assembly of Maryland, on the ground of its being repugnant to the constitution of the United States, and the act of congress aforesaid, or to one of them. Upon the foregoing statement of facts, and the pleadings in this cause (all errors in *which are hereby agreed to be mutually released), if the court should be of opinion, that the plaintifis are entitled to recover, then judgment, it is agreed, shall be entered for the plaintiffs for $2500, and costs of suit. But if the court should be of opinion, that the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover upon the statement and pleadings aforesaid, then judgment of non pros shall be entered, with costs to the defendant. It is agreed, that either party may appeal from the decision of the county court, to the court of appeals, and from the decision of the court of appeals Io the supreme court of the United States, according to the modes and usages of law, and have the same benefit of this statement of facts, in the same manner as could be had, if a jury had been sworn and impannelled in this cause, and a special verdict had been fonnd, or these facts had appeared and been stated in an exception taken to the opinion of the court, and the court’s direction to the jury thereon. Copy of the act of the Legislature of the State of Maryland, referred to in the preceding statement. An act to impose a tax on all banks or branches thereof, in the state of Maryland, not chartered by the legislature. Be it enacted by the general assembly of Maryland, that if any bank has established, or shall, without authority from the state first had and obtained, establish any branch, office of discount and *deposit, or office of pay and receipt in any part of this state, it shall not be lawful for the said L branch, office of discount and deposit, or office of pay and receipt, to issue notes, in any manner, of any other denomination than five, ten, twenty, fifty, one hundred, five hundred and one thousand dollars, and no note shall be issued, except upon stamped paper of the following denominations ; that is to say, every five dollar note shall be upon a stamp of ten cents ; every ten dollar note, upon a stamp of twenty cents ; every twenty dollar note, upon a stamp of thirty cents ; every fifty dollar note, upon a Stamp of fifty cents; every one hundred dollar note, upon a stamp of one dollar ; every five hundred dollar note, upon a stamp of ten dollars ; and every thousand dollar note, upon a stamp of twenty dollars ; which paper shall be furnished by the treasurer of the’Western Shore, under the direction of the governor and council, to be paid for upon delivery ; provided always, that any institution of the above description may relieve itself from the operation of thé provi-S’ons aforesaid, by paying annually, in advance, to the treasurer of the Western Shore, for the use of state, the sum of $15,000. And be it enacted, that the president, cashier, each of the directors and 4 Wheat.—11 161 321 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. officers of every institution established, or to be established as aforesaid, offending against thé provisions aforesaid, shall forfeit a sum of $500 for each and every offence, and every person having any agency in circulating any note aforesaid, not stamped as aforesaid directed, shall forfeit a sum not * , exceeding $100 *every penalty aforesaid, to be recovered by indict- J ment, or action of debt, in the county court of the county where the offence shall be committed, one-half to the informer, and the other half to the use of the state. And be it enacted, that this act shall be in fjill force and effect from and after the first day of May next. February 22â-27th, and March lst-3d. Webster, for the plaintiff in error, (a) stated : 1. That the question whether congress constitutionally possesses the power to incorporate a bank, might be raised upon this record ; and it was in the discretion of the defendant’s counsel to agitate it. But it might have been hoped, that it was not now to be considered as an open question. It is a question of the utmost magnitude, deeply interesting to the government itself, as well as to individuals. The mere discussion of such a question may most essentially affect the value of a vast amount of private property. We are bound to suppose, that the defendant in error is well aware of these consequences, and would not have intimated an intention to agitate such a question, but with a real design to make it a topic of serious discussion, and with a view of demanding upon it the solemn judg-* men^ ibis court. This *question arose early after the adoption of J the constitution, and was discussed and settled, so far as legislative decision could settle it, in the first congress. The arguments drawn from the constitution, in favor of this power, were stated and exhausted in that discussion. They were exhibited, with characteristic perspicuity and force, by the first secretary of the treasury, in his report to the president of the United States. The first congress created and incorporated a bank. Act of 5th February 1791, ch. 84. Nearly each succeeding congress, if not every one, has acted and legislated on the presumption of the legal existence of such a power in the government. Individuals, it is true, have doubted, or thought otherwise ; but it cannot be shown, that either branch of the legislature has, at any time, expressed an opinion against the existence of the power. The executive government has acted upon it ; and the courts of law have acted upon it. Many of those who doubted or denied the existence of the powers, when first attempted to be exercised, have yielded to the first decision, and acquiesced in it, as a settled question. When all branches of the government have thus been acting on the existence of this power, nearly thirty years, it would seem almost too late to call it in question, unless its repugnancy with the constitution were plain and manifest. Congress, by the constitution, is invested with certain powers ; and as to the *«241 objects, and within the scope of these powers, it is sovereign. Even J without the aid of the general clause in the constitution, *empowering (a) This case involving a constitutional question of great public importance, and the sovereign rights of the United States and the state of Maryland ; and the government of the United States having directed their attorney-general to appear for the plaintiff in error, the court dispensed with its general rule, permitting only two counsel to argue for each party. 162 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 324 McCulloch v. Maryland. congress to pass all necessary and proper laws for carrying its powers into execution, the grant of powers itself necessarily implies the grant of all usual and suitable means for the execution of the powers granted. Congress may declare war; it may consequently carry on war, by armies and navies, and other suitable means and methods of warfare. So, it has power to raise a revenue, and to apply it in the support of the government, and defence of the country ; it may, of course, use all proper and suitable means, not specially prohibited, in the raising and disbursement of the revenue. And if, in the progress of society and the arts, new means arise, either of carrying on war, or of raising revenue, these new means doubtless would be properly considered as within the grant. Steam-frigates, for example, were not in the minds of those who framed the constitution, as among the means of naval warfare ; but no one doubts the power of congress to use them, as means to an authorized end. It is not enough to say, that it does not appear that a bank was not in the contemplation of the framers of the constitution. It was not their intention, in these cases, to enumerate particulars. The true view of the subject is, that if it be a fit instrument to an authorized purpose, it may be used, not being specially prohibited. Congress is authorized to pass all laws “ necessary and proper ” to carry into execution the powers conferred on it. These words, “ necessary and proper,” in such an instrument, are probably to be considered as synonymous. Necessarily, powers must here intend such powers as are suitable and *fitted to the object; such as are best and most useful in relation to the end L proposed. If this be not so, and if congress could use no means but such as were absolutely indispensable to the existence of a granted power, the government would hardly exist; at least, it would be wholly inadequate to the purposes of its formation. A bank is a proper and suitable instrument to assist the operations of the government, in the collection and disbursement of the revenue ; in the occasional anticipations of taxes and imposts ; and m the regulation of the actual currency, as being a part of the trade and exchange between the states. It is not for thi-s court to decide, whether a bank, or such a bank as this, be the best possible means to aid these purposes of government. Such topics must be left to that discussion which belongs to them, in the two houses of congress. Here, the only question is, whether a bank, in its known and ordinary operations, is capable of being so connected with the finances and revenues of the government, as to be fairly within the discretion of congress, when selecting means and instruments to execute its powers and perform its duties. A bank is not less the proper subject for the choice of congress, nor the less constitutional, because it requires to be executed by granting a charter of incorporation. It is not, of itself, unconstitutional in congress to create a corporation. Corporations are but means. They are not ends and objects of government. No government exists for the purpose of creating corporations as one of the ends of its being. They are institutions established to effect certain beneficial purposes ; *and,.as means, take their character generally from their end and object. They are civil or eleemosynary, public or private, •-according to the object intended by their creation. They are common means, such as all governments use. The state governments create corporations to execute powrers confided to their trust, without any specific authority m the state constitutions for that purpose. There is the same reason 163 326 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. that congress should exercise its discretion as to the means by which it mudt execute the powers conferred upon it. Congress has duties to perform and powers to execute. It has a right to the means by which these duties can be properly and most usefully performed, and these powers executed. Among other means, it has established a bank ; and before the act establishing it can be pronounced unconstitutional and void, it must be shown, that a bank has no fair connection with the execution of any power or duty of the national government, and that its creation is consequently a manifest usurpation. 2. The second question is, whether, if the bank be constitutionally created, the state governments have power to tax it ? The people of the United States have seen fit to divide sovereignty, and to establish a complex system. They have conferred certain powers on the state governments, and certain other powers on the national government. As it was easy to foresee that question must arise between these governments thus constituted, it became of great moment to determine, upon what principle these questions should be decided, and who should decide them. The constitution, *o9>7q therefore, declares, that the *constitution itself, and the laws passed J in pursuance of its provisions, shall be the supreme law of the land, and shall control all state legislation and state constitutions, which may be incompatible therewith ; and it confides to this court the ultimate power of deciding all questions arising under the constitution and laws of the United States. The laws of the United States, then, made in pursuance of the constitution, are to be the supreme law of the land, anything in the laws of any state to the contrary notwithstanding. The only inquiry, therefore, in this case is, whether the law of the state of Maryland imposing this tax be consistent with the free operation of the law establishing the bank, and the full enjoyment of the privileges conferred by it ? If it be not, then it is void ; if it be, then it may be valid. Upon the supposition, that the bank is constitutionally created, this is the only question ; and this question seems answered, as soon as it is stated. If the states may tgx the bank, to what extent shall they tax it, and where shall they stop ? 1 An unlimited power to I tax involves, necessarily, a power to destroy ; because there is a limit j beyond which no institution and no property can bear taxation./ A question [ of constitutional power can hardly be made to depend on a question of more or less. If the states may tax, they have no limit but their discretion ; and the bank, therefore, must depend on the discretion of the state governments for its existence. This consequence is inevitable. The object in laying this tax, may have been revenue to the state. In the next case, the object may *3281 exPel the bank from the state ; but *how is this object to be J ascertained, or who is to judge of the motives of legislative acts? The government of the United States has itself a great pecuniary interest in this corporation. Can the states tax this property ? Under the confederation, when the national government, not having the power of direct legislation, could not protect its own property by its own laws, it was expressly stipulated, that “ no impositions, duties or restrictions should be laid by any state on the property of the United States.” Is it supposed, that property of the United States is now subject to the power of the state governments, in a greater degree than under the confederation ? If this power of taxation be admitted, what is to be its limit ? The United States have, and 164 1819] , OF THE UNITED STATES. 328 McCulloch v. Maryland. must have, property locally existing in all the states ; and may the states impose on this property, whether real or personal, such taxes as they please ? Can they tax proceedings in the federal courts ? If so, they can expel those judicatures from the states. As Maryland has undertaken to impose a stamptax on the notes of this bank, what hinders her from imposing a stamp-tax also on permits, clearances, registers and all other documents connected with imposts and navigation ? If, by one, she can suspend the operations of the bank, by the other, she can equally well shut up the custom-house. The law of Maryland, in question, makes a requisition. The sum called for is not assessed on property, nor deducted from profits or income. It is a direct imposition on the power, privilege or franchise of the corporation. The act purports, also, to restrain *the circulation of the paper of the bank to r*32a bills of certain descriptions. It narrows and abridges the powers of *■ the bank in a manner which, it would seem, even congress could not do. . This law of Maryland cannot be sustained, but upon principles and reasoning which would subject every important measure of the national government to the revision and control of the state legislatures. By the charter, the bank is authorized to issue bills of any demonination above five dollars. The act of Maryland purports to restrain and limit their powers in this respect. The charter, as well as the laws of the United States, makes it the duty of all collectors and receivers to receive the notes of the bank in payment of all debts due the government. The act of Maryland makes it penal, both on the person paying and the person receiving such bills, until stamped by the authority of Maryland. This is a direct interference with the revenue. The legislature of Maryland might, with as much propriety, tax treasury-notes. This is either an attempt to expel the bank from the state ; or it is an attempt* to raise a revenue for state purposes, by an imposition on property and franchises holden under the national government, and created by that government, for purposes connected with its own administration. In either view, there cannot be a clearer case of interference. The bank cannot exist, nor can any bank established by congress exist, if this right to tax it exists in the state governments. One or the other must be surrendered ; and a surrender on the part of the government of the United States would be a giving *up of those fundamental and essential powers without which the government cannot be maintained. A bank may not be, *- «° and is not, absolutely essential to the existence and preservation of the government. But it is essential to the existence and preservation of the government, that congress should be able to exercise its constitutional powers, at its own discretion, without being subject to the control of state legislation. The question is not, whether a bank be necessary or useful, but whether congress may not constitutionally judge of that necessity or utility ; and whether, having so judged and decided, and having adopted measures to carry its decision into effect, the state governments may interfere with that decision, and defeat the operation of its measures. • Nothing can be plainer than that, if the law of congress, establishing the bank, be a constitutional act, it must have its full and complete effects. Its operation cannot be either defeated or impeded by acts of state legislation. To hold otherwise, would be to declare, that congress can only exercise its constitutional powers, subject to the controlling discretion, and under the sufferance, of the state governments. 165 330 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. Hopkinson, for the defendants in error, proposed three questions for the consideration of the court. 1. Had congress a constitutional power to incorporate the bank of the United States ? 2. Granting this power to congress, has the bank, of its own authority, a right to establish its branches in the several states ? 3. Can the bank, and its branches thus established, * . claim to be exempt from the ordinary *and equal taxation of property, -* as assessed in the states in which they are placed ? 1. The first question has, for many years, divided the opinions of the first men of our country. He did not mean to controvert the arguments by which the bank was maintained, on its original establishment. The power may now be denied, in perfect consistency with those arguments. It is agreed, that no such power is expressly granted by the constitution. It has been obtained by implication ; by reasoning from the 8th section of the 1st article of the constitution ; and asserted to exist, not of and by itself, but as an appendage to other granted powers, as necessary to carry them into execution. If the bank be not “ necessary and proper ” for this purpose, it has no foundation in our constitution, and can have no support i’i this court. But it strikes us, at once, that a power, growing out of a necessity which may not be permanent, may also not be permanent. It has relation to circumstances which change ; in a state of things which may exist at one period, and not at another. The argument might have been perfectly good, to show the necessity of a bank, for the operations of the revenue, in 1791, and entirely fail now, when so many facilities for money transactions abound, which were wanting then. That some of the powers of the constitution are of this fluctuating character, existing, or not, according to extraneous circumstances, has been fully recognised by this court at the present term, in the case of Sturges v. Crowninshield (ante, p. 122). Necessity was the *oooi plea and justification *of the first Bank of the United States. If the J same necessity existed, when the second was established, it will afford the same justification ; otherwise, it will stand without justification, as no other is pretended. We cannot, in making this inquiry, take a more fair and liberal test, than the report of General Hamilton, the father and defender of this power. The uses and advantages he states, as making up the necessity required by the constitution, are three. 1st. The augmentation of the active and productive capital of the country, by making gold and silver the basis of a paper circulation. 2d. Affording greater facility to the government, in procuring pecuniary aids ; especially, in sudden emergencies ; this, he says, is an indisputable advantage of public banks. 3d. The facility of the payment of taxes, in two ways ; by loaning to the citizen, and enabling him to be punctual; and by increasing the quantity of circulating medium, and quickening circulation by bank-bills, easily transmitted from place to place. If we admit, that these advantages or conveniences amount to the necessity required by the constitution, for the creation and exercise of powers not expressly given ; yet it is obvious, they may be derived from any public banks, and do not call for a Bank of the United States, unless there should be no other public banks, or not a sufficiency of them for these operations. In 1791, when this argument was held to be valid and effectual, there were but three banks in the United States, with limited capitals, and con-*3331 *rac^ed spheres °f operation. Very different is the case now, when we -* have a banking capital to a vast amount, vested in *banks of goo 166 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 333 « McCulloch v. Maryland. credit, and so spread over the country, as to be convenient and competent for all the purposes enumerated in the argument. General Hamilton, conscious that his reasoning must fail, if the state banks were adequate for his objects, proceeds to show they were not. Mr. Hopkinson particularly examined all the objections urged by General Hamilton, to the agency of the state banks, then in existence, in the operations required for the revenue ; and endeavored to show, that they had no application to the present number, extent and situation of the state banks ; relying only on those of a sound and unquestioned credit and permanency. He also contended, that the experience of five years, since the expiration of the old charter of the Bank of the United States, has fully shown the competency of the state banks, to all the purposes and uses alleged as reasons for erecting that bank, in 1791. The loans to the government by the state banks, in the emergencies spoken of; the accommodation to individuals, to enable them to pay their duties and taxes ; the creation of a circulating currency ; and the facility of transmitting money from place to place, have all been effected, as largely and beneficially, by the state banks, as they could have been done by a bank incorporated by congress. The change in the country, in relation to banks, and an experience that was depended upon, concur in proving, that whatever might have been the truth and force of the bank argument in 1791, they were wholly wanting in 1816. *2. If this Bank of the United States has been lawfully created • and incorporated, we next inquire, whether it may, of its own author- *-ity, establish its branches in the several states, without the direction of congress, or the assent of the states ? It is true, that the charter contains this power, but this avails nothing, if not warranted by the constitution. This power to establish branches, by the directors of the bank, must be maintained and justified, by the same necessity which supports the bank itself, or it cannot exist. The power derived from a given necessity, must be coextensive with it, and no more. We will inquire, 1st. Does this necessity exist in favor of the branches ? 2d. Who should be the judge of the necessity, and direct the manner and extent of the remedy to be applied ? Branches are not necessary for any of the enumerated advantages. Not for pecuniary aids to the government; since the ability to afford them must be regulated by the strength of the capital of the parent bank, and cannot be increased by scattering and spreading that capital in the branches. Nor are they necessary to create a circulating medium ; for they create nothing ; but issue paper on the faith and responsibility of the parent bank, who could issue the same quantity, on the same foundation; the distribution of the notes of the parent bank can as well be dpne, and in fact, is done, by the state banks. Where, then, is that necessity to be found for the branches, whatever may be allowed to the bank itself ? It is undoubtedly true, that these branches are established with a single view to trading, and the profit of the stockholders, and not for the convenience *or use of the government; and therefore, they are located at the will of the directors, who represent *- $$$ and regard the interests of the stockholders, and are* such themselves. If this is the case, can it be contended, that the state rights of territory and axation are to yield for the gains of a money-trading corporation; to be prostrated at the will of a set of men who have no concern, and, no duty at to increase their profits ? Is this the necessity required by the constitu- 167. 335 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. tion for the creation of undefined powers ? It is true, that, by the charter, the government may require a branch in any place it may designate, but if this power is given only for the uses or necessities of the government, then the government only should have the power to order it. In truth, the directors have exercised the power, and they hold it, without any control from the government of the United States; and, as is now contended, without any control of the state governments. A most extravagant power to be vested in a body of men, chosen annually by a very small portion of our citizens, for the purpose of loaning and trading with their money to the best advantage ! A state will not suffer its own citizens to erect a bank, without its authority, but the citizens of another state may do so ; for it may happen that the state thus used by the bank for one of its branches, does not hold a single share of the stock. 2d. But if these branches are to be supported, on the ground of the constitutional necessity, and they can have no other foundation, the question occurs, who should be the judge of the existence of the necessity, in any proposed case; of the when and the where the power * .. *shall be exercised, which the necessity requires? Assuredly, the J same tribunal which judges of the original necessity on which the bank is created, should also judge of any subsequent necessity requiring the extension of the remedy. Congress is that tribunal; the only one in which it may be safely trusted ; the only one in which the states to be affected by the measure, are all fairly represented. If this power belongs to congress, it cannot be delegated to the directors of a bank, any more than any other legislative power may be transferred to apy other body of citizens : if this doctrine of necessity is without any known limits, but such as those who defend themselves by it, may choose, for the time, to give it; and if the powers derived from it, are assignable by the congress to the directors of a bank ; and by the directors of the bank to anybody else ; we have really spent a great deal of labor and learning to very little purpose, in our attempt to establish a form of government in which the powers of those who govern shall be strictly defined and controlled; and the rights of the government secured from the usurpations of unlimited or unknown powers. The establishment of a bank in a state, without its assent; without regard to its interests, its policy or institutions, is a higher exercise of authority, than the creation of the parent bank; which, if confined to the seat of the government, and to the purposes of the government, will interfere less with the rights and policy of the states, than those wide-spreading branches, planted everywhere, and influencing all the business of the community. Such an • .. exercise of *sovereign power, should, at least, have the sanction of 1J the sovereign legislature, to vouch that the good of the whole requires it, that the necessity exists which justifies it. But will it be tolerated, that twenty directors of a trading corporation, having no object but profit, shall, in the pursuit of it, tread upon the sovereignity of the state; enter it, without condescending to ask its leave ; disregard, perhaps, the whole system of its policy ; overthrow its institutions, and sacrifice its interests ? 3. If, however, the states of this Union have surrendered themselves in this manner, by implication, to the congress of the United States, and to such corporations as the congress, from time to time, may find it “ necessary and proper ” to create ; if a state may no longer decide, whether a trading association, with independent powers and immunities, shall plant itself m its .168 1819] . OF THE UNITED STATES. ' 337 McCulloch v. Maryland. territory, carry bn its business, make a currency and trade on its credit, raising capitals for individuals as fictitious as its own ; if all this must be granted, the third and great question in this cause presents itself for consideration ; that is, shall this association come there with rights of sovereignty, paramount to the sovereignty of the state, and with privileges possessed by no other persons, corporations or property in the state ? in other words, can the bank and its branches, thus established, claim to be exempt from the ordinary and equal taxation of property, as asssessed in the states in which they are placed ? As this overwhelming' invasion*of state sovereignty is not warranted by any express clause or grant in the constitution, and never was *imagined by any state that adopted and ratified that constitution, it will be conceded, that it must be found to be *■ necessarily and indissolubly connected with the power to establish the bank, or it must be repelled. The court has always shown a just anxiety to prevent any conflict between the federal and state powers ; to construe both so as to avoid an interference, if possible, and to preserve that harmony of action in both, on which the prosperity and happiness of all .depend. If, therefore, the right to incorporate a national bank may exist, and be exercised consistently with the right of the state, to tax the property of such bank within its territory, the court will maintain both rights ; although some inconvenience or diminution of advantage may be the consequence. It is not for the directors of the bank to say, you will lessen our profits by permitting us to be taxed ; if such taxation will not deprive the government of the uses it •derives from the agency and operations of the bank. The necessity of the government is the foundation of the charter ; and beyond that necessity, it can claim nothing in derogation of state authority. If the power to erect this corporation were expressly given in the constitution, still, it would not be construed to be an exclusion of any state right, not absolutely incompatible and repugnant. The states need no reservation or acknowledgment of their right; all remain that are not expressly prohibited, or necessarily excluded ; and this gives our opponents the broadest ground they can ask. The right now assailed by the bank, is the right of taxing property within the territory of *the state. This is the highest attribute of sovereignty, the right to raise revenue ; in fact, the right to exist; without which no other right can be held or enjoyed. The general power to tax is not denied to the states, but the bank claims to be exempted from the operation of this power. If this claim is valid, and to be supported by the court, it must be, either, 1. From the nature of the property: 2. Because it is a bank of the United States : 3. From some express provision of the constitution : or 4. Because the- exemption is indispensably necessary to the exercise of some power granted by the constitution. 1st. There is nothing in the- nature of the property of bank-stock that exonerates it from taxation. It has been taxed, in some form, by every state m which a bank has been incorporated ; either annually and directly, or by a gross sum paid for the charter. The United States have not only taxed the capital or stock of the state banks, but their business also, by imposing a duty on all notes discounted by them. The bank paid a tax for its capital; and exery man who deals with the bank, by borrowing, paid another tax for the portion of the same capital he borrowed. This species of property, then, so far from having enjoyed any exemption from the calls 169 339 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCullough v. Maryland. of the revenue, has been particularly burdened ; and been thought a fair subject of taxation both by the federal and state governments. 2d. Is it then exempt, as being a bank of the United States ? How is it such ? In name only. Just as the Bank of Pennsylvania, or the Bank of * .. Maryland, *are banks of those states. The property of the bank, real J or personal, does not belong to the United States only, as a stockholder, and as any other stockholders. The United States might have the same interest in any other bank, turnpike or canal company. So far as they hold stock, they have a property in the institution, and no further; so long, and no longer. Nor is the direction and management of the bank under the control of the United States. They are represented in the board by the directors appointed by them, as the other stockholders are represented by the directors they elect. A director of the government has no more power or right than any other director. As to the control the government may have over the conduct of the bank, by its patronage and deposits, it is precisely the same it might have over any other bank, to which that patronage would be equally important. Strip it of its name, and we find it to be a mere association of individuals, putting their money into a common stock, to be loaned for profit, and to divide the gains. The government is a partner in the firm, for gain also ; for, except a participation of the profits of the business, the government could have every other use of the bank, without owning a dollar in it. It is not, then, a bank of the United States, if by that we mean, an institution belonging to the government, directed by it, or in which it has a permanent, indissoluble interest. The ^convenience it affords in the collection and distribution of the revenue, is collateral, secondary, and may be transferred at pleasure to any other bank. It forms no Par^ construction *or character of this bank ; which, as to all J its rights and powers, would be exactly what it now is, if the government was to seek and obtain all this convenience from some other source ; if the government were to withdraw its patronage, and sell out its stock. How, then, can such an institution claim the immunities of sovereignty ; nay, that sovereignty does not possess ? for a sovereign who places his property in the territory of another sovereign, submits it to the demands of the revenue, which are but justly paid, in return for the protection afforded to the property. General Hamilton, in his report on this subject, so far from considering the bank a public institution, connected with, or controlled by, the government, holds it to be indispensable that it should not be so. It must be, says he, under private, not public, direction ; under the guidance of individual interest, not public policy. Still, he adds, the state may be holder of part of its stock ; and consequently (what ? it becomes a public property ? no !), a sharer of the profits. He traces no other consequence to that circumstance. No rights are founded on it; no part of its utility or necessity arises from it. Can an institution, then, purely private, and which disclaims any public character, be clothed with the power and rights of the government, and demand subordination from the state government, in virtue of the federal authority, which it undertakes to wield at its own will and pleasure ? Shall it be private, in its direction and interests ; public, in its rights and privileges : a trading money-lender, in its business; an un-* contr°bed sovereign, in its powers? If the whole bank, with J all its property and business, *belonged to the U nited States, it would 170 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 342 McCullough v. Maryland. not, therefore, be exempted from the taxation of the states. To this purpose, the United States and the several states must be considered as sovereign and independent; and the principle is clear, that a sovereign putting his property within the territory and jurisdiction of another sovereign, and of course, under his protection, submits it to the ordinary taxation of the state, and must contribute fairly to the wants of the revenue. In other words, the jurisdiction of the state extends over all its territory, and everything within or upon it, with a few known exceptions. With a view to this principle, the constitution has provided for those cases in which it was deemed necessary and proper to give the United States jurisdiction within a state, in exclusion of the state authority ; and even in these cases, it will be seen, it cannot be done, without the assent of the state. For a seat of government, for forts, arsenals, dock-yards, &c., the assent of the state to surrender its jurisdiction is required ; but the bank asks no consent, and is paramount to all state authority, to all the rights of territory, and demands of the public revenue. We have not been told, whether the banking-houses of this corporation, and any other real estate it may acquire, for the accommodation of its affairs, afe also of this privileged order of property. In principle, it must be the same ; for the privilege, if it exists, belongs to the corporation, and must cover equally all its property. It is understood, that a case was lately decided by the supreme court of Pennsylvania, and from which no appeal has been taken, on the part of the United *States, r4. to this court, to show that United States property, as such, has no ■-exemption from state taxation. A fort, belonging to the federal government, near Pittsburgh, was sold by public auction ; the usual auction duty was claimed, and the payment resisted, on the ground, that none could be exacted from the United States. The court decided otherwise. In admitting Louisiana into the Union, and so, it is believed, with all the new states, it is expressly stipulated, “ that no taxes shall be imposed on lands, the property of the United States/’ There can, then, be no pretence, that bank property, even belonging to the United States, is, on that account, exonerated from state taxation.1 3d. If, then, neither the nature of the property, nor the interest the United States may have have in the bank, will warrant the exemption claimed, is there anything expressed in the constitution, to limit and control the state right of taxation, as now contended for? We find but one limitation to this essential right, of which the states were naturally and justly most jealous. In the 10th section of the 1st article, it is declared, that “no state shall, without the consent of congress, lay any imposts or duties on imports or exports, except what may be absolutely necessary for executing its inspection laws and there is a like prohibition to laying any dutv of tonnage. Here, then, is the whole restriction or limitation, attempted to be imposed by the constitution, on the power of the states to raise revenue, arecisely in the same manner, from the same subjects, and to the same extent, that any sovereign and independent *state may do ; and it never was rH_ understood by those who made, or those who received, the constitu- •-tion, that any further restriction ever would, or could, be imposed. This subject did not escape either the assailants or the defenders of our form of 1 See Roach v. Philadelphia County, 2 Am. L. J. 444 ; United v. Weise, 3 Wall. Jr. C. C. 72, 79. 171 344 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch, v. Maryland. government; and their arguments and commentaries upon the instrument ought not to be disregarded, in fixing its construction. It was foreseen, and objected by its opponents, that under the general sweeping power given to congress, “ to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper, for carrying into execution the foregoing powers,” &c., the states might be exposed to great dangers, and the most humiliating and oppressive encroachments, particularly in this very matter of taxation. By referring to the Federalist, the great champion of the constitution, the objections will be found stated, together with the answers to them. It is again and again replied, and most solemnly asserted, to the people of these United States, that the right of taxation in the states is sacred and inviolable, with “ the sole exception of duties on imports and exports that.“they retain the authority in the most absolute and unqualified sense ; and that an attempt on the part of the national government to abridge them in the exercise of it, would be a violent assumption of power, unwarranted by any article or clause of its constitution.” With the exception mentioned, the federal and state powers of taxation are declared to be concurrent; and if the United States are justified in taxing state banks, the same equal and concurrent authority will justify * , the state in taxing the Bank of the United States, or any *other J bank.(a) The author begins No. 34, by saying, “I flatter myself it has been clearly shown, in my last number, that the particular states, under the proposed constitution, would have- co-equal authority with the Union, in the article of revenue, except as to duties on imports.” Under such assurances from those who made, who recommended, and carried, the constitution, and who were supposed best to understand it, was it received and adopted by the people of these United States ; and now, after a lapse of nearly thirty years, they are to be informed, that all this is a mistake, all these assurances are unwarranted, and that the federal government does possess most productive and important powers of taxation, neither on imports, exports or tonnage, but strictly internal, which are prohibited to the states. The question then was, whether the United States should have any command of the internal revenue ; the pretension now is, that they shall enjoy exclusively the best portion of it. The question was then quieted, by the acknowledgment of a co-equal right ; it is now to be put at rest, by the prostration of the state power. The federal government is to hold a power by implication, and ingenious inference from general words in the constitution, which it can hardly be believed would have been suffered in an express grant. If, then, the people were not deceived, when they were told that, with the exceptions mentioned, the state right of taxation is sacred and * _ inviolable ; and it be also true, *that the Bank of the United States -* cannot exist under the evercise of that right, the consequence ought to be, that the bank must not exist; for if it can live only by the destruction of such a right—if it can live only by the exercise of a po wer, which this court solemnly declared to be a “ violent assumption of power, unwarranted by any clause in the constitution ”—we cannot hesitate to say, let it not live. But, in truth, this is not the state of the controversy. No such extremes are presented for our choice. We only require, that the bank shall not (a) Letters of Publius, or The Federalist, Nos. 31-36. 172 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 346 McCulloch v. Maryland. violate state rights, in establishing itself, or its branches ; that it shall be submitted to the jurisdiction and laws of the state, in the same manner with other corporations and other property; and all this maybe done, without ruining the institution, or destroying its national uses. Its profits will be diminished, by contributing to the revenue of the state ; and this is the whole effect that ought, in a fair and liberal spirit of reasoning, to be anticipated. But, at all events, we show, on the part of the state, a clear, general, absolute and unqualified right of taxation (with the exception stated) ; and protest against such a right being made to yield to implications and obscure constructions of indefinite clauses in the constitution. Such a right must not be defeated, by doubtful pretensions of power, or arguments of convenience or policy to the government; much less to a private corporation. It is not a little alarming, to trace the progress of this argument. 1. The power to raise the bank is founded on no provision of the constitution that has the most distant allusion to such an *institution ; there is not a word in that instrument that would suggest the idea of a bank, to the most L fertile imagination ; but the bank is created by implication and construction, made out by a very subtle course of reasoning ; then, by another implication, raised on the former, the bank, this creature of construction, claims the right to enter the territory of a state, without its assent; to carry on its business, when it pleases, and where it pleases, against the will, and perhaps, in contravention of the policy, of the sovereign owner of the soil. Having such great success in the acquirement of implied rights, the experiment is now pushed further ; and not contented with having obtained two rights in this extraordinary way, the fortunate adventurer assails the sovereignty of the state, and would strip from it its most vital and essential power. It is thus with the famous fig tree of India, whose branches shoot from the trunk to a considerable distance ; then drop upon the earth, where they take root and become trees, from which also other branches shoot, and plant and propagate and extend themselves in the same way, until gradually a vast surface is covered, and everything perishes in the spreading shade. What have we opposed to these doctrines, so just and reasonable? Distressing inconveniences, ingeniously contrived ; supposed dangers ; fearful distrusts ; anticipated violence and injustice from the states, and consequent ruin to the bank. A right to tax, is a right to destroy, is the whole amount of the argument, however varied by ingenuity, or embellished by eloquence. It is said, the states will abuse the power ; and its exercise will *pro- r*«. A duce infinite inconvenience and embarrassment to the bank. Now, if *-this were true, it cannot help our opponents ; because, if the states have the power contended for, this court cannot take it from them, under the fear that they may abuse it ; nor, indeed, for its actual abuse ; and if they have it not, they may not use it, however moderately and discreetly. Nor is there any more force in the argument, that the bank property will be subjected to double or treble taxation. Each state will tax only the capital really employed in it; and it is always in the power of the bank, to show how its capital is distributed. But it is feared, the capital in a state may be taxed m gross ; and the individual stockholders also taxed for the same stock. Is this common case of a double taxation of the same article, to be a cause of alarm now ? Our revenue laws abound with similar cases ; they arise out of the very nature of our double government. So says the Federalist; and it 173 348 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. is the first time it has been the ground of complaint. Poll taxes are paid to the federal and state governments ; licenses to retail spirits ; land taxes; and the whole round of internal duties, over which both governments have a concurrent, and, until now, it was supposed, a co-equal right. Were not the state banks taxed by the federal, and also by the state governments ; in some, by a bonus for the charter ; in others, directly and annually ? The circumstance, that the taxes go to different governments, in these' cases, is wholly immaterial to those who pay; unless it is, that it increases the danger of excess and oppression. It is justly remarked, on this subject, by *the Federalist, that our security from excessive burdens on any J source of revenue, must be found in mutual forbearance and discretion in the use of the power; this is the only security, and the authority of this court can add nothing to it. When that fails, there is an end to the confederation, which is founded on a reasonable and honorable confidence in each other. It has been most impressively advanced, that the states, under pretence of taxing, may prohibit and expel the banks ; that in the full exercise of this power, they may tax munitions of war; ships, about to sail, and armies on their march; nay, the spirit of the court is to be aroused by the fear that judicial proceedings will also come under this all-destroying power. Loans may be delayed for stamps, and the country ruined for the want of the money. But whenever the states shall be in a disposition to uproot the general government, they will take more direct and speedy means ; and until they have this disposition, they will not use these. What power may not be abused ; and whom or what shall we trust, if we guard onrselves with this extreme caution? The common and daily intercourse between man and man; all our relations in society, depend upon a reasonable confidence in each other. It is peculiarly the basis of our confederation, which lives not a moment, after we shall cease to trust each other. If the two governments are to regard each other as enemies, seeking opportunities of injury and distress, they will not long continue friends. This sort of timid reasoning about the powers of the government, has not escaped the authors so often alluded *to ; who, in their 31st number, treat it very properly. Surely, J the argument is as strong against giving to the United States the power to incorporate a bank with branches. What may be more easily, or more extensively abused ; and what more powerful engine can we imagine to be brought into operation against the revenues and rights of the states ? If the federal government must have a bank for the purposes of its revenue, all collision will be avoided, by establishing the parent bank in its own district, where it holds an exclusive jurisdiction ; and planting its branches in such states as shall assent to it; and using state banks, where such assent cannot be obtained. Speaking practically, and by our experience, it may be safely asserted, that all the uses of the bank to the government might be thus obtained. Nothing would be wanting but profits and large dividends to the stockholders, which are the real object in this contest. Whatever may be the right of the United States to establish a bank, it cannot be better than that of the states. Their lawful power to incorporate such institutions has never yet been questioned ; whatever may be in reserve for them, when it may be found “necessary and proper” for the interests of the national bank to crush the state institutions, and curtail the state authority. Grant- 174 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 350 McCulloch v. Maryland. ing, that these rights are equal in the two governments ; and that the sovereignty of the state, within its territory, over this subject, is but equal to that of the United States ; and that all sovereign power remains undiminished in the states, except in those cases in which it has, by the constitution, been *expressly and exclusively transferred to the United States : the sover- rHs eign power of taxation (except on foreign commerce) being, in the lan- *-guage of the Federalist, co-equal to the two governments ; it follows, as a direct and necessary consequence, that having equal powers to erect banks, and equal powers of taxation on property of that description, being neither imports, exports or tonnage, whatever jurisdiction the federal government may exercise in this respect, over a bank created by a state, any state may exercise over a bank created by the United States. Now, the federal government has assumed the right of taxing the state banks, precisely in the manner in which the state of Maryland has proceeded against the Bank of the United States ; and as this right has never been resisted or questioned, it may be taken to be admitted by both parties ; and must be equal and common to both parties, or the fundamental principles of our confederation have been strangely mistaken, or are to be violently overthrown. It has also been suggested, that the bank may claim a protection from this tax, under that clause of the constitution, which prohibits the states from passing laws, which shall impair the obligation of contracts. The charter is said to be the contract between the government and the stockholders ; and the interests of the latter will be injured by the tax which reduces their profits. Many answers offer themselves to this agreement. In the first place, the United States cannot, either by a direct law, or by a contract with a third party, take away any right from the states, not granted by the constitution ; they *cannot do, collaterally and by implication, what cannot be done directly. Their contracts must conform to the constitution, and not the constitution to their contracts. If, therefore, the states have, in some other way, parted with this right of taxation, they cannot be deprived of it, by a contract between other parties. Under this doctrine, the United States might contract away every right of every state ; and any attempt to resist it, would be called a violation of the obligations of a contract. Again, the United States have no more right to violate contracts than the states, and surely, they never imagined they were doing so, when they taxed so liberally the stock of the state banks. Again, it might as well be said, that a tax on real estate, imposed after a sale of it, and not then perhaps contemplated, or new duties imposed on merchandise, after it is ordered, violate the contract between the vendor and the purchaser, and diminishes the value of the property. In fact, all contracts in relation to property, subject to taxation, are presumed to have in view the probability or possibility that they will be taxed ; and the happening of the event never was imagined to interfere with the contract, or its lawful obligations. 9 The Attorney- General., for the plaintiff in error, argued : 1. That the power of congress to create a bank ought not now to be questioned, after its exercise ever since the establishment of the constitution, sanctioned by every department of the government : by the. legislature, in the charter of the bank, and other laws connected with the incorporation ; by the executive, in its assent to those laws ; and by the judiciary, in carry- *- $$$ 175 353 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. ing them into effect. After a lapse of time, and so many concurrent acts of the public authorities, this exercise of power must be considered as ratified by the voice of the people, and sanctioned by precedent. In the exercise of criminal judicature, the question of constitutionality could not have been overlooked by the courts, who have so often inflicted punishment for acts which would be no crimes, if these laws were repugnant to the fundamental law. 2. The power to establish such a corporation is implied, and involved in the grant of specific powers in the constitution ; because the end involves the means necessary to carry it into effect. A power without the means to use it, is a nullity. But we are not driven to seek for this power in implication: because the constitution, after enumerating certain specific powers, expressly gives to congress the power “ to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested by this constitution in the government of the United States, or or in any department or officer thereof.” If, therefore, the act of congress establishing the bank was- necessary and proper to carry into execution any one or more of the enumerated powers, the authority to pass it is expressly delegated to congress by the constitution. We contend, that it was necessary and proper to carry into execution several of the enumerated powers, such as the powers of levying and collecting taxes throughout this widely-* r _ extended empire ; of paying *the public debts, both in the United States and in foreign countries ; of borrowing money, at home and abroad ; of regulating commerce with foreign nations, and among the several states ; of raising and supporting armies and a navy ; and of carrying on war. That banks, dispersed throughout the country, are appropriate means of carrying into execution all these powers, cannot be denied. Our history furnishes abundant experience of the utility of a national bank as an instrument of finance. It will be found in the aid derived to the public cause from the Bank of North America, established by congress, during the war of the revolution ; in the great utility of the former Bank of the United States ; and in the necessity of resorting to the instrumentality of the banks incorporated by the states, during the interval between the expiration of the former charter of the United States Bank, in 1811, and the establishment of the present bankin 1816 ; a period of war, the calamities of which were greatly aggravated by the want of this convenient instrument of finance. Nor is it required, that the power of establishing such a moneyed corporation should be indispensably necessary to the execution of any of the specified powers of the government. An interpretation of this clause of the constitution, so strict and literal, would render every law which could be passed by congress unconstitutional; for of no particular law can it be predicated, that it is absolutely and indispensably necessary to carry into effect any of the specified powers ; since a different law might be imagined, which could *3551 be enacted, tending to the same object, though *not equally well ' J adapted to attain it. As the inevitable consequence of giving this very restricted sense to the word “ necessary,” would be to annihilate the very powers it professes to create ; and as so gross an absurdity cannot be imputed to the framers of the constitution, this interpretation must be rejected. Another not less inadmissible consequence of this construction is, that it 176 18J 9] OF THE UNITED STATES. 355 McCulloch v. Maryland. is fatal to the permanency of the constitutional powers ; it makes them dependent for their being, on extrinsic circumstances, which, as these are perpetually shifting and changing, must produce correspondent changes in the essence of the powers on which they depend. But surely, the constitutionality of any act of congress cannot depend upon such circumstances. They are the subject of legislative discretion, not of judicial cognisance. Nor does this position conflict with the doctrine of the court in Sturges v. Croton-inshield (ante, p. 122). The court has not said, in that case, that the powers of congress are shifting powers, which may or may not be constitutionally exercised, according to extrinsic or temporary circumstances; but it has merely determined, that the power* of the state legislatures over the subject of bankruptcies is subordinate to that of congress on the same subject, and cannot be exercised so as to conflict with the uniform laws of bankruptcy throughout the Union which congress may establish. The power, in this instance, resides permanently in congress, whether it chooses to exercise it or not; but its exercise on the part of the states *is precarious, and r*«™ dependent, in certain respects, upon its actual exercise by congress. L The convention well knew that it was utterly vain and nugatory, to give to congress certain specific powers, without the means of enforcing those powers. The auxiliary means, which are necessary for this purpose, are those which are useful and appropriate to produce the particular end. “ Necessary and proper ” are, then, equivalent to needful and adapted ; such is the popular sense in which the word necessary is sometimes used. That use of it is confirmed by the best authorities among lexicographers ; among other definitions of the word “necessary,” Johnson gives “ needfuland he defines “need,” the root of the latter, by the words, “want, occasion.” Is a law, then, wanted, is there occasion for it, in order to carry into execution any of the enumerated powers of the national government; congress has the power of passing it. To make a law constitutional, nothing more is necessary than that it should be fairly adapted to carry into effect some specific power given to congress. This is the only interpretation which can give effect to this vital clause of the constitution ; and being consistent with the rules of the language, is not to be rejected, because there is another interpretation, equally consistent with. the same rules, but wholly inadequate to convey what must have been the intention of the convention. Among the multitude of means to carry into execution the powers expressly given to the national government, congress is to select, from time to time, such as are most fit for the purpose. It would have been impossible *to enumerate them all [-*0^7 in the constitution ; and a specification of some, omitting others, L would have been wholly useless. The court, in inquiring whether congress had made a selection of constitutional means, is to compare the law in question with the powers it is intended to carry into execution ; not in order to ascertain whether other 01* better means might have been selected, for that is the legislative province, but to see whether those which have been chosen have a natural connection with any specific power; whether they are adapted to give it effect; whether they are appropriate means to an end. It cannot be denied, that this is the character of the Bank of the United States. But it is said, that the government might use private bankers, or the banks incorporated by the states, to carry on their fiscal operations. This, however, presents a mere question of political expediency, which, it is repeated, is 4 Wheat.—12 177 357 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. exclusively for legislative consideration ; which has been determined by the legislative wisdom ; and cannot be reviewed by the cpurt. It is objected, that this act creates a corporation ; which, being an exercise of a fundamental power of sovereignty, can only be claimed by congress, under their grant of specific powers. But to have enumerated the power of establishing corporations, among the specific powers of congress, would have been to change the whole plan of the constitution ; to destroy its simplicity, and load it with all the complex details of a code of private jurisprudence. The power of establishing corporations is not one of the ends of government; it is only a class of means for accomplishing its ends. An enumera- J tion *of this particular class of means, omitting all others, would have been a useless anomaly in the constitution. It is admitted, that this is an act of sovereignty, and so is any other law ; if the authority of establishing corporations be a sovereign power, the United States are sovereign, as to all the powers specifically given to their government, and as to all others necessary and proper to carry into effect those specified. If the power of chartering a corporation be necessary and proper for this purpose, congress has it to an extent as ample as any other sovereign legislature. Any government of limited sovereignty can create corporations only with reference to the limited powers that government possesses. The inquiry then reverts, whether the power of incorporating a banking company, be a necessary and proper means of executing the specific powers of the national government. The immense powers incontestably given, show that there was a disposition, on the part of the people, to give ample means to carry those powers into effect. A. state can create a corporation, in virtue of its sovereignty, without any specific authority for that purpose, conferred in the state constitutions. The United States are sovereign as to certain specific objects, and may, therefore, erect a corporation for the purpose of effecting those objects. If the incorporating power had been expressly granted as an end, it would have conferred a power not intended ; if granted as a means, it would have conferred nothing more than was before given by necessary implication. Nor does the rule of interpretation we contend for, sanction any usurpation, on the part of the national government; since, if the argument be, *3591 ^at the *implied powers of the constitution may be assumed and ex- J ercised, for purposes not really connected with the powers specifically granted, under color of some imaginary relation between them, the answer is, that this is nothing more than arguing from the abuse of constitutional powers, which would equally apply against the use of those that are confessedly granted to the national government ; that the danger of the abuse will be checked by the judicial department, which, by comparing the means with the proposed end, will decide, whether the connection is real, or assumed as the pretext for the usurpation of powers not belonging to the government; and that, whatever may be the magnitude of the danger from this quarter, it is not equal to that of annihilating the powers of the government, to which the opposite doctrine would inevitably tend. 3. If, then, the establishment of the parent bank itself be constitutional, the right to establish the branches of that bank in the different states of the Union follows, as an incident of the principal power. The expediency of this ramification, congress is alone to determine. To confine the operation 178 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 359 McCulloch v. Maryland. of the bank to the district of Columbia, where congress has the exclusive power of legislation, would be as absurd as to confine the courts of the United States to this district. Both institutions are wanted, wherever the administration of justice, or of the revenue, is wanted. The right, then, to establish these bitinches, is a necessary part of the means. This right is not delegated by congress to the parent bank. The act of congress for the establishment of offices of discount *and deposit, leaves the time and place of their establishment to the directors, as a matter of detail. *■ When established, they rest, not on the authority of the parent bank, but on the authority of congress. 4. The only remaining question is, whether the act of the state of Maryland, for taxing the bank thus incorporated, be repugnant to the constitution of the United States? We insist, that any such tax, by authority of a state, would be unconstitutional, and that this act is so, from its peculiar provisions. But it is objected, that, by the 10th amendment of the constitution, all powers not expressly delegated to the United States, nor prohibited to the states, are reserved to the latter. It is said, that this being neither delegated to the one, nor prohibited to the other, must be reserved : and it is is also said, that the only prohibition on the power of state taxation, which does exist, excludes this case, and thereby leaves it to the original power of the states. The only prohibition is, as to laying any imposts, or duties on imports and exports, or tonnage duty, and this, not being a tax of that character, is said not to be within the terms of the prohibition ; and consequently, it remains under the authority of the states. But we answer, that this does not contain the whole sum of constitutional restrictions on the authority of the states. There is another clause in the constitution, which has the effect of a prohibition on the exercise of their authority, in numerous cases. The 6th article of the constitution of the United States declares, that the laws made in pursuance of it, “ shall be the supreme law of the land, anything in the constitution, or laws of *any state to the contrary not withstand-ing.” By this declaration, the states are prohibited from passing any L acts which shall be repugnant to a law of the United States. The court has already instructed us in the doctrine, that there are certain powers, which, from their nature, are exclusively vested in congress, (a) So, we contend here, that the only ground on which the constitutionality of the bank is maintainable, excludes all interference with the exercise of the power by the states. This ground is, that the bank, as ordained by congress, is an instrument to carry into execution its specified powers ; and in order to enable this instrument to operate effectually, it must be under the direction of a single head. It cannot be interfered with, or controlled in any manner, by the states, without putting at hazard the accomplishment of the end, of which it is but a means. But the asserted power to tax any of the institutions of the United States, presents directly the question of the supremacy of their laws over the state laws. If this power really exists in the states, its natural and direct tendency is to annihilate any power which belongs to congress, whether express or implied. All the powers of the national government are to be executed in the states, and throughout the states ; and if the state legislatures can tax the instruments by which those powers are (a) See Sturges ®. Crowninshield, ante, p. 122. 179 361 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. executed, they may entirely defeat the execution of the powers. If they may tax an institution of finance, they may tax the proceedings in the courts ^e United States. If they may *tax to one degree, they may tax J to any degree ; and nothing but their own discretion can impose a limit upon this exercise of their authority. They may tax both the bank and the courts, so as to expel them from the states. But, surely, the framers of the constitution did not intend, that the exercise of all the powers of the national government should depend upon the discretion of the state governments. This was the vice of the former confederation, which it was the object of the new constitution to eradicate. It is a direct collision of powers between the two governments. Congress says, there shall be a branch of the bank in the state of Maryland ; that state says, there shall not. Which power is supreme? Besides, the charter, which is a contract between the United States and the corporation, is violated by this act of Maryland. A new condition is annexed by a sovereignty which was no party to the contract. The franchise, or corporate capacity, is taxed by a legislature, between whom and the object of taxation there is no political connection. Jones, for the defendants in error, contended : 1. That this was to be considered as an open question, inasmuch as it had never before been submitted to judicial determination. The practice of the government, however inveterate, could never be considered as sanctioning a manifest usurpation ; still less, could the practice, under a constitution of a date so recent, be put in competition with the contemporaneous exposition of its illustrious authors, as recorded for our instruction, in the “Letters of Publius,” *or the J Federalist. The interpretation of the constitution, which was contended for by the state of Maryland, would be justified from that text-book, containing a commentary, such as no other age or nation furnishes, upon its public law. It is insisted, that the constitution was formed and adopted, not by the people of the United States at large, but by the people of the respective states. To suppose, that the mere proposition of this fundamental law threw the American people into one aggregate mass, would be to assume what the instrument itself does not profess to establish. It is, therefore, a compact between the states, and all the powers which are not expressly relinquished by it, are reserved to the states. We admit, that the 10th amendment to the constitution is merely declaratory ; that it was adopted ex dbundanti caMtela ’ and that with it, nothing more is reserved, than would have been reserved without it. But it is contended, on the other side, that not only the direct powers, but all incidental powers, partake of the supreme power, which is sovereign. This is an inherent sophism in the opposite argument, which depends on the conversion and ambiguity of terms. What is meant by sovereign power ? It is modified by the terms of the grant under which it was given. They do not import sovereign power, generally, but sovereign power, limited to particular cases ; and the question again recurs, whether sovereign power was given in this particular case. Is it true, that by conferring sovereign powers on a limited, delegated government, sovereign * means are a^s0 granted ? Is there no restriction *as to the means of -I exercising a general power ? Sovereignty was vested in the former confederation, as fully as in the present national government. There was 180 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 364 McCulloch v. Maryland. nothing which forbade the old confederation from taxing the people, except that three modes of raising revenue were pointed out, and they could resort to no other. All the powers given to congress, under that system, except taxation, operated as directly on the people, as the powers given to the present government. The constitution does not profess to prescribe the ends merely for which the government was instituted, but also to detail the most important means by which they were to be accomplished. “ To levy and collect taxes,” “ to borrow money,” “ to pay the public debts,” “ to raise and support armies,” “ to provide and maintain a navy,” are not the ends for which this or any other just government is established. If a banking corporation can be said to be involved in either of these means, it must be as an instrument to collect taxes, to borrow money, and to pay the public debts. Is it such an instrument ? It may, indeed, facilitate the operation of other financial institutions ; but in its proper and natural character, it is a commercial institution, a partnership, incorporated for the purpose of carrying on the trade of banking. But we contend, that the government of the United States must confine themselves, in the collection and expenditure of revenue, to the means which are specifically enumerated in the constitution, or such auxiliary means as are naturally connected with the specific means. But what natural connection is there between *the col-lection of taxes, and the incorporation of a company of bankers ? J- ’ Can it possibly be said, that because congress is invested with the power of raising and supporting armies, that it may give a charter of monopoly to a trading corporation, as a bounty for enlisting men ? Or that, under its more analogous power of regulating commerce, it may establish an East or a West India company, with the exclusive privilege of trading with those parts of the world ? Can it establish a corporation of farmers of the revenue, or burden the internal industry of the states with vexatious monopolies of their staple productions ? There is an obvious distinction between those means which are incidental to the particular power, which follow as a corollary from it, and those which may be' arbitrarily assumed as convenient to the execution of the power, or usurped under the pretext of necessity. For example, the power of coining money implies the power of establishing a mint. The power of laying and collecting taxes implies the power of regulating the mode of assessment and collection, ‘and of appointing revenue officers; but it does not imply the power of establishing a great banking corporation, branching out into every district of the country, and inundating it with a flood of paper-money. To derive such a tremendous authority from implication, would be to change the subordinate into fundamental powers ; to make the implied powers greater than those which are expressly granted ; and to change the whole scheme and theory of the government. It is well known, that many of the powers which are expressly granted to the national government in the constitution, were most reluctantly conceded by the people, who were lulled into confidence, by the assurances of its advocates, that if contained no latent ambiguity, but wds to be limited to the literal terms of the grant: and in order to quiet all alarm, the loth article of amendments was added, declaring “ that the powers not delegated to the United States by the constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.” It Would seem, that human language could not furnish words less liable to mis- 181 366 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. construction! But it is contended, that the powers expressly granted to the national government in the constitution, are enlarged to an indefinite extent, by the sweeping clause, authorizing congress to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the powers expressly delegated to the national government, or any of its departments or officers. Now, we insist, that this clause shows that the intention of the convention was, to define the powers of the government with the utmost precision and accuracy. The creation of a sovereign legislature, implies an authority to pass laws to execute its given powers. This clause is nothing more than a declaration of the authority of congress to make laws, to execute the powers expressly granted to it, and the other* departments of the government. But the laws which they are authorized to make, are to be such as are necessary and proper for this purpose. No terms could be found in the language, more absolutely excluding a general and unlimited discretion than J *these. It is not “ necessary or proper,” but “ necessary and proper.” The means used must have both these qualities. It must be, not merely convenient—fit—adapted—proper, to the accomplishment of the end in view ; it must likewise be necessary for the accomplishment of that end. Many means may be proper, which are not necessary ; because the end may be attained without them. The word “ necessary,” is said to be a synonyme of “ needful.” But both these words are defined “ indispensably requisite and, most certainly, this is the sense in which the word “ necessary ” is used in the constitution. To give it a more lax sense, would be to alter the whole character of the government as a sovereignty of limited powers. This is not a purpose for which violence should be done to the obvious and natural sense of any terms, used in an instrument drawn ( up with great simplicity, and with extraordinary precision. The only question, then, on this branch of the argument, will be, whether the establishment of a banking corporation be indispensably requisite to execute any of the express powers of the government? So far as the interest of the United States is concerned, as partners of this company of bankers, or so far as the corporation may be regarded as an executive officer of the government, acquiring real and personal property in trust for the use of the government, it may be asked, what right the United States have to acquire property of any kind, except that purchased by the cbnsent of the legislature of the state in which such property may be, for the erection of forts, magazines, &c.; and ships or muni-tions *of war, constructed or purchased by the United States, and the J public treasure? Their right of acquiring property is absolutely limited to the subjects specified, which were the only means, of the nature of wealth or property, with which the people thought it necessary to invest them. The people never intended they should become bankers or traders of any description. They meant to leave to the states the power of regulating the trade of banking, and every other species of internal industry ; subject merely to the power of congress to regulate foreign commerce, and the commerce between the different states, with which it is not pretended, that this asserted power is connected. The trade of banking, within the particular states, would then either be left to regulate itself, and carried on as a branch of private trade, as it is in many countries ; or banking companies would be incorporated by the state legislatures to carry it on, as has been the usage of this country. But in either case, congress would have nothing to do with 182 ,1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 368 McCulloch v. Maryland. the subject. The power of creating corporations is a distinct sovereign power, applicable to a great variety of objects, and not being expressly granted to congress for this, or any other object, cannot be assumed by implication. If it might be assumed for this purpose, it might also be exercised to create corporations for the purpose of constructing roads and canals ; a power to construct which has been also lately discovered among other secrets of the constitution, developed by this dangerous doctrine of implied powers. Or it might be exercised to establish great trading monopolies, *ortolockup the property of the country in mortmain, by some r*q«Q strained connection between the- exercise of such powers, and those *■ expressly given to the government. 3. Supposing the establishment of such a banking corporation, to be implied as one of the means necessary and proper to execute the powers expressly granted to the national government, it is contended by the counsel opposed to us, that its property is exempted from taxation by the state governments, because they cannot interfere with the exercise of any of the powers, express or implied, with which congress is invested. But the radical vice of this argument is, that the taxing power of the states, as it would exist, independent of the constitution, is in no respect limited or controlled by that supreme law, except in the single case of imposts and tonnage duties, which the states cannot lay, unless for the purpose of executing their inspection laws. But their power of taxation is absolutely unlimited in every other respect. Their power to tax the property of this corporation cannot be denied, without at the same time denying their right to tax any property of the United States. The property of the bank cannot be more highly privileged than that of the government. But they are not forbidden from taxing the property of the government, and therefore, cannot be constructively prohibited from taxing that of the bank. Being prohibited from taxing exports and imports, and tonnage, and left free from any other prohibition, in this respect; they may tax everything else but exports, imports and tonnage. The authority of *“the Federalist” is express, that the taxing power of congress does not exclude *■ that of the states over any other objects except these. If, then, the exercise of the taxing power of congress does not exclude that of the states, why should the exercise of any other power by congress, exclude the power of taxation by the states ? If an express power will not exclude it, shall an inplied power have that effect ? If a power of the same kind will not exclude it, shall a power of a different kind ? The unlimited power of taxation results from state sovereignty. It is expressly taken away only in the particular instances mentioned. Shall others be added by implication ? Will f ( it be pretended, that there are two species of sovereignty in our government ? 1 f Sovereign power is absolute, as to the objects to which it may be applied. ( But the sovereign power of taxation in the states may be applied to all other objects, except imposts and tonnage : its exercise cannot, therefore, be limited and controlled by the exercise of another sovereign power in congress. I The right of both sovereignties are co-equal and co-extensive. The trade of banking may be taxed by the state of Maryland ; the United States may incorporate a company to carry on the trade of banking, which may establish a branch in Maryland; the exercise of the one sovereign power, cannot be controlled by the exercise of the, other. It can no more be Controlled in this 183 370 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. case, than if it were the power of taxation in congress, which was interfered with by the power of taxation in the state, both being exerted concurrently *3^11 on ^ie same object. In both *cases, mutual confidence, discretion and J forbearance can alone qualify the exercise of the conflicting powers, and prevent the destruction of either. This is an anomaly, and perhaps an imperfection, in our system of government. But neither congress, nor this court, can correct it. That system was established by reciprocal concessions and compromises between the state and federal governments ; its harmony can only be maintained in the same spirit. Even admitting that the property of the United States (such as they have a right to hold), their forts and dock-yards, their ships and military stores, their archives and treasures, public institutions of war, or revenue or justice, are exempt, by necessary implication, from state taxation ; does it, therefore, follow, that this corporation, which is a partnership of bankers, is also exempt ? They are not collectors of the revenue, any more than any state bank or foreign bankers, whose agency the government may find it convenient to employ as depositaries of its funds. They may be employed to remit those funds from one place to another, or to procure loans, or to buy and sell stock ; but it is in a commercial, and not an administrative character, that they are thus employed. The corporate character* with which these persons are clothed, does not emempt them from state taxation. It is the nature of their employment, as agents or officers of the government, if anything, which must create the exemption. But the same employment of the state bank or private bankers, would equally entitle them to the same exemption. Nor can the exemption °f the 0^ this *corporation from state taxation, be claimed on -* the,ground of the proprietary interest wffiich the-XLniied_Stateg, have in it as stockholders.--¿Their interest "is^undisbnguishably blended with the general capital"stock ; if they will mix their funds with thesc'bUbankers, or engage as partners in any other branch of commerce, their sovereign character and dignity are lost in the mercantile character which they have assumed ; and their property thus employed becomes subject to local taxation, like other capital employed in trade. Martin, Attorney-General of Maryland.—1. Read several extracts from the Federalist, and the debates of the Virginia and New York conventions, to show that the contemporary exposition of the constitution, by its authors, and by those who supported its adoption, was wholly repugnant to that now contended for by the counsel for the plaintiff in error. That it was then maintained, by the enemies of the constitution,, that it contained a vast variety of powers, lurking under the generality of its phraseology, which would prove highly dangerous to the liberties of the people, and the rights of the states, unless controlled by some declaratory amendment, which should negative their existence. This apprehension was treated as a dream of distempered jealousy. The danger was denied to exist ; but to provide an assurance against the possibility of its occurrence, the 10th ainendment wTas added to the constitution. This, however, could be considered as nothing more than declaratory of the sense of the people as to the extent of the * h i powers Conferred on the new government. We are now called upon J to apply that theory of interpretation, which was then rejected by the friends of the new constitution, and we are asked to engraft upon it powers 184 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 373 McCulloch v. Maryland. of vast extent, which were disclaimed by them, and which if they had been fairly avowed at the time, would have prevented its adoption. Before we do this, they must, at least, be proved to exist, upon a candid examination of this instrument, as if it were now, for the first time, submitted to interpretation. Although we cannot, perhaps, be allowed to say, that the states have been “ deceived in their- grant yet we may justly claim something like a rigorous demonstration of this power, which nowhere appears upon the face of the constitution, but which is supposed to be tacitly inculcated in its general object and spirit. That the scheme of the framers of the constitution, intended to leave nothing to implication, will be evident, from the consideration, that many of .the powers expressly given are only means to accomplish other powers expressly given. For example, the power to de-/ clare war involves, by necessary implication, if anything was to be implied] the powers of raising and supporting armies, and providing and maintaining a navy, to prosecute the war then declared. So also, as money is the sinew \ of war, the powers of laying and collecting taxes, and of borrowing money,» are involved in that of declaring war. Yet all these powers are specifically! I enumerated. If, then, the convention has specified some powers, which be-1 I ing only means to accomplish the ends of government, might have been I I *taken by implication ; by what just rule of construction, are othei- rsf! i , sovereign powers, equally vast and important, to be assumed by im- L \ plication ? We insist, that the only safe rule is, the plain letter of the constitution ; the rule which the constitutional legislators themselves have prescribed in the 10th amendment, which is merely declaratory ; that the powers not delegated to the United States, nor prohibited to the states, are re- \ served to the states respectively, or to the people. The power of establish- \ , ing corporations is not delegated to the United States, nor prohibited-to the / individual states. It is, therefore, reserved to the states, or to the people. It is not expressly delegated, either as an end, or a means, of national government. ' It is not to be taken by implication, as a means of executing any or all of the powers expressly granted ; because other means, not more important or more sovereign in theii- character, are expressly enumerated. We still insist, that the authority of establishing corporations is one of the great . sovereign powers of government. It may well exist in the state governments, without being expressly conferred in the state constitutions ; because those governments have all the usual powers which belong to every political society, unless expressly forbidden, by the letter of the state constitutions, from exercising them. The power of establishing corporations has been constantly exercised by the state governments, and no portion of it has been ceded by them to the government of the United States. ’ 2. But admitting that congress has a right to incorporate a banking company, as one of the means *necessary and proper to execute the specific powers of the national government ; we insist, that the *• I respective states have the right to tax the property of that corporation, within their territory ; that the United States cannot, by such an act of incorporation, withdraw any part of the property within the state from the grasp of taxation. It is not necessary for us to contend, that any part of ' the public property of the United States, its munitions of war, its ships and treasure, are subject to state taxation. But if the United States hold shares in the stock of a private banking company, or any other trading company, . 185 915 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v? Maryland. their property is not exempt from taxation, in common with the other capital stock of the company; still less, can it communicate to the shares belonging to private stockholders, an immunity from local taxation. The right of taxation by the state, is co-extensive with all private property within the state. The interest of the United States in this bank is private property, though belonging to public persons. It is held by the goverment, as an undivided interest with private stockholders. It is employed in the same trade, subject to the same fluctuations of value, and liable to the same contingencies of profit and loss. The shares belonging to the United States, or of any other stockholders, are not subjected to direct taxation by the law of Maryland. The tax imposed, is a stamp tax upon the notes issued by a banking-house within the state of Maryland. Because the United States happen to be partially interested, either as dormant or active partners, in that house, is no reason why the state should refrain from laying a tax which they have, otherwise, *a constitutional right to impose, any more than J if they were to become interested in any other house of trade, which should issue its notes, or bills of exchange, liable to a stamp duty, by a law of the state. But it is said, that a right to tax, in this case, implies a right to destroy ; that it is impossible to draw the line of discrimination between a tax fairly laid for the purposes of revenue, and one imposed for the purpose of prohibition. We answer, that the same objection would equally apply to the right of congress to tax the state banks ; since the same difficulty of discriminating occurs in the exercise of that right. The whole of this subject of taxation is full of difficulties, which the convention found it impossible to solve, in a manner entirely satisfactory. The first attempt was to divide the subjects of taxation between the state and the national government. This being found impracticable or inconvenient, the state governments surrendered altogether their right to tax imports and exports, and tonnage ; giving the authority to tax all other subjects to congress, but reserving to the states a concurrent right to tax the same subjects to an unlimited extent. This was one of the anomalies of the government, the evils of which must be endured, or mitigated by discretion and mutual forbearance. The debates in the state conventions show that the power of state taxation was understood to be absolutely unlimited, except as to imports and tonnage duties. The states would not have adopted the constitution, upon any other understanding. As to the judicial proceedings, and *3^-. the custom-house papers of the United States, they are *not property, J by their very nature; they are not the subjects of taxation ; they are the proper instruments of national sovereignty, essential to the exercise of its powers, and in legal contemplation altogether extra-territorial as to state authority. Pinkney, for the plaintiff in error, in reply, stated : 1. That the cause must first be cleared of a question which ought not to have been forced into the argument—whether the act of congress establishing the bank was consistent with the constitution fK-Tiiis'^uestion depended both~on authority and on principle. No topics to illustrate it could be drawn from the confederation, since the present constitution was as different from that, as light from darkness. The former was a mere federative league ; an alliance offensive and defensive between the states, such as there had been many examples of in 186 i 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 377 McCulloch v. Maryland. the history of the world. It had no power of coercion but by arms. Its radical vice, and that which the new constitution was intended to reform, was legislation upon sovereign states in their corporate capacity. But the constitution acts directly on the|people, by means of powers communicated directly from the people. No state, in its corporate capacity, ratified it; but it was proposed for adoption to popular conventions. It springs from the people, precisely as the state constitution springs from the people, and acts on them in a similar manner. It was adopted by them in the geographi-, cal sections into which the country is divided. The federal powers are just I as sovereign as those of the states. The state sovereignties are not the authors *of the constitution of the United States. They are preced-ing in point of time, to the national sovereignty, but they are post- *• . poned to it, in point of supremacy, by the will of the people. The means of giving efficacy to the sovereign authorities vested by the people in the national government, are those adapted to the end ; fitted to promote, and having a natural relation and connection with, the objects of that government.' The constitution, by which these authorities, and the means of executing them, are given, and the laws made in pursuance of it, are declared to be the supreme law of the land ; and they would have been such, without the insertion of this declaratory clause; they must be supreme, or they would be nothing. . The constitutionality of the establishment of the bank, as one of the means necessary to carry into effect the authorities vested in the national government, is no longer an open question. It has been long since settled by decisions of the most revered authority, legislative, executive and judicial. A legislative construction, in a doubtful case, persevered in for a course of years, ought to be binding upon the court. This, however, is not a question of construction merely, but of political necessity, on which congress must decide. It is conceded, that a manifest usurpation cannot be maintained in this mode; but, we contend, that this is such a doubtful case, that congress may expound the nature and extent of the authority under which it acts, and that this practical interpretation has become incorporated into the constitution. There are two distinguishing points which entitle it to great respect. The first is, that it was a *contemporaneous construction ; the second is, that it was made by the authors of the con- I stitution themselves. The members of the convention who framed the I constitution, passed into the first congress, by which the new government was organized ; they must have understood their own work. They determined that the constitution gave to congress the power of incorporating a banking ¡company. It was not required, that this power should be expressed in the text yf the constitution ; it might safely be left to implication. An express authority to erect corporations generally, would have been perilous ; since it might have been constructively extended to the creation of corporations entirely unnecessary to carry into effect the other powers granted; we do not claim an authority in this respect, beyond the sphere of the specific powers. The grant of an authority to erect certain corporations, might have been equally dangerous, by omitting to provide for others, which time and experience might show to be equally, and even more necessary. It is a historical fact, of great importance in this discussion, that amendments to the constitution were actually proposed, in order to guard against the establishment of commercial monopolies. But if the general power of incorporating did not exist, 187 379 SUPREME COURT McCulloch v. Maryland. [Feb’y why seek to qualify it, or to guard against its abuse ? The legislative precedent, established in 1791, has been followed up by a series of acts of congress, all confirming the authority. Political considerations alone might have produced the refusal to renew the charter in 1811; at any rate, we know that they mingled themselves in the debate, and the determination. * .. *In 1815, a bill was passed by the two houses of congress, incorporat- J ing a national bank ; to which the president refused his assent, upon political considerations only, waiving the question of constitutionality, as being settled by contemporaneous exposition, and repeated subsequent recognitions. In 1816, all branches of the legislature concurred in establishing the corporation, whose chartered rights are now in judgment before the court. None of these measures ever passed sub silentio ; the proposed incorporation was always discussed, and opposed, and supported, on constitutional grounds, as well as on considerations of political expediency. Congress is prima facie a competent judge of its own constitutional powers. It is not, as in questions of privilege, the exclusive judge ; but it must first decide, and that in a proper judicial character, whether a law is constitutional, before it is passed. It had an opportunity of exercising its judgment in this respect, upon the present subject, not only in the principal acts incorporating the former, and the present bank, but in the various incidental statutes subsequently enacted on the same subject; in all of which, the question of constitutionality was equally open to debate, but in none of which was it agitated. There are, then, in the present case, the repeated determinations of the three branches of the national legislature, confirmed by the constant acquiescence of the state sovereignties, and of the people, for a considerable length of time. Their strength is fortified by judicial authority. The * decisions in the courts, affirming the constitutionality of these *laws, -* passed, indeed, sub silentio; but it was the duty of the judges, especially in criminal cases, to have raised the question ; and we are to conclude, from this circumstance, that no doubt was entertained respecting it. And if the question be examined on principle, it will be found not to admit of doubt. Has congress, abstractedly, the authority to erect corporations ? This authority is not more a sovereign power, than many other powers which are acknowledged to exist, and which are but means to an end. All the objects of the government are national objects, and the means are, and must be, fitted to accomplish them. These objects are enumerated in the constitution, and have no limits but the constitution itself. A more perfect union is to be formed ; justice to be established; domestic tranquillity insured ; the common defence provided for ; the general welfare promoted; the blessings of liberty secured to the present generation, and to posterity. For the attainment of these vast objects, the government is armed with powers and faculties corresponding in magnitude. Congress has power to lay and collect taxes and duties, imposts and excises ; to pay the debts, and provide for the common defence and general welfare of the United States ; to borrow money on the credit of the nation ; to regulate commerce ; to establish uniform naturalization and bankrupt laws ; to coin money, and regulate the circulating medium, and the standard of weights and measures ; to establish post-offices and post-roads ; to promote the progress of science an<^ ^ie use^ul arts, by granting patents and copyrights ; to constitute -* tribunals inferior to the supreme court, and to define *and punish 188 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 382 McCulloch v. Maryland. offences against the law of nations ; to declare and carry on war ; to raise and support armies, and to provide and maintain a navy ; to discipline and govern the land and naval forces ; to call forth the militia to execute the laws, suppress insurrections and repel invasions ; to provide for organizing, arming and disciplining the militia; to exercise exclusive legislation, in all cases, over the district where the seat of government is established, and over such other portions of territory as may be ceded to the Union for the erection of forts, magazines, &c.; to dispose of, and make all needful rules and regulations respecting, the territory or other property belonging to the United States; and to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution these powers, and all other powers vested in the national government, or any of its departments or officers. The laws thus made are declared to be the supreme law of the land ; and the judges in every state are bound thereby, anything in the constitution or laws of any state to the contrary nothwithstanding. Yet it is doubted, whether a government invested with such immense powers has authority to erect a corporation within the sphere of its general objects, and in order to accomplish some of those objects ! The state powers are much less in point of magnitude, though greater in number ; yet it is supposed, the states possess the authority of establishing corporations, whilst it is denied to the geveral government. It is conceded to the state legislatures, though not specifically granted, because it is said to be an incident of state sovereignty ; but it *is refused to congress, because it is not specifically granted, though it may be *-necessary and proper to execute the powers which are specifically granted. But the authority of legislation in the state government is not Unlimited ; there are several limitations to- their legislative authority. First, from the nature of all government, especially, of republican government, in which the residuary powers of sovereignty, not granted specifically, by inevitable implication, are reserved to the people. Secondly, from the express limitations contained in the state constitutions. And thirdly, from the express prohibitions to the states contained in the United States constitution. The power of erecting corporations is nowhere expressly granted to the legislatures of the states in their constitutions ; it is taken by necessary implication : but it cannot be exercised to accomplish any of the ends which are beyond the sphere of their constitutional authority. The power of erecting corporations is not an end of any government; it is a necessary means of accomplishing the ends of all governments. It is an authority inherent in, and incident to, all sovereignty. The history of corporations will illustrate this position. They were transplanted from the Roman law into the common law of England, and all the municipal codes of modern Europe. From England, they were derived to this country. But in the civil law, a corporation could be created by a mere voluntary association of individuals. 1 Bl. Com. 471. And in England, the authority of parliament *is not necessary to create a corpo- r*™. rate body. The king may do it, and may communicate his power to *-a subject (1 Bl. Com. 474), so little is this regarded as a transcendent power of sovereignty, in the British constitution. So also, in our constitution, it ought to be regarded as but a subordinate power to carry into effect the great objects of government. The state governments cannot establish corporations to carry into effect the national powers given to congress, nor can congress create 189 384 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. corporations to execute the peculiar duties of the state governments. But so much of the power or faculty of incorporation as concerns national objects has passed away from the state legislatures, and is vested in the national government. An act of incorporation is but a law, and laws are but means to promote the legitimate end of all government—the felicity of the people. All powers are given to the national government, as the people will. The reservation in the 10th amendment to the constitution, of “ powers not delegated to the United States,” is not confined to powers not expressly delegated. Such an amendment was indeed proposed ; but it was perceived, that it would strip the government of some of its most essential powers, and it was rejected. Unless a specific means be expressly prohibited to the general government, it has it, within the sphere of its specified power's. Many particular means are, of course, involved in the general means necessary to carry into effect the powers expressly granted, and in that case, the general means become *the end, and the smaller objects the means. -1 It was impossible for the framers of the constitution to specify, prospectively, all these means, both because it would have involved an immense variety of details, and because it would have been impossible for them to foresee the infinite variety of circumstances, in such an unexampled state of political society as ours, for ever changing and for ever improving. How unwise would it have been, to legislate immutably for exigencies which had not then occurred, and which must have been foreseen but dimly and imperfectly ! The security against abuse is to be found in the constitution and nature of the government, in its popular character and structure. The statute book of the United States is filled with powers derived from implication. The power to lay and collect taxes will not execute itself. Congress must designate in detail all the means of collection. So also, the power of establishing post-offices and post-roads, involves that of punishing the offence of robbing the mail. But there is no more necessary connection between the punishment of mail-robbers, and the power to establish postroads, than there is between the institution of a bank, and the collection of the revenue and payment of the public debts and expenses. So, light-houses, beacons, buoys and public piers, have all been established, under the general power to regulate commerce. But they are not indispensably necessary to commerce. It might linger on, without these aids, though exposed to more perils and losses. So, congress has authority to coin money, and to guard the purity of the circulating medium, by providing for the punishment *0^ coonterfeiting the current coin ; but laws are also made for pun-J ishing the offence of uttering and passing the coin thus counterfeited. It is the duty of the court to construe the constitutional powers of the national government liberally, and to mould them so as to effectuate its great objects. Whence is derived the power to punish smuggling ? It does not collect the impost, but it is a means more effectually to prevent the collection from being diminished in amount, by frauds upon the revenue laws. Powers, as means, may then be implied in many cases. And if so, why not in this case as -well as any other ? The power of making all needful rules and regulations respecting the territory of the United States, is one of the specified powers of congress. Under this power, it has never been doubted, that congress had authority te establish corporations in the territorial governments. But this power is 190 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 386 McCulloch v. Maryland. derived entirely from implication. It is assumed, as an incident to the principal power. If it may be assumed, in that case, upon the ground, that it is a necessary means of carrying into effect the power expressly granted, why may it not be assumed, in the present case, upon a similar ground ? It is readily admitted, there must be a relation, in the nature and fitness of things between the means used and the end to be accomplished. But the question is, whether the necessity which will justify a resort to a certain means, must be an absolute, indispensable, inevitable necessity ? The power of passing all laws necessary and proper to carry into effect the other powers specifically granted, is a political power ; it *is a matter of legislative dis-cretion, and those who exercise it, have a wide range of choice in t ° selecting means. In its exercise, the mind must compare means with each other. But absolute necessity excludes all choice ; and therefore, it cannot be this species of necessity which is required. Congress alone has the fit means of inquiry and decision. The more or less of necessity never can enter as an ingredient into judicial decision. Even absolute necessity cannot he judged of here ; still less, can practical necessity be determined in a judicial forum. The judiciary may, indeed, and must, see that what has been done is not a mere evasive pretext, under which the national legislature travels out of the prescribed bounds of its authority, and encroaches upon state sovereignty, or the rights of the people. For this purpose, it must inquire, whether the means assumed have a connection, in the nature and fitness of things, with the end to be accomplished. The vast variety of possible means, excludes the practicability of judicial determination as to the fitness of a particular means. It is sufficient, that it does not appear to be violently and unnaturally forced into the service, or fraudulently assumed, in order to usurp a new substantive power of sovereignty. A philological analysis of the terms “ necessary and proper ” will illustrate the argument. Compare these terms as they are used in that part of the constitution now in question, with the qualified manner in which they are used in the 10th section of the same article. In the latter, it is provided that “no state shall, without the consent of congress, lay any imposts or duties on imports *or exports, except what may be absolutely necessary for executing t ® its inspection laws.” In the clause in question, congress is invested with the power “ to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers,” &c. There is here then, no qualification of the necessity ; it need not be absolute ; it may be taken in .its ordinary grammatical sense. The word necessary, standing by itself, has no inflexible meaning ; it is used in a sènse more or less strict, according to the subject. This, like many other words, has a primitive sense, and another figurative and more relaxed ; it may be qualified by the addition of adverbs of diminution or enlargement, such as very, indispensably, more, less, or absolutely necessary ; wThich last is the sense in which it is used in the 10th section of this article of the constitution. But that it is not always used in this strict and rigorous sense, may be proved, by tracing its definition and etymology in every human language. If, then, all the powers of the national government are sovereign and supreme ; if the power of incorporation is incidental, and involved in the others ; if the degree of political necessity which will justify a resort to a particular means, to carry into execution the other powers of the govern- 191 388 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. ment, can never be a criterion of judicial determination, but must be left to legislative discretion, it only remains to inquire, whether a bank has a natural and obvious connection with other express or implied powers, so as to become a necessary and proper means of carrying them into execution. A * qqi bank *might be established as a branch of the public administration, J without incorporation. The government might issue paper, upon the credit of the public faith, pledged for its redemption, or upon the credit of its property and funds. Let the office where this paper is issued be made a place of deposit for the money of individuals, and authorize its officers to discount, and a bank is created. It only wants the forms of incorporation. But, surely, it will not be pretended, that clothing it with these forms would make such an establishment unconstitutional. In the bank which is actually established and incorporated, the United States are joint stockholders, and appoint joint directors ; the secretary of the secretary of the treasury has a supervising authority over its affairs ; it is bound, upon his requisition, to transfer the funds of the government wherever they may be wanted ; it performs all the duties of commissioners of the loan-office ; it is bound to loan the government a certain amount of money, on demand ; its notes are receivable in payment for public debts and duties ; it is intimately connected, according to the usage of the whole world, with the power of borrowing money, and with all the financial operations of the government. It has, also, a close connection with the power of regulating foreign commerce, and that between the different states. It provides a circulating medium, by which that commerce can be more conveniently carried on, and exchanges may be facilitated. It is true, there are state banks by which a circulating medium to a certain extent is provided. But that only diminishes the quantum of ne°essity, *which is no criterion by which to test the constitutionality J of a measure. It is also connected with the power of making all needful regulations for the government of the territory, “ and other property of the United States.” If they may establish a corporation to regulate their territory, they may establish one to regulate their property. Their treasure is their property, and may be invested in this mode. It is put in partnership ; but not for the purpose of carrying on the trade of banking as one of the ends for which the government was established ; but only as an instrument or means for executing its sovereign powers. This instrument could not be rendered effectual for this purpose, but by mixing the property of individuals with that of the public. The bank could not otherwise acquire a credit for its notes. Universal experience shows, that, if, altogether a government bank, it could not acquire, or would soon lose, the confidence of the community. 2. As to the branches, they are identical with the parent bank. The power to establish them is that species of subordinate power, wrapped up in the principal power, which congress may place at its discretion. 3. The last and greatest, and only difficult question in the cause, is that which respects the assumed right of the states to tax this bank, and its branches, thus established by congress ? This is a question, comparatively of no importance to the individual states, but of vital importance to the Union. Deny this exemption to the bank as an instrument of government, and w^at the consequence? There is no express provision *in the -* constitution, which exempts any of the national institutions or prop- 192 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 391 McCulloch v. Maryland. ertyfrom state taxation. It is only by implication that the army and navy, and treasure, and judicature of the Union are exempt from state taxation. Yet they are practically exempt ; and they must be, or it would be in the power of any one state to destroy their use. Whatever the United States have a right to do, the individual states have no right to undo. The power I of congress to establish a bank, like its other sovereign powers, is supreme, or it would be nothing. Rising out of an exertion of paramount authority, it cannot be subject to any other power. Such a power in the states, as that contended for on the other side, is manifestly repugnant to the power of congress ; since a power to establish, implies a power to continue and preserve. I There is a manifest repugnancy between the power of Maryland to tax, ; and the power of congress to preserve, this institution. A power to build r up, what another may pull down at pleasure, is a power which may provoke a smile, but can do nothing else. This law of Maryland acts directly on the operations of the bank, and may destroy it. There is no limit or check in this respect, but in the discretion of the state legislature. That discretion cannot be controlled by the national councils. Whenever the local councils of Maryland will it, the bank must be expelled from that state. A right to tax, without limit or control, is essentially a power to destroy. If one national institution may be destroyed in this manner, all may be destroyed in the same manner. If this power to tax the national property and institutions *exists in the state of Maryland, it is unbounded in extent. r*on9 There can be no check upon it, either by congress, or the people of *■ the other states. Is there then any intelligible, fixed, defined boundary of this taxing power ? If any, it must be found in this court. If it does not exist here, it is a nonentity. But the court cannot say what is an abuse, and what is a legitimate use of the power. The legislative intention may be so masked, as to defy the scrutinizing eye of the court. How will the court ascertain, d priori, that the given amount of tax will crush the bank ? It is essentially a question of political economy, and there are always a vast variety of facts bearing upon it. The facts may be mistaken. Some important considerations belonging to the subject may be kept out of sight; they must all vary with times and circumstances. The result, then, must determine, whether the tax is destructive. But the bank may linger on for some time, and tha^result cannot be known, until the work of destruction is j consummated. A criterion which has been proposed, is to see "whether the tax has been laid, impartially, upon the state banks, as well as the Bank of I the United States. Even this is an unsafe test; for the state governments may wish, and intend, to destroy their own banks. The existence of any national institution ought not to depend upon so frail a security. But this tax is levelled exclusively at the branch of the United States Bank established in Maryland. There is, in point of fact, a branch of no other bank within that state, and there can legally be no other. It is a fundamental article of the state *constitution of Maryland, that taxes shall operate on all the citizens impartially and uniformly, in proportion to their I wit’h the exception, however, of taxes laid for political purposes, is is a tax laid for a political purpose ; for the purpose of destroying a great institution of the national government; and if it were not imposed for at purpose, it would be repugnant to the state constitution, as not being 4 Wheat.—13 193 393 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. laid uniformly on all the citizens, in proportion to their property. So that the legislature cannot disavow this to be its object, without, at the same time, confessing a manifest violation of the state constitution. Compare this act of Maryland with that of Kentucky, which is yet to come before the court, and the absolute necessity of repressing such attempts in their infancy, will be evident. Admit the constitutionality of the Maryland tax, and that of Kentucky follows inevitably. How can it be said, that the office of discount and deposit in Kentucky cannot bear a tax of $60,000 per annum, payable monthly ? Probably, it could not ; but judicial certainty is essential ; and the court has no means of arriving at that certainty. There is, then, here, an absolute repugnancy of power to power; we are not bound to show, that the particular exercise of the power in the present case is absolutely repugnant. It is sufficient, that the same power may be thus exercised. There certainly may be some exceptions out of the taxing power of the states, other than those created by the taxing power of congress ; because, if there were no implied exceptions, then, the navy, and other *exclu-J sive property of the United States, would be liable to state taxation. If some of the powers of congress, other than its taxing power, necessarily involve incompatibility with the taxing power of the states, this may be incompatible. This is incompatible ; for a power to impose a tax ad libitum upon the notes of the bank, is a power to repeal the law, by which the bank was created. The bank cannot be useful, it cannot act at all, unless it issues notes. If the present tax does not disable the bank from issuing its notes, another may ; and it is the authority itself which is questioned, as being entirely repugnant to the power which established and preserves the bank. Two powers thus hostile and incompatible cannot co-exist. There must be, in this case, an implied exception to the general taxing power of the states, because it is a tax upon the legislative faculty of congress, upon the national property, upon the national institutions. Because the taxing powers of the two governments are concurrent in some respects, it does not follow, that there may not be limitations on the taxing power of the states, other than those which are imposed by the taxing power of congress. Judicial proceedings are practically a subject of taxation in many countries, and in some of the states of this Union. The states are not expressly prohibited in the constitution, from taxing the judicial proceedings of the United States. Yet such a prohibition must be implied, or the administration of justice in the national courts might be obstructed by a prohibitory tax. But such a tax is no more a tax on the legislative faculty of congress than this. The branch *oqK-i *bank in Maryland is as much an institution of the sovereign power -* of the Union, as the circuit court of Maryland. One is established in virtue of an express power ; the other by an implied authority ; but both are equal, and equally supreme. All the property and all the institutions of the United States are, constructively, without the local, territorial jurisdiction of the individual states, in every respect, and for every purpose, including that of taxation. This immunity must extend to this case, because the power of taxation imports the power of taxation for the purpose of prohibition and destruction. The immunity of foreign public vessels from the local jurisdiction, whether state or national, was established in the case of The Exchange, 7 Cranch 116, not upon positive municipal law, nor upon con ven- 194 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 395 McCulloch v. Maryland. tional law ; but it was implied, from the usage of nations, and the necessity of the case. If, in favor of foreign governments, such an edifice of exemption has been built up, independent of the letter of the constitution, or of any other written law, shall not a similar edifice be raised on the same foundations, for the security of our own national government ? So also, the jurisdiction of a foreign power, holding a temporary possession of a portion of national territory, is nowhere provided for in the constitution ; but is derived from inevitable implication. United States v. Rice (ante, p. 246). These analogies show, that there may be exemptions from state jurisdiction, not detailed in the constitution, but arising out of general considerations. If congress has power to do a particular act, *no state can impede, r*oQfi retard or burden it. Can there be a stronger ground, to infer a ces-sation of state jurisdiction ? The Bank of the United States is as much an instrument of the government for fiscal purposes, as the courts are its instruments for judicial purposes. They both proceed from the supreme power, and equally claim its protection. Though every state in the Union may impose a stamp tax, yet no state can lay a stamp tax upon the judicial proceedings or custom-house papers of the United States. But there is no such express exception to the general taxing power of the states contained in the constitution. It arises from the general nature of the government, and from the principle of the supremacy of the national powers, and the laws made to execute them, over the state authorities and state laws. It is objected, however, that the act of congress, incorporating the bank, withdraws property from taxation by the state, which would be otherwise liable to state taxation. We answer, that it is immaterial, if it does thus withdraw certain property from the grasp of state taxation, if congress had authority to establish the bank, since the power of congress is supreme. But, in fact, it withdraws nothing from the mass of taxable property in Maryland, which that state could tax. The whole capital of the bank, belonging to private stockholders, is drawn from every state in the Union, and the stock belonging to the United States, previously constituted a part of the public treasure. Neither the stock belonging to citizens of other states, nor the privileged treasure *of the United States, mixed up with this r-*««* private property, were previously liable to taxation in Maryland ; and as to the stock belonging to its own citizens, it still continues liable to state taxation, as a portion of their individual property, in common with all the other private property in the state. The establishment of the bank, so far from withdrawing anything from taxation by the state, brings something into Maryland which that state may tax. It produces revenue to the citizens of Maryland, which may be taxed equally and uniformly, with all their other private property. The materials of which the ships of war, belonging to the United States, are constructed, were previously liable to state taxation. But the instant they are converted into public property, for the public defence, they cease to be subject to state taxation. So, here, the treasure of the United States, and that of individuals, citizens of Maryland, and of other states, are undistinguishably confounded in the capital stock of this great national institution, which, it has been before shown, could be niade useful as an instrument of finance, in no other mode than by thus blending together the property of the government and of private merchants. 195 397 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. This partnership is, therefore, one of necessity, on the part of the United States. Either this tax operates upon the franchise of the bank, or upon its property. If upon the former, then it comes directly in conflict with the exercise of a great sovereign authority of congress ; if upon the latter, then it is a tax upon the property of the United States ; since the law does not, and *cannot, in imposing a stamp tax, distinguish their interest from J that of private stockholders. But ik is said, that congress possesses and exercises the unlimited authority of tsi&ng the state banks ; and therefore, the states ought to have an equal right to tax the Bank of the United States. The answer to this objection is, that, in taxing the state banks, the states in congress exercise their power of taxation. Congress exercises the power of the people ; the whole acts on the whole. But the state tax is a part acting on the whole. Even if the two cases were the same, it would rather exempt the state banks from federal taxation, than subject the Bank of the United States to taxation by a particular state. But the state banks are not machines essential to execute the powers of the state sovereignties, and therefore, this is out of the question. The people of the United States; and the sovereignties of the several states, have no control over the taxing power of a particular state. But they have a control over the taxing power of the United States, in the responsibility of the members of the house of representatives to the people of the state which sends them, and of the senators, to the legislature by whom they are chosen. But there is no correspondent responsibility of the local legislature of Maryland, for example, to the people of the other states of the Union. The people of other states are not represented in the legislature of Maryland, and can have no control, directly or indirectly, over its proceedings. The legislature of Maryland is responsible only to the people of that state. The national *government can withdraw J nothing from the taxing power of the states, which is not for the purpose of national benefit and the common welfare, and within its defined powers. But the local interests of the states are in perpetual conflict with the interests of the Union ; which shows the danger of adding power to the partial views and local prejudices of the states. If the tax imposed by this law be not a tax on the property of the United States, it is not a tax on any property; and it must, consequently, be a tax on the faculty or franchise. It is, then, a tax on the legislative faculty of the Union, on the charter of the bank. It imposes a stamp duty upon the notes of the bank, and thus stops the very source of its circulation and life. It is -as much a direct interference with the legislative faculty of congress, as would be a tax on patents, or copyrights, or custom-house papers or judicial proceedings. Since, then, the constitutional government of this republican empire cannot be practically enforced, so as to secure the permanent glory, safety and felicity of this great country, but by a fair and liberal interpretation of its powers ; since those powers could not all be expressed in the constitution, but many of them must be taken by implication ; since the sovereign powers of the Union are supreme, and, w’herever they come in direct conflict and repugnancy with those of the state governments, the latter must give way ; since it has been proved, that this is the case as to the institution of the bank, *4001 an^ §eneral Power taxation by the states ; since this power ■* unlimited and unchecked, as it necessarily must be, by the *very 196 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 400 McCulloch v. Maryland. nature of the subject, is absolutely inconsistent with, and repugnant to, the right of the United States to establish a national bank; if the power of taxation be applied to the corporate property, or franchise, or property of the bank, and might be applied in the same manner, to destroy any other of the great institutions and establishments of the Union, and the whole machine of the national government might be arrested in its motions, by the exertion, in other cases, of the same power which is here attempted to be exerted upon the bank : no other alternative remains, but for this court to interpose its authority, and save the nation from the consequences of this dangerous attempt. I March 7th, 1819. Marshall, Ch. J., delivered the opinion of the court. —In the case now to be determined, the defendant, a sovereign state, denies the obligation of a law enacted by the legislature of the Union, and the ¡plaintiff, on his part, contests the validity of an act which has been passed by the legislature of that state. The constitution of our country, in its most interesting and vital parts, is to be considered ; the conflicting powers of the government of the Union and of its members, as marked in that constitution, are to be discussed ; and an opinion given, which may essentially influence the great operations of the government. No tribunal can approach such a question without a deep sense of its importance, and of the awful responsibility involved in its decision. But it must be decided peacefully, or remain a source of »hostile legislation, perhaps, of hostility of a still more seiuous nature ; and if it is to be so decided, by this tri- *-bunal alone can the decision be made. On the supreme court of the United States has the constitution of our country devolved this important duty. The first question made in the cause is—has congress power to incorporate a bank ? It has been truly said, that this can scarcely be considered as an open question, entirely unprejudiced by the former proceedings of the nation respecting it. The principle now contested was introduced at a very early period of our history, has been recognised by many successive legislatures, and has been acted upon by the judicial department, in cases of peculiar delicacy, as a law of undoubted obligation. It will not be denied, that a bold and daring usurpation might be resisted, after an acquiescence still longer and more complete than this. But it is conceived, that a doubtful question, one on which human reason may pause, and the human judgment be suspended, in the decision of which the great principles of liberty are not concerned, but the respective powers of those who are equally the representatives of the people, are to be adjusted ; if not put at rest by the practice of the government, ought to receive a considerable impression from that practice. An exposition of the constitution, deliberately established by legislative acts, on the faith of which an immense property has been advanced, ought not to be lightly disregarded. The power now contested was exercised by the first congress elected under the present constitution. »The bill for incorporating the Bank of the United States did not steal upon an unsuspecting legislature, *-and pass unobserved. Its principle was completely understood, and was »opposed with equal zeal and ability. After being resisted, first, in the fair and open field of debate, and afterwards, in the executive cabinet, with as \much persevering talent as any measure has ever experienced, and being 197 402 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. supported by arguments which convinced minds as pure and as intelligent as this country can boast, it became a law. The original act was permitted to expire ; but a short experience of the embarrassments to which the refusal to revive it exposed the government, convinced those who were most preju-5 diced against the measure of its necessity, and induced the passage of the present law. It would require no ordinary share of intrepidity, to assert / that a measure adopted under these circumstances, was a bold and plain / ) usurpation, to which the constitution gave no countenance. These obsërva-! ) tions belong to the cause ; byt they are not made under the impression, 11 that, were the question entirely new, the law would be found irreconcilable > J with the constitution. In discussing this question, the counsel for the state of Maryland have / deemed it of some importance, in the construction of the constitution, to । consider that instrument, not as emanating from the people, but as the act / of sovereign and independent states. The powers of the general govern-| ment, it has been said, are delegated by the states, who alone are truly sovereign ; and must be exercised in subordination to the states, who alone possess supreme dominion. *It would be difficult to sustain this pro-' -1 position. The convention which framed the constitution was indeed elected by the state legislatures. But the instrument, when it came from their hands, was a mere proposal, without obligation, or pretensions to it. It was reported to the then existing congress of the United States, with a request that it might “ be submitted to a convention of delegates, chosen in each state by the people thereof, under the recommendation of its legislature, for their assent and ratification.” This mode of proceeding was adopted ; and by the convention, by congress, and by the state legislatures, ’ the instrument was submitted to the people^ They acted upon it in the only manner in which they can act safely, effectively and wisely, on such a subject, by assembling in convention. It is true, they assembled in their several states—and where else should they have assembled ? No political dreamer was ever wild enough to think of breaking down the lines which separate the states, aqd of compounding the American people into one common mass. Of consequence, when they act, they act in their states. But the measures they adopt do not, on that account, cease to be the measures of the people themselves, or become the measures of the state governments. From these conventions, the constitution derives its whole authority. The government proceeds directly from the people ; is “ ordained and established,” in the name of the people ; and is declared to be ordained, “ in order. to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic *404.1 tranquillity, and secure *the blessings of liberty to themselves and to J their posterity.” The assent of the states, in their sovereign capacity, is implied, in calling a convention, and thus submitting that instrument to the people. But the people were at perfect liberty to accept or reject it ; and their act was final. It required not the affirmance, and could not be negatived, by the state governments. The constitution, when thus adopted, was of complete obligation, and bound the state sovereignties. It has been said, that the people had already surrendered all their powers to the state sovereignties, and had nothing more to give. But, surely, the question whether they may resume and modify the powers granted to government, does not remain to be settled in this country. Much more might 198 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 404 McCulloch v. Maryland. the legitimacy of the general government be doubted, had it been created by the states. The powers delegated to the state sovereignties were to be exercised by themselves, not by a distinct and independent sovereignty, created by themselves. To the formation of a league, such as was the confederation, the state sovereignties were certainly competent. But when/ “ in order to form a more perfect union,” it was deemed necessary to change y this alliance into an effective government, possessing great and sovereign .powers, and acting directly on the people, the necessity of referring it to ■ the people, and of deriving its powers directly from them, was felt and / acknowledged by all. The government of the Union, then (whatever may; be the influence of this fact on the case), is, *emphatically and truly, [-*. a government of the people. In form, and in substance, it emanates *-from them. Its powers are granted by them, and are to be exercised directly on them, and for their benefit. This government is acknowledged by all, to be one of enumerated powers. The principle, that it can exercise only the powers granted to it, would seem too apparent, to have required to be enforced by all those arguments, which its enlightened friends, while it was depending before the people, found it necessary to urge ; that principle is now universally admitted. But the question respecting the extent of the powers actually granted, is perpetually arising, and will probably continue to arise, so long as our system shall exist. In discussing these questions, the conflicting powers of the general and state governments must be brought into view, and the supremacy of their respective laws, when they are in opposition, must be settled. If any one proposition could command the universal assent of mankind, / we might expect it would be this—that the government of the Union, \ X though limited in its powers, is supreme within its sphere of action. This would seem to result, necessarily, from its nature. It is the government of all; its powers are delegated by all; it represents all, and acts for all. Though any one state may be willing to control its operations, no state is willing to allow others to control them. The nation, on those subjects on which it can act, must necessarily bind its component parts. But this question is not left to mere reason : the people have, in express terms, decided it, by saying, *“ this constitution, and the laws of the United States, which shall be made in pursuance thereof,” “ shall be the supreme law of the land,” and by requiring that the members of the state legislatures, and the officers of the executive and judicial departments of the states, shall take the oath of fidelity to it. The government of the United States, then, though limited in its powers, is supreme; and its laws, when made in pursuance of the constitution, form the supreme law of the land, “ anything in the constitution or laws of any state to the contrary notwithstanding.” Among the enumerated powers, we do not find that of establishing a \ bank or creating a corporation. But there is no phrase in the instrument ? which, like the articles of confederation, excludes incidental or implied pow- \ erg ; and which requires that everything granted shall be expressly and minutely described. Even the 10th amendment, which was framed for the purpose of quieting the excessive jealousies which had been excited, omits the word “ expressly,” and declares only, that the powers “ not delegated to the United States, nor prohibited to the states, are reserved to the states or to the people thus leaving the question, whether the particular power 199 406 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. which may become the subject of contest, has been delegated to the one government, or prohibited to the other, to depend on a fair construction of the whole instrument. The men who drew and adopted this amendment had experienced the embarrassments resulting from the insertion of this *4071 word *n ^e articles *of confederation, and probably omitted it, to J avoid those embarrassments. A constitution, to contain an accurate detail of all the subdivisions of which its great powers will admit, and of all the means by which they may be carried into execution, would partake of the prolixity of a legal code, and could scarcely be embraced by the human mind. It would, probably, never be understood by the public. Its nature, / therefore, requires, that only its great outlines should be marked, its imporci tant objects designated, and the minor ingredients which compose those Ì (objects, be deduced from the nature of the objects themselves. That this / idèa was entertained by the framers of the American constitution, is not / only to be inferred from the nature of the instrument, but from the language. Why else were some of the limitations, found in the 9th section of the 1st article, introduced? It is also, in some degree, warranted, by their having omitthd to use any restrictive term which might prevent its receiving a fail’ and just interpretation. In considering this question, then, we must never forget that it is a constitution we are expounding. Although, among the enumerated powers of government, we do not find the word “ bank ” or “ incorporation,” we find the great powers, to lay and | collect taxes ; to borrow money ; to regulate commerce ; to declare and con-I duct a war ; and to raise and support armies and navies. The sword and Jthe purse, all the external relations, and no inconsiderable portion of the in-| dustry of the nation, are intrusted to its government. It can never be pre-* tended, *that these vast powers draw after them others of inferior * J importance, merely because, they are inferior. Such an idea can never j be advanced. But it may with great reason be contended, that a govern-/ ment, intrusted with such ample powers, on the due execution of which the S happiness and prosperity of the nation so vitally depends, must also be inis trusted with ample means for their execution. The power being given, it is / the interest of the nation to facilitate its execution. It can never be their interest, and cannot be presumed to have been their intention, to clog and embarrass its execution, by withholding the most appropriate means. Throughout this vast republic, from the St. Croix to the Gulf of Mexico, from the Atlantic to the Pacific, revenue is to be collected and expended, armies are to be marched and supported. The exigencies of the nation may require, that the treasure raised in the north should be transported to the south, that raised in the east, conveyed to the west, or that this order should be reversed. Is that construction of the constitution to be preferred, which would render these operations difficult, hazardous and expensive ? Can we adopt that construction (unless the words imperiously require it), which would impute to the framers of that instrument, when granting these powers for the public good, the intention of impeding their exercise, by withholding a choice of means ? If, indeed, such be the mandate of the constitution, we have only to obey ; but that instrument does not profess to enumerate the * , means by which the powers it confers may be executed ; nor does it J prohibit the creation of a corporation, *if the existence of such a 200 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 409 McCulloch v. Maryland. being be essential, to the beneficial exercise of those powers. It is, then, the subject of fair inquiry, how far such means may be employed. It is not denied, that the powers given to the government imply the ordinary means of execution. That, for example, of raising revenue, and applying it to national purposes, is admitted to imply the power of conveying money from place to place, as the exigencies of the nation may require, and of employing the usual means of conveyance. But it is denied, that the government has its choice of means; or, that it may employ the most convenient means, if, to employ them, it be necessary to erect a corporation. On what foundation does this argument rest ? On this alone : the power of creating a corporation, is one appertaining to sovereignty, and is not expressly conferred on congress. This is true. But all legislative powers appertain to sovereignty. The original power of giving the law on any subject whatever, is a sovereign power; and if the government of the Union is restrained from creating a corporation, as a means for performing its functions, on the single reason that the creation of a corporation is an act of sovereignty ; if the sufficiency of this reason be acknowledged, there would be some difficulty in sustaining the authority of congress to pass other laws for the accomplishment of the same objects. The government which has a right to do an act, and has imposed on it, the duty of performing that act, must, according to the dictates of reason, be allowed *to select the rj., means; and those who contend that it may not select any appropriate L means, that one particular mode of effecting the object is excepted, take upon themselves the burden of establishing that exception. The creation of a corporation, it is said, appertains to sovereignty. This is admitted. But to what portion of sovereignty does it appertain ? Does it belong to' one more than to another ? In America, the powers of so ver- ( eignty are divided between the government of the Union, and those of the I states. They are each sovereign, with respect to the objects committed to ] it, and neither sovereign, with respect to the objects committed to the other. / We cannot comprehend that train of reasoning, which w’ould maintain, that the extent of power granted by the people is to be ascertained, not by the nature and terms of the grant, but by its date. Some state constitutions were formed before, some since that of the United States. We cannot believe, that their relation to each other is in any degree dependent upon this circumstance. Their respective powers must, we think, be precisely the same, as if they had been formed at the same time. Had they been formed at the same time, and had the people conferred on the general government the power contained in the constitution, and on the states the whole residuum of power, would it have been asserted, that the government of the Union was not sovereign, with respect to those objects which were intrusted to it, in relation to which its laws were declared to be supreme ? If this could not have been asserted, we cannot well comprehend the process of reasoning * which maintains, that a power appertaining to sovereignty cannot be connected with that vast portion of it which is granted to *-the general government, so far as it is calculated to subserve the legitimate objects of that government. The power of creating a corporation, though appertaining to sovereignty, is not, like the power of making war, or levying taxes, or of regulating commerce, a great substantive and independent power, which cannot be implied as incidental to other powers, or 201 411 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. used as a means of executing them. It is never the end for which other powers are exercised, but a means by which other objects are accomplished. No contributions are made to charity, for the sake of an incorporation, but a corporation is created to administer the charity ; no seminary of learning is instituted, in order to be incorporated, but the corporate character is conferred to subserve the purposes of education. No city was ever built, with the sole object of being incorporated, but is incorporated as affording the best means of being well governed. The power of creating a corporation is never used for its own sake, but for the purpose of effecting something else. No sufficient reason is, therefore, perceived, why it may not pass as incidental to those powers which are expressly given, if it be a direct mode of executing them. But the constitution of the United States has not left the right of congress to employ the necessary means, for the execution of the powers conferred on the government, to general reasoning. To its enumeration of powers is added, that of making “ all *laws which shall be necessary •J and proper, for carryinig into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested by this constitution, in the government of the United States, or in any department thereof.” The counsel for the state of Maryland have urged various arguments, to prove that this clause, though, in terms, a grant of power, is not so, in effect; but is really restrictive of the general right, which might otherwise be implied, of selecting means for executing the enumerated powers. In support of this proposition, they have found it necessary to contend, that this clause was inserted for the purpose of conferring on congress the power of making laws. That, without it, doubts might be entertained, whether congress could exercise its powers in the form of legislation. But could this be the object for which it was inserted ? A government is created by the people, having legislative, executive and judicial powers. Its legislative powers are vested in a congress, which is to consist of a senate and house of representatives. Each house may determine the rule of its proceedings ; and it is declared, that every bill which shall have passed both houses, shall, before it becomes a law, be' presented to the president of the United States. The 7th section describes the course of proceedings, by which a bill shall become a law; and, then, the 8th section enumerates the powers of congress. Could it be necessary to say, that a legislature should exercise legislative powers, in the shape of legislation ? After allow-*4131 each bouse to prescribe *its own course of proceeding, after ' -1 describing the manner in which a bill should become a law, would it have entered into the mind of a single member- of the convention, that an express power to make laws was necessary, to enable the legislature to make them? That a legislature, endowed with legislative powers, can legislate, is a proposition too self-evident to have been questioned. But the argument on which most reliance is placed, is drawn from that peculiar language of this clause. Congress is not empowered by it to make all laws, which may have relation to the powers confered on the government, but such only as may be 11 necessary and proper” for carrying them into execution. The word “ necessary” is considered as controlling the W’hole sentence, and as limiting the right to pass laws for the execution of the granted powers, to such as are indispensable, and without which the power 202 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 413 McCulloch v. Maryland. would be nugatory. That it excludes the choice of means, and leaves to congress, in each case, that only which is most direct and simple. Is it true, that this is the sense in which the word “necessary” is always used ? Does it always import an absolute physical necessity, so strong, that one thing to which another may be termed necessary, cannot exist without that other? We think it does not. If reference be had to its use, in the common affairs of the world, or in approved authors, we find that it frequently imports no more than that one thing is convenient, or useful, or essential to another. To employ the means necessary to an end, is generally understood as employing any means calculated to *produce the end, and not as being confined to those single means, without *-which the end would be entirely unattainable. Such is the character of human language, that no word conveys to the mind, in all situations, one single definite idea ; and nothing is more common than to use words in a figurative sense. Almost all compositions contain words, which, taken in a their rigorous sense, would convey a meaning different from that which is obviously intended. It is essential to just construction, that many words which import something excessive, should be understood in a more mitigated sense—in that sense which common usage justifies. The word “ necessary ” is of this description. It has not a fixed character, peculiar to itself. It admits of all degrees of comparison; and is often connected with other words, which increase or diminish the impression the mind receives of the urgency it imports. A thing may be necessary, very necessary, absolutely or indispensably necessary. To no mind would the same idea be conveyed by these several phrases. The comment on the word is well illustrated by the passage cited at the bar, from the 10th section of the 1st article of the constitution. It is, we think, impossible to compare the sentence which prohibits a state from laying “imposts, or duties on imports or exports, except what may be absolutely necessary for executing its inspection laws,” with that which authorizes congress “ to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution ” the powers of the general government, without feeling a conviction, that the convention understood itself to change materially *the meaning of the word “ necessary,” by pre- . fixing the word “ absolutely.” This word, then, like others, is used *■ 1 in various senses; and, in its construction, the subject, the context, the intention of the person using them, are all to be taken into view. Let this be done in the case under consideration. The subject is the execution of those great powers on which the welfare of a nation essentially depends. It must have been the intention of those who gave these powers, to insure, so far as human prudence could insure, their beneficial execution. This could not be done, by confiding the choice of means to such narrow limits as not to leave it in the power of congress to adopt any which might be appropriate, and which were conducive to the end. This provision is made in a constitution, intended to endure for ages to come, and consequently, to be adapted to the various crises of human affairs. To have prescribed the means by which government should, in all future time, execute its powers, would have been to change, entirely, the character of the instrument, and give it the properties of a legal code. It would have been an unwise attempt to provide, by immutable rules, for exigencies which, if toreseen at all, must have been seen dimly, and which can be best provided 203 415 SUPREME COURT f [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. for as they occur. To have declared, that the best means shall not be used, but those alone, without which the power given would be nugatory, would have been to deprive the legislature of the capacity to avail itself of experience, to exercise its reason, and to accommodate its legislation to circumstances. *4.1 a I we aPP^y this principle of construction to any of the powers of J the government, we shall find it so pernicious in its operation that we shall be compelled to discard it. The powers vested in congress may certainly be carried into execution, without prescribing an oath of office. The power to exact this security for the faithful performance of duty, is not given, nor is it indispensably necessary. The different departments may be established ; taxes may be imposed and collected ; armies and navies may be raised and maintained ; and money may be borrowed, without requiring an oath of office. It might be argued, with as much plausibility as other incidental powers have been assailed, that the convention was not unmindful of this subject. The oath which might be exacted—that of fidelity to the constitution—is prescribed, and no other ean be required. Yet, he would be charged with insanity, who should contend, that the legislature might not superadd, to the oath directed by the constitution, such other oath of office as its wisdom might suggest. So, with respect to the whole penal code of the United States : whence arises the power to punish, in cases not prescribed by the constitution ? All admit, that the government may, legitimately, punish any violation of its laws ; and yet, this is not among the enumerated powers of congress. The right to enforce the observance of law, by punishing its infraction, might be denied, with the more plausibility, because it is expressly given in some cases. *41'71 Congress is empowered “to provide for the punishment *of counter- ■* feitipg the securities and current coin of the United States,” and “to define and punish piracies and felonies committed on the high seas, and offences against the law of nations.” The several powers of congress may exist, in a very imperfect state, to be sure, but they may exist and be carried into execution, although no punishment should be inflicted, in cases where the right to punish is not expressly given. Take, for example, the power “ to establish post-offices and post-roads.” This power is executed, by the single act of making the establishment. But, from this has been inferred the power and duty of carrying the mail along the post-road, from one post-office to another. And from this implied power, has again been inferred the right to punish those who steal letters from the post-office, or rob the mail. It may be said, with some plausibility, that the right to carry the mail, and to punish those who rob it, is not indispensably necessary to the establishment of a post-office and post-road. This right is indeed essential to the beneficial exercise of the power, but not indispensably necessary to its existence. So, of the punishment of the crimes of stealing or falsifying a record or process of a court of the United States, or of perjury in such court. To punish these offences, is certainly conducive to the due administration of justice. But courts may exist, and may decide the causes brought before them, though such crimes escape punishment. The baneful influence of this narrow construction on all the operations of *. „ . the government, and the absolute *impracticability of maintaining it, J without rendering the government incompetent to its great objects, might be illustrated by numerous examples drawn from the constitution, and 204 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 418 McCulloch v. Maryland. from our laws. The good sense of the public has pronounced, without hesitation, that the power of punishment appertains to sovereignty, and may be exercised, whenever the sovereign has a right to act, as incidental to his constitutional powers. It is a means for carrying into execution all sovereign powers, and may be used, although not indispensably necessary. It is a right incidental to the power, and conducive to its beneficial exercise. If this limited construction of the word “ necessary ” must be abandoned, in order to punish, whence is derived the rule which would reinstate it, when the government would carry its powers into execution, by means not vindictive in their nature? If the word “necessary” means “needful,” “requisite,” “essential,” “conducive to,” in order to let in the power of punishment for the infraction of law ; why is it not equally comprehensive, when required to authorize the use of means which facilitate the execution of the powers of government, without the infliction of punishment ? In ascertaining the sense in which the word “ necessary ” is used in this clause of the constitution, we may derive some aid from that with which it it is associated. ' Congress shall have power “ to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper to carry into execution” the powers of the government. If the word “ necessary ” was used in that strict and rigorous sense for which the counsel for the state of *Maryland contend, it would be an extraordinary departure from the usual course of the human L mind, as exhibited in composition, to add a word, the only possible offect of which is, to qualify that strict and rigorous meaning ; to present to the mind the idea of some choice of means of legislation, not strained and compressed within the narrow limits for which gentlemen contend. But the argument which most conclusively demonstrates the error of the construction contended for by the counsel for the state of Maryland, is founded on the intention of the convention, as manifested in the whole clause. To waste time and argument in proving that, without it, congress might carry its powers into execution, would be not much less idle, than to hold a lighted taper to the sun. As little can it be required to prove, that m the absence of this clause, congress would have some choice of means. That it might employ those which, in its judgment, would most advantageously effect the object to be accomplished. That any means adapted to the end, any means which tended directly to the execution of the constitutional powers of the government, were in themselves constitutional. This clause, as construed by the state of Maryland, would abridge, and almost annihilate, this useful and necessary right of the legislature to select its means. That this could not be intended, is, we should think, had it not been already controverted, too apparent for controversy. We think so for the following reasons: 1st. The clause is placed among the powers of congress, not among the limitations on those powers. 2d. Its terms purport to enlarge, not to diminish the powers vested . in the government. It purports to be an additional power, not a L restriction on those already granted. No reason has been, or can be assigned, for thus concealing an intention to narrow the discretion of the national legislature, under words which purport to enlarge it. pThe framers of the constitution wished its adoption, andwell knew that it would be endangered by its strength, not by its weakness^ Qlad they been capable of using language which would convey to the eye one idea, and, after deep reflection, impress 205 420 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. on the mind, another, they would rather have disguised the grant of power, than its limitation?) If, then, their intention had been, by this clause, to restrain the free use of means which might otherwise have been implied, that intention would have been inserted in another place, and would have been expressed in terms resembling these. “ In carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all others,” &c., “ no laws shall be passed but such as are necessary and proper.” Had the intention been to make this clause restrictive, it would unquestionably have been so in form as well as in effect. The result of the most careful and attentive consideration bestowed upon this clause is, that if it does not enlarge, it cannot be construed to restrain the powers of congress, or to impair the right of the legislature to exercise its best judgment in the selection of measures to carry into execution the constitutional powers of the government. If no other motive for its insertion can be suggested, a sufficient one is found in the desire to *remove all. doubts respecting *the right to legislate on that vast mass J of incidental powers which must be involved in the constitution, if that instrument be not a splendid bauble. We admit, as all must admit, that the powers of the government are limited, and that its limits are not to be transcended. But we think the sound construction of the constitution must allow to the national legislature that discretion, with respect to the means by which the powers it confers are to be carried into execution, which will enable that body to perform the high duties assigned to it, in the manner most beneficial to the people. Let the end be legitimate, let it be within the scope of. the constitution, and all means which are appropriate, which are plainly adapted to that end, which are not prohibited, but consist with the letter and spirit of the constitution, are constitutional.1 That a corporation must be considered as a means not less usual, not of higher dignity, not more requiring a particular specification than other means, has been-sufficiently proved. If we look to the origin of corporations, to the manner in which they have been framed in that government from which we have derived most of our legal principles and ideas, or to the uses to which they have been applied, we find no reason to suppose, that a constitution, omitting, and wisely omitting, to enumerate all the means for carrying into execution the great powers vested in government, ought to have specified this. Had it been intended to grant this power, as one which should be distinct and independent, to be exercised in any case whatever, it *4221 *wou^ have found a place among the enumerated powers of the 1 government. But being considered merely as a means, to be employed only for the purpose of carrying into execution the given powers, there could be no motive for particularly mentioning it. The propriety of this remark would seem to be generally acknowledged, by the universal acquiescence in the construction which has been uniformly put on the 3d section of the 4th article of the constitution. The power to “ make all needful rules and regulations respecting the territory or other property belonging to the United States,” is not more comprehensive, than the power “ to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carry- 1 See Montague v. Richardson, 24 Conn. 348. 206 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 422 McCulloch v. Maryland. ing into execution ” the powers of the government. Yet all admit the constitutionality of a territorial government, which is a corporate body. // If a corporation may be employed, indiscriminately with other means, to carry into execution the powers of the government, no particular reason can be assigned for excluding the use of a-banL_ if required for its fiscal ^operations. To use one, must be within the discretion of congress, if it be an appropriate mode of executing the powers of government. That it is a convenient, a useful, and essential instrument in the prosecution of its fiscal operations, is not now a subject of controversy. All those who have been concerned in the administration of our finances, have concurred in representing its importance and necessity / and so strongly have they been felt, that II statesmen of the first class, whose previous opinions *against it had (-*423 been confirmed by every circumstance which can fix the human judgment, have yielded those opinions to the exigencies of the nation. Under the confederation, congress, justifying the measure by its necessity, transcended, perhaps, its powers, to obtain the advantage of a bank ; and our own legislation attests the universal conviction of the utility of this measure. The time has passed away, when it can be necessary to enter into any discussion, in order to prove the importance of this instrument, as a means to effect the legitimate objects of the government. But were its necessity less apparent, none can deny its being an appropriate measure ; and if it is, the decree of its necessity, as has been very justly observed, is to be discsused in another place. Should congress, in~] the execution of its powers, adopt measures which are prohibited by the j constitution ; or should congress, under the pretext of executing its powers, / pass laws for the accomplishment of objects not intrusted to the government ; it would become the painful duty of this tribunal, should a case requiring such a decision come before it, to say, that such an act was not the law of the land. But where the law is not prohibited, and is really calcu- 1 lated to effect any of the objects intrusted to the government, to undertake here to inquire into the decree of its necessity, would be to pass the line which circumscribes the judicial department, and to tread on legislative ground. This court disclaims all pretensions to such a power?/ * After this declaration, it can scarcely be necessary to say, that the existence of state banks can have no possible influence on the ' question. No trace is to be found in the constitution, of an intention to create a dependence of the government of the Union on those of the states, for the execution of the great powers assigned to it. Its means are adequate to its ends ; and on those means alone was it expected to rely for the accomplishment of its ends. To impose on it the necessity of resorting to means which it cannot control, which another government may furnish or withhold, would render its course precarious, the result of its measures uncertain, and create a dependence on other governments, which might disappoint its most important designs, and is incompatible with the language of the constitution. But were it otherwise, the choice of means implies a right to choose a national । Dank m preference to state banks, and congress alone can make the election. After the most deliberate consideration, it is the unanimous and decided opinion of this court, that the act to incorporate the Bank of the United states is a law made in pursuance of the constitution, and is a part of the supreme law’of the land. 207 424 SUPREME COURT McCulloch v. Maryland. [Feb’y The branches, proceeding from the same stock, and being conducive to the complete accomplishment of the object, are equally constitutional. It would have been unwise, to locate them in the charter, and it would be unnecessarily inconvenient, to employ the legislative power in making those subordinate arrangements. The great duties of the bank are prescribed; * 1 those duties require branches ; and the bank itself *may, we think, be safely trusted with the selection of places where those branches shall be fixed ; reserving always to the government the right to require that? a branch shall be located where it may be deemed necessary. /\ It being the opinion of the court, that the act incorporating the bank is constitutional; and that the power of establishing a branch in the state of Maryland might be properly exercised by the bank itself, we proceed to inquire— 2. Whether the state of Maryland may, without violating the constitution, tax that branch Y That the power of taxation is one of vital impor-; tance ; that it is retained by the states ; that it is not abridged by the grant of a similar power to the government of the Union ; that it is to be concurrently exercised by the two governments—are truths which have never been denied. But such is the paramount character of the constitution, that its capacity to withdraw any subject from the action of even this power, is admitted. The states are expressly forbidden to lay any duties on imports on exports,'except what maybe absolutely necessary for executing their in-\ I spection laws. If the obligation of this prohibition must be conceded—if it v may restrain a state from the exercise of its taxing power on imports and A exports—the same paramount character would seem to restrain, as it cer-! | tainly may restrain, a state from such other exercise of this power, as is in its nature incompatible with, and repugnant to, the constitutional laws of # _ the Union. A law, absolutely repugnant to another, as entirely ^repeals J that other as if express terms of repeal were used. On this ground, the counsel for the bank place its claim to be exempted from the power of a state to tax its operations^ There is no express pro-, vision for the case, hut the claim has been sustained on a principle which so entirely pervades the constitution, is so intermixed with the materials which compose it, so interwoven with its web, so blended with its texture, as to be incapable of being separated from it, Without rending it into shreds. This great principle is, that the constitution and the law’s made in pursuance thereof are supreme; that they control the constitution and laws of the respective states, and cannot be controlled by them. From this, which may be almost termed an axiom, other propositions are deduced as corollaries, on the truth or error of which, and on their application to this case, the cause has been supposed to depend. These are, 1st. That a power to create implies ' a power to preserve : 2d. That a power to destroy, if wielded by a different hand, is hostile to, and incompatible with these powers to create, and to preserve : 3d. That where this repugnancy exists, that authority which is supreme must control, not yield to that over which it is supreme. These propositions, as abstract truths, would, perhaps, never be controverted. Their application to this case, however, has been denied; and both in maintaining the affirmative and the negative, a splendor of eloquence, and strength of argument, seldom, if ever, surpassed, have been displayed. 208 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. . *127 McCulloch v. Maryland. *The power of congress to create, and of course, to continue, the bank, was the subject of the preceding part of this opinion ; and is no longer to be considered as questionable. That the power of taxing it by the states may be exercised so as to destroy it, is too obvious to be denied. But taxation is said to be an absolute power, which acknowledges no other limits than those expressly prescribed in the constitution, and like sovereign power of every other description, is intrusted to the discretion of those who use it. But the very terms of this argument admit, that the sovereignty or^ the state, in the article of taxation itself, is subordinate to, and may be controlled by the constitution of the United States. How far it has been controlled by that instrument^ must be a question of construction. In making this construction, no principle, not declared, can be admissible, which would defeat the legitimate operations of a supreme government. It is of the very essence of supremacy, to remove all obstacles to its action within its own sphere, and so to modify every power vested in subordinate governments, as to exempt its own operations from their own influence. This effect need not he stated in terms. It is so involved in the declaration of supremacy, so necessarily implied in it, that the expression of it could not make it more certain.' We must, therefore, keep it in view, while construing the constitution. The argument on the part of the state of Maryland, is, not that the states may directly resist a law of congress, but that they may exercise their *acknowledged powers upon it, and that the constitution leaves them this right, in the confidence that they will not abuse it. Before we *-proceed to examine this argument, and to subject it to test of the constitution, we must be permitted to bestow a few considerations on the nature and extent of this original right of taxation, which is acknowledged to remain with the states. It is admitted, that the power of taxing the people^ and their property, is essential to the very existence of government, and may be legitimately exercised on the objects to which it is applicable, to the utmost extent to which the government may choose to carry it. The only security against the abuse of this power, is found in the structure of the / government itself. In imposing a tax, the legislature acts upon its constit-/ uents. This is, in general, a sufficient security against erroneous andl oppressive taxation. The people of a state, therefore, give to their government a right of taxing themselves and their property, and as the exigencies of government cannot be limited, they prescribe no limits to the exercise of this right, resting confidently on the interest of the legislator, and on the influence of the constituent ever their representative, to guard them against its abuse. But j the means employed by the government of the Union have no such security, / nor is the right of a state to tax them sustained by the same theory. Those | means are not given by . the people of a particular state, not given by the V constituents of the legislature, which claim the right to tax them, but by tke people of all the states. They are given by all, *for the benefit * of all and upon theory, should be subjected to that government L only which belongs to all. It may be objected to this definition, that the power of taxation is not confined to the people and property of a state. It may be exercised upon every object brought within its jurisdiction. This is true. But to what 4 Whe4T.—14 209 429 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McCulloch v. Maryland. source do wo trace this right ? It is obvious, that it is an incident of sovereignty, and is co-extensive with that to which it is an incident. All subjects over which the sovereign power of a state extends, are objects of taxa: tion ; but those over which it does not extend, are, upon the soundest principles, exempt from taxation. This proposition may almost be pronounced self-evident'. Z- The sovereignty of a state extends to everything which exists by its 'own authority, or is introduced by its permission; but does it extend to those \ means which are employed by congress to carry into execution powers conferred on that body by the people of the United -States ? We think it demonstrable, that it does not. Those powers are not given by the people of a single state. They are given by the people of the United States, to a government whose laws, made in pursuance of the constitution, are declared to be supreme. Consequently, the people of a single state cannot confer a sovereignty which will extend over them. If we measure the power of taxation residing in a state, by the extent of sovereignty which the people of a single state possess, and can confer on * -.its government, we have an intelligible standard, applicable *to every -I case to which the power may be applied. We have a principle which leaves the power of taxing the people and property of a state unimpaired; which leaves to a state the command of all its resources, and which places beyond its reach, all those powers which are conferred by the people of the United States on the government of the Union, and all those means which are given for the purpose of carrying those powers into execution. We have a principle which is safe for the states, and safe for the Union. We are relieved, as we ought to be, from clashing sovereignty ; from interfering powers ; from a repugnancy between a right in one government to pull down, what there is an acknowledged right in another to build up; from the incompatibility of a right in one government to destroy, what there is a right in another to preserve. We are not driven to the perplexing inquiry, so unfit for the judicial department, what degree of taxation is the legitimate use, and what degree may amonnt to the abuse of the power. The attempt to use it on the means employed by the government of the Union, in pursuance of the constitution, is itself an abuse, because it is the usurpation of a power which the people of a single state cannot give. We find, then, on just theory, a total failure of this original fight to tax the means employed by the government of the Union, for the execution of its powers. The right never existed, and the question whether it has been surrendered, cannot arise. But, waiving this theory for the present, let us resume the inquiry, Whether this power can be exercised *by the respective states, con- -* sistently with a fair construction of the constitution? |*That the power to tax involves the power to destroy ; that the power to destroy may defeat and render useless the power to create ; that there is a plain repugnance in conferring on one government a power to control the constitutional measures of another, which other, with respect to those very measures, is declared to be supreme over that which exerts the control, are propositions not to be denied. / But all inconsistencies are to be reconciled by the magic of the word cdfijidence. Taxation, it is said, does not necessarily and unavoidably destroy. To carry it to the excess of destruction, would be an 210 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 431 McCulloch v. Maryland. abuse, to presume which, would banish that confidence which is essential to all government. But is this a case of confidence? Would the people of any one state trust those of another with a power to control the most insignificant operations of their state government? We know they would not. Why, then, should we suppose, that the people of any one state should be willing to trust those of another with a power to control the operations of a government to which they have confided their most important and most valuable interests? In the legislature of the Union alone, are all represented. The legislature of the Union alone, therefore, can be trusted by the people with the power of controlling measures which concern all, in the confidence that it will not be abused. This, then, is not a case of confidence, and we must consider it is as it really is. *If we apply the principle for which the state of Maryland con- ■.* ~~ tends, to the constitution, generally, we shall find it capable of chang- L ing totally the character of that instrument. We shall find it capable of arresting all the measures of the government, and of prostrating it at the foot of the states. The American people have declared their constitution and the laws made in pursuance thereof, to be supreme ; but this principle would transfer the supremacy, in fact, to the states. If the states may tax one instrument, employed by the government in the execution of its powers, they may tax any and every other instrument. They may tax the mail; they may tax the mint; they may tax patent-rights ; they may tax the papers of the custom-house ; they may tax judicial process ; they may tax all the means employed by the government, to an excess which would defeat all the ends of government. This was not intended by the American people. They did not design to make their government dependent on the states. Gentlemen say, they do not claim the right to extend state taxation to these objects. They limit their pretensions to property. But on what principle, is this distinction made? Those who make it have furnished no reason for it, and the principle for which they contend denies it. They contend, that the power of taxation has no other limit than is found in the 10th section of the 1st article of the constitution ; that, with respect to everything else, the power of the states is supreme, and admits of no control. If this be true, the distinction between property and *other sub- rHc jects to which the power cd taxation is applicable, is merely arbitrary, *-and can never be sustained. This is not all. If the controlling power of the states be established ; if their supremacy as to taxation be acknowledged ; what is to restrain their exercising control in any shape they may please to give it ? Their sovereignty is not confined to, taxation ; that is not the only mode in which it might be displayed. The question is, in truth, a question of supremacy ; and if the right of the states to tax the means employed by the general government be conceded, the declaration that the constitution, and the laws made in pursuance thereof, shall be the supreme law of the land, is empty and unmeaning declamation. In the course of the argument, the Federalist has been quoted ; and the opinions expressed by the authors of that work have been justly supposed to oe entitled to great respect in expounding the constitution. No tribute can be paid to them which exceeds their merit ; but in applying their opinions to the cases which may arise in the progress of our government, a right to 211 433 SUPREME COURT McCulloch v. Maryland. [Feb’y judge of their correctness must be retained ; and to understand the argument, we must examine the proposition it maintains, and the objections against which it is directed. The subject of those numbers, from which passages have been cited, is the unlimited power of taxation which is vested in the general government. The objection to this unlimited power, which the argument seeks to remove, is stated with fulness and clearness. It is, *. „. ] “ that an indefinite power of taxation in the latter (the government J *of the Union) might, and probably would, in time, deprive the former (the government of the states) of the means of providing for their own necessities ; and would subject them entirely to the mercy of the national legislature. As the laws of the Union are to become the supreme law of the land ; as it is to have power to pass all laws that may be necessary for carrying into execution the authorities with which it is proposed to vest it; the national government might, at any time, abolish the taxes imposed for state objects, upon the pretence of an interference with its own. It might allege a necessity for doing this, in order to give efficacy to the national revenues ; and thus, all the resources of taxation might, by degrees, become the subjects of federal monopoly, to the entire exclusion and destruction of the state governments.” The objections to the constitution which are noticed in these numbers, were to the undefined power of the government to tax, not to the incidental privilege of exempting its own measures from state taxation. The consequences apprehended from this undefined power were, that it would absorb all the objects of taxation, “ to the exclusion and destruction of the state governments.” The arguments of the Federalist are intended to prove the fallacy of these apprehensions; not to prove that the government was incapable of executing any of its powers, without exposing the means it employed to the embarrassments of state taxation. Arguments urged against these objections, and these apprehensions, are to be understood as relating to the points *4351 ^ey *mean to prove. Had the authors of those excellent essays been J asked, whether they contended for that construction of the constitution, which would place within the reach of the states those measures which the government might adopt for the execution of its powers ; no man, who has read their instructive pages, will hesitate to admit, that their answer must have been in the negative. It has also been insisted, that, as the power of taxation in the general and state governments is acknowledged to be concurrent, every argument which would sustain the right of the general government to tax banks char-Y tered by the states, will equally sustain the right of the states to tax banks chartered by the general government. But the two cases are not on the same reason. The people of all the states have created the general government, and have, conf erred upon it the general power of taxation. The people of all the states, and the states themselves, are represented in congress, and, by their representatives, exercise this power. When they tax the chartered institutions of the states, they tax their constituents ; and these taxes must be uniform. But when a state taxes the operations of the government of the United States, it acts upon institutions created, not by their own constituents, but by people over whom they claim no control. It acts upon the measures of a government created by others as well as themselves, or the benefit of others in common with themselves. The difference is t at 212 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 485 McCulloch v. Maryland. /which always exists, and always must exist, between the action of the whole y on a *part, and the action of a part on the whole—between the laws of a government declared to be supreme, and those of a government *• which, when in opposition to those laws, is not supreme. But if the full application of this argument could be admitted, it might bring into question the right of congress to tax the state banks, and could not prove the rights of the states to tax the Bank of the United States. The court has bestowed on this subject its most deliberate consideration. The result is a conviction that the states have no power, by taxation or otherwise, to retard, impede, burden, or in any manner control, the operations of the constitutional laws enacted by congress to carry into execution the powers vested in the general government. This is, we think, the unavoidable consequence of that supremacy which the constitution has declared. We are unanimously of opinion, that the law passed by the legis-> lature of Maryland, imposing a tax on the Bank of the United States, is unconstitutional and void. This opinion does not deprive the states of any resources which they originally possessed. It does not extend to a tax paid by the real property of the bank, in common with the other real property within the state, nor to a tax imposed on the interest which the citizens of Maryland may hold in this institution, in 'common with other property of the same description throughout the state. But this is a tax on the operations of the bank, and i /is, consequently, a tax on the operation of an instrument employed by the y government *of the Union to carry its powers into execution. Such a tax must be unconstitutional. *• Judgment.—This cause came on to be heard, on the transcript of the record of the court of appeals of the state of Maryland, and was argued by counsel: on consideration whereof, it is the opinion of this court, that the act of the legislature of Maryland is contrary to the constitution of the United States, and void; and therefore, that the said court of appeals of the state of Maryland erred, in affirming the judgment of the Baltimore county court, in which judgment was rendered against James W. McCulloch ; but that the said court of appeals of Maryland ought to have reversed the said judgment of the said Baltimore county court, and ought to have given judgment for the said appellant, McCulloch : It is, therefore, adjudged and ordered, that the said judgment of the said court of appeals of the state of Maryland in this case, be, and the same hereby is, reversed and annulled. And this court, proceeding to render such judgment as the said court of appeals should have rendered ; it is further adjudged and ordered, that the judgment of the said Baltimore county court be reversed and annulled, and that judgment be entered in the said Baltimore county court for the said James W. McCulloch. 213 *438 SUPREME COURT [Eeb’y *The General Smith : Hollins et al., Claimants. Admiralty j urisdiction.—Maritime liens. The admiralty possesses a general jurisdiction is cases of suits by material-men, in personam, and in rem. Where, however, the proceeding is in rem, to enforce a specific lien, it is incumbent upon the party to establish the existence of such lien, in the particular case. Where repairs have been made, or necessities furnished to a foreign ship, or to a ship in a port of the state to which she does not belong, the general maritime law gives the party a lien on the ship itself for his security, and he may maintain a suit in rem, in the admiralty, to enforce his right. But as to repairs and necessaries in the port or state to which the ship belongs, the case is governed altogether by the local law; and no lien is implied, unless by that law. By the common law, material-men furnishing repairs to a domestic ship, have no particular lien upon the ship itself for their demand. A ship-wright who has taken a ship into his possession to repair it, is not bound to part with the possession until he is paid for the repairs ; but if he parts with the possession (of a domestic ship) or has worked upon it, without taking possession, he has no claim upon the ship itself. The common law being the law of Maryland, on this subject, it was held, that material-men could not maintain a suit in rem, in the district court of Maryland, for supplies furnished to a domestic ship, although they might have maintained a suit in personam, in that court. Appeal from the Circuit Court of Maryland. This was a libel, filed on the 4th day of October 1816, in the district court of Maryland, setting forth that James Ramsey, the libellant, had supplied and furnished for the use, accommodation and equipment of the ship General Smith, at Baltimore, in *4oq-i the district *of Maryland, to equip and prepare her for a voyage on J the high seas, various articles of cordage, ship-chandlery, and stores, amounting in the whole to the value of $4599.75, for no part of which he had received any compensation, payment or security. That the said ship was then owned by a certain George Stevenson, to whom he had applied for payment of said materials furnished, but without effect. And praying the usual process against the ship, and that she should be sold under the decree of the court, to pay and satisfy the libellant his claim. A claim was given for the ship, by John Hollins and James W. McCulloch, merchants, of Baltimore. On the hearing of the cause in the court below, it was proved, or admitted by the parties, that the ship was an American vessel, and formerly was the property of George P. Stevenson, a merchant of Baltimore, and a citizen of the United States ; and that whilst the ship so belonged to Stevenson, the libellant, a ship-chandler of Baltimore, furnished for her use various articles of ship-chandlery to equip and furnish her, it being her first equipment, to perform a voyage to a foreign country, to wit, to Rotterdam and Liverpool, and back to Baltimore. That Stevenson was also the owner of several other vessels, for which the libellant, from time to time, furnished articles for their equipment for foreign voyages, and that payments were made by Stevenson to the libellant, at different times, on their general account, without application to any particular part of the account. That *4401 skip soon afterwards sailed, &c. That the ship departed *from J Baltimore, on the voyage, without any express assent or permission of the libellant, and also without objection being made on his part, and without his having attempted to detain her, or enforce any lien which he had 214 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. The General Smith. 440 against her for the articles furnished. That the ship continued to be the property of said Stevenson, during the said voyage, and after her return, and was not sold or disposed of in any way by him, until the 3d day of October 1816, when, finding himself embarrassed in his pecuniary affairs, and obliged to stop payment, he executed an assignment to the claimants of his property, including the ship General Smith, in trust for the payment of all bonds for duties due by said Stevenson to the United States, and for the payment and satisfaction of his other creditors, &c. Another libel was filed, on the 11th of November 1816, against the same ship, by Rebecca Cockrill, administratrix of Thomas Cockrill, deceased, alleging that the said Thomas, in his lifetime, at Baltimore, in the said district, did furnish a large amount of iron materials, and bestow much labor and trouble, by himself, and those hired and employed by him, in working up and preparing certain iron materials for building and preparing the said ship for navigating the high seas, all which materials, and work and labor, were in fact applied and used in the construction and fitting said ship, according to a bill of particulars annexed. That the libellant had been informed and believed, that said ship was owned and claimed by various persons in certain proportions, but in what proportions, and who were the several owners, *she did not know, and could not, therefore, state. r*441 That neither the said Thomas, in his lifetime, nor the libellant, since *-his decease, had ever received any part of said account, nor any security or satisfaction for the same. Concluding with the usual prayer for process, &c. A claim was given for the same parties, and at the hearing, the same proofs and admissions were made as in the suit of James Ramsey ; except that it did not appear, that Thomas Cockrill had furnished any other vessels belonging to Stevenson with materials, nor that any payments on account had been made by said Stevenson to said Cockrill, or to the libellant, as his administratrix. The district court ordered the ship to be sold, and decreed, that the libellants should be paid out of the proceeds the amount of their demands for materials furnished. In the circuit court, this decree was affirmed, pro formd, by consent, and the cause was brought by appeal to this court. March 9th. Pinkney, for the appellants and claimants, admitted the general jurisdiction of the district court, as an instance court of admiralty, over suits by material-men in personam and in rem, and over other maritime contracts ; but denied, that a suit in rem could be maintained, in the present case, because the parties had no specific lien upon the ship for supplies furnished in the port to which she belonged. In the case of materials furnished or repairs done to a foreign ship, the maritime law has given such a lien, which may be enforced by a suit in the admiralty. *But in the case of a domestic ship, it was long since settled by the most solemn L adjudications of the common law (which is the law of Maryland on this subject), that mechanics have no lien upon the ship itself for their demands, but must look to the personal security of the owner. Abbott on Ship. p. 2, c. 3, § 9-13, and the cases there cited ; Woodruff v. The Levi Learborne, 4 Hall’s L. Jour. 97. Had this been a suit in personam, in the admiralty, there would have been no doubt, that the district court would have had 215 442 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y The General Smith. jurisdiction : but there being, by the local law, no specific lien to be enforced, there could be no ground to maintain a suit in rem. Winder, contra, insisted, that the question of jurisdiction and lien were intimately and inseparably connected. In England, the lien has been denied to attach, in the case of domestic ships, because the courts of common law, in their unreasonable jealousy, of the admiralty jurisdiction, would not permit the only court, which could enforce the lien, to take cognisance of it. Consequently, the lien has been lost with the jurisdiction. But the universal maritime law, as administered in the European courts of admiralty, recognises the lien, in the case of a domestic, as well as a foreign ship : Stevens v. The Sandwich, 1 Pet. Adm. 233, note ; De Lovio v. Doit, 2 Gallis. 400, 468, 475 ; and commercial policy demands that it should be enforced in both cases. *. . 1 *March 10th, 1819. Story, Justice, delivered the opinion of the -* court.—No doubt is entertained by this court, that the admiralty rightfully possesses a general jurisdiction in cases of material-men ; and if this had been a suit in personam, there would not have been any hesitation in sustaining the jurisdiction of the district court. Where, however, the proceeding is in rem, to enforce a specific lien, it is incumbent upon those who seek the aid of the court, to establish the existence of such lien in the particular case. Where repairs have been made, or necessaries have been furnished to a foreign ship, or to a ship in a port of the state to which she does not belong, the general maritime law, following the civil law, gives the party a lien on the ship itself for his security ; and he may well maintain a suit in rem, in the admiralty, to enforce his right. But in respect to repairs and necessaries in the port or state to which the ship belongs, the case is governed altogether by the municipal law of that state ; and no lien is implied, unless it is recognised by that law. Now, it has been long settled, whether originally upon the soundest principles, it is now too late to inquire, that by the common law, which is the law of Maryland, material-men and mechanics furnishing repairs to a domestic ship, have no particular lien upon the ship itself for the recovery of their demands. A ship-wright, indeed, who has taken a ship into his own possession to repair it, is not bound to part with the possession, until he is paid for the repairs, any more than any * °^ber artificer. But if he has once parted with the possession, *or J has worked upon it, without taking possession, he is not deemed a privileged creditor, having any claim upon the ship itself. Without, therefore, entering into a discussion of the particular circumstances of this case, we are of opinion, that here there was not, by the principles of law, any lien upon the ship ; and, consequently, the decree of the circuit court must be reversed. Decree reversed, (a) (a) See The Aurora, 1 Wheat. 96, 103, in which case a lien of material-men on foreign ships was recognised by this court. The common law is the municipal law of most of the states, as to supplies furnished to domestic ships: but the legislature of New York has, by statute, given a lien to ship-wrights, material-men and suppliers o ships, for the amount of their debts, whether the ships are owned within the state or 216 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 444 McIver v. W alker. not. Acts of 22d sess. c. 1, and 40th sess. c. 59. This lien existing by the local law, may consequently be enforced, upon the principle of the above case in the text, by a suit in rem in the admiralty.1 McIver’s Lessee v. Walker et al. Land-law of Tennessee. If there be nothing in a patent to control the call for course and distance, the land must be bounded by the courses and distances of the patent, according to the magnetic meridian; but it is a general principle, that the course and distance must yield to natural objects called for in the patent. All lands are supposed to be actually surveyed, and the intention of the grant is, to convey the land according to the actual survey; Consequently, distances must be lengthened or r# R shortened, and courses varied, so as to conform to the natural objects called for. t If a patent refer to a plat annexed, and if, in that plat, a water-course be laid down as running through the land, the tract must be so surveyed as to include the water-course, and to conform as nearly as may be to the plat, although the lines, thus run, do not correspond with the courses and discourses mentioned in the patent; and although neither the certificate of survey nor the patent call for that water-course. Error to the Circuit Court for the District of East Tennessee. This was an ejectment brought in that court, by the plaintiff in error, against the defendants. Upon the first trial of the cause, a judgment was rendered in the circuit court in favor of the defendants, and upon that judgment a writ of error was taken out, and. the judgment reversed by this court, at February term 1815 (9 Cranch 173); and the cause was sent back to be tried, according to certain directions prescribed by this court. As the opinion given by this court upon the reversal of the first judgment contains a statement of the facts given in evidence upon the first trial, it is deemed proper to insert the opinion in this place. It is as follows : 1 It was decided in Peyton v. Howard, 7 Pet. 324, that when the state law give a lien for supplies furnished to a domestic vessel, in her home port, it may be enforced by a proceeding in rem in the court of admiralty ; and in 1844, in pursuance of authority conferred upon the supreme court by the acts of 8th May 1792, and of the 23d August 1842, it adopted, what is know as the 12th rule in admiralty, which provided, that “ in all suits by material-men for supplies, repairs or other necessaries for a foreign ship, or for a ship, in a foreign port, the libellant may proceed against the ship and freight in rem, or against the master and owner alone in personam ; and the like proceeding in rem shall apply to cases of domestic ships, where, by the local law, a lien is given to material-wen for supplies, repairs and other necessaries. Under this rule, the jurisdiction in rem was always sustained. The state lien, however, was enforced, not as a right which the court was bound to carry into execution, upon the application of the party, but as a discretionary one,which the court might lawfully exercise, for the purposes of justice, where it did not involve controversies beyond the limits of admiralty jurisdic- tion. The St. Lawrence, 1 Black 530. In many of the states, however, the laws were found not to harmonize with the principles and rules of the maritime code, and embarrassed the federal courts in applying them. And accordingly, in 1859, the last clause of the 12th rule was modified, so as to read as follows : “ And the like proceeding in personam, but not in rem, shall apply to domestic ships for supplies, repairs or other necessaries.” This rule, whilst in force, took away the power from the district courts to enforce such claims against domestic vessels by process in rem. The Adele, 1 Ben. 309 ; The Circassian, 11 Bl. C. C. 472. But in 1872, the rule was again amended, so as to provide, that “ in all suits by material-men for supplies or repairs or other necessaries, the libellant may proceed against the ship and freight in rem or against the master or owner alone in personam.” And this restored the old rule, giving the proceeding in rem to enforce liens created by the state law. The Lottawanna, 21 Wall. 558. And see Norton v. Switzer, 93 U. S. 366-66 ; The Mary Gratwick, 2 Sawyer 342 ; The Lewellen, 4 Biss. 156, 167. 217 445 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McIver v. Walker. “On the trial of this cause, the plaintiff produced two patents for 5000 acres each, from the state of North Carolina, granting to Stokely Donelson (from whom the plaintiff derived his title), two several tracts of land, lying on Crow creek, the one, No. 12, beginning at a box elder standing on a ridge, corner to No. 11, &c., as by the plat hereunto annexed will appear. The plat and certificate of survey were annexed to the grant. The plaintiff *4.4.«! Proved that there were eleven other grants of the same date *for -* 5000 acres each, issued from the state of North Carolina, designated as a chain of surveys joining each other, from No. 1 to No. 11, inclusive, each calling for land on Crow creek as a general call, and the courses and distances of which, as described in the grants, are the same with the grants produced to the jury. It was also proved, that the beginning of the first grant was marked and intended as the beginning corner of No. 1, but no other tree was marked, nor was any survey ever made, but the plat was made out at Raleigh, and does not express on its face that the lines were run by the true meridian. It was also proved, that the beginning corner of No. 1, stood on the north-west side of Crow creek, and the line running thence down the creek, called for in the plat and patent, is south, forty degrees west. It further appeared, that Crow creek runs through a valley of good land, which is on an average about three miles wide, between mountains unfit for cultivation, and which extends from the beginning of survey No. 1, in the said chain of surveys, until it reaches below survey No. 13, in nearly a straight line, the course of which is nearly south, thirty-five degrees west, by the needle, and south, forty degrees west, by the true meridian ; that on the face of the plats annexed to the grants, the creek is represented as running through and across each grant. The lines in the certificate of survey do not expressly call for crossing the creek ; but each certificate and grant calls generally for land lying on Crow creek. If the lines of the tracts herein before mentioned, No. 12 and 13, in the said chain of surveys, be run *4471 according to the course of *the needle and the distances called for, -* they will not include Crow creek, or any part of it, and will not include the land in possession of the defendants. If they be run according to the true meridian, or so as to include Crow creek, they will include the lands in possession of the defendants. Whereupon, the counsel for the plaintiffs moved the court to instruct the jury, 1st. That the lines of the said lands ought to be run according to the true meridian, and not according to the needle. 2d. That the lines ought to be run so as to include Crow creek, and the lands in possession of the defendants. The court overruled both these motions, and instructed the jury, that the said grant must be run according to the course of the needle, and the distances called for in the said grants, and that the same could not legally be run, so as to include Crow creek, and that the said grants did not include the lands in possession of the defendants. To this opinion, an exception was taken by the plaintiff s counsel. A verdict and judgment were rendered for the defendants, and that judgment is now before this court on a writ of error. “ It is undoubtedly the practice of surveyors, and the practice was proved in this cause, to express in their plats and certificates of survey, the courses which are designated by the needle ; and if nothing exists to control the call for course and distance, the land must be bounded by the courses and distances of the patent, according to the magnetic meridian. 218 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. McIver v. Walker. 447 But it is a general principle, that the course and distance must yield to natural objects called for in the patent. All lands are supposed to be actually surveyed, *and the intention of the grant is to convey the land, according to that actual survey ; consequently, if marked trees *• and marked corners be found, conformable to the calls of the patent, or if water-courses be called for in the patent, or mountains, or any other natural objects, distances must be lengthened or shortened, and courses varied, so as to conform to those objects. The reason of the rule is, that it is the intention of the grant to convey the land actually surveyed, and mistakes in courses or distances are more probable, and more frequent, than in marked trees, mountains, rivers, or other natural objects, capable of being clearly designated, and accurately described. Had the survey in this case been actually made, and the lines had called to cross Crow creek, the courses and distances might have been precisely what they are, it might have been im-practicable to find corner, or other marked trees, and yet the land must have been so surveyed as to include Crow creek. The call in the lines of the patent, to cross Crow creek, would be one to which course and distance must necessarily yield. This material call is omitted, and from its omission arises the great difficulty of the cause. That the lands should not be described as lying on both sides of Crow creek, nor the lines call for crossing that creek, are such extraordinary omissions as to create considerable doubt with the court, in deciding whether there is any other description given in the patent, of sufficient strength to control the call for course and distance. The majority of the court is of opinion, that there is such a description. The *patent closes its description of the land granted, by a reference in the plat which is annexed. The laws of the state L require this annexation. In this plat, thus annexed to the patent, and thus referred to as describing the land granted, Crow creek is laid down as passing through the tract. Every person having knowledge of the grant, would also have knowledge of the plat, and would by that plat be instructed, that the lands lay on both sides the creek. There would be nothing to lead to a different conclusion but a difference of about five degrees in the course, should he run out the whole chain of surveys in order to find the beginning of No. 12 ; and he would know that such an error in the course would be corrected by such a great natural object as a creek, laid down by the surveyor in the middle of his plat. This would prove, notwithstanding the error in the course, that the lands on both sides of Crow creek were intended to be included in the survey, and intended to be granted by the patent. “It is the opinion of the majority of this court, that there is error in the opinion of the circuit court for the district of East Tennesee, in this, that the said court instructed the jury, that the grant under which the plaintiff claimed, could not be legally run so as to include Crow creek ; instead of directing the jury that the said grant must be so run as to include Crow creek, and to conform, as near as may be, to the plat annexed to the said grant ; wherefore, it is considered by this court that the said judgment be reversed and annulled, and the cause be remanded to the said circuit court, that a new trial may be had according to L law.” (9 Cranch 173.) Upon the cause being remanded to the circuit court for a new trial, the 219 450 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McIver v. Walker. plaintiff gave, in substance, the same evidence which he gave upon the first trial, and proved, or offered to prove, these additional facts—That it was the express and declared intention of the surveyor to locate the land upon Crow creek ; that his field-notes called for crossing Crow creek, and that he supposed the courses inserted in the grants would place the lands upon Crow creek. Upon the foftner trial, it was proved, and admitted by the parties, that the beginning of lot No. 1, was marked as a corner, but that no survey had ever been made of that lot, or of the lots of land in dispute. Upon the last trial, the witness gave the same testimony, and further stated, that a corner was marked for the beginning of lot No. 1. That the compass was set at this corner, and a chain or two might have been stretched upon the first course of the grant; but of this he was not certain. During the last trial, various objections were made by the defendants to the testimony offered by the plaintiff ; especially, to that which tended to prove that it was the intention of the surveyor to locate the land upon Crow creek, and that his field-notes called for crossing Crow creek. These objections were sustained by the court, and the testimony declared inadmissible. Upon the evidence given in the cause, various instructions were prayed by the plaintiff, all of which the court refused to give ; but charged the *4.511 jurX’ that from the testimony then adduced, they should find J that McCoy, the deputy-surveyor, when he went upon the ground to survey the land, did mark the beginning corner of lot No. 1, upon two poplars, and set his compass a given course, and that the chain-carriers stretched one or two chains upon that course, and that McCoy made his field-notes in conformity thereto, and that those field-notes were transmitted to James W. Lachey, the surveyor, who made out the plats annexed to the grants, and that he made out the said plats in conformity with the said field-notes, and that he marked down Crow creek, by guess, upon the plats, that this was so much of a legal and actual survey, as to show that the surveyor committed no mistake in what he did upon the ground, notwithstanding it might not be according to what he wished or intended in his own mind ; and in that case, the lessor of the plaintiff would be barred by the courses and distances called for in the grant. Under this instruction of the court, a verdict was found for the defendants, and judgment rendered accordingly, upon which the cause was again brought to this court by writ of error. This cause was argued at the last term, by Swann and Campbell, for the plaintiff in error, and by Williams, for the defendants in error, and was reargued, at the present term, March 1st, by Swann, for the plaintiffs in error, and by Jones and Williams, for the defendants in error. March 11th, 1819. Marshall, Ch. J., delivered the opinion of the *4591 courk—*The court has re-examined the opinion which it gave, when J this cause was formerly before it, and has not perceived any reason for changing that opinion. Nor do the new facts introduced into the cause, in any material degree, vary it. If there had been a settled course of decisions in Tennessee, upon their local laws, different from the judgment pio-nounced by this court, we should not hesitate to follow those decisions. But upon an examination of the cases cited at the bar, we do not perceive 220 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 452 Orr v. Hodgson. that such is the fact. The judgment of the circuit court is, therefore, reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings. Judgment.—This cause came on to be heard, on the transcript of the record, and was argued by counsel: on consideration whereof, it is the opinion of this court, that the circuit court erred in the instructions given to the jury : it is, therefore, adjudged and ordered, that the judgment of the circuit court for the district of East Tennessee, in this cause, be, and the same is, hereby reversed and annulled. And it is further ordered, that the said cause be remanded to the said circuit court for further proceedings to be had therein, according to law. *Okr v. Hodgson and Wife, et al. [*453 Aliens.—British treaty. Bill for rescinding a contract for the sale of lands, on the ground of defect of title, dismissed with costs. An alien may take an estate in lands, by the act of the parties, as by purchase ; but he cannot take by the act of the law, as by descent. Where a person dies, leaving issue, who are aliens, the latter are not deemed his heirs in law ; but the estate descends to the next of kin who have an inheritable blood, in the same manner as if no such alien issue were in existence. , The 6th article of the treaty of peace between the United States and Great Britain, of 1783, con-pletely protected the titles of British subjects to lands in the United States, which would have been liable to forfeiture, by escheat, for the defect of alienage; that article was not meant to be confined to confiscations jure belli.1 The 9th article of the treaty between the United States and Great Britain, of 1794, applies to the title of the parties, whatever it is, and gives it the same legal validity as if the parties were citizens ; it is not necessary that they show an actual possession or seisin, but only that the title was in them, at the time the treaty was made.1 2 The 9th article of the treaty of 1794 did not mean to include any other persons than such as were British subjects or citizens of the United States.” Appeal from the Circurt Court for the District of Columbia. The appellant filed his bill in equity in the court below, stating, that on the 10th day of January 1816, he purchased of the defendants, William Hodgson and Portia, his wife, and John Hopkins and Cornelia, his wife, a tract of land called Archer’s Hope, situate in the county of James’ City, in the state of Virginia, for the sum of $5000 and gave his bond to the said Hodgson and Hopkins for *the payment of the said purchase-money. That, at the [■*._. time of the purchase, the defendants affirmed to the plaintiff, that *-they were seised in right of the said Portia and Cornelia, of a good, sure and indefeasible estate of inheritance, in fee-simple, in the said tract of land, and had full power and lawful authority to convey the same, and in consequence of such affirmation, the plaintiff made the purchase, and gave his bond, as aforesaid. And further stating, that he had since discovered, that the defendants had no title to the said lands, but that the title thereto was either vested in the children of the Countess Barziza, or that the commonwealth of Virginia was entitled to them by escheat. That Colonel Philip Ludwell, a native of 1 Shanks v. Dupont, 3 Pet. 242. 2 Blight v. Rochester, 7 Wheat. 535 ; Hughes v. Edwards, 9 Id. 489. . 221 454 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Orr v. Hodgson. the said commonwealth, being seised in fee of the said lands, had two daughters, Hannah and Lucy, born of the same mother, -in Virginia. That, some years before the year 1767, he removed with his family, including his said two daughters, to England, where he died, in the year 1767, having, by his last will, devised all his estates to his said two daughters, and appointed as their guardians, Peter Paradise, John Paradise, of the city of London, and William Dampier. That Hannah, one of the said daughters, married William Lee, a native of Virginia, and died, leaving issue, two daughters, the said defendants, Portia Hodgson and Cornelia Hopkins, who are citizens of Virginia, residing in the district of Columbia. That Lucy Ludwell, the other daughter above mentioned, during her infancy, to wit, in May 1769, at the city of London, married*the said John Paradise, a British subject, by 4,. ■, *whom she had issue, a daughter, named Lucy, born in England, -* about the year 1770. That the said Lucy Paradise, daughter of the said John and Lucy Paradise, on the 4th of April 1787, at the said city of London, married Count Barziza, a Venetian subject, by whom she had issue, a son, named John, born in the city of Venice, on the 10th of August 1796. That the said John Paradise, in the year 1787, came to Virginia, with his wife, and returned with her to England, in 1789, where he died, in 1796, having, by his last will, devised all his personal estate, charged with some pecuniary legacies, to his wife, but making no disposition of his real estate, and leaving no issue, but the Countess Barziza. That the said Countess Barziza died intestate, in Venice, on the 1st of August 1800, leaving her said sons, John and Philip, her only issue ; and that neither her sons, nor herself, nor her husband, were ever in the United States. That the said Count Barziza was also dead. That the said Lucy Paradise, after the death of the said John Paradise, her husband, treated the said lands as her own, exercising acts of ownership over the same, and about the year 1805, returned to Virginia, where she died intestate, in 1814, being in possession of said lands at her decease, and leaving no issue but the two sons of Countess Barziza above mentioned, who, at the time of her death, had not become citizens or subjects of any other state or power than Venice and Austria. That by marriage articles, made before the marriage of John Paradise and Lucy Ludwell, between the said John Paradise, of the first part, the said _ Peter Paradise, his father, *of the second part, the said Lucy Ludwell J of the third part, the said William Dampier, of the fourth part, and James Lee and Robert Carry, of the fifth part, reciting the said intended marriage, and that the said Peter Paradise had agreed to pay his son 4000?. sterling, at the marriage, and that his executors should pay 4000?. sterling more to Lee and Carry, upon the trusts thereinafter mentioned. And that the said John Paradise and Lucy had agreed, that all the estates of the said Lucy Ludwell should be settled as thereinafter mentioned, but that, by reason of her infancy, no absolute settlement of the same could then be made. It was witnessed, that in consideration of the marriage, and for making provision for the said Lucy Ludwell, and the issue of the said John Paradise on her body to be begotten, and for the consideration of ten shillings, to the said John Paradise, paid by the said Lee and Carry, and for divers other good causes and valuable considerations, him, the said John Paradise, thereunto moving, he, the # said John Paradise, covenanted with said Lee and Carry, that if the marriage took effect, he would make, or cause 222 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 456 Orr v. Hodgson. to be made, such acts and deeds as would convey all the estates of the said Lucy Ludwell to the said Lee and Carry, upon trust, as to that part of the real property, which was situate in Virginia : 1. To the use of John Paradise for life, remainder to the use of all or any of the children of the \narriage, for such estates (not exceeding estates-tail) as John Paradise and the said Lucy Ludwell, by deed, during the coverture, or as the survivor of them, by deed or will, should appoint, and in default *of such appointment, to the use of all the children of the marriage, as >-tenants in common in tail, with cross-remainders in tail, remainder to the use of such person as the said Lucy Ludwell should appoint, and in default of such appointment, to -the use of the survivor of John Paradise and Lucy Ludwell in fee-simple : 2. With power to the husband and “wife, to make leases not exceeding twenty-one years : 3. With power to the trustees to sell any part of the estate, and apply the proceeds to the purchase of other lands in England, subject to the use of the marriage articles. And as to the personal estate of the said Lucy Ludwell, to the use of John Paradise for life, remainder to Lucy Ludwell for life, remainder to the children of the marriage, as the parents should appoint, and in default of such appointment, to the use of all the children of the marriage, share and share alike : but if there should be no children of the marriage, or being such, if all of them should die before the age of twenty-one, or marriage, then to the use of such person as the said Lucy Ludwell should appoint, and in default of such appointment, to the survivor of the said John Paradise and Lucy Ludwell, in absolute property. And as to the second of the said sums of 40004, to the trustees, upon trust for the use of John Paradise for life, remainder for Lucy Ludwell for life, remainder to the children of the marriage, in the same manner as the personal estate of the said Lucy Ludwell was settled : provided, that if -there should be no issue of the marriage, then to the use of John Paradise in absolute property : provided also, that it should and might be *lawful for the trustees, with the consent of the said John rs)e Paradise and Lucy Ludwell, or the survivor of them, and after the •-death of such survivor, of their or his own authority, to lay out the same in lands in England, to the use of John Paradise for life, remainder to Lucy Ludwell for life, remainder to the children of the marriage in the same manner as the lands of the said Lucy Ludwell were settled. That after the death of the said Peter Paradise, the said John Paradise, as his executor, paid the last mentioned 40004 to the trustees aforesaid, who invested it in the British funds, and by deed dated the 8th of December 1783, and to which the said John Paradise and Lucy Ludwell were parties, they declared the same subject to the uses of the marriage settlement. „ The bill further alleged, that the plaintiff, upon discovering the foregoing circumstances, applied to the defendants, and requested them to rescind the contract, and to deliver up the bond to the plaintiff to be cancelled, the same having been obtained by misrepresentation, or through mistake, without any consideration valuable in law, and at the same time, offered to convey back to them any title, interest or estate, which might have been conveyed to him by the defendants. But that the defendants refused, and threatened to bring a suit at common law, upon the said bond, and to enforce payment thereof, contrary to equity. Conoluding with the usual prayer for a discovery, &c., and for a decree rescinding the sale of lands, and that the 223 458 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Orr v. Hodgson. defendants should be compelled to deliver up the bond to be cancelled, and * J for further relief, &c. *To which bill the defendant demurred. The bill was dismissed by the court below, with costs, and the cause was brought by appeal to this court. February 18th, 1819. The cause was argued by Jones, for the defendants and respondents—no counsel appearing for the appellant. March 11th. Story, Justice, delivered the opinion of the court.—The whole merits of this cause rest upon the question, whether the defendants, Portia Hodgson, and Cornelia Hopkins, took an estate in fee-simple, in one moiety of the land stated in the bill, by descent, as nieces and heirs of Lucy Paradise, widow of John Paradise, upon her death in 1814. If they did, then the contract for the sale of the land to the plaintiff ought to be fulfilled ; if not, then the contract ought to be rescinded. Two objections are urged against the title. First, that Lucy Paradise, at the time of her death, was a British subject, and so not capable of passing the land in question by descent secondly, if so entitled, yet, upon her death, the land escheated to the commonwealth of Virginia, for want of heirs legally entitled to take the same by descent. It appears, that Lucy Paradise took her moiety of the estate in question, by devise from her father, Philip Ludwell, who was a native of Virginia, where also, his daughter Lucy was born. Sometime before the year 1767, he removed with his family, including this daughter, to England, * , where he died in *1767. In 1769, this daughter was married in England to John Paradise (a British subject), by whom she had issue a daughtei, Lucy, who was born in England, about 1770, and who, afterwards, in 1787, in England, married Count Barziza, a Venetian subject, by whom she had two sons, one born in Venice, in February 1789, and the other in Venice, in August 1796, both of whom are now living. The Countess Barziza died in Venice, in August 1800, leaving no other issue except her two sons, and neither she, nor her husband, nor her sons, were ever in the United States. In the year 1787, John Paradise came with his wife to Virginia, and returned with her to England, in the year 1789, where he died, in 1796. After the death of her husband, Lucy Paradise treated the land in controversy as her own, exercising acts of ownership over it; and about the year 1805, returned to Virginia, where she died intestate, in possession of the land, in 1814, leaving no issue but her two grandsons, the children of the Countess Barziza, and the defendants Portia and Cornelia, her nieces, who would be her heirs-at-law, if no such issue were living. From this summary statement, it is clear, that the two sons of the Countess Barziza are aliens to the commonwealth of Virginia, and of course, cannot take the estate in question, by descent from their grandmother, unless their disability is removed by the treaty of 1794. Forthough an alien may take an estate, by the act of the parties, as, by purchase ; yet he can never take by the act of the law, as, by descent, for he has no inher-$ _ itable blood. But the *objection now supposed to exist, is, that under -* these circumstances, although the grandsons cannot, as aliens, take by descent; yet they answer in some sort, to the description of “ heirs,” and therefore, prevent the estate from descending to the nieces, who have a legal capacity to take, because, strictly speaking, they are not heirs. The 224' 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 461 Orr v. Hodgson. law is certainly otherwise. Where a person dies, leaving issue, who are aliens, the latter are not deemed his heirs-at-law, for they have no inheritable blood, and the estate descends to the next of kin, who have an inheritable blood, in the same manner as if no such alien issue weré in existence. 2 Bl. Com. 249 ; Duroure v. Jones., 4 T. R. 300 ; Com. Dig. Alien, C, 1. In the present case, therefore, the defendants, the nieces of Lucy Paradise, are her heirs-at-law, entitled to take by descent, whatever estate could rightfully pass to her heirs, unless the British treaty of 1794 enlarged the capacity of her grandsons to take by descent, a point which will be hereafter considered. And this brings us to the other question in the cause, whether Lucy Paradise, under the circumstances of the case, had such an estate in the land, as could by 1/UW pass by descent to her heirs ? There is no question that she took an estate in fee-simple, by devise from her father ; but it is supposed, that although born in Virginia, by her removal to England, with her father, before, and remaining there until long after, the American revolution, she must be considered as electing to remain a ^British subject, and thus became, as well by operation of law, as ric by the statutes of Virginia on this subject, an alien to that common- *-wealth. And if she became an alien, then the estate held by her could not pass by descent, but for defect of inheritable blood, escheated to the government. Com. Dig. Alien, C, 2 ; Co. Litt. 2 ó. Admitting that Lucy Paradise did so become an alien, it is material to inquire, what effect the treaty of peace of 1783 had upon her case ; and upon the best consideration that we can give to it, we are of opinion that the sixth article of that treaty (a) completely protected her estate from'forfeiture, by way of escheat for the defect of alienage. That defect was a disability solely occasioned by the war, and the separation of the colony from the mother country ; and under such circumstances, a seizure of the estate by the government, upon an inquest of office, for the supposed forfeiture, would have been a confiscation of the property, in the sense in which that term is used in the treaty. When the 6th article of the treaty declared, “ that no future confiscation should be made,” it could not mean to confine the operation of the language to confiscations jure belli; for the treaty itself *extinguished the war, and with it, the rights growing out of war ; r*.., and when it further declared, that no person should, on account of *■ the part he had taken in the war, suffer any future loss or damage, either in his person, liberty or property, it must have meant to protect him from all future losses of property, which, but for the war, would have remained inviolable. The fifth article of the treaty also materially illustrates and confirms this construction. It is there agreed, that congress shall recommend to the state legislatures to provide for the restitution of all estates of British subjects, &c., which had been confiscated. Yet, why restore such estates, if, eo instant i, they were forfeitable on account of alienage ? This subject (®) Which provides, “ that there shall be no future confiscations made, nor any prosecutions commenced, against any person or persons, for, or by reason of, the part which he or they may have taken in the present war; and that no person shall, on that account, suffer any future loss or damage, either in his person, liberty or property; and that those who may be in confinement on such charges, at the time of the ratification of the treaty in America, shall be immediately set at liberty, and the prosecutions so commenced be discontinued.” 4 Wheat.—15 ' 225 463 SUPREME COURT . [Feb’y Orr v. Hodgson. has been heretofore before us, and although no opinion was then pronounced, it was most deliberately considered. We do not now profess to go at large into the reasoning upon which our present opinion is founded. It would require more leisure than is consistent with other imperious duties ; and we must, therefore, content ourselves with stating, that the doctrine here asserted is the decided judgment of the court. If the case were not protected by the treaty of 1783, it might become necessary to consider, whether it is aided by the ninth article of the treaty of 1794, which declares, that British subjects, who now hold lands in the United States, shall continue to hold them, according to the nature and tenure of their respective estates and titles therein, and that as to such lands, and the legal remedies incident thereto, neither they, nor their heirs or * assigns, *shall be regarded as aliens. It does not appear, by the bill -1 in this case, that Lucy Paradise was in the actual possession or seisin of the land, at the time of the treaty. Nor is it necessary, because the treaty applies to the title, whatever it is, and gives it the same legal validity as if the parties were citizens. Harden v. Fisher, 1 Wheat. 300. But although it does not directly appear by the bill, what the title of Lucy Paradise was, at the time of the treaty ; yet, as the title is asserted in her, both before and after the treaty, and there is no allegation of any intermediate transfer, it must be presumed, in this suit, that she never parted with her title. It follows, that in this view also, her title was completely confirmed, free from the taint of alienage ; and that by the express terms of the treaty, it might lawfully pass to her heirs. And here it becomes material to ascertain, whether the treaty of 1794, under the description of heirs, meant to include any other persons than such as were British .subjects or American citizens, at the time of the descent cast; and it is our opinion, that the intention was not to include any other persons. It cannot be presumed, that the treaty stipulated for benefits to any persons who were aliens to both governments. Such a construction would give to this class of cases, privileges and immunities far beyond those of the natives of either country ; and it would also materially interfere with the public policy common to both. We have, therefore, no hesitation to reject any interpretation which would give to persons, aliens to both *governments, the privileges of both ; and in this predicament are the J children of the Countess Barziza. The rule, then, of the common law, which gives the estate to the next heirs having inheritable blood, must prevail in this case. We have not thought it necessary to go into an examination of the articles for a marriage settlement, entered into between Lucy Paradise and John Paradise, on their marriage, for two reasons : first, the articles were merely executory, and being entered into by Mrs. Paradise, when under age, and not afterwards ratified by her, they were not binding upon her; secondly, if they were binding, yet, inasmuch as the only persons in whose favor they could now be executed, are aliens, incapable of holding the estate to their own use, no court of equity would, upon the general policy of the law, feel itself at liberty to decree in their favor. Decree dismissing the bill affirmed, with costs. («) (a) Mabshall, Chief Justice, did not sit in this cause. 226 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. *466 *Astok v. Wells et al. Recording act.—Fraudulent conveyance. Under the registry act of Ohio, which provides that certain deeds “ shall be recorded in the county in which the lands, tenements and hereditaments, so conveyed or affected, shall be situate within one year after the day on which such deed or conveyance was executed ; and, unless recorded in the manner, and within the time, aforesaid, shall be deemed fraudulent against any subsequent bond fide purchaser, without knowledge of the existence of such former deed of conveyance,” lands lying in Jefferson county were conveyed by deed ; and a new county, called Tuscarawas county, was erected, partly from Jefferson, after the execution and before the recording of the deed, in which new county the lands were included; and the deed was recorded in Jefferson: Held, that this registry was not sufficient, either to preserve its legal priority, or to give it the equity resulting from constructive notice to a subsequent purchaser. Notice of a prior incumbrance to an agent, is notice to the principal. Under the statute of fraudulent conveyances of Ohio, which provides, that “ every gift, grant or conveyance of lands, tenements, hereditaments, &c., made or obtained, with intent to defraud creditors of their just and lawful debts or damages, or to defraud or deceive the person or persons who shall purchase such lands, &c., shall be deemed utterly void, and of no effect Held, that a bond fide purchaser, without notice, could not be affected by the intent of the grantor to defraud creditors. Appeal from the Circuit Court of Ohio. The bill in equity filed in this cause stated, that Arnold Henry Dorhman, in 1806, became indebted to the United States, in the sum of $6515.10, for duties upon the importation of certain goods, payable at the custom-house in the city of New York. The plaintiff, Henry Astor, became *bound with Dorhman for the pay-ment of those duties ; and thereupon, Dohrman, to secure Astor, *-executed and delivered the mortgage deed of the 14th of August 1806, in the bill mentioned, for the 13th township, in 7th range, then lying in Jefferson county, in the state of Ohio : and Dorhman became further indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $2700, to secure which, upon said township, he afterwards, on the 25th of August 1807, executed another mortgage deed of the same premises. Both the deeds were recorded in the county of Jefferson, on the 2d of October 1810, and in Tuscarawas, on the 21st of October 1812, which county was erected in part from Jefferson, after the execution, and before the recording therein of said deeds. On the 26th of August 1807, the plaintiff released to Dorhman onefourth of said township, by deed, recorded in Tuscarawas county, on the 9th of March 1813. On the 24th of October 1810, Dorhman gave the defendant Wells, a deed of trust of the three-fourths of said township, not released,’ to secure the payment of $5000, for which the defendant Wells had become liable for Dorhman, by indorsing his paper, at the bank of Steubenville, which was recorded in Tuscarawas, the 13th of January 1811. On the 12th of February 1813, the defendant Wells took another deed from Dorhman, for the quarter sections which had been released, which was recorded in Tuscarawas county on the 10th of March 1813, to secure $3000, for further ¡bdorsements by Wells for Dorhman. The bill then charged the defendant Wells with notice of the plaintiff’s deeds and *lien upon said lands, before his deeds, indorsements, or any payments made by him ; and *-hat he accepted the deeds, made the indorsements, and payments, if any, with knowledge, &c.; charged a secret understanding, that the released sections, conveyed to Wells, by the last-mentioned deed, were to inure to orhman or his family ; and that neither transaction between Wells and 227 468 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Astor v. Wells. Dorhman was bond fide. Dorhman died on the 21st of February 1813, nine days after his last deed to AV ells, who commenced a suit against the heirs of Dorhman, on the 27th of August following ; and obtained a decree of sale, .under which he purchased the premises ; all which was charged to be fraudulent. The widow and heirs of Dorhman, by their answer, admitted all the deeds, and answered, generally, that they knew nothing of the other transactions. The answer of Wells admitted the plaintiff’s deeds ; stated his own deeds to be bond fide, and denied notice and fraud. Obadiah Jennings, who was examined as a witness in the cause, testified that he prepared the first deed to Wells, and saw it executed, but said that Dorhman employed him, and he considered himself exclusively employed by Dorhman, and not as the agent or attorney of Wells, in that transaction ; that it was probable, he had held some conversation with Wells as to his liabilities for Dorhman, and the nature of the security to be given, before Dorhman applied to him to draw the deed ; and that Wells sent the deed to him in a letter, to carry to be recorded in Tuscarawas county. Dorhman informed him, that Astor’s agent had brought Astor’s deeds and put them on *record ; and Dorhman wished to give Wells the preference, and -* consulted him how it could be done. The witness examined the record, and knew of Astor’s deeds and lien on those lands. He advised Dorhman to give Wells a deed, which, if recorded in Tuscarawas, would give him the preference ; but never gave Wells any information respecting Astor’s deeds. March 6th. Brush, for the appellant and plaintiff, argued : 1. That the defendant’s (Wells) deed was void, under the second section of the statute of Ohio, entitled an ‘f act for the prevention of frauds,” &c., which declares, ((that every gift, grant or conveyance of lands, tenements, hereditaments, &c., made or obtained with intent to defraud creditors of their just and lawful debts or damages, or to defraud or deceive the person or persons who shall purchase such lands, &c., shall be deemed utterly void, and of no effect.” Rev. Laws of Ohio, 321. The bill shows Astor to be a creditor; the answer admits it ; and Jennings proves that Dorhman informed him such was the fact. The debt being secured by mortgage upon the lands m controversy, only makes the fraud more palpable. Still, he was and is a creditor ; and it is manifest, Dorhman made the deed to Wells to defraud Astor, his creditor. 2. The recording of Astor’s deeds in Jefferson county, was notice to the defendant, Wells. During all the time given for recording, the lands lay in that county ; it was, therefore, the proper place for recording those deeds, * , and *the recording afterwards must have relation to the time when J and the place where they ought to have been recorded ; considering the township as part of the county for that purpose. Heath v. Rose, 12 Johns. 140 ; 1 Johns. Cas. 85 ; Vin. Abr., tit. Relation, 288. And the recording ought to-be considered as nunc pro tunc, yet not so as to affect any deed made and recorded prior to the making this record : and as to all subsequent, no inconvenience or injustice could be complained of, inasmuch as every purchaser would be bound to search those records for all deeds there recorded prior to the division. Using such diligence as he was bound 228 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 470 Astor v. Wells. to use, knowing the lands originally lay in that county, he would have discovered Astor’s deed there recorded, before any deed made to him ; and ought, therefore, to be charged with notice. To what time does the act of assembly relate, when it says the deed shall be “ recorded in the county in which such lands shall be situate?” Revised Laws of Ohio, 318. To the time of making and delivery of the deed, or to the time of recording ? The latter would make the deed take effect from the recording, not from the delivery, as is the law. The case of Taylor v. McDonald's Heirs, is not analogous, as there the lands did not lie in the county where the deed was recorded; and the question was upon the effect of the deed at law. 3. By accepting the deed prepared by Jennings, the defendant, Wells, has made Jennings his agent, by legal implication ; and notice to him is notice to his principal. Jennings acted in the transaction ; advised Dorh-man how to give Wells the preference ; *prepared the deed ; saw it executed, and at the request of Wells carried, it to be recorded ; and *■ had some previous conversation with Wells as to his liabilities for Dorhman, and the nature of the security to be given. In De Neve v. De Neve, Ambl. 438, the defendant “ denied notice of the first articles and settlement, till six months after the marriage; and denied that Norton was employed as her solicitor, though she put confidence in him, because he was concerned for her husband, and recommended by him, who assured her, he (Norton) would make a handsome provision for her; and Norton assured her, he had taken care to secure her an annuity of £150 a year, and did not then, or any time before, give her any notice of any former settlement.” Although the defendant here has not been as candid as the defendant was in that case, yet by his artful taciturnity and scanty pleading upon the most important subject, much is to be inferred against him. In the case of Jennings v. Moore, 2 Vern. 609, Blincorne acted the very part Jennings has in this transaction, so far as the conduct of either is material to affect the purchaser; and so far as there is any difference, it would seem, the case at bar presents much the strongest ground of equity, to set aside the subsequent incumbrancer or purchaser. Moore had completed his purchase, by paying the money; Wellshad not. Blincorne was a bond fide creditor, and had an interest in the estate of Whitlatch,,the vendor, and his object was, to secure an honest debt; but Wells’s purchase, and the sale to him, was made to *defraud and defeat a bond fide creditor. Moore was charged, upon the naked fact of acceptance ; but in this case, strong circumstances *■ and inferences, beside that, implicate Wells. He, most undoubtedly, knew the handwriting of Jennings, his friend, and was bound to inquiry ; but Jennings was careful not to mention it to him in any way ! So was Blincorne, and so Norton ; and the care which all have taken for the purchaser implicates him with their agency, if he will accept, they having notice, and contriving to conceal from him, is the ground of malafides, and the foundation for the charge of notice against the purchaser. Brotherton v. Hatt, 2 ^ern. 574, maintains the same principle, and is called by Lord Hardwicks a clear authority.” The same scriveners were witnesses, and engrossed all the securities, and were quasi agents for all the lenders. Not that the fact Qi agency was otherwise established, than by the fact of accepting or receiving the securities, engrossed by the same scriveners, who had notice ; the concealment of which by them, if the law could tolerate it, would make 229 472 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Astor v. Wells. frauds practicable, without the means of detection. In the latter case above cited, it does not appear, that Mrs. Hatt, the third mortgagee, had any better knowledge who the scriveners were, than Wells in this case. ’ If such had been the fact, that she knew who engrossed the deed for her, and such fact deemed important, it would have been noticed in the report. And it is not mentioned as a fact, or material, in the case of Le Neve v. Le Neve, where *4H31 *the case is cited with approbation by the Lord Chancellor ; but in all J these cases, they seem to have gone much upon the ground of the fraud of those third persons, and the danger of sanctioning such fraud, by deciding stricti juris, upon the mere ground of the laches of the first purchaser, in not recording his deed within the time prescribed, or not before the second deed. And although these cases profess to go upon the ground of an agency, yet it is manifest, such agency was presumed in each, and that the decision rested virtually upon the fraud which was established against persons, not concerned in interest, thereby fixing the sting of disability upon the temptation to commit fraud, by whatever motive prompted or encouraged. 4. The defendant, Wells, has not shown the time of hie payment, nor denied notice at or before the same, and is, therefore, chargable with notice before his purchase was completed. Tourvilles. Nash, 3 P. Wms. 307 ; Story v. Ld. Windsor, 2 Atk. 630. After notice, Wells ought to have compelled Dorhman to make payment, by applying the other quarter township, instead of endorsing more, and securing that also, thereby taking all hope from Astor. His conscience was affected, before the first arrangement was completed, while he had time and opportunity to save himself, and he was bound to that course. 5. The defendant has not denied notice indirectly, by implication, or notice to one whom the law will consider his agent. His answer is stiff and formal, especially, with respect to the first deed to him; careful *a »741 *not to say h°w matter was managed ; and, considering all the J circumstances of this case, it must be considered as a declaration that he had no actual knowledge of Astor’s deeds, not having received positive information that such were in existence. 6. Can the defendant, Wells, maintain a title, or claim the benefit of an interest, derived to him through the fraud of Dorhman and Jennings? If he can, the doctrine and principle of many cases are overturned, and we have a new law upon the subject of frauds. What is said in Le Neve v. Le Neve, Ambl. 447, is quite applicable. But in a late decision, this doctrine is fully recognised in a case like the present, though with fewer circumstances of fraud to justify its application. Hildreth v. Sands, 2 Johns, Ch.*35, and cases there cited. The cases cited to the third point are considered as applicable here ; the mala fides of the actors in those cases was the ground of considering them agents by relation; the purchaser accepting his deed from polluted hands, makes their acts and knowledge his own. Sir Samuel Romilly (arguenddj, in Huguenin v. Baseley, 14 Ves. 288, says, “though no direct authority is produced, your Lordship, dispensing justice by the same rule as your predecessors, upon such a subject, not confined within the narrow limits of precedent, will, as a new relation appears, look into the principles that govern the human heart, and decide in a case far the strongest that has yet occurred upon this ground alone, from its infinite importance 230 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. Astor V. Wells. *475 to community.” *And the Chancellor thereupon lays down the doctrine as well established, “ that interests gained by the fraud of other persons, cannot be maintained.” It would be infinitely mischievous, if they could, and as there said, “ would be almost impossible ever to reach a case of fraud.” The genus, or kind, of fraud, seems not to be sb much regarded as that such is the character of the transaction. Doddridge, contra.—1. The registry act, and whatever other statutory regulations each sovereign society may adopt for the transfer of titles to real property, are matters of positive institution ; the English registry act and statute of enrolments, however, have furnished precedents which, in one way or another, have been followed up in each state ; and the decisions upon them have been so uniform, as to have become quite familiar. The attempt here to impeach a deed, innocently obtained, on the ground, that it was fraudulently intended by the grantor, is quite novel, and as dangerous as it is novel. It proceeds on the ground, that the clause in the state law is to be expounded in the disjunctive, and that “ or ” is not to be expounded so as to mean “ and.” The first objection to this interpretation is, that it supposes the word “ made,” can be satisfied by the act of a vendor alone ; and the word “obtained,” in like manner, by the single act of the vendee, which is impossible. No deed can be made, without the assent of two persons, at least. Deeds take effect upon the delivery ; which is never effected, without the concurrence of the person who receives. The second objection is, that it puts *to hazard the interest of every purchaser ; as every pur- r4s chaser must depend for his security, not upon his own innocence, but *-upon the continual integrity of the vendor ; who, if, at any time, and for any reason, he can be brought to confess his own fraudulent intentions, in answer to a bill against him and his vendee, can ruin the latter. A third and decisive objection is, that the statute of frauds, if it be susceptible of the complainant’s interpretation, repeals the registry act, which is not pretended. The registry act, then in force in Ohio, provided, that all deeds executed out of the state, “ should be recorded in the county in which the lands, tenements and hereditaments, so conveyed or affected, shall be situate, within one year after the day on which such deed or conveyance was executed ; and unless recorded in the manner, and within the time aforesaid, shall be deemed fraudulent against any subsequent bond fide purchaser, without knowledge of the existence of such former deed of conveyance.” Now, if the act of Dorhman, in giving his first deed to Wells, is fraudulent, as being made with intent to postpone Astor to him, and for that reason is void, then the registry act is effectually done away ; because no man, under any circumstances, can make a second sale, by concealing a former one, without being guilty of as much fraud as Dorhman, at the least. His case was a hard one; he had two creditors, one of whom must suffer, and his wishes were to prefer one of them. He sought no benefit by this act to himself, nor can his conduct be as censurable as if he were selling to put money into his own pocket. If the plaintiff be right, *the parties to 1*4^ a first and second sale stand as at the common law. L 2. The doctrine of constructive notice, is entirely exploded. The term never did convey the true meaning of the courts. There is something almost absurd, in the idea of proceeding upon a question of fraud by con- 231 All SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Astor v. Wells. struction. The cases upon this subject, only proceed upon two principles: first, actual notice to the party; and second, to the agent of the party. The notice arising from a suit pending; a registry or any public record, is not a matter of construction. .The lispendens, the register of record, furnish such irresistible evidence of notice in fact, that the party is not at liberty to urge the contrary ; and the relief is granted on the ground of notice in fact. Nor is this an arbitrary rule : all men are parties to the public proceedings of the courts of justice, and presumed to be present at them; and also parties to every legal registry, or other public record ; what the laws require to be done, and is done according to those laws, they are, in like manner, parties to, and are supposed to be acquainted with ; and because the laws have provided those public documents for the security of every man, it is his fault, if he sees them not, and therefore, he is adjudged to have seen them in fact. But this reason can have no application to the proceedings of a court not of competent jurisdiction, nor to registries and records not made according to law. In respect to proceedings in courts of incompetent jurisdiction, or irregular records, they are only notice, if in fact, they have been heard or seen *4S81 by Party> so as to *Put him upon inquiry. Sugd. on Vend. 470, J and cases there cited. It is believed, that no decisions have been had upon this statute ; but the statutes of Kentucky and of Pennsylvania are like that of Ohio : and in the case of Taylor v. McDonald’s Heirs, 2 Bibb 420, the court in Kentucky decide, that a record made, not in the proper county, is not of itself notice. The court say, “the law requires the deed shall be recorded, not only within the limited time, in order to be valid against a subsequent purchaser without notice, but also in the county where the land lies. This provision is obviously intended to enable persons to trace the legal title, with the industry and attention essential to a compliance with the act.” That case is stronger than is necessary for our purpose; because in that, the deed was recorded in time, but in the wrong county; and in ours, the party has failed in respect of both time and place. The case of Heister’s Lessee v. Fortner, 2 Binn. 10, is an authority to the same effect; and also, that a record made within the time, and within the proper county, is void, if made upon less proof than the law requires. An illegal registry, then, is not proof of notice. Nor does the doctrine of relation apply. All the cases cited on the subject of relation prove, that the act by which a transaction is completed, has relation to the beginning; as, for instance, the presentation of a copyhold, to the surrender: but that this relation is a legal fiction, operating between the parties only, and without any *4.'701 effect upon third persons or their *rights. But the use made of this -* fiction, whereby an illegal registry is made so to relate, either to the date of the execution, or proper time of registering a deed, as to affect the estate of a third person, is an invention of such modern date, as to have acquired, as yet, very little authority in this country. If the obvious policy of the law, and the authority of the decisions referred to, are satisfactory, then the case of Wells is the very strongest that can be imagined. Suppose, he had gone to the registry, to look for the record of any conveyance of the lands in question, who could suppose, he would examine the entries upon it, after the date of the separation of the counties, for a conveyance of lands m Tuscarawas ? 3. It is said, that Wells does not show himself to be a complete purchaser, 232 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 479 Astor v. Wells. without notice, because he had not made full payment. The law is admitted to be as stated in respect of a purchase and sale ; but the reason given for it has no application here. The reason is, that when the second purchaser receives notice of the first, he should stay his hand—refuse a deed or withhold payment ; and because this is in his power, it is his moral duty to do it. But in the case of Wells it was otherwise : he was already accountable to the bank for the whole amount. This point has been determined, in a case of precisely the same nature, as to a bank indorsement. Lyle v. Luconib, 5 Binn. 585. The rule, that notice to an agent is notice to his principal, and consequently, his fraud affects his principal, as much as if committed by himself, is not disputed. But the rule is explained and qualified, *in order to give security to the party.affected by it. The agent r*^gg must be employed by the party—in the same transaction. ’ Notice to L the agent is not sufficient, unless acquired by him, in the course of the transaction in which he is employed ; notice otherwise acquired, will not affect his principal. A general agency is not sufficient : it must be in the particular case ; and the employment must be to purchase, or to make or treat of terms—not merely to draw a deed. If the agent is employed by one of the parties, notice to him shall affect that party only ; where both employ him, his fraud shall attach to both. Lowther v. Carlton, 2 Atk. 139 ; Warwick v. Warwick, 3 Ibid. 291,294. And it is only necessary to deny the agency and all circumstances from which fraud may be inferred, where those matters are charged in the bill. Newman v. Wallace, 2 Bro. C. C. 143. The propriety of the application of the general rule as to agents, in the cases of Brotherton v. Hatt, 2 Vern. 574 ; Jennings v. Moore, Ibid. 609 ; Le Neve v. Le Neve, Ambl. 436, has been questioned. In each of these cases, the fact of agency is charged, with all the circumstances of the transaction, from which that fact could be inferred. As those three cases contain nearly the whole lawr upon the subject of notice to an agent, it is only necessary to show that neither of them furnish a precedent to affect Wells. In Le Neve v. Le Neve, the agent was defendant, and he denied his agency, and admitted notice. The other only denied notice to herself; and the ground of decision is, that she admits enough in *her answer to make Norton her agent, In Jennings v. Moore, one person was treating of a purchase for him- *• self, and during the transaction received notice ; and perfected the contract in the name of a third person, who accepted of it, without notice. The authority of this decision has been doubted, but with very little reason. In Brotherton v. Hatt, the agents were, scriveners ; they kept an office, and their profession was to drive bargains, effect loans and perfect securities. The court adjudge them to be agents, and that notice to them was notice to their principals ; not because one of the parties had consulted them, and procured them merely to write a deed which another accepted. By the term “ scrivener,” something more is meant than a conveyancer. The reason for the decision is, that all the loans were effected by them, at their office, and all the securities also ; and from the nature of their employment, the court decided them to be the agents of each party, in effecting the loans and the securities ; but whether the court decided these facts upon proper testimony or not, is immaterial. The principle is, that notice to him who is employed by both parties to effect a loan, and prepared a security is notice to both parties. The relation of agent and principal cannot exist, without the 233 481 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Astor v. Wells. consent of the principal. In every case cited, and in all others, the fraud is charged as it happened, either to the principal or his agent, and in the latter case, the agent is made a defendant. Agency or not, is a fact, which if stated and denied, must, like every other fact, be proved. In our case, all that is charged is denied, and no part of it is proved. *. * Brush, in reply, insisted, that the construction of the act of fraudu- J lent conveyances, contended for on the part of the defendants, could not be supported. It was undoubtedly competent for the legislature to say, such instruments should be void for fraud, whether the donee or grantee be party in the fraud or not, and they have so said. Taking, the entire section together, it is sensible only as it reads ; but by altering “or” to “and” a new meaning is interpolated. The rule upon the subject is, that such construction shall be given, as will give effect to every word, if possible, that none may have been employed to no purpose. The construction, moreover, is arbitrary ; contrary to a very plain text ; substituting one word for another, in a law which is neither ambiguous nor doubtful ; not for the purpose of suppressing fraud, and advancing the remedies, but for the purpose of restraining the operation of a remedial act. A deed, void for fraud, is not protected by the registry act, w’hich relates only to purchasers, and never was intended to affect creditors. It has never received such a construction in the state, or elsewhere, nor will the language warrant it. Speaking of the deed of a prior purchaser, it says, “ unless recorded in a manner, and within the time aforesaid, shall be deemed fraudulent against any subsequent bond fide purchaser, without knowledge of the existence of such former deed of conveyance.” There cannot be a subsequent purchaser, unless there had been & former one. Besides, the registry act was passed in 1805 ; the staute of frauds and perjuries, protecting creditors against the frauds of their debtors, in 1810, five years afterwards ; *and must be ■J considered as repealing so much of the former act as comes within its provisions. If it did affect creditors in any way, quoad hoc it is repealed; leaving it to operate as between purchasers, upon a first and second sale, the first not a creditor. Another pretension set up for Wells is, that he also is, or was, a creditor and that Dorhman might prefer, which he would. If this be so, that provision in favor of creditors in the statute of frauds is defeated, as it would be in the power of a debtor to evade it at pleasure. If it be law, which we feel no disposition to controvert, that in some cases, a debtor may give one creditor a preference over another, yet this privilege no longer remained with Dorhman. He had exercised it; he had made his election to give Astor the preference, by conveying the lands to him, as it was competent for him to do, most assuredly, when it does not appear that, at that time, he owed any one else. This privilege must be exercised fairly, by giving that which is his own, not that which belongs to another, and which he may happen to hold in trust for that other. There is no law which authorizes a trustee thus to give away the trust-estate, by advancing or preferring one creditor to another. But Wells, at that time, did not stand in the relation of creditor to Dorhman. He had indorsed, but it does not appear he had paid any money, or that there would have been any necessity for him to pay7, if, after express notice, he had not extended his indorsements, and involved the 234 483 OF THE UNITED STATES. Astor V. Wells. whole of Dorhman’s estate, as if with the design which Dorhman had already» manifested, of cutting Astor off *altogether. As is said in Tourville r*4s4 v. Nash, 3 P. Wins. 307, he should have filed his bill quia timet *-against Dorhman, and pursued his remedy upon the other quarter township, released by Astor, and whatever other property could be found. There is nothing in the case which shows that Dorhman had received the whole $5000 before notice to Wells, nor what part he had received. It lies upon Wells to make this appear clearly, for if any part remained unpaid, it might have been stopped, and the payment enjoined. It is said, “ if the plaintiff be right, parties to a first and second sale stand as at common law.” But this is not a case merely between purchasers at a first and second sale. To this point, the plaintiff is considered a creditor ;< and it stands as a case between a creditor and purchaser of the debtor. At common law, such a conveyance would be avoided. The statute of Elizabeth is in aid of the common law, extending the remedy to subsequent creditors, superadding the sanction of penalties. It declares “ deeds made in fraud of creditors void.” And although it inflicts penalties, still, in England, it is viewed as remedial, “ made against frauds, for the public good, and to be taken by equity.” Gooch?s Case, 5 Co. 60 ay 1 Fonbl. Eq. 270, 282. Even if the doctrine of constructive notice were admitted to be no longer a rule of equity, still this admission would only raise a dispute upon an abstract proposition, whether the notice we rely on be actual or constructive ? It is, therefore, a disagreement as to the name. *Under what denomina- r+,p. tion have the law-writers classed it ? is the question. If actual, then we say, Wells had actual notice. If constructive, then he had only constructive notice. We have only to show Wells had such notice as the law charges him with, to avoid the danger of sanctioning fraud, and to close the avenues of injustice, and fraudulent speculation. According to the opposite argument, a suit pending; or a registry of a deed, are notice in fact. They are facts of record, and notice to all persons in the same community; but we must be permitted to disbelieve that every person has seen them in fact, and, therefore, knows what they contain. Yet every person is bound by this knowledge, because they are made public, and accessible to all: constructive knowledge or notice, being by the law charged upon the party, because he might have known ; the law having done its part by making such public record, and declaring all persons bound by it, whether they know it or not. It is a well-established principle, that the defendant must unequivocally deny all notice, even though it be not charged, and every fact and circumstance from which it can be inferred, in order to be considered a bond fide purchaser. Frost v. Beekman, 1 Johns. Ch. 302 ; s. c. Ibid. 566 ; Murray n. Finster, 2 Ibid. 155. This the defendant, Wells, has not done. The case of Taylor v. McDonald's Heirs, 2 Bibb 420, is not analogous ; as there the lands never were included in the county where the deed was recorded ; and the question was upon the effect of the deed at law. 1819] *March 10th, 1819. Johnston, Justice, delivered the opinion of the court.—The questions in this case are partly of law, partly of fact. The bill charges the defendant with express notice of the complainant’s previous mortgage, and with holding the land purchased under a secret trust for the legal representatives of Dorhman, the mortgagor. Both these facts 235 486 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Astor v. Wells. the answer denies ; and as there is no evidence to sustain them, they must be put out of the case. The bill then proposes to affect the defendant, Wells, with constructive notice ; and if it fails there, then to set aside the deed to Wells as absolutely void, under the express provision of a law of the state of Ohio. Obadiah Jennings, who drew the mortgage from Dorhman to Wells, was fully apprised of the existence of Astor’s mortgage, and acted in concert with Dorhman, expressly to defeat Astor’s prior lien, and give precedence to Wells. The advantage of which they proposed to avail themselves for this purpose, was a supposed mistake committed by Astor as to the legal office for recording his deed. The land was originally comprised within the limits of Jefferson county. But before the recording of the deed, the county of Tuscarawas was taken off from Jefferson, and the land lay in that part of Jefferson which thus became Tuscarawas county. The law of Ohio requires that the recording shall take place in the county in which the land lies. The first question is, was this a legal recording, under the laws of Ohio, so as to preserve the priority which dates gave to Astor ? The office of Jefferson *county was the legal office, at the time of executing the -* deed : did it continue to be so, at the time of recording it ? This can only be decided by considering the object of the law. It was to give notice to subsequent purchasers—to place at their command the means of investigation, to which, if they did not resort, they had only to blame their own indolence or folly. But no one in search of such information respecting lands situate in Tuscarawas county, would be expected to search the records of Jefferson, subsequent to the date of the separation. He would naturally refer to the records of the new county, to its origin, and from that time pursue his inquiries among the records of the county in which it was originally comprised. And therefore, we are of opinion, that the recording of Astor’s deed was not sufficient, either to preserve its legal priority, or give it the equity resulting from constructive notice. But it is contended, that Jennings was the mutual agent of both mortgagor and mortgagee, in the creation of Wells’s mortgage, and therefore, the notice to Jennings was notice to Wells. Here, again, the complainant’s case is unsupported by. the evidence. On the law, there could be no doubt, if the facts were such as the complainant contends. But it is positively denied, both by Wells and Jennings; and if Jennings was the agent of Dorhman only, his knowledge could produce no other effect on the rights of Wells, than if it had been concealed in the breast of Dorhman. And this leads to the final question in the case. As the deed really was “ made” to defraud Astor, does that' circumstance alone, under the laws *of Ohio, destroy its validity, without reference to the knowledge or -1 connivance of the mortgagee. And this again must be decided, by referring to the object of the law. The words of the statute would literally embrace the case. But who are the objects of the law ? Not creditors only, but subsequent purchasers. And to give it such a construction as would expose a bond fide, purchaser, without notice, to imposition, in order to protect creditors, could never comport with the intent of the law. Upon the whole, we are of opinion, that there is no error in the decree below, and that the same be affirmed, with costs. Decree affirmed, with costs. 236 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 488 McArthur ®. Browder. Land law of Ohio. The rule which prevails in Kentucky and Ohio as to land titles, is, that, at law, the patent is the foundation of title, and neither party can bring his entry before the court : but a junior patentee, claiming under an elder entry, may, in chancery, support his equitable title. A description which will identify the land, is all that is necessary to the validity of a grant: but the law requires that an entry should be made with such certainty, that subsequent purchasers may be enabled to locate the adjacent residuum. An entry for 1000 acres of land in Ohio, on Deer creek, “ beginning where the upper line of Ralph Morgan’s entry crosses the creek, running with Morgan’s line, on each side of the creek, 400 poles, *thence up the creek, 400 poles in a direct line, thence from each side of the Q given line with the upper line, at right angles with the side lines, for quantity held to be *-a valid entry. Distinction between amending and withdrawing an entry. Appeal from the Circuit Court of Ohio. The bill in equity filed in this cause, by the appellant, McArthur, stated, that George Mathews, on the 19th of September 1799, made the following entry with the surveyor of the .Virginia army lands : “No. 3717: 1799, September 19th. George Mathews, assignee, enters 1000 acres of land, on part of a military-warrant, No. 4795, on Deer creek, beginning where the upper line of Ralph Morgan’s entry, No. 3665, crosses the creek, running with Morgan’s line, on each side of the creek, 200 poles ; thence up the creek 400 poles, on a direct line, thence from each side of the given line, with the upper line, at right angles with the side lines, for quantity.” That afterwards, the entry of Ralph Morgan was withdrawn ; and that, in consequence, George Mathews made the following entry : “No. 3717 : 1801, October 26th. George Mathews, assignee, enters 1000 acres of land on part of a military-warrant, No. 4795, on Deer creek, beginning at two elms on the south-west bank of the creek, upper corner to Henry Mossies’ survey, No. 3925, running south 45° west, 120 poles, north 65° west, 172 poles, north 17° west, 320 poles, north 76° east, 485 poles, thence south 1° west, 292 poles, thence to the beginning.” The bill charged, that the last entry was not intended as a new one ; but only as an amendment or explanation of the first. This last entry was surveyed the 7th of *October, 1807 : and upon an assignment to the r*.Qn complainant, the land embraced in the survey was patented to the *-plaintiff, the 6th of July 1806. The title of Browder, the respondent, was stated in the bill as follows : That on the 20th of July 1798, Nathaniel Randolph made the following entry : “No. 3310 : July 20th, 1798. Nathaniel Randolph, assignee, enters 300 acres of land on three military-warrants, Nos. 4165,4250 and 4664, on the lower side of‘Deer creek, beginning at a walnut and two elms, cornered five poles from the bank of the creek, running south 61° west, 200 poles to two white oaks, and two hickories, thence north 7° west, 234 poles, thence north 61° east, 200 poles, thence to the beginning.” That the last entry was surveyed for Randolph, and the oldest patent obtained by him, which he conveyed to Browder, who has recovered upon an ejectment. By the answer and exhibits, it appeared, that Randolph’s survey was made the 1st of August 1798 ; that a patent was granted to Randolph, the 29th 237 490 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y McArthur v. Browder. of September 1800, who conveyed to the respondent. The respondent, Browder, having brought an action of ejectment, recovered the possession of the land in question ; and the appellant, McArthur, filed this bill in equity, praying for an injunction ; a conveyance of so much of the land claimed by the respondent, as interfered with his claim ; and for general relief. The bill was dismissed by the circuit court, and the cause brought by appeal to this court. March 10th, 1819. This cause was argued by Scott and *Z?n.zs/z, J for the appellant, and by the Attorney- General and Doddridge^ for the respondent. March 12th. Marshall, Ch. J., delivered the opinion of the court.—In this case, the appellee claims under the elder grant, founded on the elder entry. Consequently, if his entry be valid, the bill of the appellant cannot be sustained. But the entry is so defective in description, that it was necessarily abandoned ; and the appellee relies on his patent; anterior to the emanation of which, the appellant contends, that the land was appropriated by this entry. The validity of this entry also is denied. But before we examine the objections made to it, we-must consider those which have been urged against the jurisdiction of this court as a court of equity. The rule which prevails both in Kentucky and Ohio is, that, at law, the patent is the foundation of title, and that neither party can bring his entry before the court. In consequence of this rule, it has been also well settled, that the junior patentee, claiming under an elder entry, may, in chancery, support his equitable title, and obtain a decree for a conveyance of so much of the land as, under his entry, he may be entitled to. But the general principle is supposed to be inapplicable to this case, because the words of the entry are introduced into the grant; and if they were too vague to appropriate the land, when used in the entry, they must be too vague to *4.Q91 appropriate it, when used in the grant, which is a *question triable J at law, and which was tried in the ejectment brought by the appellee for the land. Were the fact precisely as stated, it could not support the argument which is founded on it. When lands are granted, a description which will identify them is all that is necessary to the validity of the grant. But identity is not all that is necessary to the validity of an entry. The law requires that locations should be made with such certainty, that subsequent purchasers may be enabled to locate the adjacent residuum. All grants are founded on surveys; they recite the surveys, and all that is required in an ejectment is, to prove that the land claimed is that which was surveyed. But more is required in a contest respecting an entry ; nothing is more common than for courts to declare en entry void for uncertainty, notwithstanding the clearest proof that the land claimed, and that located, are the same. There is then nothing in the resemblance between the words of the grant and of the entry, to distinguish this from other cases, in which the party claiming under the first good entry, comes into chancery to obtain a conveyance of lands held under a senior patent. We proceed, then, to examine the entry under which the appellant claims. That entry is made for 1000 acres of land on Deer creek, “ beginning where the upper line of Ralph Morgan 8 238 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 492 McArthur v. Browder. entry crosses the creek, running with Morgan’s line on each side of the creek, 200 poles, thence up the creek 400 poles, on a direct line, thence from each side of the *given line, with the upper line at right angles with the r*4Qq side lines, for quantity.” L That entries, which contain such descriptive words as clearly to designate the place where the land lies, shall, with respect to their more particular locative calls, be supported, if they can, on fair construction, be supported, is a principle which pervades the whole of that curious and intricate fabric, which has been erected by the decisions on land titles in Kentucky, and has been taken as a model for those in the military district of Ohio. If a subsequent locator, brought to the spot where the lands lie, with the location in his hand, might, by the application of the rules which the courts have established, know how to place the entry, so as to enable himself to locate the adjacent residuum, the entry must be sustained. In this case, it is admitted, that the beginning is described with sufficient certainty. The place where the upper line of Ralph Morgan’s entry crosses Deer creek, is ascertained. From that beginning, the entry calls to run “ with Ralph Morgan’s line, on each side of the creek, 200 poles.” It is said to be entirely uncertain, whether this line is to be 200 poles on each side of the creek, so as to amount to 400 poles, or to be only a line of 200 poles altogether. Did this ambiguity really exist in the words themselves, it is entirely removed by the other parts of the location. The entry is made for 1000 acres of land, and cannot on any construction, be made to exceed 500 acres, unless the base line be 400 poles. We have then a given line of 400 poles. The entry then proceeds, *“ thence up the creek 400 poles, on a direct line.” The plain meaning of these words is, that the land *-lies up the creek, so that a direct line of 400 poles will reach its upper boundary. If the location stopped here, adding only^ “ for quantity,” the decisions of Kentucky would establish it as a good entry for a square, formed on the upper side of the base line of 400 poles, which would contain 1000 acres of land. But the entry proceeds, “thence from each side of the given line, with the upper line at right angles with the side lines, for quantity.” This part of the description has been said to produce uncertainty, because two lines are given, and a subsequent locator could not tell to which reference was made. If it would make any difference whether the base line, or the line up the creek, was taken as the given line, this might produce some difficulty ; but if the entry must cover precisely the same ground, whether the one or the other be taken as the given line, it can make none. Let the base line be considered as the given line. It is plain, that the words “ from each side ” must mean from each end, because the land is to lie up the creek ; whereas, if you proceed from each side, it would lie partly down the creek. The line, too, which is to give the quantity, with the side lines, is the upper line, and that is removed from the base line, the distance necessary to include the quantity of land required. As this quantity is to be inclosed from the whole entry taken together, within lines which form a square, the entry must be understood to require, that the side lines should be drawn from the ends of the base line, *and the inaccuracy of the expression could not mis-lead. [495 But the entry is understood to refer, as the given line, to that which is 239 495 SUPREME COURT McArthur v. Browder. [Feb’y last mentioned ; that is, to the line of 400 poles, which is perpendicular to the base. You are then carried up the creek 400 poles, in a direct line from the base line. From each side of this line, you are carried “ with the upper line at right angles with the side lines,” until you get 1000 acres. This construction gives full effect to every word of the entry, and gives a square which will contain 1000 acres. It is, we think, the natural construction. The entry would be so understood by every subsequent locator. On any construction, then, which can be given to the words, the entry must not only have the same form, but must cover precisely the same land. If, then, the original entry had never been amended, there could be no doubt of the right of the party claiming under it. This leads to the inquiry, whether the amendment affects this right ? The distinction between amending and withdrawing an entry is well established, and completely understood. An amended entry retains its original character, so far as it is unchanged by the amendment. So far as it is changed, it is a new entry. The survey, in this case, is understood to conform precisely to the amended entry ; and it contains a part of the land comprehended in the original entry. So far as respects the land within the appellee’s patent, which is comprehended by the * .. original entry, the amended entry, and the survey, we think, the *ap- J pellant was entitled to a decree, and consequently, the circuit court erred in dismissing his bill. The decree is to be reversed, and the cause remanded to the circuit court, with directions to enter a decree conforming to this opinion. Decree.—This cause came on ’to be heard, on the transcript of the record of the court of the United States for the seventh circuit, and district of Ohio, and was argued by counsel: on consideration whereof, this court is of opinion, that the plaintiff in the circuit court had a good title in equity to so much of the land contained in the defendant’s patent, as is comprehended in the original entry made by George Mathews; in September 1799, and also in his amended entry, and in his survey ; and that the decree of the said circuit court, dismissing the bill, is erroneous and ought to be reversed, and it is, accordingly, reversed ; and this court doth further direct and order, that the said cause be remanded to the said circuit court, with directions to enter a decree, directing the defendant to convey to the plaintiff so much of the land contained in his patent, as is comprehended in the original entry, and also in the amended entry and survey, on which the grant of the plaintiff was founded. 240 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. *497 *The Neustra Señora de la Caridad : Bages et al., Claimants. Capture l)y revolutionary cruiser. A cruiser, equipped at the port of Carthagena, in South America, and commissioned under the authority of the province of Garthagena, one of the United Provinces of New Grenada, at war with Spain, sailed from the said port, and captured on the high seas, as prize, a vessel and cargo, belonging to the subjects of the king of Spain, and put a prize-crew on board; and ordered her to proceed to the said port of Carthagena ; the captured vessel was afterwards fallen in with, by a private armed vessel of the United States, and the cargo taken out and brought into the United States for adjudication, as the property of their enemy; the original Spanish owner and the prize-master from the Carthagenian crusier, both claimed the goods: the possession was decreed to be restored to the Carthagenian prize-master. War having been recognised to exist between Spain and her colonies, by the government of the United States, it is the duty of the courts of the United States, where a capture is made by either of the belligerent parties, without any violation of our neutrality, and the captured prize is brought innocently with our jurisdiction, to leave things in the same state they find them ; or to restore them to the state from which they have been forcibly removed by the act of our own citizens. The Spanish treaty held not to apply to the above case, as the court could not consider the Carthagenian captors as pirates, and the capture was not made within the jurisdictional limits of the United States—the only two cases in which the treaty enjoins restitution. Appeal from the Circuit Court of North Carolina. This was a prize allegation against certain goods, taken by a private armed vessel of the United States, the Harrison, during the late war with Great Britain, *out of a ship called the Neustra Señora de la Caridad. L A claim was interposed by Salvador Bages, and others, Spanish subjects, domiciled at St. Iago, in the island of Cuba, alleging that the ship was a Spanish ship, and with the goods, their property, was captured on the high seas, by an armed vessel cruising under the pretended colors of Carthagena, the commander of which produced no commission, nor did the claimants know, or admit, he had one, and who detained the Caridad as prize, and put a prize-crew on board. That having separated from the capturing vessel, they were met with and boarded by the privateer Harrison. That the said privateer captured and took possession of the Caridad, and the captors unladed the cargo from on board of her, into the Harrison, and having brought the same into the port of Wilmington, North Carolina, proceeded against it as prize of war. A cross-claim was filed by Pedro Brugman, mastei’ and commander of the Carthagenian armed schooner Neustra Señora de la Popa, in behalf of himself and others, the owners of said privateer, to the goods thus proceeded against as prize of war, by the commander, officers and crew of the Harrison. This claim pleaded, that the goods were not, at the time of the proceedings, nor at the time of capture by the Harrison, the property of any British subjects, or of any persons domiciled in the dominions of Great Britain, nor of any of the enemies of the United States, but that the same then were, and yet are, the property of the owners, officers and crew of the La Popa, from whose lawful possession the same *had been violently and wrongfully taken, on the high seas, by the Harrison, as before t Mentioned. That the La Popa, having been duly commissioned by the sovereign authority of the independent state of Carthagena, and furnished With letters of marque and reprisal, authorizing her to capture, on the high seas, the property of the enemies of said state, left the port of Carthagena, 4 Wheat.—16 241 499 SUPREME COURT The Nuestra Señora de la Caridad. [Feb’y in tlîê month of December 1814, on a cruise. That on the 21st of January 1815, while cruising off St. Iago de Cuba, the said privateer La Popa, commanded by the claimant, seized and captured the ship La Caridad, sailing from Jamaica to Cuba, loaded with dry-goods, and belonging, with the cargo, to the enemies of the said independent state of Carthagena, as the papers on board, and the information of the master and crew, convinced the claimant to be the fact. That the claimant put a prize-master and crew on board the captured vessel, and ordered her to proceed to the said port of Carthagena. That the said prize-master and crew retained the possession for four days, and while they were proceeding to Carthagena, the Caridad was forcibly taken by the Harrison from their possession, the goods taken out, and brought into the port of Wilmington, as aforesaid. An order was made by the court below, that the claimant, Pedro Brugman, should be allowed to make further proof, that the commission which he produced, and under which he alleged the original capture to have been made, was issued by the authority acting as the sovereign authority of the United Provinces of New Grenada. * * At the hearing, it was proved, by the testimony of witnesses, -* that the La Popa belonged to and had been actually fitted out in Carthagena, one of the said United Provinces of New Grenada ; that the commission produced by the commander, was in the usual form in which letters of marque were issued by the sovereign authority of'that province ; that the seal affixed to the same was the seal used at the time by those who exercised the sovereign authority of Carthagena to authenticate the commissions by them granted ; that the officers of state by whom the same was signed, were at the time, and had been for some time before, respectively, the governor and the secretary of war and the marine of the said province ; that the witnesses were acquainted with thé handwriting of the said governor and secretary, the witnesses having often seen them write, as well as seen their public and acknowledged writings, and verily believed the same to be their signatures. And the commission was also proved to be genuine, and to have regularly issued by the certificates and declarations of the officers of state of the Province of Carthagena. The original capture by the La Popa, the retaking by the Harrison, and the proprietary interest of the original Spanish owners of the goods, were all fully proved. The circuit court decreed, at May term 1818, the goods to be restored to the possession of Pedro Brugman ; from which sentence an appeal was taken to this court, by the claimant, Salvador Bages, for himself and the original Spanish owners. The cause was submitted, without argument. # , *March 12th, 1819. Johnson, Justice, delivered the opinion of the J court.—This case arose out of a capture made in the late war. The La Popa, a commissioned cruiser of the Province of Carthagena, had made prize of the Caridad, a Spanish vessel, in a voyage from Jamaica to Cuba. The American private armed vessel Harrison fell in with the Caridad, then in possession of the prize crew of the La Popa, and suspecting her cargo o be British, took possession of it, and transshipped it into their own vesse. On the arrival of the Harrison, in a port of North Carolina, the cargo was claimed both by the Caridad and La Popa, and finally restored to the a Popa. This is an appeal from the decision of the circuit court of Nort 242 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 601 Wheaton v. Sexton. Carolina, made by the original Spanish owner, and the case has been submitted on the evidence and the grounds, taken in the argument below. There is no doubt, that the property was Spanish, nor that the privateer La Popa was commissioned as a cruiser, whilst the Province of Cartbagena had an organized government; and there is the fullest evidence, that her armament and equipment was unaffected by any charge of having been made in violation of our laws. The only question in the case is, whether an original Spanish owner is entitled to the aid of the courts of this country, to restore to him property of which he has been dispossessed by capture, under a commission derived from the revolted colonies ? and this question is considered, by this court, as having *been fully decided by the principles r*gQ2 assumed in the case of the United States v. Palmer., at the last term *-(3 Wheat. 610), and by the decisions in the cases of The Estrella {ante, p. 298), and The Divina Pastora {ante, p. 52), at the present term. War notoriously exists, and is recognised by our government to exist, between Spain and her colonies. This is an appeal to the highest of all tribunals on a question of right. No neutral nation can act against either, without taking part with the other in the war. All that the law of nations requires of us, is strict and impartial neutrality. And no friendly nation ought to demand of the courts of this country to do an act which may involve it in a war with the victor. Our duty is, where the property of either is brought innocently within our jurisdiction, to leave things as we find them; much more, to restore them to that state from which they have been forcibly removed by the act of our own citizens. The treaty with Spain can have no bearing upon the case, as this court cannot recognise such captors as pirates, and the capture was not made within our jurisdictional limits. In those two cases only, does the treaty enjoin restitution. Decree affirmed, with costs. *Wheaton v. Sexton’s Lessee. [*503 Judicial sale.—Fraudulent conveyance. A sale, under a ft. fa., duly issued, is legal, as respects the purchaser, provided the writ be levied upon the property, before the return-day, although the sale be made after the return-day, and the writ be never actually returned.1 A deed made upon a valuable and adequate consideration, which is actually paid, and the change of property is bond fide, or such as it purports to be, cannot be considered as a conveyance to defraud creditors.2 Error to the Circuit Court for the District of Columbia. This was an action of ejectment, brought in the court below, by the defendant in error, Sexton, against the plaintiff in error, Wheaton, to recover the possession of a parcel of ground in the city of Washington, being lot number 17, in square 254, containing 825 4f- square feet, with the buildings thereon. At the trial, the plaintiff produced and read in evidence to the jury, a deed of bargain and sale of the premises from John P. Van Ness and wife, and C. Stephenson, to Sally Wheaton, the wife of the defendant in ejectment ; and a deed from one Watterson to the same, of the same premises ; 1 s. p. McNitt v. Turner, 16 Wall. 365. 4 Orane». Hardy, 1 Mich. 56. 243 503 SUPREME COURT Wheaton v. Sexton. [Feb’y a writ of/. fa. against the goods, chattels, lands and tenements of the defendant, issued from the court below, upon a judgment obtained by Sexton against Wheaton, with a return thereon by the marshal: “December the * 30th, 1815, sold the real property *in square 254, to Francis F. Key, Esq. for three hundred dollars ; sales of real property in square 253, countermanded by said Key ; sold personal property,” &c. The writ was never actually returned, but for the first time, produced by the marshal in court, at the trial of this cause. The sale took place after the return-day mentioned in the writ. The plaintiff also produced and read in evidence a deed from the marshal to the plaintiff in ejectment, dated 30th May 1816, he having been the highest bidder, by Key, his attorney. The defendant’s counsel prayed the court to instruct the jury, that the lessor of the plaintiff could not recover. The court refused to give such instruction, but instructed the jury, that if they should- be of opinion, from the evidence, that the writ of ft. fa. was levied by the marshal, upon the property in question, before the return-day of the writ, it was lawful for him to sell the same, under and by virtue of said writ, and that the facts respecting the said sale might be proved by parol. To which instruction, the defendant excepted. The defendant, to show the legal title of the premises to be in one E. B. Caldwell, and not in the lessor of the plaintiff, gave in evidence a deed from the defendant in ejectment to said E. B. Caldwell, made and executed on the 23d of December 1811, conveying the premises to the said E. B. Cald; well, reciting the deeds from Van Ness, &c., and that it was understood, at the time of making those deeds, that the property should be absolutely for the sole use of said Sally Wheaton, &c., but it had been apprehended and suggested, that the said Joseph Wheaton might *have a life-estate J therein, to carry into effect the original intent of the conveyances, and for the consideration of five dollars, paid to him by E. B. Caldwell, the said Joseph Wheaton conveyed to him all his right, title and interest, in trust for the use of said Sally Wheaton. Whereupon, the court instructed the jury, that if the jury should be of opinion, from the evidence, that the said deed was made by the said Joseph Wheaton, without a valuable consideration therefor, or was made by him, with intent to defeat and delay, or defraud his creditor, the said Sexton, of his debt aforesaid, then the said deed was void in law, as to the said Sexton : to which the defendant excepted. The jury found a verdict, and the court rendered a judgment for the lessor of the plaintiff. The cause was then brought to this court by writ of error. The cause was submitted, without argument. March 12th, 1819. Johnson, Justice, delivered the opinion of the court. —The suit below was ejectment, and the defendant in this court recovered, under a title derived from a sale by the marshal of this district. The marshal’s deed conveys the life-estate of Wheaton in the lands in question. And the plaintiff below proved the title in the defendant’s wife, under conveyances executed after marriage. The defence set up was a conveyance exe-xjuted by Wheaton, to a trustee, for the sole and separate use of his wife and *5061 ^er and the deed purports to have been executed in considera- J tion of, and to carry into *effect an original intention in the parties, 244 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 506 Wheaton v. Sexton. that the conveyances to his wife should inure to the same uses, although the conveyances in law operate otherwise. But there is no other evidence of this fact than what is contained in the deed, and it was executed but two days before the judgment. At the trial, two bills of exception were taken ; the first of which brings up the question, whether a sale by the marshal, after the return-day of the writ, was legal. The court charged that it was, provided the levy was made before the return-day. And on this point, the court can only express its surprise that any doubt could be entertained. The court below were unquestionably right in this instruction. The purchaser depends on the judgment, the levy and the deed. All other questions are between the parties to the judgment and the marshal. Whether the marshal sells, before or after the return, whether he makes a correct return, or any return at all, to the writ, is immaterial to the purchaser, provided the writ was duly issued, and the levy made before the return. The second bill of exception brings up the question, whether the deed to Caldwell, in trust for Mrs. Wheaton, was not fraudulent and void as against creditors. In ordinary cases, a voluntary conveyance of a man, to the use of his wife, when circumstanced as Wheaton, was, would unquestionably be void. But it is contended, that, in this instance, a court of equity would have decreed Wheaton to make the conveyance he did execute, and therefore, it was not a voluntary conveyance. That there are cases in *which the court would lend its aid to protect the acquisitions of a wife from •-the creditors of a husband, may well be admitted ; but on this case, it is enough to observe, that if the husband may, upon his own recital, make out such a case, there would no longer exist any difficulty in evading the rights of creditors. Yet this court is not satisfied, that the court below has given an instruction that comports with the law of the case. The instruction of the court, given on motion of the plaintiff below, is, that the deed was void in law, “ if it was made by the said Joseph Wheaton, without a valuable consideration therefor, or was made by him with intent to defeat, delay or defraud his creditors.” Had the conjunction and been substituted in this instruction for it would have been entirely unimpeachable ; but as it now reads, it must mean, that even had a valuable consideration been paid, if the deed was made, with intent to defeat creditors, it was void. We know of no law which avoids a deed, where a valuable (by which, to a general intent must also be understood adequate) consideration is paid, and the change of property be bond fide, or such as it professes to be. Of such a contract, it cannot be predicated, that it is with intent to defeat or defraud creditors, since, although the property itself no longer remains subject to the judgment, a substitute is furnished by which that judgment may be satisfied. Nor is it any impeachment of such a deed, that it is made to the use of the family of the maker. The trustee, in that case, becomes the benefactor, and not the husband. It is *not a provision made by him for his r*Knfl family, but by another. *- Although, from anything that appears in this cause, this court can see no ground on which the jury could have found otherwise than they did, yet if he instruction was erroneous, and to the prejudice of the defendant below, 245 508 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Sergeant v. Biddle. as this court cannot estimate its influence on the minds of the jury, the judgment must be reversed. Judgment reversed. Sergeant’s Lessee V. Biddle et al. Depositions. Depositions taken according to the proviso.in the 30th section of the judiciary act or 1789, under a dedimuspotestatein, “accordingto common usage, when it may be necessary to prevent a failure or delay of justice,” are, under np circumstances, to be considered as taken de bene esse, whether the witnesses reside beyond the process of the court or within it; the provisions of the act relative to depositions de bene esse being confined to those taken under the enacting part of • the section. March 9th, 1819. This cause was argued by Martin and C. J. Ingersoll, for the plaintiff, and by Hopkinson and Sergeant, for the defendants. The facts are fully stated in the opinion of the court. March 12th. Washington, Justice, delivered the opinion of the court.— * *The only question certified by the circuit court for the district of ' -* Delaware to this court is, whether certain depositions, taken under a commission issued from that court to Philadelphia, could, under the circumstances of the case, be given in evidence to the jury ? This question arises out of the following facts : On the 25th of October 1817, a consent rule was entered in this case, “ for a commission to issue to take depositions on both sides, to be directed to Thomas Bradford, jr., and William J. Duane, of Philadelphia ; interrogatories to be filed on ten days’ notice.” The agreement of the counsel, under which this rule was entered, was filed in court, on the 11th of November, of the same year. On the 27th of October 1817, an ex parte rule was entered, on the motion of the defendants’ counsel, “ for a commission to issue to the city of Philadelphia, on the part of the defendants, to be directed to George Vaux and William Smith, or either of them, commissioners on the part of the defendants, on ten days notice of filing interrogatories, with liberty to the plaintiff’s counsel to name a commissioner or commissioners, if they should choose to do so, at any time before issuing the commission.” After the counsel for the lessor of the plaintiff had opened his case, and gone through his evidence, the counsel for the defendants, having opened his case, offered to give in evidence to the jury sundry depositions of witnesses, taken under a commission to Philadelphia, bearing date the 31st of *5101 ^cto^er 1817, directed to George Vaux and William Smith, or *either -* of them, and to George M. Dallas and Richard Bache, or either of them. This evidence was objected to by the plaintiff’s counsel, on the ground, that the depositions so taken were to be considered, in point of law, as taken de bene esse. In support of this evidence, the defendants stated, and the opposite counsel admitted, that previous to the execution of this commission, an agreement had been entered into, that the same should be executed by George M. Dallas, one of the commissioners on the part of the plaintiff, and George Vaux, another of the commissioners on the part of the defendants ; and that it w'as further agreed, and so indorsed on the commission, that the said George Vaux might be permitted to take a solemn affirmation, instead of an oath, and that the commissioners who should act, 246 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 510 Sergeant v. Biddle. might be qualified by any aiderman of Philadelphia, and their clerk, by the commissioners ; and which agreements were entered into upon the application of the defendants’ counsel. He further gave in evidence, that commissions had heretofore issued to Philadelphia, and other places within 100 miles of the place of trial, from the circuit court for that district, upon motions made for that purpose ; and that upon motion, commissions had issued to Philadelphia, and to other places without the state, from the supreme court of the state of Delaware, previous and subsequent to the year 1789. That upon the return of the commission in this case, publication thereof was ordered by the court; and lastly, that all the witnesses examined in the execution of the *said commission, resided in Philadelphia, r*5n distant 33 miles from the place of holding the court. *- It is contended by the plaintiff’s counsel, that as, by the 6th section of the act of. the 2d of March 1793, subpoenas for witnesses may run into any other district than that in which the court is holden, provided, that in civil causes, the witnesses do not live at a greater distance than 100 miles from the place of holding the court, the deposition in this case ought not to have been received, unless it had appeared to the court that the witnesses had been duly summoned, and were unable to attend. This argument appears to be founded upon the provision of the 30th section of the judiciary act of 1789, c. 20, to which this case has no relation. That section authorizes the taking of depositions in the specified cases, without the formality of a commission, but declares, that the depositions so taken, shall be de bene esse ; and to prevent any conclusion from being drawn against the power of the courts to grant commissions for taking depositions, by reason of the above provisions, this section goes on to provide, that nothing in the said section contained shall be construed to prevent any court of the United States from granting a dedimus potestatem to take depositions, according to common usage, when it may be necessary to prevent a failure or delay of justice, which power it is declared they shall severally possess. The only question then is, whether depositions taken under a dedimus potestatem, according to common usage, are, under any circumstances, to be considered as taken de bene esse? And it is the opinion *of this r4. court, that they cannot be so considered. What might be the effect •-of the agreement of the parties, or of an order of the court to the contrary, need not be decided in this case, as the rule, as well as the commission which issued under it, was absolute and unqualified. Whenever a commission issues for taking depositions, according to common usage, whether the witness reside beyond the process of the court, or within it, the depositions are absolute, the above section of the act of congress relating to depositions de bene esse, being most obviously confined to those taken under the enacting part of that section. But it is contended by the plaintiff’s counsel, that this commission to take depositions of witnesses living within 100 miles from the place at which the court was to sit, although in another district, was improvidently issued, and that the rule under wThich it issued was erroneously made. Whether this objection ought, or ought not, to have been made, at the time, or during the term when the,rule was entered, is a question which does not occur in this case ; because, it is most obvious, from the conduct of the plaintiff’s counsel in the court below, that if they did not agree to the rule, the com- 247 512 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Boyd v. Graves. mission was issued with their consent. A consent rule was entered, on the 25th of October, differing from the ex parte rule, entered two days afterwards, in no other respect, but as to the names of the commissioners. The plaintiff’s counsel afterwards joined in the commission, removed every possible objection as to the commissioners, by naming one on the part of the plaintiff, to act with one of the defendants’ *commissioners, and filed J his cross-interrogatories, to be propounded to the witnesses. The commission was executed by the commissioners so named, and the witnesses were regularly examined, as well on the cross-interrogatories, as on those in chief. After such unequivocal evidence of consent to the issuing of the commission, it is not competent to the plaintiff’s counsel to object, that it issued improvidently, or that the rule was improperly obtained. It is to be certified to the circuit court for the district of Delaware, that the depositions taken under the commission, referred to in the transcript of the record sent to this court, dated the 31st day of October 1817, ought to be given in evidence to the jury, upon the trial of the cause in which they were taken. Certificate accordingly. Boyd’s Lessee v. Graves et al. Statute of frauds. An agreement, by parol, between two proprietors of adjoining lands, to employ a surveyor to run the dividing line between them, and that it should be thus ascertained and settled, which was executed, and the line accordingly run, and marked on a plat by the surveyor, in their presence, as the boundary, held to be conclusive, in an action of ejectment, after a correspondent possession of twenty years by the parties, and those claiming under them respectively. Such an agreement is not within the statute of frauds, as being a contract for the sale of lands, or any interest in or concerning them. * *Duvall, Justice, delivered the opinion, of the court.—An action J of ejectment was brought by Andrew Boyd against the defendants, in the circuit court for the district of Kentucky, on the 25th of November 1814, for 2000 acres of land in Fayette county, on the waters of Elkhorn creek. The patent bears date on the 3d of December 1789, and was granted to Andrew Boyd, pursuant to a survey made, the 14th of July 1774, on a warrant issued under the royal proclamation of 1763. This tract of land is contained within the courses and distances following : beginning at a buckeye and ash, corner to John Carter’s land, and in a line of William Phillips s land, and with the same south-west, 374 poles, crossing a small branch, to a hoop wood and sugar tree, and leaving said line, south-east, 860 poles, crossing a branch to an elm and buckeye, north-east, 374 poles, crossing a branch to a sugar tree and buckeye, thence north-west, 860 poles to the beginning. The defendants claimed title under a patent granted to Elijah Craig, on the 7th of November 1779, for 2000 acres, on a warrant to John Carter, heir-at-law of Thomas Carter, in consideration of military services. The warrant was assigned to Craig. The courses and distances are the following : beginning at three large hoopwoods growing from one root, corner to William Phillips’s land, and with a line thereof, south-west, 374 poles, crossing two branches to a buckeye and ash on the bank, south-east, 860 poles, crossing a small creek to a sugar tree and buckeye, north-east, 3/4 248 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. *515 Boyd v. Graves. poles, crossing three branches to an ash, hickory, *mulberry and hoopwood, north-west, 860 poles to the first station. These two tracts are adjacent to, and bind on each other. It is obvious, that they were intended to present rectangular figures, and to contain equal quantities ; but by satisfying the calls, the figures are irregular, and do not contain equal quantities. The plaintiff in the court below locates his pretensions, on the plat returned in the cause, beginning at A, then to K, to L, to D, and to the beginning. And he locates Craig’s patent, beginning at A, then to B, to C, to D, and to the beginning. The defendants locate it, beginning at A, then to B, to C, to E, and to the beginning. The land contained in the triangle A, E, D, is the land in dispute. The defendants, to support their location, offered evidence to prove, that the dividing line between Boyd and Craig being unascertained, the parties, by agreement, had it surveyed, for the purpose of establishing and settling the line between them ; that in the year 1793, it was run, in their presence, from A to E, as distinguished on the plat, and that it was mutually agreed to establish the corner at E, where a boundary was marked, by consent, E C and A B, and that the line from A to E should be the dividing line between them, and that possession had been since held accordingly. They also offered in evidence, a deed from Boyd and wife to William Hanback, bearing date the 14th of December 1793, for 100 acres, part of the land granted to Boyd, beginning at the corner at E, before mentioned, and bounding on the line A E, regarding it as the dividing *line between Boyd and Craig ; also a deed from Elijah Craig to John Whitesides, >-dated 12th of May 1794, for 72 acres, part of Craig’s patent, bounding also on the line A E as the dividing line between Boyd and Craig : and that all the other defendants, as purchasers, under Craig, held to the said line A E. The defendant’s counsel then moved the court to instruct the jury, that if they found, from the evidence, that, owing to the uncertainty of the line of said Boyd and Carter’s military surveys, the said Boyd and Elijah Craig, by mutual consent, surveyed and located their respective patents, by making the line from A to E, and marking the corner at E, with the intent (at the time), positively expressed, to settle and ascertain the true boundary and dividing line between the tracts respectively claimed by thejn, under their patents, and that the said line has been acquiesced in by the said parties, and possession held and taken accordingly, for more than twenty years before the commencement of this action, that they ought to find for the defendants : which instruction the court gave, and to this opinion of the court, the plaintiff, by his counsel, excepted ; and the record of the proceedings was removed, by writ of error, to this court, for their decision. At the trial in the court below, several other questions were propounded, and decided by the court, and to which exceptions were taken, which it is not material to notice here, because, the decision of this court on the question stated, will decide the controversy between the parties. *It appears, that in the year 1793, more than twenty years before the commencement of this action of ejectment, Boyd and Craig *-employed a surveyor to run the dividing line between them, and they mutu-ahy agreed, that it should be thus ascertained and settled. It was, accordingly, run as described on the plat, from A to E, and the corner at E was marked 249 517 SUPREME COURT Dartmouth College v. Woodward. [Feb’y in their presence as the boundary between them. That possession has been held by each, and those claiming under them, respectively, from that time to the present; and that each has sold parcels of land, bounding them on the line A E, thus agreed on, regarding it as the established line between them. Hence, the question arises, whether the agreement made in 1793, although by parol, accompanied by corresponding possession for more than twenty years, is, or is not, conclusive against the plaintiff’s right of recovery in this action ? This court cannot consider the agreement of the parties, although by parol, to settle the dividing line between them by a surveyor, mutually employed, as affected by the statute of frauds, as is contended by the counsel for the plaintiff. It is not a contract for the sale or conveyance of lands; it has no ingredient of such a contract. There is no quid pro quo : and the court do not consider it as a conveyance of title from one person to another. It was merely a submission of a matter of fact, to ascertain where the line would run, on actual survey, begining at a place admitted and acknowledged by the parties to be a boundary, where the line must begin. The possession »k1S-i subsequently held, and the acts of the parties, *evidenced by their J respective sales of parcels of the land held by each, under his patent, bounding on the agreed line, amount to a full and complete recognition of it; and in the opinion of this court, precludes the plaintiff, after such a lapse of time, from denying it to be the dividing line between him and the defendants ; and neither ought now to be permitted to disturb the possession of the other, under a pretence that the line was not correctly run. Judgment affirmed. Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward. Constitutional law.—Obligation of contracts.—Charter. The charter granted by the British crown to the trustees of Dartmouth College, in New Hampshire, in the year 1769, is a contract within the meaning of that clause of the constitution of. the United States (art. 1, § 10), which declares, that no state shall make any law impairing the obligation of contracts.1 The charter was not dissolved by the revolution. An act of the state legislature of New Hampshire, altering the charter, without the consent of the corporation, in a material respect, is an act impairing the obligation of the charter, and is unconstitutional and void. Under its charter, Dartmouth College was a private and not a public corporation ; that a corporation is established for purposes of general charity, or for education generally, does not, per se, make it a public corporation, liable to the control of thé legislature.2 Dartmouth College «. Woodward, 1 N. H. Ill, reversed. Error to the Superior Court of the State of New-Hampshire. This was an action of trover, brought in the state court, in which the plaintiffs 1 Providence Bank v. Billings, 4 Pet. 514 ; State Bank of Ohio v. Knoop, 16 How. 369 ; Dodge v. Woolsey, 18 Id. 331; Jefferson Branch Bank v. Skelly, 1 Black 436; The Binghamton Bridge, 3 Wall. 51 ; Home of the Friendless«. Bouse, 8 Id. 430; Washington University «. Rouse, Id. 439;. Davis v. Gray, 16 250 Id. 203 ; Humphrey v. Pegues, Id. 244 ; Pacific Railroad Co. V. Maguire, 20 Id. 36. 2 Vincennes University v. Indiana, 14 How. 269.'; Allen v. McKean, 1 Sumn. 276. In Farrington v. Tennessee, 95 U. S. 685, Judge Swayne says, the question decided in the Dartmouth College case has since been con- 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. *519 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. in error declared for *two books of records, purporting to contain the records of all the doings and proceedings of the trustees of Dartmouth College, from the establishment of the corporation until the 7th day of October 1816 ; the original charter or letters-patent, constituting the college ; the common seal; and four volumes or books of account, purporting to contain the charges and accounts- in favor of the college. The defendant pleaded the general issue, and at the trial, the following special verdict was found: The said jurors, upon their oath, say, that his Majesty George III., king of Great Britain, &c., issued his letters-patent, under the public seal of the province, now state, of New Hampshire, bearing the 13th day of December, in the 10th year of his reign, and in the year of our Lord 1769, in the words following : George the Third, by the grace of God, of Great Britain, France and Ireland, King, Defender of the Faith, and so forth, To all to whom these presents shall come, greeting: Whereas, it hath been represented to our trusty and well-beloved John Wentworth, Esq., governor and commander-in-chief, in and over our province of New Hampshire, in New England, in America, that the Reverend Eleazar Wheelock, of Lebanon, in the colony of Connecticut, in New England, aforesaid, now doctor in divinity, did, on or about the year of our Lord 1754, *at his own expense, on his own estate and plantation, set on foot an Indian charity school, and for several years, through L ® the assistance of well-disposed persons in America, clothed, maintained and educated a number of the children of the Indian natives, with a view to their carrying the Gospel, in their own language, and spreading the knowledge of the great Redeemer, among their savage tribes, and hath actually employed a number of them as missionaries and school-masters in the wilderness, for that purpose : and by the blessing of God upon the endeavors of said Wheelock, the design became reputable among the Indians, insomuch that a large number desired the education of their children in said school, and were also disposed to receive missionaries and school-masters, in the wilderness, more than could be supported by the charitable contributions in these American colonies. Whereupon, the said Eleazar Wheelock thought it expedient, that endeavors should be used to raise contributions from w’ell-disposed persons in England, for the carrying on and extending said undertaking ; and for that purpose the said Eleazar Wheelock requested the Rev. Nathaniel Whitaker, now doctor in divinity to go over to England for that purpose, and sent over with him the Rev. Samson Occom, an Indian minis- sidered as finally settled in the jurisprudence of the entire country, and he remarks, that, “ perhaps, the genius of Marshall never shone forth in greater power and lustre.” So, in Edwards ®. Kearzey, 96 U. S. 607, the same learned judge says, the point decided in Dartmouth College v. Woodward, had not, it is believed, when the constitution was adopted, occurred to any one. There is no trace of it in the Federalist, nor in any other certain contemporaneous publication. It was first made and judicially decided, under the constitution, in that case. Its novelty was admitted by Mr. Chief Justice Marshall, but it was met and conclusively answered in his opinion. And in Stone v. Mississippi, 101 U. S. 816, Waite, Ch. J., says, that the doctrines announced by the court in this case have become so imbedded in the jurisprudence of the United States, as to make them, to all intents and purposes, a part of the constitution itself. 251 520 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. ter, who had been educated by the said Wheelock. And to enable the said Whitaker to the more successful performance of said work, on which he was sent, said Wheelock gave him a full power of attorney, by which said Whitaker solicited those worthy and generous contributors to the charity, * , viz., *The Right Honorable William, Earl of Dartmouth, the Hon- J orable Sir Sidney Stafford Smythe, Knight, one of the barons of his Majesty’s court of exchequer, John Thornton, of Clapham, in the county of Surrey, Esquire, Samuel Roflfey, of Lincoln’s Inn Fields, in the county of'Middlesex, Esquire, Charles Hardy, of the parish of Saint Mary-le-bonne, in said county, Esquire, Daniel West, of Christ’s church, Spitalfields, in the county aforesaid, Esquire, Samuel Savage, of the same place, gentleman, Josiah Roberts, of the parish of St. Edmund the King, Lombard Street, London, gentleman, and Robert Keen, of the parish of Saint Botolph, Aidgate, London, gentleman, to receive the several sums of money, which should be contributed, and to be trustees for the contributors to such charity, which they cheerfully agreed to. Whereupon, the said Whitaker did, by virtue of said power of attorney, constitute and appoint the said Earl of Dartmouth, Sir Sidney Stafford Smythe, John Thornton, Samuel Roffey, Charles Hardy and Daniel West, Esquires, and Samuel Savage, Josiah Roberts and Robert Keen, gentlemen, to be trustees of the money which had then been contributed, and which should, by his means, be contributed for said purpose; which trust they have accepted, as by their engrossed declaration of the same, under their hands and seals, well executed, fully appears, and the same has also been ratified, by a deed of trust, well executed by the said Wheelock. And the said Wheelock further represents, that he has, by power of at-^ -. Forney, for many weighty reasons, *given full power to the said trus- J tees, to fix upon and determine the place for said school, most subservient to the great end in view ; and to enable them understandingly, to give the preference, the said Wheelock has laid before the said trustees, the several offers which have been generously made in the several governments in America, to encourage and invite the settlement of said school among them, for their own private emolument, and the increase "of learning in their respective places, as well as for the furtherance of the general design in view. And whereas, a large number of the proprietors of lands in the western part of this our province of New Hampshire, animated and excited thereto, by the generous example of his excellency, their governor, and by the liberal contributions of many noblemen and gentlemen in England, and especially by the consideration, that such a situation would be as convenient as any for carrying on the great design among the Indians ; and also, considering, that without the least impediment to the said design, the same school may be enlarged and improved to promote learning among the English, and be a means to supply a great number of churches and congregations, which are likely soon to be formed in that new country, with a learned and orthodox ministry; they, the said proprietors, have promised large tracts of land, for the uses aforesaid, provided the school shall be settled in the western part of our said province. And they, the said right honorable, honorable and worthy trustees, before mentioned, having maturely con-] sid^red the reasons and arguments, in favor of the several places *pro-J posed, hav6 given the preference to- the western part of our said 252 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 523 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. province, lying on Connecticut river, as a situation most convenient for said school. And the said Wheelock has further represented a necessity of a legal incorporation, in order to the safety and well-being of said seminary, and its being capable of the tenure and disposal of lands and bequests for the use of the same. And the said Wheelock has also represented, that for many weighty reasons, it will be expedient, at least, in the infancy of said institution, or till it can be accommodated in that new country, and he and his friends be able to remove and settle, by and round about it, that the gentlemen, whom he has already nominated in his last will (which he has transmitted to the aforesaid gentlemen of the trust in England), to be trustees in America, should be of the corporation now proposed. And also, as there are already large collections for said school, in the hands of the aforesaid gentlemen of the trust, in England, and all reasons to believe, from their singular wisdom, piety and zeal to promote the Redeemer’s cause (which has already procured for them the utmost confidence of the kingdom), we may expect they will appoint successors in time to come, who will be men of the same spirit, whereby great good may and will accrue many ways to the institution, and much be done, by their example and influence, to encourage and facilitate the whole design in view ; for which reason, said Wheelock desires, that the trustees aforesaid may be vested with all that power therein, which can consist with their distance from the same. *Know ye, therefore, that We, considering the premises, and r*524 being willing to encourage the laudable and charitable design of L spreading Christian knowledge among the savages of our American wilderness, and also that the best means of education be established in our province of New Hampshire, for the benefit of said province, do, of our special grace, certain knowledge and mere motion, by and with the advice of our counsel for said province, by these presents, will, ordain, grant and constitute, that there be a college erected in our said province of New Hampshire, by the name of Dartmouth College, for the education and instruction of youth of the Indian tribes in this land, in reading, writing and all parts of learning, which shall appear necessary and expedient, for civilizing and christianizing children of pagans, as well as in all liberal arts and sciences, and also of English youth and any others. And the trustees of said college may and shall be one body corporate and politic, in deed, action and name, and shall be called, named and distinguished by the name of the Trustees of Dartmouth College. And further, we have willed, given, granted, constituted and ordained, and by this our present charter, of our special grace, certain knowledge and mere motion, with the advice aforesaid, do, for us, our heirs and successors for ever, will, give, grant, constitute and ordain, that there shall be in the said Dartmouth College, from henceforth and for ever, a body politic, consisting of trustees of said Dartmouth College. And for the more full and perfect erection of said corporation and body politic, consisting of trustees of Dartmouth College, we, of our special grace, certain *knowledge and mere motion, do, by these presents, for us, our heirs and succes- *■ sors, make, ordain, constitute and appoint our trusty and well-beloved John Wentworth, Esq., governor of our said province, and the governor of our said province of New Hampshire for the time being, and our trusty and well- 253 525 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. beloved Theodore Atkinson, Esq., now president of our council of our said province, George Jaffrey and Daniel Peirce, Esq’rs, both of our said council, and Peter Gilman, Esq., now speaker of our house of representatives in said province, and William Pitkin, Esq., one of the assistants of our . colony of Connecticut, and our said trusty and well-beloved Eleazar Wheelock, of Lebanon, doctor in divinity, Benjamin Pomroy, of Hebron, James Lockwood, of Weathersfield, Timothy Pitkin and John Smalley, of Farmington, and William Patten, of Hartford, all of our said colony of Connecticut, ministers of the gospel (the whole number of said trustees consisting, and hereafter for ever to consist, of twelve and no more) to be trustees of said Dartmouth College, in this our province of New Hampshire. And we do further, of our special grace,, certain knowledge and mere motion, for us, our heirs and successors, will, give, grant and appoint, that the said trustees and their successors shall for ever hereafter be, in deed, act and name, a body corporate and politic, and that they, the said body corporate and politic, shall be known and distinguished, in all deeds, grants, bargains, sales, writings, evidences or otherwise howsoever, and in all courts for ever hereafter, plea and be impleaded by the name of the Trustees of Dartmouth College ; and that the said corporation, *by the name J aforesaid, shall be able, and in law capable, for the use of said Dartmouth College, to have, get, acquire, purchase, receive, hold, possess and enjoy, tenements, hereditaments, jurisdictions and franchises, for themselves and their successors, in fee-simple, or otherwise howsoever, and to purchase, receive or build any house or houses, or any other buildings, as they shall think needful and convenient, for the use of said Dartmouth College, and in such town in the western part of our said province of New Hampshire, as shall, by said trustees, or the major part of them, he agreed on ; their said agreement to be evidenced by an instrument in writing, under their hands, ascertaining the same : And also to receive and dispose of any lands, goods, chattels and other things, of what nature soever, for the use aforesaid : And also to have, accept and receive any rents, profits, annuities, gifts, legacies, donations or bequests of any kind whatsoever, for the use aforesaid; so, nevertheless, that the yearly value of the premises do not exceed the sum of 6000Z. sterling ; and therewith, or otherwise, to support and pay, as the said trustees, or the major part of such of them as are regularly convened for the purpose, shall agree, the president, tutors and other officers and ministers of said Dartmouth College; and also to pay all such missionaries and school-masters as shall be authorized, appointed and employed by them, for civilizing and christianizing, and instructing the Indian natives oef this land, their several allowances ; and also their respective annual salaries or allow-ances> and aH such necessary and *contingent charges, as from time -* to time shall arise and accrue, relating to the said Dartmouth College : And also, to bargain, sell, let or assign, lands, tenements or hereditaments, goods or chattels, and all other things whatsoever, by the name aforesaid in as full and ample a manner, to all intents and purposes, as a natural person, or other body politic or corporate, is able to do, by the laws or our realm of Great Britain, or of said province of New Hampshire. And further, of our special grace, certain knowledge and mere motion, to the intent that Our said corporation and body politic may answer the end of their erection and constitution, and may have perpetual succession and 254 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. Dartmouth College v. Woodward. 527 continuance for ever, we do, for us, our heirs and successors, will, give and grant unto the Trustees of Dartmouth College, and to their successors for ever, that there shall be, once a year, and every year, a meeting of said trustees, held at said Dartmouth College, at such time as by said trustees, or the major part of them, at any legal meeting of said trustees, shall be agreed on ; the first meeting to be called by the said Eleazar Wheelock, as soon as conveniently may be, within one year next after the enrolment of these our letterspatent, at such time and place as he shall judge proper. And the said trustees, or the major part of any seven or more of them, shall then determine on the time for holding the annual meeting aforesaid, which may be altered as they shall hereafter find most convenient. And we further order and direct, that the said Eleazar Wheelock shall notify the time for holding said first meeting, to be called as aforesaid, by sending a letter *to p_Og each of said trustees, and causing an advertisement thereof to be *-printed in the New Hampshire Gazette, and in some public newspaper printed in the colony of Connecticut. But in case of the death or incapacity of the said Wheelock, then such meeting to be notified in manner aforesaid, by the governor or commander-in-chief of our said province for the time being. And we do also, for us, our heirs and successors, hereby will, give and-grant unto the said Trustees of Dartmouth College, aforesaid, and to their successors for ever, that when any seven or more of the said trustees, or their successors, are convened and met together, for the service of said Dartmouth College, at any time or times, such seven or more shall be capable to act as fully and amply, to all intents and purposes, as if all the trustees of said college were personally present—and all affairs and actions whatsoever, under the care of said trustees, shall be determined by the majority or greater number of those seven or more trustees so convened and met together. And we do further will, ordain and direct, that the president, trustees, professors, tutors and all such officers as shall be appointed for the public instruction and government of said college, shall, before they undertake the execution of their offices or trusts, or within one year after, take the oaths and subscribe the declaration provided by an act of parliament made in the grst year of King George the First, entitled “ an act for the further security of his majesty’s person and government, and the succession of the crown in the heirs of the late Princess Sophia, being *Protestants, and for the r4..Q0 extinguishing the hopes of the pretended Prince of Wales, and his *-open and secret abettors that is to say, the president, before the governor of our said province for the time being, or by one by him empowered to that service, or by the president of our said council, and the trustees, professors, tutors and other officers, before the president of said college for the time being, who is hereby empowered to administer the same; an entry of all which shall be made in the records of said college. And we do, for us, our heirs, and successors, hereby will, give and grant full power and authority to the president hereafter by us named, and to his successors, or, in case of his failure, to any three or more of the said trustees, to appoint other occasional meetings, from time to time, of the said seven trustees, or any greater number of them, to transact any matter or thing necessary to be done before the next annual meeting, and to order notice to the said seven, or any greater number of them, of the times and 255 529 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. places of meeting for the service aforesaid, by a letter under his or their hands, of the same, one month before said meeting : provided always, that no standing rule or order be made or altered, for the regulation of said college, nor any president or professor be chosen or displaced, nor any other matter or thing transacted or done, which shall continue in force after the then next annual meeting of the said trustees, as aforesaid. And further, we do, by these presents, for us, our heirs and successors, create, make, constitute, nominate and appoint our trusty and well-beloved * Eleazar Wheelock, doctor in divinity, the founder of said ^college, to J be president of said Dartmouth College, and to have the immediate care of the education and government of such students as shall be admitted into said Dartmouth College for instruction and education ; and do will, give and grant to him, in said office, full power, authority and right, to nominate, appoint, constitute and ordain, by his last will, such suitable and meet person or persons as he shall choose to succeed him in the presidency of said Dartmouth College ; and the person so appointed, by his last will, to continue in office, vested with all the powers, privileges, jurisdiction and authority of a president of said Dartmouth College ; that is to say, so long and until such appointment by said last will shall be disapproved by the trustees of said Dartmouth College. And we do also, for us, our heirs and successors, will, give and grant to the said trustees of said Dartmouth College, and to their successors for ever, or any seven or more of them, convened as aforesaid, that in the case of the ceasing or failure of a president, by any means whatsoever, that the said trustees do elect, nominate and appoint such qualified person as they, or the major part of any seven or more of them, convened for that purpose as above directed, shall think fit, to be president of said Dartmouth College, and to have the care of the education and government of the students as aforesaid ; and in case of the ceasing of a president as aforesaid, the senior professor or tutor, being one of the trustees, shall exercise the office of a president, until the trustees shall make choice of and appoint, a president as »ko1-i aforesaid; *and such professor or tutor, or any three or more of • J the trustees, shall immediately appoint a meeting of the body of the trustees for the purpose aforesaid. And also we do will, give and grant to the said trustees, convened as aforesaid, that they elect, nominate and appoint so many tutors and professors to assist the president in the education and government of the students belonging thereto, as they the said trustees shall, from time to time, think needful and serviceable to the interests of said Dartmouth College. And also,, that the said trustees or their successors, or the major part of any seven or more of them, convened for that purpose as above directed, shall, at any time, displace and discharge from the service of said Dartmouth College, any or all such officers, and elect others in their room and stead, as before directed. And also, that the said trustees, or their successors, or the major part of any seven of them which shall convene for that purpose, as above directed, do, from time to time, as occasion shall require, elect, constitute and appoint a treasurer, a clerk, an usher and a steward for the said Dartmouth College, and appoint to them, and each of them, their respective businesses and trust; and displace and discharge from the service of said college, such treasurer, clerk, usher or steward, and to elect others in their room and stead ; which officers so elected, as before 256 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 531 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. directed, we do for us, our heirs and successors, by these presents, constitute and establish in their respective offices, and do give to each and every of them full power and authority to exercise the same in said Dartmouth College, according to the *directions, and during the pleasure of said p-30 trustees, as fully and freely as any like officers in any of our univer- L sities, colleges or seminaries of learning in our realm of Great Britain, lawfully may or ought to do. And also, that the said trustees and their successors, or the major part of any seven or more of them, which shall convene for that purpose, as is above directed, as often as one or more of said trustees shall die, or by removal or otherwise shall, according to their judgment, become unfit or incapable to serve the interests of said college, do, as soon as may be after the death, removal or such unfitness or incapacity of such trustee or trustees, elect and appoint such trustee or trustees as shall supply the place of him or them so dying, or becoming incapable to serve the interests of said college; and every trustee so elected and appointed shall, by virtue of these presents, and such election and appointment, be vested with all the powers and privileges which any of the other trustees of said college are hereby vested with. And we do further will, ordain and direct^ that from and after the expiration of two years from the enrolment of these presents, such vacancy or vacancies as may or shall happen, by death or otherwise, in the aforesaid number of trustees, shall be filled up by election as aforesaid, so that when such vacancies shall be filled up unto the complete number of twelve trustees, eight of the aforesaid whole number of the body of trustees shall be resident, and respectable freeholders of our said province of New Hampshire, and seven of said whole number shall be laymen. *And we do further, of our special grace, certain knowledge and , mere motion, will, give and grant unto the said trustees of Dartmouth *-College, that they, and their successors, or the major part of any seven of them, which shall convene for that purpose, as is above directed, may make, and they are hereby fully empowered, from time to time, fully and lawfully to make and establish such ordinances, orders and laws, as may tend to the good and wholesome government of the said college, and all the students and the several officers and ministers thereof, and to the public benefit of the same, not repugnant to the laws and statutes of our realm of Great Britain, or of this our province of New Hampshire, and not excluding any person of any religious denomination whatsoever, from free and equal liberty and advantage of education, or from any of the liberties and privileges or immunities of the said college, on account of his or their speculative sentiments in religion, and of his or their being of a religious profession different from the said trustees of the said Dartmouth College. And such ordinances, orders and laws, which shall as aforesaid be made, we do, for us, our heirs and successors, by these presents, ratify, allow of, and confirm, as good and effectual to oblige and bind all the students, and the several officers and ministers of the said college. And we do hereby authorize and empower the said trustees of Dartmouth College, and the president, tutors and professors oy them elected and appointed as aforesaid, to put such ordinances, orders and laws in execution, to all proper intents and purposes. *And we do further, of our special grace, certain knowledge and mere motion, will, give, and grant unto the said trustees of said Dart- *• mouth College, for the encouragement of learning, and animating the stu- 4 Wheat.—17 257 534 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. dents of said college to diligence and industry, and a laudable progress in literature, that they, and their successors, or the major part of any seven or more of them, convened for that purpose, as above directed, do, by the president of said college, for the time being, or any other deputed by them, give and grant apy such degree or degrees to any of the students of the said college, or any others by them thought worthy thereof, as are usually granted in either of the universities, or any other’ college in our realm of Great Britain ; and that they sign and seal diplomas or certificates of such graduations, to be kept by the graduates as perpetual memorials and testimonials thereof. And we do further, of our special grace, certain knowledge and mere motion, by these presents, for us, our heirs and successors, give and grant unto the trustees of said Dartmouth College, and to their successors, that they and their successors shall have a common seal, under which they may pass all diplomas or certificates of degrees, and all other affairs and business of, and concerning the said college ; which shall be engraven in such a form and with such an inscription as shall be devised by the said trustees, for the time being, or by the major part of .any seven or more of them, convened for the service of the said college, as is above directed. $ *And we do further, for us, our heirs and successors, give and J grant unto the said trustees of the said Dartmouth College, and their successors, or to the major part of any seven or more of them, convened for the service of the said college, full power and authority, from time to time, to nominate and appoint all other officers and ministers, which they shall think convenient and necessary for the service of the said college, not herein particularly named or mentioned ; which officers and ministers we do hereby empower to execute their offices and trusts, as fully and freely as any of the officers and ministers in our universities or colleges in our realm of Great Britain lawfully may or ought to do. And further, that the generous contributors to the support of this design of spreading the knowledge of the only true God and Saviour among the American savages, may, from time to time, be satisfied that their liberalities are faithfully disposed of, in the best manner, for that purpose, and that others may, in future time, be encouraged in the exercise of the like liberality, for promoting the same pious design, it shall be the dpty of the president of said Dartmouth College, and of his successors, annually, or as often as he shall be thereunto desired or required, to transmit to the right honorable, honorable, and worthy gentlemen of the trust, in England, before mentioned, a faithful account of the improvements and disbursements of the several sums he shall receive from the donations and bequests made in England, through the hands of said trustees, and also advise them of the general plans laid, and prospects exhibited, as well as a faithful -* *account of all remarkable occurrences, in order, if they shall think expedient, that they may be published. And this to continue so long as they shall perpetuate their board of trust, and there shall be any of the Indian natives remaining to be proper objects of that charity. And lastly, our express will and pleasure is, and we do, by these presents, for us, our heirs and successors, give and grant unto the said trustees of Dartmouth College, and to their successors for ever, that these our letters-patent, on the enrolment thereof in the secretary’s office of our province of New Hamp' 258 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 586 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. shire aforesaid, shall be good and effectual in the law, to all intents and purposes, against us, our heirs and successors, without any other license, grant or confirmation from us, our heirs and successors, hereafter by the said trustees to be had and obtained, notwithstanding the not writing or misrecital, not naming or misnaming the aforesaid offices, franchises, privileges, immunities or other the premises, or any of them, and notwithstanding a writ of ad quod damnum hath not issued forth to inquire of the premises, or any of them, before the ensealing hereof, any statute, act, ordinance, or provision, or any other matter or thing, to the contrary notwithstanding. To have and to hold, all and singular the privileges, advantages, liberties, immunities, and all other the premises herein and hereby granted, or which are meant, mentioned or intended to be herein and hereby given and granted, unto them, the said trustees of Dartmouth College, and to their successors for ever. In testimony whereof, we have caused these our letters to be made patent, and the public seal of *our said province of New’ Hamp- r*Kos shire to be hereunto affixed. Witness our trusty and well-beloved L John Wentworth, Esquire, governor and commander-in-chief in and over our said province, &c., this thirteenth day of December, in the tenth year of our reign, and in the year of our Lord 1769. N.B. The words “ and such professor or tutor, or any three or more of the trustees, shall immediately appoint a meeting of the body of the trustees, for the purpose aforesaid,” between the first and second lines, also the words “ or more,” between the 27th and 28th lines, also the words “ or more,” between the 28th and 20th lines, and also the words “to all intents and purposes,” between the 37th and 38th lines of this sheet, w\ere respectively interlined, before signing and sealing. And the said jurors, upon their oath, further say, that afterwards, upon the 18th day of the same December, the said letters-patent were duly enrolled and recorded in the secretary’s office of said province, nowr state, of New Hampshire ; and afterwards, and within one year from the issuing of the same letters-patent, all the persons named as trustees in the same accepted the said letters-patent, and assented thereunto, and the corporation therein and thereby created and erected was duly organized, and has, until the passing of the act of the legislature of the state of Newr Hampshire, of the 27th of June, a. d. 1816, and ever since (unless prevented by said act r*Koo and the *doings under the same) continued to be a corporation. And the said jurors, upon their oath, further say, that immediately after its erection and organization as aforesaid, the said corporation had, took, acquired and received, by gift, donation, devise and otherwise, lands, goods, chattels and moneys of great value ; and from time to time since, have had, taken, received and acquired, in manner aforesaid, and otherwise, lands, goods, chattels and moneys of great value ; and on the same 27th day of June, a. d. 1816, the said corporation, erected and organized as aforesaid, had, held and enjoyed, and ever since have had, held and enjoyed, divers lands, tenements, hereditaments, goods, chattels and moneys, acquired in manner aforesaid, the yearly income of the same, not exceeding the sum of «26,666, for the use of said Dartmouth College, as specified in said letters-patent. And the said jurors, upon their oath, further say, that part of the said lands, so acquired and holden by the said trustees as aforesaid, were 259 538 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. granted by (and are situate in) the state of Vermont, a. d. 1785, and are of great value ; and other part of said lands, so acquired and holden as aforesaid, were granted by (and are situate in) the state of New Hampshire, in the years 1789 and 1807, and are of great value. And the said jurors, upon their oath, further say, that the said trustees of Dartmonth College, so constituted as aforesaid, on the same 27th day of June, a. d. 1816,, were possessed of the goods and chattels in the declaration of the said trustees specified, *and at the place therein mentioned, as of their own proper goods and -1 chattels, and continued so possessed until, and at the time of the demand and refusal of the same, as hereinafter mentioned, unless divested thereof, and their title thereto defeated and rendered invalid, by the provisions of the act of the state of New Hampshire, made and passed on the same 27th day of June, a. d. 1816, and the doings under the same, as hereinafter mentioned and recited. And the said jurors, upon their oath, further say, that on the 27th day of June, a. d. 1816, the legislature of said state of New Hampshire made and passed a certain act, entitled, “ an act to amend the charter, and enlarge and improve the corporation of Dartmouth College,” in the words following: An act to amend the charter, and enlarge and improve the corporation of Dartmouth College. Whereas, knowledge and learning generally diffused through a community, are essential to the preservation of a free government, and extending the opportunities and advantages of education is highly conducive to promote this end, and by the constitution it is made the duty of the legislators and magistrates, to cherish the interests of literature, and the sciences, and all seminaries established for their advancement ; and as the college of the state may, in the opinion of the legislature, be rendered more extensively useful: therefore— § 1. Be it enacted, &c., that the *corporation, heretofore called -• and known by the name of the Trustees of Dartmouth College, shall ever hereafter be called and known by the name of the Trustees of Dartmouth University ; and the whole number of said trustees shall be twenty-one, a majority of whom shall form a quorum for the transaction of business ; and they and their successors in that capacity, as hereby constituted, shall respectively for ever have, hold, use, exercise and enjoy all the powers, authorities, rights, property, liberties, privileges and immunities which have hitherto been possessed, enjoyed and used by the Trustees of Dartmouth College, except so far as the same maybe varied or limited by the provisions of this act. And they shall have power to determine the times and places of their meetings, and manner of notifying the same; to organize colleges in the university ; to establish an institute, and elect fellows and members thereof : to appoint such officers as they may deem proper, and determine their duties and compensation, and also to displace them ; to delegate the power of supplying vacancies in any of the offices of the university, for any term of time not extending beyond their next meeting : to pass ordinances for the government of the students, with reasonable penalties, not inconsistent with the constitution and laws of this state ; to prescribe the course of education, and confer degrees ; and to arrange, invest and employ the funds of the university. 260 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 540 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. § 2. And be it further enacted, that there shall be a board of overseers, who shall have perpetual succession, and whose number shall be twenty-five, *fifteen of whom shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. • The president of. the senate, and the speaker of the house L of representatives of New Hampshire, the governor and lieutenant-governor of Vermont, for the time being, shall be members of said board, ex officio. The board of overseers shall have power to determine the times and places of their meetings, and manner of notifying the same ; to inspect and confirm, or disapprove and negative, such votes and proceedings of the board of trustees as shall relate to the appointment and removal of president, professors and other permanent officers of the university, and determine their salaries ; to the establishment of colleges and professorships, and the erection of new college buildings : provided always, that the said negative shall be expressed within sixty days from the time of said overseers being furnished with copies of such acts : provided also, that all votes and proceedings of the board of trustees shall be valid and effectual, to all intents and purposes, un|.il such negative of the board of overseers be expressed, according to the provisions of this act. § 3. Be it.further’ enacted, that there shall be a treasurer of said corporation, who shall be duly sworn, and who, before he enters upon the duties of his office, shall give bonds, with sureties, to the satisfaction of the corporation, for the. faithful performance thereof ; and also a secretary to each of the boards of trustees and overseers, to be elected by the said boards, respectively, who shall keep a just and true record of the proceedings of the board for *which he was chosen. And it shall furthermore be the duty of the secretary of the board of trustees to furnish, as soon as L may be, to the said board of overseers, copies of the records of such votes and proceedings, as by the provisions of this act are made subject to their revision and control. § 4. Be it further enacted, that the president of Dartmouth University, and his successors in office, shall have the superintendence of the government and instruction of the students, and may preside at all meetings of the trustees, and do and execute all the duties devolving by usage on the president of a university. He shall render annually to the governor of this state an account of the number of students, and of the state of the funds of the university ; and likewise copies of all important votes and proceedings of the corporation and overseers, which shall be made out by the secretaries of the respective boards. § 5. Be it further enacted, that the president and professors of the university shall be nominated by the trustees, and approved by the overseers : and shall be liable to be suspended or removed from office in manner as before provided. . And each of the two boards of trustees and overseers shall have power to suspend and remove any member of their respective boards. 8 6. Be it further enacted, that the governor and counsel are hereby authorized to fill all vacancies in the board of overseers, whether’ the same be original vacancies, or are occasioned by the death, resignation or removal of any member. And *the governor and counsel in like manner shall, rsj!_. Q by appointments, as soon as may be, complete the present board of *-trustees to the number of twenty-one, as provided for by this act, and shall 261 543 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. have power also to fill all vacancies that may occur previous to, or during the first meeting of the said board of trustees. But the president of said university for the time being, shall, nevertheless, be a member of said board of trustees, ex officio. And the governor and council shall have power to inspect the doings and proceedings of the corporation, and of all the officers of the university, whenever they deem it expedient; and they are hereby required to make such inspection, and report the same to the legislature of this state, as often as once in every five years. And the governor is hereby authorized and requested to summon the first meeting of the said trustees and overseers, to be held at Hanover, on the 26th day of August next. § 7. Be it further enacted, that the president and professors of the university, before entering upon the duties of their offices, shall take the oath to support the constitution of the United States and of this state ; certificates of which shall be in the office of the secretary of this state, within sixty days from their entering on their offices respectively. § 8. Be it further enacted, that perfect freedom of religious opinion shall be enjoyed by all the officers and students of the university7; and no officer or student shall be deprived of any honors, privileges or benefits of the institution, on accout of his religious creed or belief. The theological * i colleges which *may be established in the university shall be founded -I o n the same principles of religious freedom ; and any man, or body of men, shall have a right to endow colleges or professorships of any sect of the Protestant Christian religion : and the trustees shall be held and obliged to ^appoint professors of learning and piety of such sects, according to the will of the donors. - Approved, June 27th, 1816. And the said jurors, upon their oath, further say, that, at the annual meeting of the trustees of Dartmouth College, constituted agreeably to the letters-patent aforesaid, and in no other way or manner, holden at said college, on the 28th day of August, a. d. 1816, the said trustees voted and resolved, and caused the said vote and resolve to be entered on their records, that they do not accept the provisions of the said act of the legislature of New Hampshire of the 27th of June 1816, above recited, but do, by the said vote and resolve, expressly refuse to accept or act under the same. And the said jurors, upon their oath, further say, that the said trustees of Dartmouth College have never accepted, assented to, or acted under, the said act of the 27th of June, a. d. 1816, or any act passed in addition thereto, or in amendment thereof, but have continued to act, and still claim the right of acting, under the said letters-patent. And the said jurors, upon their oath, further say, that on the 7th day of October, a. d. 1816, and before the commencement of this suit, the said trustees of Dartmouth College demanded of the said *William H. J Woodward the property, goods and chattels in the said declaration specified, and requested the said William H. Woodward, who then had the same in his hands and possession, to deliver the same to them, which the said William H. Woodward then and there refused to do, and has ever since neglected and refused to do, but converted the same to his own use, if the said trustees of Dartmouth College could, after the passing of the said act 262 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 545 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. of the 27th day of June, lawfully demand the same, and if the said William II. Woodward was not, by law, authorized to retain the same in his possession after such demand. And the said jurors, upon their oath, further say, that on the 18th day of December, a. d. 1816, the legislature of the said state of New Hampshire made and passed a certain other act, entitled, “ an act in addition to, and in amendment of, an act, entitled, an act to amend the charter, and enlarge and improve the corporation of Dartmouth College,” in the words following : An act in addition to, and in amendment of, an act, entitled, “ an act to amend the charter, and enlarge and improve the Corporation of Dartmouth College.” Whereas, the meetings of the trustees and overseers of Dartmouth University, which were summoned agreeably to the provisions of said act, failed of being duly holden, in consequence of a quorum of neither said trustees nor overseers attending at the *time and place appointed, whereby the proceedings of said corporation have hitherto been, and *-still are delayed : § I. Be it enacted, &c., that the governor be, and'he is hereby authorized and requested to summon a meeting of the trustees of Dartmouth University, at such time and place as he may deem expedient. And the said trustees, at such meeting, may do and transact any matter or thing, within the limits of their jurisdiction and power, as such trustees, to every intent and purpose, and as fully and completely as if the same were transacted at 'any annual or other meeting. And the governor, with advice of council, is authorized to fill all vacancies that have happened, or may happen in the board of said trustees, previous to their next annual meeting. And the governor is hereby authorized to summon a meeting of the overseers of said university, at such time and place as he may consider proper. And provided, a less number than a quorum bf said board of overseers convene at the time and place appointed for such meeting of their board, they shall have power to adjourn, from time to time, until a quorum shall have convened. § 2. And be it further enacted, that so much of the act, to which this is an addition, as makes necessary any particular number of trustees or overseers of said university, to constitute a quorum for the transaction of business, be, and the same hereby is repealed ; and that hereafter, nine of said trustees, convened agreeably to the provisions of this act, or *to those p,.. of that to which this is an addition, shall be a quorum for transacting *• business ; and that in the board of trustees, six votes at least shall be necessary for the passage of any act or resolution. And provided also, that any smaller number than nine of said trustees, convened at the time and place appointed for any meeting of their board, according to the provisions of this act, or that to which this is an addition, shall have power to adjourn from time to time, until a quorum shall have convened. § 3. And be it further enacted, that each member of said board of trustees, already appointed or chosen, or hereafter to be appointed or chosen, shall, before entering on the duties of his office, make and subscribe an oath for the faithful discharge of the duties aforesaid ; which oath shall be returned to, and filed in the office of the secretary of state, previous to the 263 547 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. next regular meeting of said board, after said member enters on the duties of his office, as aforesaid. Approved, December 18th, 1816. And the said jurors, upon their oath, further say, that on the 26th day of December, a. d. 1816, the legislature of said state of New Hampshire made and passed a certain Other act, entitled, “ an act in addition to an act, entitled, an act in addition to, and in amendment of an act, entitled, an act to amend the charter and enlarge and improve the corporation of Dartmouth College,” in the words following : *An act in addition to an act, entitled, “an act in addition to, -* and in amendment of, an act, entitled, an act to amend the charter and enlarge and improve the corporation of Dartmouth College.” Be it enacted &c., that if any person or persons shall assume the office of president, trustee, professor, secretary, treasurer, librarian or other officer of Dartmouth University ; or by any name, or under any pretext, shall, directly or indirectly, take upon himself or themselves the discharge of any of the duties of either of those offices, except it be pursuant to, and in conformity with, the provisions of an act, entitled, “ an act to amend the charter and enlarge and improve the corporation of Dartmouth College,” or, of the “ act, in addition to and in amendment of an act, entitled, an act to amend the charter and enlarge and improve the corporation of Dartmouth College,” or shall in any way, directly or indirectly, wilfully impede or hinder any such officer or officers already existing, or hereafter to be appointed agreeably to the provisions of the acts aforesaid, in the free and entire discharge of the duties of their respective offices, conformably to the provisions of said acts, the person or persons so offending shall, for each offence, forfeit and pay the sum of five hundred dollars, to be recovered by any person who shall sue therefor, one-half thereof to the use of the prosecutor, and the other half to the use of said university. And be it further enacted, that the person or persons who sustained the *5401 °®ces secretary and treasurer *of the trustees of Dartmouth Col- J lege, next before the passage of the act, entitled, “ an act to amend the charter and enlarge and improve the corporation of Dartmouth College,” shall continue to hold and discharge the duties of those offices, as secretary and treasurer of the trustees of Dartmouth University, until another person or persons be appointed, in his or their stead, by the trustees of said university. And that the treasurer of said university, so existing, shall, in his office, have the care, management, direction and superintendence of the property of said corporation, whether real or personal, until a quorum of said trustees shall have convened in a regular meeting. Approved, December 26th, 1816. And the said jurors, upon their oath, further say, that the said William H. Woodward, before the said 27th day of June, had been duly appointed by the said trustees of Dartmouth College, secretary and treasurer of the said corporation, and was duly qualified to exercise, and did exercise the said offices, and perform the duties of the same; and as such secretary and 264 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 549 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. treasurer, rightfully had, while he so continued secretary and treasurer as aforesaid, the custody and keeping of the several goods, chattels and property, in said declaration specified. And the said jurors, upon their oath, further say, that the said William H. Woodward was removed by said trustees of Dartmouth College (if the said trustees could, by law, do the said acts) from said office of secretary, on the 27th day of August, a. d. 1816, and from said office of treasurer, on the 27th day of *September, then next following, of which said re-movals be, the said William H. Woodward, had due notice on each L of said days last mentioned. And the said jurors, upon their oath, further say, that the corporation called the. Trustees of Dartmouth University, was duly organized on the 4th day of February, a. d. 1817, pursuant to, and under, the said recited acts of the 27th day of June, and of the 18th and 26th days of December, a. d. 1816 ; and the said William H. Woodward was, on the said 4th day of February, a. d. 1817, duly appointed by the said Trustees of Dartmouth University, secretary and treasurer of the said Trustees of Dartmouth University, and then and there accepted both said offices. And the said jurors, upon their oath, further say, that this suit was commenced on the 8th day of February, a. d. 1817. But whether upon the whole matter aforesaid, by the jurors aforesaid, in manner and form aforesaid found, the said acts of the 27th of June, 18th and 26th of December, a. d. 1816, are valid in law, and binding on the said trustees of Dartmouth College, without acceptance thereof and assent thereunto by them, so as to render the plaintiffs incapable of maintaining this action, or whether the same acts are repugnant to the constitution of the United States, and so void, the said jurors are wholly ignorant, and pray the advice of the court upon the premises. And if, upon the said matter, it shall seem to the court here, that the said acts last mentioned are valid in law, and binding on said trustees of Dartmouth College, *without acceptance thereof, and r*55j assent thereto, by them, so as to render the plaintiffs incapable of L maintaining this action, and are not repugnant to the constitution of the United States, then the said jurors, upon their oath, say, that the said William H. Woodward is not guilty of the premises above laid to his charge, by the declaration aforesaid, as the said William H. Woodward hath above m pleading alleged. But if, upon the whole matter aforesaid, it shall seem to the court here, that the said acts last mentioned are not valid in law, and are not binding on the said trustees of Dartmouth College, without acceptance thereof, and assent thereto, by them, so as to render them incapable of maintaining this action, and that the said acts are repugnant to the constitution of the United States and void, then the said jurors, upon their oath, say that the said William H. Woodward is guilty of the premises above laid to his charge, by the declaration aforesaid, and in that case, they assess the damages of them, the said trustees of Dartmouth College, by occasion thereof, at $20,000. Judgment having been afterwards rendered upon the said special verdict, by the superior court of the state of New Hampshire, being the highest court of law or equity of said state, for the plaintiff below, the cause was brought before this court by writ of error. 265 551 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. March 10th and 11th, 1818. Webster, for the plaintiffs in error.—The general question is, whether the acts of the 27th of June, and of the 18th ¿EK«! an<^ 26th of December 1816, are *valid and binding on the rights of J the plaintiffs, without their acceptance or assent. The substance of the facts recited in the preamble to the charter, is, that Dr. Wheelock had founded a charity, on funds owned and procured by himself ; that he was at that time, the sole dispenser and sole administrator, as well as the legal owner of these funds ; that he had made his will devising this property in trust, to continue the existence and uses of the school, and appointed trustees ; that, in this state of things, he had been invited to fix Ins school permanently in New Hampshire, and to extend the design of it to the education of the youth of that province ; that before he removed his school, or accepted this invitation, w’hich his friends in England had advised him to accept, he applied for a charter, to be granted, not to whomsoever the king or government of the province should please, but to such persons as he named and appointed, viz., the persons whom he had already appointed to be the future trustees of his charity, by his will. The charter, or letterspatent, then proceed to create such a corporation, and to appoint twelve persons to constitute it, by the name of the “ Trustees of Dartmouth College to have perpetual existence, as such corportion, and with power to hold and dispose of lands and goods for the use of the college, with all the ordinary powers of corporations. They are, in their discretion, to apply the funds and property of the college to the support of the president, tutors, ministers and other officers of the college, and such missionaries and school-masters as they may see fit to employ among *the Indians. There J are to be twelve trustees for ever, and no more ; and they are to have the right of filling vacancies occurring in their own body. The Rev. Mr. Wheelock is declared to be the founder of the college, and is, by the charter, appointed first president, with power to appoint a successor, by his last will. All proper powers of government, superintendence and visitation, are vested in the trustees. They are to appoint and remove all officers, at their discretion ; to fix their salaries, and assign their duties ; and to make all ordinances, ordersand laws, for the government of the students. And to the end that the persons who had acted as depositaries of the contributions in England, and who had also been contributors themselves, might be satisfied of the good use of their contributions, the president was, annually, or when required, to transmit to them an account of the progress of the institution, and the disbursements of its funds, so long as they should continue to act in that trust. These letters-patent are to be good and effectual in law, against the king, his heirs and successors for ever, without further grant or confirmation ; and the trustees are to hold all and singular these privileges, advantages, liberties and immunities, to them and to their successors for ever. No funds are given to the college by this charter. A corporate existence and capacity are given to the trustees, with the privileges and immunities which have been mentioned, to enable the founder and his associates the better to manage the funds which they themselves had contributed, and such others as they might afterwards obtain. *5r41 * After the institution, thus created and constituted, had existed, J uninterruptedly and usefully, nearly fifty years, the legislature of New Hampshire passed the acts in question. The first act makes the twelve 266 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 554 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. trustees under the charter, and nine other individuals to be appointed by the governor and council, a corporation, by a new name ; and to this new corporation transfers all the property, rights, powers, liberties and privileges of the old corporation ; with further power to establish new collèges and an institute, and to apply all or any part of the funds to these purposes, subject to the power and control of a board of twenty-five overseers, to be appointed by the governor and council. The second act makes further provisions for executing the objects of the first, and the last act authorizes the defendant, the treasurer of the plaintiffs, to retain and hold their property, against their will. If these acts are valid, the old corporation is abolished, and a new one created. The first act does, in fact, if it can have effect, create a new corporation, and transfer to it all the property and franchises of the old. The two corporations are not the same, in anything which essentially belongs to the existence of a corporation. They have different names, and different powers, rights and duties ; their organization is wholly different ; the powers of the corporation are not vested in the same or similar hands. In one, the trustees are twelve, and no more; in the other, they are twenty-one. In one, the power is a single board ; in the other, it is divided between two boards. Although the act professes to *include the old trustees pre-in the new corporation, yet that was without their assent, and against L their remonstrance ; and no person can be compelled to be a member of such a corporation against his will. It was neither expected nor intended, that they should be members of the new corporation. The act itself treats the old corporation as at an. end, and going on the ground, that all its functions have ceased, it provides for the first meeting and organization of the new corporation. It expressly provides also, that the new corporation shall have and hold all the property of the old ; a provision which would be quite unnecessary, upon any other ground, than that the old corporation was dissolved. But if it could be contended, that the effect of these acts was not entirely to abolish the old corporation, yet it is manifest, that they impair and invade the rights, property and powers of the trustees, under the charter, as a corporation, and the legal rights, privileges and immunities which belong to them, as individual members of the corporation. The twelve trustees were the sole legal owners of all the property acquired under the charter ; by the acts, others are admitted, against their will, to be joint owners. The twelve iudividuals, who are trustees, were possessed of all the franchises and immunities conferred by the charter ; by the acts, nine other trustees, and twenty-five overseers, are admitted, against their will, to divide these franchises and immunities with them. If, either as a corporation, or as individuals, they have any legal rights, this forcible intrusion of others violates those rights, as manifestly as an entire and complete ouster *and dispossession. These acts alter the whole constitution of *- the corporation ; they affect the rights of the whole body, as a corporation, and the rights of the individuals who compose it ; they revoke corporate powers and franchises ; they alienate and transfer the property of the college to others. By the charter, the trustees had a right to fill vacancies in their own number ; this is now taken away. They were to consist of twelve, and by express provision, of no more ; this is altered. They and their successors, appointed by themselves, were for ever to hold the property; 267 556 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. the legislature has found successors for them, before their seats are vacant. The powers and privileges, which the twelve were to exercise exclusively, are now to be exercised by others. By one of the acts, they are subjected to heavy penalties, if they exercise their offices, or any of those powers and privileges granted them by charter, and which they had exercised for fifty years ; they are to be punished for not accepting the new grant, and taking its benefits. This, it must be confessed, is rather a summary mode of settling a question of constitutional right. Not only are new trustees forced into the corporation, but new trusts and uses are created. The college is turned into a university ; power is given to create new colleges, and to authorize any diversion of the funds, which may be agreeable to the new boards, sufficient latitude is given, by the undefined power of establishing an institute. To these new colleges, and this institute, the funds contributed by the founder, Dr. Wheelock, and by the original donors, the Earl of * Dartmouth *and others, are to be applied, in plain and manifest dis- -1 regard of the uses to which they were given. The president, one of the old trustees, had a right to his office, salary and emoluments, subject to the twelve trustees alone ; his title to these is now changed, and he is made accountable to new masters ; so also, all the professors and tutors. If the legislature can, at pleasure, make these alterations and changes in the rights and privileges of the plaintiffs, it may, with equal propriety, abolish these rights and privileges altogether the same power which can do any part of this work, can accomplish the whole. And, indeed, the argument, on which these acts have been hitherto defended, goes altogether on the ground, that this is such a corporation as the legislature may abolish at pleasure ; and that its members have no rights, liberties, franchises, property or privileges, which the legislature may not revoke, annul, alienate or transfer to others, whenever it sees fit. It w’ill be contended by the plaintiffs, that these acts are not valid and binding on them without their assent. 1. Because they are against common right, and the constitution of New Hampshire. 2. Because they are repugnant to the constitution of the United States. I am aware of the limits which bound the jurisdiction of the court in this case; and that on this record, nothing can be decided, but the single question, whether these acts are repugnant to the constitution of the United States. Yet it may assist in forming an opinion of their true nature and character, to compare them with those fundamental principles, introduced into the state governments *for the purpose of limiting the exercise of the legislative power, I and which the constitution of New Hampshire expresses with great fullness and accuracy. It is not too much to assert, that the legislature of New Hampshire would not have been competent to pass the acts in question, and to make them binding on the plaintiffs, without their assent, even if there had been, in the constitution of New Hampshire, or of the United States, no special restriction on their power ; because these acts are not the exercise of a power properly legislative. . Calder v. Bull, 3 Dall. 386. Their object and effect is, to take away from one, rights, property and franchises, and to grant them to another. This is not the exercise of a legislative power. To justify the taking away of vested rights, there must be a forfeiture ; to adjudge upon and declare which, is the proper province of the judiciary. Attainder and 268 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 558 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. confiscation are acts of sovereign power, not acts of legislation. The British parliament, among other unlimited powers, claims that of altering and vacating charters ; not as an act of ordinary legislation, but of uncontrolled authority. It is, theoretically, omnipotent; yet, in modern times, it has attempted the exercise of this power, very rarely. In a celebrated instance, those who asserted this power in parliament, vindicated its exercise only in a case, in which it could be shown, 1st. That the charter in question was a charter of political power. 2d. That there was a great and overruling state necessity, justifying the *violation of the charter. 3d. That the charter had been abused, and justly forfeited. (Annual Register L 1784, p. 160 ; Pari. Reg. 1783 ; Mr. Burke’s Speech on Mr. Fox’s East India Bill, Burke’s Works, vol. 3, p. 414, 417, 467, 468, 486.) The bill affecting this charter did not pass ; its history is well known. The act which afterwards did pass, passed with the assent of the corporation. Even in the worst times, this power of parliament to repeal and rescind charters has not often been exercised. The illegal proceedings in the reign of Charles II. were under color of law. Judgments of forfeiture were obtained in the courts. Such was the case of the quo warranto against the city of London, and the proceedings by which the charter of Massachusetts was vacated. The legislature of New Hampshire has no more power over the rights of the plaintiffs than existed, somewhere, in some department of government, before the revolution. The British parliament could not have annulled or revoked this grant, as an act of ordinary legislation. If it had done it at all, it could only have been, in virtue of that sovereign power, called omnipotent, which does not belong to any legislature in the United States. The legislature of New Hampshire has the same power over this charter, which belonged to the king, who granted it, and no more. By the law of England, the power to create corporations is a part of the royal prerogative. 1 Bl. Com. 472. By the revolution, this power may be considered as having devolved on the legislature of *the state, and it has, accordingly, been exercised by the legislature. But the king cannot abolish a corporation, or new model •-it, or alter its powers, without its assent. This is the acknowledged and well-known doctrine of the common law. “ Whatever might have been the notion in former times,” says Lord Mansfield, “ it is most certain, now, that the corporations of the universities are lay corporations ; and that the crown cannot take away from them any rights that have been formerly subsisting in them, under old charters or prescriptive usage.” 3 Burr. 1656. After forfeiture duly found, the king may regrant the franchises; but a grant of franchises, already granted, and of which no forfeiture has been found, is void. Corporate franchises can only be forfeited by trial and judgment. King v. Pasmore, 3 T. R. 244. In case of a new charter or grant to an existing corporation, it may accept or reject it as it pleases. King v. Vice-chancellor of Cambridge, 3 Burr. 1656 ; 3 T. R. 240, per Lord Kenyon. It may accept such part of the grant as it chooses, and reject the rest. 3 Burr. 1661. In the very nature of things, a charter cannot be forced upon any Body ; no one can be compelled to accept a grant; and without acceptance, the grant is necessarily void. Ellis v. Marshall, 2 Mass. 277 ; Kyd on Corp. 65-6. It cannot be pretended, that the legislature, as successor to the king in this part of his prerogative, has any power to revoke, vacate or alter this piaj charter. If, therefore, the legislature has not this power, by airy *spe- *- 269 561 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. cific grant contained in the constitution ; nor as included in its ordinary legislative powers ; nor by reason of its succession to the prerogatives of the crown in this particular ; on what ground would the authority to pass these acts rest, even if there were no special prohibitory clauses in the constitution, and the bill of rights ? But there are prohibitions in the constitution and bill of rights of New Hampshire, introduced for the purpose of limiting the legislative power, and of protecting the rights and property of the citizens. One prohibition is, ‘ that no person shall be deprived of his property, immunities or privileges, put out of the protection of the law, or deprived of his life, liberty or estate, but by judgment of his peers, or the law of the land.” In the opinion, however, which was given in the court below, it is denied, that the trustees, under the charter, had any property, immunity, liberty or privilege, in this coiporation, within the meaning of this prohibition in the bill of rights. It is said, that it is a public corporation and public property. That the trustees have no greater interest in it than any other individuals. That it is not private property, which they can sell, or transmit to their heirs ; and that, therefore, they have no interest in it. That their office is a public trust, like that of the governor, or a judge ; and that they have no more concern in the property of the college, than the governor in the property of the state, or than the judges in the fines which they impose on the culprits at their bar. That it is nothing to them, whether their powers shall be extended *5621 Or ^essene<^j any more than is *to the courts, whether their jurisdic-° J tion shall be enlarged or diminished. It is necessary, threfore, to inquire into the true nature and character of the corporation which was created by the charter of 1769. There are divers sorts of corporations; and it may be safely admitted that the legislature has more power over some, than over others. 1 Wooddes. 474 ; 1 Bl. Com. 467. Some corporations are for government and political arrangement ; such, for example, as cities, counties and the towns in New England. These may be changed and modified, as public convenience may require, due regard being always had to the rights of property. Of such corporations, all who live within the limits are, of course, obliged to be members, and to submit to the duties which the law imposes on them as such. Other civil corporations are for the advancement of trade and business, such as banks, insurance companies, and the like. These are created, not by general law, but usually J>y grant; their constitution is special ; it is such as the legislature sees fit to give, and the grantees to accept. The corporation in question is. not a civil, although it is a lay corporation. It is an eleemosynary corporation. It is a private charity, originally founded and endowed by an individual, with a charter obtained for it at his request, for the better administration of his charity. “ The eleemosynary sort of corporations are such as are constituted for the perpetual distributions of the free-alms or bounty of the founder of them, to such persons as he has directed. Of this *are all hospitals for the maintenance of the poor, J sick and impotent ; and all colleges both in our universities and out of them.” 1 Bl. Com. 471. Eleemosynary corporations are for the management of private property, according to the will of the donors ; they are private corporations. A college is as much a private corporation as an hospital ; especially, a college founded as this was, by private bounty. A col-270 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 663 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. lege is a charity. “ The establishment of learning,” says Lord Hardwicke, “ is a charity, and so considered in the statute of Elizabeth. A devise to a college, for their benefit, is a laudable charity, and deserves encouragement.” 1 Ves. 537. The legal signification of a charity is derived chiefly from the statute 43 Eliz., c. 4. “ Those purposes,” says Sir. W. Grant, “ are considered charitable, which that statute enumerates.” 9 Ves. 405. Colleges are enumerated as charities in that statute. The government, in these cases, lends its aid to perpetuate the bénéficient intention of the donor, by granting a charter, under which his private charity shall continue to be dispensed, after his death. This is done, either by incorporating the objects of the charity, as, for instancei the scholars in a college, or the poor in a hospital ; or by incorporating those who are to be governors or trustees of the charity. 1 Wooddes. 474. In cases of the first sort, the founder is, by the common law, visitor. In early times, it became a maxim, that he who gave the property might regulate it in future. Cujus est dare, ejus est disponere. This right of visitation descended from the founder to his heir, as *a right of property, and precisely as his other property went to his heir ; and in default of L heirs, it went to the king, as all other property goes to the king, for the want of heirs. The right of visitation arises from the property ; it grows out of the endowment. The founder may, if he please, part with it, at the time when he establishes the charity, and may vest it in others. Therefore, if he chooses that governors, trustees or overseers should be appointed in the charter, he may cause it to be done, and his power of visitation will be transferred to them, instead of descending to his heirs. The persons thus assigned or appointed by the founder will be visitors, with all the powers of the founder, in exclusion of his heir. 1 Bl. Com. 472. The right of visitation then accrues to them, as a matter of property, by the gift, transfer or appointment of the founder. This is a private right, which they can assert in all legal modes, and in which they have the same protection of the law as in all other rights. As visitors, they may make rules, ordinances and statutes, and altar and repeal them, so far as permitted so to do by the charter. 2 T. R. 350-51. Although the charter proceeds from the crown, or the government, it is considered as the will of the donor. It is obtained at his request. He imposes it as the rule which is to prevail in the dispensation of his bounty, in all future times. The king, or government, which grants the charter, is not thereby the founder, but he who furnishes the funds. The gift of the revenues is the foundation. 1 Bl. Com. 480. The leading *case on this subject is Phillips v. Bury, (a) This was an eject- pgg$ ment brought to recover the rectory-house, &c., of Exeter college, in L Oxford. The question was, whether the plaintiff or defendant was legal rector. Exeter college was founded by an individual, and incorporated by a charter granted by Queen Elizabeth. The controversy turned upon the power of the visitor, and in the discussion of the cause, the nature of college charters and corporations was very fully considered ; and it was determined, that the college was a private corporation, and that the founder had a right (a) Reported in 1 Ld. Raym. 5 ; Comb. 265 ; Holt 715; 1 Show. 360 ; 4 Mod. 106; Skin. 447. 271 565 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. to appoint a visitor, and give him such power as he thought fit. (a) The learned Bishop Stillingfleet’s argument in the same cause, as a member of the House of Lords, when it was there heard, exhibits very clearly the nature of colleges and similiar corporations. (6) These opinions received the sanction of the House of Lords, and they seem to be settled and undoubted law. Where there is a charter, vesting proper powers of government in trustees or governors, they are visitors ; and there is no control in anybody else ; except only that the courts of equity or of law will interfere so far as to preserve the revenues, and prevent the perversion of the funds, and to keep the visitors within their prescribed bounds. Green v. Rutherford, 1 Ves. 472 ; Attorney-General v. Foundling Hospital, 2 Ves. jr. 47 ; Kyd on Corp. 195; *5661 ^00P- ®q. PL “ The foundations of colleges,” says Lord J Mansfield, “ are to be considered in two views, viz., as they are corporations, and as they are eleemosynary. As eleemosynary, they are the creatures of the founder; he may delegate his power, either generally or specially ; he may prescribe particular modes and manners, as to the exercise of part of it. If he makes a general visitor (as by the general words, visita-tor sit), the person so constituted has all incidental power ; but he may be restrained as to particular instances. The founder may appoint a special visitor, for a particular purpose, and no further. The founder may make a general visitor ; and’ yet appoint an inferior particular power, to be executed without going to the visitor in the first instance.” St. John's College, Cambridge v. Todington, 1 Burr. 200. And even if the king be founder, if he grant a charter incorporating trustees and governors, they are visitors, and the king cannot visit. Attorney- General v. Middleton, 2 Ves. 328. A subsequent donation, or engrafted fellowship, falls under the same general visitatorial power, if not otherwise specially provided. Green v. Rutherford ; St. John's College v. Todington. In New England, and perhaps throughout the United States, eleemosynary corporations have been generally established in the latter mode, that is by incorporating governors or trustees, and vesting in them the right of visitation. Small variations may have been in some instances adopted ; as in the case of Harvard College, where some power of inspection is given to the * , overseers, but *not, strictly speaking, a visitatorial power, which still J belongs, it is apprehended, to the fellows or members of the corporation. In general, there are many donors. A charter is obtained, comprising them all, or some of them, and such others as they choose to include, with the right of appointing their successors. They are thus the visitors of their own charity, and appoint others, such as they may see fit, to exercise the same office in time to come. All such corporations are private. The case before the court is clearly that of an eleemosynary corporation. It is, in the strictest legal sense, a private charity. In King v. St. Catharine's Hall, 4 T. R. 233, that college is called a private, eleemosynary, lay corporation. It was endowed by a private founder, and incorporated by letters-patent. And in the same manner was Dartmouth College founded and incorporated. Dr. Wheelock is declared by the charter to be its founder. It was established by him, on funds contributed and collected by himself. As such (a) Lord Holt’s judginent, copied from his own manuscript, is in 2 T. R. 346. 0) 1 Burn’s Eccl. Law 443. 272 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 567 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. founder, he had a right of visitation, which he assigned to the trustees, and they received it, by his consent and appointment, and held it under the charter. 1 Bl. Com. ubi supra. He appointed these trustees visitors, and in that respect to take place of his heir ; as he might have appointed devisees to take his estate, instead of his heir. Little, probably, did he think, at that time, that the legislature would ever take away this property and these privileges, and give them to others ; little did he suppose, that this charter secured to him and his successors no legal rights ; little did *the other donors think so. If they had, the college would have been, L ° what the university is now, a thing upon paper, existing only in name. The numerous academies in New England have been established substantially in the same manner. They hold their property by the same tenure, and no other. Nor has Harvard College any surer title than Dartmouth College ; it may, to-day, have more friends ; but to-morrow, it may have more enemies ; its legal rights are the same. So also of Yale College ; and indeed of all the others. When the legislature gives to these institutions, it may, and does, accompany its grants with such conditions as it pleases. The grant of lands by the legislature of New Hampshire to Dartmouth College, in 1789, was accompanied • with various conditions. When donations are made, by the legislature'or others, to a charity, already existing, without any condition, or the specification of any new use, the donation follows the nature of the charity. Hence the doctrine, that all eleemosynary corporations are private bodies. They are founded by private persons, and on private property. The public cannot be charitable in these institutions. It is not the money of the public, but of private persons which is dispensed. It may be public, that is, general, in its uses and advantages ; and the state may very laudably add contributions of its own to the funds ; but it is still private in the tenure of the property, and in the right of administering the funds. If the doctrine laid down by Lord Holt, and the House of Lords, in Phillips v. Bury, and recognised and established in all the other cases, be correct, *the property of this college was private property ; it was r* vested in the trustees by the charter, and to be administered by them, according to the will of the founder and donors, as expressed in the charter ; they were also visitors of the charity, in the most ample sense. They had, therefore, as they contend, privileges, property and immunities, within the true meaning of the bill of rights. They had rights, and still have them, which they can assert against the legislature, as well as against other wrongdoers. It makes no difference, that the estate is holden for certain trusts ; the legal estate is still theirs. They have a right in the property, and they have a right of visiting and superintending the trust; and this is an object of legal protection, as much as any other right. The charter declares that the powers conferred on the trustees, are “privileges, advantages, liberties and immunities and that they shall be for ever holden by them and their successors. Ihe New Hampshire bill of rights declares that no one shall be deprived of is property, privileges or immunities,” but by judgment of his peers, or the law of the land. The argument on the other side is, that although these terms may mean something in the bill of rights, they mean nothing in this charter. But ney are terms of legal signification, and very properly used in the charter ; 4 Wheat.—18 273 569 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. they are equivalent with franchises. Blackstone says, that franchise and liberty are used as synonymous terms. And after enumerating other liberties and franchises, he says, “ it is likewise, a franchise, for a number of persons to be incorporated and subsist as a body politic, with a power to maintain *perpetual succession, and do other corporate acts ; and each individ- ' J ual member of such corporation is also said to have a franchise or freedom.” 2 Bl. Com. 37. Liberties is the term used in magna charta, as including franchises, privileges, immunities and all the rights which belong to that class. Professor Sullivan says, the term signifies the “ privileges that some of the subjects, whether single persons or bodies corporate, have above others by the lawful grant of the king ; as the chattels of felons or outlaws, and the lands and privilegs of corporations.” Sullivan’s Leet, 41st Leet. The privilege, then, of being a member of a corporation, under,a lawful grant, and of exercising the rights and powers of such member, is such a privilege, liberty or franchise, as has been the object of legal protection, and the subject of a legal interest, from the time of magna charta to the present moment. The plaintiffs have such an interest in this corporation, individually, as they could assert and maintain in a court of law, not as agents of the public, but in their own right. Each trustee has a franchise, and if he be disturbed in the enjoyment of it, he would have redress, on appealing to the law, as promptly as for any other injury. If the other trustees should conspire against any one of them, to prevent his equal right and voice in the appointment of a president or professor, or in the passing of any statute or ordinance of the college, he would be entitled to his action, for depriving him of his franchise. It makes no difference, that this property is to be holden and administered, and these franchises exercised, .. *for the purpose of diffusing learning. No principle and no case estab-& J lishes any such distinction. The public may be benefited by the use of this property ; but this does not change the nature of the property, or the rights of the owners. The object of the charter may be public good; so it is in all other corporations ; and this would as well justify the resumption or violation of the grant in any other case as in this. In the case of an advowson, the use is public, and the right cannot be turned to any private benefit or emolument. It is, nevertheless, a legal private right, and the property of the owner, as emphatically as his freehold. The rights and privileges of trustees, visitors or governors of incorporated colleges, stand on the same foundation. They are so considered, both by Lord Holt and Lord Hardwicke. Phillips v. Bury j Green v. Butherforth. See also 2 Bl. Com. 21. To contend, that the rights of the plaintiffs may be taken away, because they derive from them no pecuniary benefit, or private emolument, or because they cannot be transmitted to their heirs, or would not be assets to pay their debts, is taking an extremely narrow view of the subject. According to this notion, the case would be different, if, in the charter, they had stipulated for a commission on the disbursement of the funds ; and they have ceased to have any interest in the property, because they have undertaken to administer it gratuitously. It cannot be necessary to say much in refutation of the idea, that there cannot be a legal interest, or *own- J ership, in anything which does not yield a pecuniary profit; as if the law regarded no rights but the rights of money, and of visible tangible 274 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 572 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. property. Of what nature are all rights of suffrage ? No elector has a particular personal interest ; but each has a legal right, to be exercised at his own discretion, and it cannot be taken away from him. The exercise of this right, directly and very materially affects the public ; much more so than the exercise of the privileges of a trustee of this college. Consequences of the utmost magnitude may sometimes depend on the exercise of the right of suffrage by one or a few electors. Nobody was ever yet heard to contend, however, that on that account the public might take away -the right or impair it. This notion appears to be borrowed from no better source than the repudiated doctrine of the three judges in the Aylesbury Case.(d) That was an action against a returning officer, for refusing the plaintiff’s vote, in the election of a member of parliament. Three of the judges of the king’s bench held, that the action could not be maintained, because, among other objections, “it was not any matter of profit, either in presenti or in futuro It would not enrich the plaintiff, in pr aesenti, nor would it, in futuro, go to his heirs, or answer to pay his debts. But Lord Holt and the House of Lords were of another opinion. The judgment of the three judges was reversed, and the doctrine they held, having been exploded for a century, seems now for the first time to be revived. Individuals have a right *to use their own property for purposes of benevolence, either towards the public, or towards other individuals. *-They have a right to exercise this benevolence in such lawful manner as they may choose ; and when the government has induced and excited it, by contracting to give perpetuity to the stipulated manner of exercising it, to rescind this contract, and seize on the property, is not law, but violence. Whether the state will grant these franchises, and under what conditions it will grant them, it decides for itself. But when once granted, the constitution holds them to be sacred, till forfeited for just cause. That all property, of which the use may be beneficial to the public, belongs, therefore, to the public, is quite a new doctrine. It has no precedent, and is supported by no known principle. Dr. Wheelock might have answered his purposes, in this case, by executing a private deed of trust. He might have conveyed his property to trustees, for precisely such uses as are described m this charter. Indeed, it appears, that he had contemplated the establishment of his school in that manner, and had made his will, and devised the property to thè same persons who were afterwards appointed trustees in the charter. Many literary and other charitable institutions are founded in that manner, and the trust is renewed, and conferred on other persons, from time to time, as occasion may require. In such a case, no lawyer would or could say, that the legislature might divest the trustees, constituted by deed or will, seize upon the property, and give it to other persons, for other purposes. Aijd does the granting of a charter, which is only done to perpetuate the trust *in a more convenient manner, make any difference? Does or can this change the nature of the charity, and turn it into *-& public, political corporation ? Happily, we are not without authority on this point. It has been considered and adjudged. Lord Hardwicke says, in so many words, “ The charter of the crown cannot make a charity more or less public, but only more permanent than (a) Ashby White, 2 Ld. Raym. 938. 27=5 574 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. it would otherwise be.” Attorney- General v. Pearce, 2 Atk. 87. The granting of the corporation is but making the trust perpetual, and does not alter the nature of the charity. The very object sought in obtaining such charter, and in giving property to such a corporation, is to make and keep it private property, and to clothe it with all the security and inviolability of private property. The intent is, that there shall be a legal private ownership, and that the legal owners shall maintain and protect the property, for the benefit of those for whose use it was designed. Who ever endowed the public? Who ever appointed a legislature to administer his charity? Or who ever heard, before, that a gift to a college, or hospital, or an asylum, was, in reality, nothing but a gift to the state ? The state of Vermont is a principal donor to Dartmouth College. The lands given lie in that state. This appears in the special verdict. Is Vermont to be considered as having intended a gift to the state of New Hampshire in this case ; as it has been said is to be the reasonable construction of all donations to thé college ? The legislature of New Hampshire affects to represent the public, and there-* fore, claims a right to control *all property destined to public use. J What hinders Vermont from considering herself equally the representative of the public, and from resuming her grants, at her own pleasure? Her right to do so is less doubtful, than the power of New Hampshire to pass the laws in question. In University v. Foy, 2 Hayw. 310, the supreme court of North Carolina pronounced unconstitutional and void, a law repealing a grant to the University of North Carolina ; although that university was originally erected and endowed by a statute of the state. That case was a grant of lands, and the court decided, that it could not be resumed. This is the grant of a power and capacity to hold lands. Where is the difference of the cases, upon principle ? In Terrett v. Taylor, 9 Cranch 43, this court decided, that a legislative grant or confirmation of lands, for the purposes of moral and religious instruction, could no more be rescinded than other grants. The nature of the use was not holden to make any difference. A grant to a parish or church, for the purposes which have been mentioned, cannot be distinguished, in respect to the title it confers, from a grant to a college for the promotion of piety and learning. To the same purpose may be cited, the case of Pawlet v. Clark. The state of Vermont, by statute, in 1794, granted to the respective towns in that state, certain glebe lands, lying within those towns, for the sole use and support of religious worship. In 1799, an act was passed, to repeal the act of 1794 ; but this court declared »Khzji that the act of 1794, “ so far as it *granted the glebes to the towns, could not afterwards be repealed by the legislature, so as to divest the rights of the towns under the grant.” 9 Cranch 292. It will be for the other side to show, that the nature of the use decides the question, whether the legislature has power to resume its grants. It will be for those who maintain such a doctrine, to show the principles and cases upon which it rests. It will be for them also, to fix the limits and boundaries of their doctrine, and to show what are, and what are not, such uses as to give the legislature this power of resumption and revocation. And to furnish an answer to the cases cited, it will be for them further to show, that a grant for the use and support of religious worship, stands on other ground than a grant for the promotion of piety and learning. I hope enough has been said, to show, that the trustees possessed vested 276 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 576 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. liberties, privileges and immunities, under this charter ; and that such liberties, privileges and immunities, being once lawfully obtained and vested, are as inviolable as any vested rights of property whatever. Rights to do certain acts, such, for instance, as the visitation and superintendence of a college, and the appointment of its officers, may surely be vested rights, to all legal intents, as completely as the right to possess property. A late learned judge of this court has said, “ when I say, that a right is vested in a citizen, I mean, that he has the power to do certain actions, or to possess certain things, according to the law of the land. 3 Dall. 394. *If such be the true nature of the plaintiffs’interests under this charter, what are the articles in the New Hampshire bill of rights *-which these acts infringe ? They infringe the second article ; which says, that the citizens of the state have a right to hold and possess property. The plaintiffs had a legal property in this charter ; and they had acquir ?d property under it. The acts deprive them of both ; they impair and take away the charter ; and they appropriate the property to new uses, against their consent. The plaintiffs cannot now hold the property acquired by themselves, and which this article says, they have a right to hold. They infringe the twentieth article. By that article it is declared, that in questions of property, there is a right to trial ; the plaintiffs are divested, without trial oi’ judgment. They infringe the twenty-third article. It is therein declared, that no retrospective laws shall be passed ; the article bears directly on the case ; these acts must be deemed retrospective, within the settled construction of that term. What a retrospective law is, has been decided, on the construction of this very article, in the circuit court for the first circuit. The learned judge of that circuit, says, “ every statute which takes away or impairs vested rights, acquired under existing laws, must be deemed retrospective.” Society v. Wheeler, 2 Gallis. 103. That all such laws are retrospective, was decided also in the case of Dash v. Van Kleeck, *1 Johns. 477, where a most learned *judge quotes this article from the constitution 1*51-0 of New Hampshire, with manifest approbation, as a plain and clear expression of those fundamental and unalterable principles of justice, which must lie at the foundation of every free and just system of laws. Can any man deny, that the plaintiffs had rights, under the charter, which were legally vested, and that by these acts, those rights are impaired ?(a) These (a) “It is a principle in the English law, as ancient as the law itself,” says Chief Justice Kent, in the case last cited, “that a statute, even of its omnipotent parliament, is not to have a retrospective effect. Nova constitutio futuris formam imponere débet, et non prœteritis. (Bracton, lib. 4, fol. 228 ; 2 Inst. 292.) The maxim in Bracton was probably taken from the civil law, for we find in that system the same principle, that the law-giver cannot alter his mind, to the prejudice of a vested right. Nemo potest mutare consilium suum in alterius injuriam. (Dig. 50, 17, 75.) This maxim °f Papinian is general in its terms; but Dr. Taylor (Elements of the Civil Law 168) applies it directly as a restriction upon the law-giver ; and a declaration in the code leaves no doubt as to the sense of the civil law. Leges et constitutiones futuris certum est dare formam negotiis, non ad facta prœterita revocari nisi nominatim, et de prœte-'nto tempore, et adhuc pendentibus negotiis cautum sit. (Cod. 1, 14, 7.) This passage, according to the best interpretation of the civilians, relates not merely to future suits, but to future, as 'contradistinguished from past, contracts and vested rights. (Peiezii, Prælec. ht.) It is, indeed, admitted, that the prince may enact a retrospective aw, provided it be done expressly ; for the will of the prince, under the despotism of 277 - *579 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. *acts infringe also, the thirty-seventh article of the constitution of New Hampshire ; which says, that the powers of government shall be kept separate. By these acts, the legislature assumes to exercise a judicial power ; it declares a forfeiture, and resumes franchises, once granted, without trial or hearing. If the constitution be not altogether waste paper, it has restrained the power of the legislature in these particulars, If it has any meaning, it is, that the legislature shall pass no act, directly and manifestly impairing private property, and private privileges. It shall not judge, by act; it shall not decide, by act ; it shall not deprive, by act. But it shall leave all these things to be tried and adjudged by the law of the land. * . The fifteenth article has been referred *to before. It declares, J that no one shall be “ deprived of his property, immunities or privileges, but by the judgment of his peers, or the law of the land.” Notwithstanding the light in which the learned judges in New Hampshire viewed the rights of the plaintiffs under the charter, and which has been before adverted to, it is found to be admitted, in their opinion, that those rights are privileges, within the meaning of this fifteenth article of the bill of rights. Having quoted that article, they say, “ that the right to manage the affairs of this college is a privilege, within the meaning of this clause of the bill of rights, is not to be doubted.” In my humble opinion, this surrenders the point. To resist the effect of this admission, however, the learned judges add, “ but how a privilege can be protected from the operation of the law of the land, by a clause in the constitution, declaring that it shall not be taken away, but by the law of the land, is not very easily understood.” This answer goes on the ground, that the acts in question are laws of the land, within the meaning of the constitution. If they be so, the argument drawn from this article is fully answered. If they be not so, it being admitted that the plaintiffs’ rights are “ privileges,” within the meaning of the article, the argument is not answered, and the article is infringed by the acts. Are then these acts of the legislature, which affect only particular persons and their particular privileges, laws of the land ? Let this question be answered by the text of Blackstone : “And first, it (z. e., law) is a rule; not a transient the Roman emperors, was paramount to every obligation. Great latitude was anciently allowed to legislative expositions of statutes; for the separation of the judicial, from the legislative, power, was not then distinctly known or prescribed. The prince was in the habit of interpreting his own laws for particular occasions. This was called the interloeutio prineipis; and this, according to Huber’s definition, wras, quando principes inter partes loquuntur, et jus dicunt. (Praelec. Juris. Rom., vol. 2, 545.) No correct civilian, and especially, no proud admirer of the ancient republic (if any such then existed), could have reflected on this interference with private rights, and pending suits, without disgust and indignation; and we are rather surprised to find, that under the violent and irregular genius of the Roman government, the principle before us should have been acknowledged and obeyed to the extent in which we fin it. The fact shows, that it must be founded in the clearest justice. Our case is happily very different from that of the subjects of Justinian. With us, the power of the law-giver is limited and defined; the judicial is regarded as a distinct, independent power; private rights have been better understood, and more exalted in public estimation, as well as secured by provisions dictated by the spirit of freedom, and unknown to the civil law. Our constitutions do not admit the power assumed by the Roman prince; and the principle we are considering, is now to be regarded as sacred. 278 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. *581 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. sudden order from a superior, to or concerning a particular *person ; but something permanent, uniform and universal. Therefore, a particular act of the legislature, to confiscate the goods of Titius, or to attaint him of high treason, does not enter into the idea of a municipal law ; for the operation of this act is spent upon Titius only, and has no relation to the community in general; it is rather a sentence than a law.” 1 Bl. Com. 44. Lord Coke is equally decisive and emphatic. Citing and commenting on the celebrated 29th chap, of magna charta, he says, “no man shall be disseised, &c., unless it be by the lawful judgment, that is, verdict of equals, or by the law of the land, that is (to speak it once for all), by the due course and process of law.” 2 Inst. 46. Have the plaintiffs lost their franchises by “due course and process of law?” On the contrary, are not these acts “particular acts of the legislature, which have no relation to the community in general, and which are rather sentences than laws?” By the law of the land, is most clearly intended, the general law; a law, -which hears before it condemns ; which proceeds upon inquiry, and renders judgment only after trial. The meaning is, that every citizen shall hold his life, liberty, property and immunities, under the protection of the general rules which govern society. Everything which may pass under the form of an enactment, is not, therefore, to be considered the law of the land. If thjs were so, acts of attainder, bills of pains and penalties, acts of confiscation, acts reversing judgments, and acts directly transferring one man’s *estate to another, legislative judgments, decrees and forfei- r tures, in all possible forms, would be the law of the land. Such a *-strange construction would render constitutional provisions, of the highest importance, completely inoperative and void. It would tend directly to establish the union of all powers in the legislature. There would be no general permanent law for courts to administer, or for men to live under. The administration of justice would be an empty form, an idle ceremony. Judges would sit to execute legislative judgments and decrees ; not to declare the law, or to administer the justice of the country. “Is that the law of the land,” said Mr. Burke, “upon which, if a man go to Westminster Hall, and ask counsel by what title or tenure he holds his privilege or estate, according to the law of the land, he should be told, that the law of the land is not yet kpown; that no decision or decree has been made in his case ; that when a decree shall be passed, he will then know what the law of the land is? Will this be said to be the law of the land, by any lawyer who has a rag of a gown left upon his back, or a wig with one tie upon his head ?” That the power of electing and appointing the officers of this college is not only a right of the trustees, as a corporation, generally, and in the aggregate, but that each individual trustee has also his own individual franchise in such right of election and appointment, is according to the language of all the authorities. Lord Holt says, “ it is agreeable to reason and the rules of law, that a franchise should be vested in the corporation aggregate, and yet the benefit of it to redound to the *particular members, and rsic to be enjoyed by them in their private capacity. Where the privilege L of election is used by particular persons, it is a particular right, vested in every particular man.” 2 Ld. Raym. 952. . It is also to be considered, that the president and professors of this college have rights to be affected by these acts. Their interest is similar to 279 &?3 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. that of fellows in the English colleges; because they derive their living wholly, or in part, from the founder’s bounty. The president is one of the trustees or corporators. The professors are not necessarily members of the corporation; but they are appointed by the trustees, are removable only by them, and have fixed salaries, payable out of the general funds of the college. Both president and professors have freeholds in their offices; subject only to be removed by the trustees, as their legal visitors, for good cause. All the authorities speak of fellowships in colleges as freeholds, notwithstanding the fellows may be liable to be suspended or removed, for misbehavior, by their constituted visitors. Nothing could have been less expected, in this age, than that there should have been an attempt, by acts of the legislature, to take away these college livings, the inadequate, but the only support of literary men, who have devoted their lives to the instruction of youth. The president and professors were appointed by the twelve trustees. They were accountable- to nobody else, and could be removed by nobody else. They accepted their offices on this tenure. Yet the legislature has appointed *other persons, with power to remove these -* officers, and to deprive them of their livings ; and those other persons have exercised that power. No description of private property has been regarded as more sacred than college livings. They are the estates and freeholds of a most deserving class of men ; of scholars who have consented to forego the advantages of professional and public employments, and to devote themselves to science and literature, and the instruction of youth, in the quiet retreats of academic life. Whether to dispossess and oust them ; to deprive them of their office, and turn them out of their livings; to do this, not by the power of their legal visitors, or governors, but by acts of the legislature ; and to do it, without forfeiture, and without fault; whether all this be not in the highest degree an indefensible and arbitrary proceeding, is a question, of which there would seem to be but one side fit for a lawyer or a scholar to espouse. Of all the attempts of James II. to overturn the law, and the rights of his subjects, none was esteemed more arbitrary or tyrannical, than his attack on Magdalen college, Oxford : and yet, that attempt was nothing but to put out one president and put in another. The president of that college, according to the chartei’ and statutes, is to be chosen by the fellows, who are the corporators. There being a vacancy, tlie king chose to take the appointment out of the hands of the fellows, the legal electors of a president, into his own hands. He, therefore, sent down his mandate, commanding the fellows to admit, for president, a person of his nomination ; and inasmuch as this was directly against *the char-ter and constitution of the college, he was pleased to add a non obstante clause, of sufficiently comprehensive import. The fellows were commanded to admit the person mentioned in the mandate, “any statute, custom or constitution to the contrary notwithstanding, wherewith we are graciously pleased to dispense, in this behalf.” The fellows refused obedience to this mandate, and Dr. Hough, a man of independence and character, was chosen president by the fellows, according to the charter and statutes. The king then assumed the power, in virtue of bis prerogative, to send down certain commissioners to turn him out ; which was done accordingly ; and Parker, a creature suited to the times, put in his place. And because the president, who was rightfully and legally elected, would not deliver the 280 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 585 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. keys, the doors were broken open. “ The nation, as well as the university,” says Bishop Burnet,(a) “looked .on all these proceedings with just indignation. It was thought an open piece of robbery and burglary, when men, authorized by no legal commission, came and forcibly turned men out of their possession and freehold.” Mr. Hume, although a man of different temper, and of other sentiments, in some respects, than Dr. Burnet, speaks of this arbitrary attempt of prerogative, in terms not less decisive. “ The president, and all the fellows,” says he, “except two, who complied, were expelled the college : and Parker was put in possession of the office. This act of violence, of all those which were committed during *the reign of James, is perhaps the most illegal and arbitrary. When L the dispensing power was the most strenuously insisted on by court lawyers, it had still been allowed, that the statutes which regard private property could not legally be infringed by that prerogative. Yet, in this instance, it appeared, that even these were.not now secure from invasion. The privileges of a college are attacked ; men are illegally dispossessed of their property for adhering to their duty, to their oaths, and to their religion.” This measure king James lived to repent, after repentance was too late. When the charter of London was restored, and other measures of violence retracted, to avert the impending revolution, the expelled president and fellows of Magdalen college were permitted to resume their rights. It is evident, that this was regarded as an arbitrary interference with private property. Yet private property was no otherwise attacked, than as a person was appointed to administer and enjoy the revenues of a college, in a manner and by persons not authorized by the constitution of the college. A majority of the members of the corporation would not comply with the king’s wishes; a minority would ; the object was, therefore, to make this minority, a majority. To this end, the king’s commissioners were directed to interfere in the case, and they united with the two complying fellows, and expelled the rest; and thus effected a change in the government of the college. The language in which Mr. Hume, and all other writers, speak of this abortive attempt of oppression, shows, that colleges were esteemed to be, as *they truly are, private corporations, and the property and privileges *■ which belong to them, private property, and private privileges. Court lawyers were found to justify the king in dispensing with the laws ; that is, in assuming and exercising a legislative authority. But no lawyer, not even a court lawyer, in the reign of king James the second, so far as appears, was found to say, that even by this high authority, he could infringe the franchises of the fellows of a college, and take away their livings. Mr. Hume gives the reason ; it is, that such franchises were regarded, in a most emphatic sense, as private property. (6) If it could be made to appear, that the trustees and the president and professors held their offices' and franchises during the pleasure of the legislature, and that the property holden (a) History of his Own Times, vol. 3, p. 119.’ (&) See a full account of this, in State Trials, 4th ed., vol. 4, p. 262. 1 Burnet is, notoriously, an unreliable historian. Dr. Johnson said of him, and this woik, “ I jo not believe that Burnet intentionally lied ; but he was so much prejudiced, that he took no pains to find out the truth. He was like a man who resolves to regulate his time by a certain watch; but will not inquire whether the watch is right or not.” 281 s 87 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. belonged to the state, then, indeed, the legislature have done no more than they had, a right to do. But this is not so. The charter is a charter of privileges and immunities ; and these are holden by the trustees, expressly against the state, for ever. It is admitted, that the state, by its courts of law, can enforce the will of the donor, and compel a faithful execution of the trust. The plaintiffs claim no exemption from legal responsibility. They hold themselves at all times answerable to the law of the land, for their conduct in the trust committed to them. They ask only to hold the property of which they are owners, and the franchises which belong to them, until they shall be found by due course and process of law to have forfeited * -, them. It can make no difference, *whether the legislature exercise -1 the power it has assumed, by removing the trustees and the president and professors, directly, and by name, or by appointing others to expel them. The principle is the same, and in point of fact, the result has been the same. If the entire franchise cannot be taken away, neither can it be essentially impaired. If the trustees are legal owners of the property, they are sole owners. If they are visitors, they are sole visitors. No one will be found to say, that if the legislature may do what it has done, it may not do anything and everything which it may choose to do, relative to the property of the corporation, and the privileges of its members and officers. If the view which has been taken of this question be at all correct, this was an eleemosynary corporation—-a private charity.. The property was private property. The trustees were visitors, and their right to hold the charter, administer the funds, and visit and govern the college, was a franchise and privilege, solemnly granted to them. The use being public, in no way diminishes their legal estate in the property, or their title to the franchise. There is no principle, nor any case, which declares that a gift to such a corporation is a gift to the public. The acts in question violate property ; they take awray privileges, immunities and franchises ; they deny to the trustees the protection of the law ; and they are retrospective in their operation. In all which respects, they are against the constitution of New Hampshire. 2. The plaintiffs contend, in the second place, that the acts in question are repugnant to the 10th section *of the 1st article of the -1 constitution of the United States. The material words of that section are, no state shall pass any bill of attainder, ex post facto law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts.” The object of these most important provisions in the national constitution has often been discussed, both here and elsewhere. It is exhibited with great clearness and force by one of the distinguished persons who framed that instrument. “ Bills of attainder, ex post facto laws, and laws impairing the obligation of contracts, are contrary to the first principles of the social compact, and to every principle of sound legislation. The two former are expressly prohibited by the declarations prefixed to some of the state constitutions, and all of them are prohibited by the spirit and scope of these fundamental charters. Our own experience has taught us, nevertheless, that additional fences against these dangers ought not to be omitted. Very properly, therefore, have the convention added this constitutional bulwark in favor of personal security and private rights ; and I am much deceived, if they have not, in so doing, as faithfully consulted the genuine sentiments as the un- 282 • 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 589 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. doubted interests of their constituents. The sober people of America are weary of the fluctuating policy which has directed the public councils. They have seen with regret, and with indignation, that sudden changes, and legislative interferences, in cases affecting personal rights, become jobs in the hands of enterprising and influential speculators; and snares to the more industrious and less informed part of the ^'community. They have seen, too, that one legislative interference is but the link of a long L chain of repetitions ; every subsequent interference being naturally produced by the effects of the preceding.” (a) It has already been decided in this court, that a grant is a contract, w’ithin the meaning of this provision ; and that a grant by a state is also a contract, as much as the grant of an individual.^) *It has also been decided, that a grant by a state before the revolution, is as much to be protected as a grant since. New Jersey *■ v. Wilson, 7 Cranch 264. But the case of Terrett v. Taylor, before cited, is of all others most pertinent to the present argument. Indeed, the judgment of the court in that case seems to leave little to be argued or decided in this.(c) This court, then, does not admit the doctrine, *that a legislature r*5g2 can repeal statutes creating private corporations. If it cannot repeal *- (a) Letters of Publius, or The Federalist (No. 44., by Mr. Madison). (&) In Fletcher Peck, 6 Cranch 87, the court says, “a contract is a compact between two or more parties, and is either executory or executed. An executory contract is one in which a party binds himself to do, or not to do, a particular thing; such was the law under which the conveyance was made by the government. A contract executed is one in which the object of contract is performed; and this, says Blackstone, differs in nothing from a grant. The contract between Georgia and the purchasers was executed by the grant. A contract executed, as well as one which is executory, contains obligations binding on the parties. A grant, in its own nature, amounts to an extinguishment of the right of the grantor, and implies a contract not to re-assert that right. If, under a fair construction of the constitution, grants are comprehended under the term contracts, is a grant from the state excluded from the operation of the provision ? Is the clause to be considered as inhibiting the state from impairing the obligation of contracts between two individuals, but as excluding from that inhibition, contracts made with itself ? The words themselves contain no such distinction. They are general, and are applicable to contracts of every description. If contracts made with the state are to be exempted from their operation, the exception must arise from the character of the contracting party, not from the words which are employed. Whatever respect might have been felt for the state sovereignties, it is not be disguised, that the framers of the constitution viewed, with some apprehension, the violent acts which might grow out of the feelings of the moment; and that the people of the United States, m adopting that instrument, have manifested a determination to shield themselves, and their property, from the effects of those sudden and strong passions to which men are exposed. The restrictions on the legislative power of the states, are obviously founded on this sentiment; and the constitution of the United States contains what maybe deemed a bill of rights, for the people of each state.” (c) “A private corporation,” says the court, “created by the legislature, may lose its franchises by a misuser or non-user of them; and they may be resumed by the government, under a judicial judgment, upon a quo warranto to ascertain and enforce the forfeiture. This is the common law of the land, and is a tacit condition annexed to the creation of every such corporation. Upon a change of government, too, it may pe admitted, that such exclusive privileges attached to a private corporation as are inconsistent with the new government, may be abolished. In respect, also, to public corporations which exist only for public purposes, such as counties, towns, cities, &c., the legislature may, under proper limitations, have a right to change, modify, enlarge 283 592 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. them altogether, of course, it cannot repeal any part of them, or impair them, or essentially alter them, without the consent of the corporators. If, therefore, it has been shown, that this college is to be regarded as a private charity, this case is embraced within the very terms of that decision. A grant of corporate powers and privileges is as much a contract, as a grant of land. What proves all charters of this sort to be contracts, is, that they must be accepted, to give them force and effect. If they are not accepted, they are void. And in the case of an existing corporation, if a new charter is given it, it may even accept part, and reject the rest. In v. Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge, 3 Burr. 1656, Lord Mansfield says, “ there is a vast deal of difference between a new charter granted to a new corporation (who must take it as it is given), and a new charter given to a corporation already in being, and acting either under a former charter, or under prescriptive usage. The latter, a corporation already existing, are not obliged to accept the new charier in toto, and to receive either all or none of it; * -J they may act partly under it, and *partly under their old charter, or J prescription. The validity of these new charters must turn upon the acceptance of them.” In the same case, Mr. Justice Wilmot says, “it is the concurrence and acceptance of the university, that gives the force to the charter of the crown.” In the King v. Pasmore, 3 T. R. 240, Lord Kenyon observes, “ some things are clear : when a corporation exists, capable of discharging its functions, the crown cannot obtrude another charter upon them ; they may either accept or reject it.”(a) In all cases relative to charters, the acceptance of them is uniformly alleged in the pleadings. This shows the general understanding of the lawr, that they are grants, or contracts ; and that parties are necessary to give them force and validity. In King v. Dr. Askew, 4 Burr. 2200, it is said, “ the crown cannot oblige a man to be a corporator, without his consent; he shall not be subject to the inconveniences of it, without accepting it and assenting to it.” These terms, “ acceptance,” and “ assent,” are the very language of contract. In Ellis n. Marshall, 2 Mass. 279, it was expressly adjudged, that the naming of the defendant, among others, in an act of incorporation, did not, of itself, make him a corporator ; and that his assent wras necessary to that end. The court speak of the act of incorporation as a grant, and observe, “ that a man may refuse a grant, whether from the government or an individual, seems to be %a principle too clear to require the support of authorities.” But Mr. Justice *5941 ^ULLER’ in v- Pasmore, *furnishes, if possible, a still more -* direct and explicit authority. Speaking of a corporation for government, he says, “ I do not know how to reason on this point better than in or restrain them, securing, however, the property for the use of those for whom and at whose expense it was originally purchased. But that the legislature can repeal statutes creating private corporations, or confirming to them property already acquired under the faith of previous laws, and by such repeal, can vest the property of such corporations exclusively in the state, or dispose of the same to such purposes as they please, without the consent or default of the corporators, we are not prepared to admit; and we think ourselves standing upon the principles of natural justice, upon the fundamental laws of every free government, upon the spirit and letter of the constitution of the United States, and upon the decisions of most respectable judicial tribunals, in resisting such a doctrine.” (a) See also 1 Kyd on Corp. 65. 284 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 594 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. the manner urged by one of the relator’s counsel, who considered the grant of incorporation to be a compact between the crown and a certain number of the subjects, the latter of whom undertake, in consideration of the privileges which are bestowed, to exert themselves for the good government of the place.” This language applies, with peculiar propriety and force, to the case before the court. It was in consequence of the “ privileges bestowed,” that Dr. Wheelock and his associates undertook to exert themselves for the instruction and education of youth in this college ; and it was on the same consideration, that the founder endowed it with his property. And because charters of incorporation are of the nature of contracts, they cannot be altered or varied, but by consent of the original parties. If a charter be granted by the king, it may be altered by a new charter, granted by the king, and accepted by the corporators. But if the first charter be granted by parliament, the consent of parliament must be obtained to any alteration. In King v. Miller^ 6 T. R. 277, Lord Kenyon says, “where a corporation takes its rise from the king’s charter, the king, by granting, and the corporation, by accepting, another charter, may alter it, because it is done with the consent of all the parties who are competent to consent to the alteration.”(a) There are, in this *case, all the essential constituent parts of a con- r*gg5 tract. There is something, to be contracted about; there are parties, *-and there are plain terms in which the agreement of the parties, on the subject of the contract, is expressed ; there are mutual considerations and inducements. The charter recites, that the founder, on his part, has agreed to establish his seminary in New Hampshire, and to enlarge it, beyond its original design, among other things, for the benefit of that province ; and thereupon, a charter is given to him and his associates, designated by himself, promising and assuring to them, under the plighted faith of the state, the fight of governing the college, and administering its concerns, in the' manner provided in the charter. There is a complete and perfect grant to them of all the power of superintendence, visitation and government. Is not this a contract ? If lands or money had been granted to him and his associates, for the same purposes, such grant could not be rescinded. And is there any difference, in legal contemplation, between a grant, of corporate franchises, and a grant of tangible property? No such difference is recognised in any decided case, nor does it exist in the common apprehension of mankind. It is, therefore, contended, that this case falls within the true meaning of this provision of the constitution, as expounded in the decisions of this court ; that the charter of 1769 is a contract, a stipulation or agreement : mutual in its considerations, express and formal in its terms, and of a most binding and solemn nature. That the acts in question impair this contract, *has r*^gg already been sufficiently shown. They repeal and abrogate its most *-essential parts. Much has heretofore been said on the necessity of admitting such a power in the legislature as has been assumed in this case. Many cases of possible evil have been imagined, which might otherwise be without remedy. Abuses, it is contended, might arise in the management of such institutions, (a) See Ex parte Bolton School, 2 Bro. 0. C. 662. 285 596 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. . which the ordinary courts of law would be unable to correct. But this is only another instance of that habit of supposing extreme cases, and then of reasoning from them, which is the constant refuge of those who are obliged to defend a cause which, upon its merits, is indefensible. It would be sufficient to say, in answer, that it is not pretended, that there was here any such case of necessity. But a still more satisfactory answer is, that the apprehension of danger is groundless, and therefore, the whole argument fails. Experience has not taught us, that there is danger of great evils, or of great inconvenience, from this source. Hitherto, neither in our own country nor elsewhere, have such cases of necessity occurred. The judicial establishments of the state are presumed to be competent to prevent abuses and violations of trust, in cases of this kind, as well as in all others. If they be not, they are imperfect, and their amendment would be a most proper subject for legislative wisdom. Under the government and protection of the general laws of the land, those institutions have always been found safe, as well as useful. They go on with the progress of society, accommodating themselves • -. easily, without sudden change or *violence, to the alterations, which -* take place in its condition; and in the knowledge, the habits and pursuits of men. The English colleges were founded in Catholic ages. Their religion was reformed with the general reformation of the nation ; and they are suited perfectly well to the purpose of educating the Protestant youth of modern times. Dartmouth College was established under a charter granted by the provincial government; but a better constitution for a college, or one more adapted to the condition of things under the present government, in all material respects, could not now be framed. Nothing in it was found to need alteration at the revolution. The wise men of that day saw in it one of the best hopes of future times, and commended it, as it was, with parental care, to the protection and guardianship of the government of the state. A charter of more liberal sentiments, of wiser provisions, drawn with more care, or in a better spirit, could not be expected at any time, or from any source. The college needed no change in its organization or government. That which it did need was the kindness, the patronage, the bounty of the legislature ; not a mock elevation to the character of a university, without the solid benefit of a shilling’s donation, to sustain the character ; not the swelling and empty authority of establishing institutes and other colleges. This unsubstantial pageantry would seem to have been in derision of the scanty endowment and limited means of an unobtrusive, but useful and growing seminary. Least of all, was there a necessity, or pretence of necessity, to infringe its legal rights, violate its franchises *-noi *an(f privileges, and pour upon it these overwhelming streams of hti- J gation. But this argument, from necessity, would equally apply in all other cases. If it be well founded, it would prove, that whenever any inconvenience or evil should be experienced from the restrictions imposed on the legislature by the constitution, these restrictions ought to be disregarded. It is enough to say, that the people have thought otherwise. They have, most wisely, chosen to take the risk of occasional inconvenience, from the want of power, in order that there might be a settled limit to its exercise, and a permanent security against its abuse. They have imposed prohibitions and restraints ; and they have not rendered these altogether vain and 286 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 598 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. nugatory, by conferring the power of dispensation. If inconvenience should arise, which the legislature cannot remedy under the power conferred upon it, it is not answerable for such inconvenience. That which it cannot do within the limits prescribed to it, it cannot do at all. No legislature in this, country is able, and may the time never come, when it shall be able, to apply to itself the memorable expression of a Roman pontiff : “ Licet hoc de jure non, possumus, volumus tamen de plenitudine potestatis.” The case before the court is not of ordinary importance, nor of every-day occurrence. It affects not this college only, but every college, and all the literary institutions of the country. They have flourished, hitherto, and have become in a high degree respectable and useful to the community. They have all a common principle of existence, the inviolability *of their charters. It will be a dangerous, a most dangerous, experiment, L to hold these institutions subject to the rise and fall of popular parties, and the fluctuation of political opinions. If the franchise may be, at any time, taken away or impaired, the property also may be taken away, or its use perverted. Benefactors will have no certainty of effecting the object of their bounty ; and learned men will be deterred from devoting themselves to the service of such institutions, from the precarious title of their offices. Colleges and halls will be deserted by all better spirits, and become a theatre for the contention of politics ; party and faction will be cherished in the places consecrated to piety and learning. These consequences are neither remote nor possible only ; they are certain and immediate. When the court in North Carolina declared the law of the state, which repealed a grant to its university, unconstitutional and void, the legislature had the candor and the wisdom to repeal the law. This example, so honorable to the state which exhibited it, is most fit to be followed on this occasion. And there is good reason to hope, that a state which has hitherto been so much distinguished for temperate councils, cautious legislation, and regard to law, will not fail to adopt a course which will accord with her highest and best interest, and in no small degree, elevate her reputation. It was, for many obvious reasons, most anxiously desired, that the question of the power of the legislature over this charter should have been finally decided in the state court. An earnest hope was entertained, *that the judges of that court might have viewed the case in a light favorable *-to the rights of the trustees. That hope has failed. It is here that those rights are now to be maintained, or they are prostrated for ever. Omnia alia perfugia bonorum, subsidia, consilia, auxilia jura, ceciderunt. Quern enim alium appellem ? quern obtestor ? quern implorem ? Nisi hoc loco, nisi apud vos, nisi per vos, judices, salutem nostram, quoe spe exigua extre-maque pendet, temerimus ; nihil est praeterea quo confugere possimus. Holmes, for the defendant in error, argued, that the prohibition in the constitution of the United States, which alone gives the court jurisdiction in this ease, did not extend to grants of political power ; to contracts concern-uig the internal government and police of a sovereign state. Nor does it extend to contracts which relate merely to matters of civil institution, even of a private nature. Thus, marriage is a contract, and a private contract; hut relating merely to a matter of civil institution, which every society has an inherent right to regulate as its own wisdom may dictate, it cannot be 287 600 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. considered as within the spirit of this prohibitory clause. Divorces unquestionably impair the obligation of the nuptial contract ; they change the relations of the marriage state, without the consent of both the parties, and thus come clearly within the letter of the prohibition. But surely, no one will contend, that there is locked up in this mystical clause of the constitu-ti°n a prohibition to the states to grant divorces, a power *peculiarly -* appropriate to domestic legislation, and which has been exercised in every age and nation where civilization has produced that corruption of manners, which, unfortunately, requires this remedy. Still less can a contract concerning a public office to be exercised, or duty to be performed, be included within this prohibition. The convention who framed the constitution, did not intend to interfere in the exercise of the political powers reserved to the state governments. That was left to be regulated by their own local laws and constitutions ; with this exception only, that the Union should guaranty to each state a republican form of government, and defend it against domestic insurrection and rebellion. Beyond this, the authorities of the Union have no right to interfere in the exercise of the powers reserved to the state.. They are sovereign and independent in their own sphere. If, for example, the legislature of a particular state should attempt to deprive the judges of its courts (who, by the state constitution, held their places during good behavior) of their offices, without a trial by impeachment ; or should arbitrarily and capriciously increase the number of the judges, so as to give the preponderancy in judicature to the prevailing political faction, would it be pretended, that the minority could resist such a law, upon the ground of its impairing the obligation of a contract ? Must not the remedy, if anywhere existing, be found in the interposition of some state authority to enforce the provisions of the state constitution ? The education of youth, and the encouragement of the arts and sciences, *6021 isoneof th® most important objects of civil government. Vattel, ' lib. 1, c. 11, § 112-13. By our constitutions, it is left exclusively to the states, with the exception of copyrights and patents. It was in the exercise of this duty of government, that this charter was originally granted to Dartmouth College. Even when first granted, under the colonial government, it was subject to the notorious authority of the British parliament over all charters containing grants of political power. It might have been revoked or modified by act of parliament. 1 Bl. Com. 485. The revolution, which separated the colony from the parent county, dissolved all connection between this corporation and the crown of Great Britain. But it did not destroy that supreme authority which every political society has over its public institutions ; that still remained, and was transferred to the people of New Hampshire. They have not relinquished it to the govern-{ ment of the United States, or to any department of that government. Neither does the constitution of New Hampshire confirm the charter of Dartmouth College, so as to give it the immutability of the fundamental law. On the contrary, the constitution of the state admonishes the legislature of the duty of encouraging science and literature, and thus seems to suppose its power of control over the scientific and literary institutions of the state. The legislature had, therefore, a right to modify this trust, the original object of which, was the *6031 education of the Indian and English youth of the province. It is not ' -* necessary to contend, that it had the right of wholly diverting *the 288. 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 603 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. fund from the original object of its pious and benevolent founders. Still, it must be insisted, that a regal grant, with a regal and colonial policy, necessarily became subject to the modification of a republican legislature, whose right, and whose duty, it was, to adapt the education of the youth of the country to the change in its political institutions. It is a corollary from the right of self-government. The ordinary remedies which are furnished in the court for a misuser of the corporate franchises, are not adapted to the great exigencies of are volution in government. They presuppose a permanently-established order of things, and are intended only to correct occasional deviations and minor mischiefs. But neither a reformation in religion, nor a revolution in government, can be accomplished or confirmed by a writ of quo warranto or mandamus. We do not say, that the corporation has forfeited its charter for misuser; but that it has become unfit for use, by a change of circumstances. Nor does the lapse of time from 1776 to 1816, infer an acquiescence on the part of the legislature, or a renunciation of its right to abolish or reform an institution, which being of a public nature, cannot hold its privileges by prescription. Our argument is, that it is, at all times, liable to be new modelled by the legislative wisdom, instructed by the lights of the age. The conclusion then is, that this charter is not such a contract as is contemplated by the constitution of the United States; that it is not a contract of a private nature, concerning property or other private interests : but that it is a grant of a public nature, *for public purposes, relative to the internal government and police of a state, and therefore, liable to be revoked or modified by the supreme power of that state. Supposing, however, this to be a contract such as was meant to be included in the constitutional prohibition, is its obligation impaired by these acts of the legislature of New Hampshire ? The title of the acts of the 27th of June, and the 18th of December 1816, shows that the legislative will and intention was to amend the charter, and enlarge and improve the corporation. If, by a technical fiction, the grant of the charter can be considered as a contract between the king (or the state) and the corporators, the obligation of that contract is not impaired ; but is rather enforced, by these acts, which continue, the same corporation, for the same objects, under a new name. It is well settled, that a mere change of the name of a corporation will not affect its identity. An addition to the number of the colleges, the creation of new fellowships, or an increase of the number of the trustees, do not impair the franchises of the corporate body. Nor is the franchise of any individual corporator impaired. In the words of Mr. Justice Ashhurst, in the case of the King v. Pasmore, 3 T. R. 244, “ the members of the old body have no injury or injustice to complain of, for they are all included in the new charter of incorporation ; and if any of them do not become members of the new incorporation, but refuse to accept, it is their own *fault.” What rights, which are secured by this alleged contract, are invaded L hy the acts of the legislature ? Is it the right of property, or of privileges ? It is not the former, because the corporate body is not deprived of the least portion of its property. If it be the personal privileges of the corporators that are attacked, these must be either a common and universal privilege, such as the right of suffrage, for interrupting the exercise of which an action would lie ; or they must be monopolies and exclusive privileges, 4 Wheat.—19 289 605 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. which are always subject to be regulated and modified by the supreme power of the state. Where a private proprietary interest is coupled with the exercise of political power, or a public trust, the charters of corporations have frequently been amended by legislative authority. Gray v; Portland Panic, 3 Mass. 364; Commonwealth v. Pird, 12 Ibid. 443. In charters creating artificial persons, for purposes exclusively private, and not interfering with the common rights of the citizens, it may be admitted, that the legislature cannot interfere to amend, without the consent of the grantees. The grant of such a charter might, perhaps, be considered as analogous to a contract between the state and private individuals, affecting their private rights, and might thus be regarded as within the spirit of the constitutional prohibition. But this charter is merely a mode of exercising one of the great powers of civil government. Its amendment, or even repeal, can no more be considered as the breach of a contract, than the amendment or repeal of any other law. ♦anal repeal or amendment is an ordinary act of public legislation, J and not an act impairing the obligation of a contract between the government and private citizens, under which personal immunities or proprietary interests are vested in them. The Attorney- General, on the same side, stated, that the only question properly before court was, whether the several acts of the legislature of New Hampshire, mentioned in the special verdict, are repugnant to that clause of the constitution of the United States, which provides, that no state shall 11 pass any bill of attainder, ex post facto law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts ?” Beside its intrinsic difficulty, thè extreme delicacy of this question is evinced by the sentiments expressed by the court, whenever it has been called to act on such a question. Calder v. Pull, 3 Dall. 392, 394, 395 ; Fletcher v. Peele, 6 Cranch 87 ; New Jersey v. Wilson, 7 Ibid. 164 ; Terrettx. Taylor, 9 Ibid. 43. In the case of Fletcher v. Peck, the court says, “The question whether a law be void for its repugnancy to the constitution, is, at all times, a question of much delicacy, which ought seldom, if ever, to be decided in the affirmative, in a doubtful case. The court, when impelled by duty to render such a judgment, would be unworthy of its station, could it be unmindful of the solemn obligation which that station imposes. But it is not on slight, implication, and vague conjecture, that the legislature is to be pronounced to have transcended its powers, and its acts are to be considered as void. The opposition between the constitution and the law should su i8 contended by the counsel for the plaintiffs *in error, are J void, being repugnant to the constitution of that state, and also to the constitution of the United States. Whether the first objection to these laws be well founded or not, is a question with which this court, in this case, has nothing to do : because it has no jurisdiction, as an appellate court, over the decisions of a state court, except in cases where is drawn in question the validity of a treaty, or statute of, or an authority exercised under, the United States, and the decision is against their validity; or where is drawn in question the validity of a statute of, or an authority exercised under, any state, on the ground of their being repugnant to the coiistitution, treaties or laws of the United States, and the decision is in favor of their validity; or where is drawn in question the construction of any clause of the constitution, or of a treaty, or statute of, or commission held under, the United States, and the decision is against the title, right, privilege or exemption specially set up or claimed by either party, under such clause of the said constitution, treaty, statute or commission. The clause in the constitution of the United States which was drawn in question in the court from whence this transcript has been sent, is that part of the tenth section of the first article, which declares, that, “no state shall pass any bill of attainder, ex post facto law, or any law impairing the obligation of contracts.” The decision of the state court is against the title specially claimed by the plaintiffs in error, under the above clause, because they contend, that the laws of New Hampshire, above referred to, J *impair the obligation of a contract, and are, consequently, repugnant to the above clause of the constitution of the United States, and void. There are, then, two questions for this court to decide : 1st. Is the charter granted to Dartmouth College on the 13th of December 1769, to be considered as a contract ? If it be, then, 2d. Do the laws in question impair its obligation ? 1. What is a contract ? It may be defined to be a transaction between two or more persons, in which each party comes under an obligation to the other, and each reciprocally acquires a right to whatever is promised by the other. Powell on Cont. 6. Under this definition, says Mr. Powell, it is obvious, that every feoffment, gift, grant, agreement, promise, &c., may be included, because in all there is a mutual consent of the minds of the parties concerned in them, upon an agreement between them respecting some property or right that is the object of the stipulation. He adds, that the ingredients requisite to form a contract, are, parties, consent, and an obligation to be created or dissolved : these must all concur, because the regular effect of all contracts is, on one side, to acquire, and on the other, to part with, some property or rights ; or to abridge, or to restrain natural liberty, by binding the parties to do, or restraining them from doing, something which before they might have done, or omitted. If a doubt could exist that a grant is a contract, the point was decided in the case of Fletcher v, J Peck, 6 Cranch 87, *in which it was laid down, that a contract is either 312 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 657 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. executory or executed ; by the former, a party binds himself to do, or not to do, a particular thing ; the latter is one in which the object of the contract is performed, and this differs in nothing from a grant ; but whether executed or executory, they both contain obligations binding on the parties, and both are equally within the provisions of the constitution of the United States, which forbids the state governments to pass laws impairing the obligation of contracts. If, then, a grant be a contract, within the meaning of the constitution of the United States, the next inquiry is, whether the creation of a corporation by charter, be such a grant, as includes an obligation of the nature of a contract, which no state legislature can pass laws to impair ? A corporation is defined by Mr. Justice Blackstone (2 Bl. Com. 37) to be a franchise. It is, says he, “ a franchise for a number of persons, to be incorporated and exist as a body politic, 'with a power to maintain perpetual succession, and to do corporate acts, and each individual of such corporation is also said to have a franchise or freedom.” This franchise, like other franchises, is an incorporeal hereditament, issuing out of something real or personal, or concerning or annexed to, and exercisable within a thing corporate. To this grant, or this franchise, the parties are the king and the persons for whose benefit it is created, or trustees for them. The assent of both is necessary. *The r*ggg subjects of the grant are not only privileges and immunities, but *■ property, or, which is the same thing, a capacity to acquire and to hold property in perpetuity. Certain obligations are created, binding both on the grantor and the grantees. On the part of the former, it amounts to an extinguishment of the king’s prerogative to bestow the same identical franchise on another corporate body, because it would prejudice his prior grant, (2 Bl. Com. 37.) It implies, therefore, a contract not to re-assert the right to grant the franchise to another, or to impair it. There is also an implied contract, that the founder of a private charity, or his heirs, or other persons appointed by him for that purpose, shall have the right to visit, and to govern the corporation, of which he is the acknowledged founder and patron, and also, that in case of its dissolution, the reversionary right of the founder to the property, with which he had endowed it, should be preserved inviolate. The rights acquired by the other contracting party are those of having perpetual succession, of suing and being sued, of purchasing lands for the benefit of themselves and their successors, and of having a common seal, and of making by-laws. The obligation imposed upon them, and which forms the consideration of the grant is that of acting up to the end or design for which they were created by their founder. Mr. Justice Buller, in the case of the King v. Pasmore, 3 T. R. 246, says, that the grant of incorporation is a compact between the crown and a number of persons, the latter of whom undertake, in consideration *of the privileges bestowed, to exert them-selves for the good government of the place. If they fail to perform L their part of it, there is an end of the compact. The charter of a corporation, says Mr. Justice Blackstone (2 Bl. Com. 484), may be forfeited through negligence, or abuse of its franchises, in which case, the law judges, that the body politic has broken the condition upon which it was incorporated, and thereupon the corporation is void. It appears to me, upon the whole, that 313 659 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. these principles and authorities prove, incontrovertibly, that a charter of incorporation is a contract. 2. The next question is, do the acts of the legislature of New Hampshire of the 27th of June, and 18th and 26th of December 1816, impair this contract, within the true intent and meaning of the constitution of the United States ? Previous to the examination of this question, it will be proper clearly to mark the distinction between the different kinds of lay aggregate corporations, in order to prevent any implied decision by this court of any other case, than the one immediately before it. We are informed, by the case of Philips v. Bury, 1 Ld. Raym. 5 ; s. c. 2 T. R. 346, which contains all the doctrine of corporations connected with this point, that there are two kinds of corporations aggregate, viz., such as are for public government, and such as are for private charity. The first are those for the government of a town, city or the like ; and being for *6601 Pu^lic advantage, are *to be governed according to the law of the J land. The validity and justice of their private laws and constitutions are examinable in the king’s courts. Of these, there are no particular founders, and consequently, no particular visitor ; there are no patrons of these corporations. But private and particular corporations for charity, founded and endowed by private persons, are subject to the private government of those who erect them, and are to be visited by them or their heirs, or such other persons as they may appoint. The only rules for the government of these private corporations are the laws and constitutions assigned by the founder. This right of government and visitation arises from the property which the founder had in the lands assigned to support the charity ; and as he is the author of the' charity, the law invests him with the necessary ■power of inspecting and regulating it. The authorities are full, to prove, that a college is a private charity, as well as an hospital, and that there is, in reality, no difference between them, except in degree ; but they are within the same reason, and both eleemosynary. These corporations, civil and eleemosynary, which differ from each other so especially in their nature and constitution, may very well differ in matters which concern their rights and privileges, and their existence and subjection to public control. The one is the mere creature of public institution, created exclusively for the public advantage, without other endowments than such as the king, or government, may bestow upon it, and having no other founder or visitor than the king or government, the fundator incipiens. *The *6611 validity and justice of its laws and constitution are examinable by J the courts having jurisdiction over them ; and they are subject to the general law of the land. It would seem reasonable, that such a corporation may be controlled, and its constitution altered and amended by the government, in such manner as the public interest may require. Such legislative interferences cannot be said to impair the contract by which the corporation was formed, because there is, in reality, but one party to it, the trustees or governors of the corporation being merely the trustees for the public, the cestui que trust of the foundation. These trustees or governors have no interest, no privileges or immunities, which are violated by such interference, and can have no more right to complain of them, than an ordinary trustee, who is called upon in a court of equity to execute the trust. They accepted the charter, for the public benefit alone, and there would seem to be no 314 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 661 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. reason, why the government, under proper limitations, should not alter or modify such a grant, at pleasure. But the case of a private corporation is entirely different. That is the creature of private benefaction, for a charity or private purpose. It is endowed and founded by private persons, and subject to their control, laws and visitation, and not to the general control of the government; and .all these powers, rights and privileges flow from the property of the founder in the funds assigned for the support of the charity. Although the king, by the grant of the charter, is, in some sense, the founder of all eleemosynary corporations, because, without his grant, they cannot exist ; yet the patron or endower is the perficient founder, to whom belongs, as of right, all the powers and privileges, which pgg2 have been described. With such a corporation, it is not competent *-for the legislature to interfere. It is a franchise, or incorporeal hereditament, founded upon private property, devoted by its patron to a private charity, of a peculiar kind, the offspring of his own will and pleasure, to be managed and visited by persons of his own appointment, according to such laws and regulations as he, or the persons so selected, may ordain. It has been shown, that the charter is a contract on the part of the government, that the property with which the charity is endowed, shall be for ever vested in a certain number of persons, and their successors, to subserve the particular purposes designated by the founder, and to be managed in a particular way. If a law increases or diminishes the number of the trustees, they are not the persons which the grantor agreed should be the managers of the fund. If it appropriate the fund intended for the support of a particular charity, to that of some other charity, or to an entirely different charity, the grant is in effect set aside, and a new contract substituted in its place ; thus disappointing completely the intentions of the founder, by changing the objects of his bounty. And can it be seriously contended, that a law, which changes so materially the terms of a contract, does not impair it ? In short, does not every alteration of a contract, however unimportant, even though it be manifestly for the interest of the party objecting to it, impair its obligation ? If the assent of all the parties to be bound by a contract, be of its essence, how *is it possible, that a new contract, sub- pggg stituted for, or engrafted on another, without such assent, should not violate the old charter ? This course of reasoning, which appears to be perfectly manifest, is not without authority to support it. Mr. Justice Blackstone lays it down (2 Bl. Com. 37), that the same identical franchise, that, has been before granted to one, cannot be bestowed on another; and the reason assigned is, that it would prejudice the former grant. In the King v. Pasmore, 3 T. R. 246, Lord Kenyon says, that an existing corporation cannot have another charter obtruded upon it by the crown. It may reject it, or accept the whole, or any part of the new charter. The reason is obvious ; a charter’ is a contract, to the validity of which the consent of both parties is essential, and therefore, it cannot be altered or added to without such consent. But the case of Terrett v. Taylor, 9 Cranch 43, fully supports the distinction above stated, between civil and private corporations, and is entirely m point. It was decided in that case, that a private corporation, created by the legislature, may lose its franchises by misuser, or non-user, and may be resumed by the government, under a judicial judgment of forfeiture. In 815 663 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. respect to public corporations, which exist only for public purposes, such as towns, cities, &c., the legislature may, under proper limitations, change, modify, enlarge or restrain them, securing, however, the property for the use of those for whom, and at whose expense, it was purchased. But it is deHÍed» that it has power to repeal *statutes creating private corpora- J tions, or confirming to them property already acquired under the faith of previous laws ; and that it can, by such repeal, vest the property of such corporations in the state, or dispose of the same to such purposes as it may please, without the consent or default of the corporators. Such a law, it is declared, would be repugnant both to the spirit and the letter of the constitution of the United States. If these principles, before laid down, be correct, it cannot be denied, that the obligations of the charter to Dartmouth College are impaired by the laws under consideration. The ñame of the corporation, its constitution and government, and the objects of the founder, and of the grantor of the charter, are totally changed. By the charter, the property of this founder was vested in twelve trustees, and no more, to be disposed of by them, or a majority, for the support of a college, for the education and instruction of the Indians, and also of English youth, and others. Under the late acts, the trustees and visitors are different; and the property and franchises of the college are transferred to different and new uses, not contemplated by the founder. In short, it is most obvious, that the effect of these laws is to abolish the old corporation, and to create a new one in its stead. The laws of Virginia, referred to in the case of Terrett v. Taylor, authorized the overseers of the poor to sell the glebes belonging to the Protestant Episcopal Church, and to appropriate the proceeds to other uses, The laws in question divest the trustees of Dartmouth College of the property vested in them *by founder, and vest it in other trustees, for the support of a J different institution, called Dartmouth University. In what respects do they differ? Woftld the difference have been greater in principle, if the law had appropriated the funds of the college to the making of turnpike roads, or to any other purpose of a public nature ? In all respects, in which the contract has been altered, without the assent of the corporation, its obligations have been impaired ; and the degree can make no difference in the construction of the above provision of the constitution. It has been insisted, in the argument at the bar, that Dartmouth College was a mere civil corporation, created for á public purpose, the public being deeply interested in the education of its youth ; and that, consequently, the charter was as much under the control of the government of New Hampshire, as if the corporation had concerned the government of a town or city. But it has been shown, that the authorities are all the other way. There is not a case to be found which contradicts the doctrine laid down in the case of Philips v. Bury, viz., that a college, founded by an individual, or individuals, is a private charity, subject to the government and visitation of the founder, and not to the unlimited control of the government. It is objected, in this case, that Dr. Wheelock is not the founder of Dartmouth College. Admit, he is not. How would this alter the case ? Neither the king, nor the province of New Hampshire was the founder ; and if the contributions made by the governoi’ of New Hampshire, by those J persons who *granted lands for the college, in order to induce its loca-316 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 666 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. tiori in a particular part of the state, by the other liberal contributors in England and America, bestow upon them claims equal with Dr. Wheelock, still it would not alter the nature of the corporation, and convert it into one for public government. It would still be a private eleemosynary corporation, a private charity, endowed by a number of persons, instead of a single individual. But the fact is, that whoever may mediately have contributed to swell the funds of this charity, they were bestowed at the solicitation of Dr. Wheelock, and vested in persons appointed by him, for the use of a charity, of which he was the immediate founder, and is so styled in the charter. Upon the whole, I am of opinion, that the above acts of New Hampshire, not having received the assent of the corporate body of Dartmouth College, are not binding on them, and, consequently, that the judgment of the state court ought to be reserved. Johnson, Justice, concurred, for the reasons stated by the Chief Justice. Livingston, Justice, concurred, for the reasons stated by the Chief Justice, and Justices Washington and Story. Story, Justice.—This is a cause of great importance, and as the very learned discussions, as well here, as in the state court, show, of no inconsiderable difficulty. There are two questions, to which the appellate jurisdic-diction of this court properly applies. *1. Whether the original charter of Dartmouth College is a contract, within the prohibitory L clause of the constitution of the United States, which declares, that no state shall pass any “ law impairing the obligation of contracts ?” 2. If so, whether the legislative acts of New Hampshire of the 27th of June, and of the 18th and 27th of December 1816, or any of them, impair the obligations of that charter ? It will be necessary, however, before we proceed to discuss these questions, to institute an inquiry into the nature, rights and duties of aggregate corporations, at common law; that we may apply the principles, drawn from this source, to the exposition of this charter, which was granted emphatically with reference to that law. An aggregate corporation, at common law, is a collection of individuals, united into one collective body, under a special name, and possessing certain immunities, privileges and capacities, in its collective character, which do not belong to the natural persons composing it. Among other things, it possesses the capacity of perpetual succession, and of Acting by the collected vote or will of its component members, and of suing and being sued in all things touching its corporate rights and duties. It is, in short, an artificial person, existing in contemplation of law, and endowed with certain powers and franchises which, though they must be exercised through the medium of its natural members, are yet considered as subsisting in the corporation itself, as distinctly as if it were a real personage. Hence, such a corporation may sue and be sued by its own members, and *may contract with them in rn.Ai4Q the same manner, as with any strangers. 1 Bl. Com. 469, 475 ; 1 •-Kyd on Corp. 13, 69, 189 ; 1 Wooddes. 471, &c. A great variety of these corporations exist, in every country governed by the common law ; in some 317 668 SUPREME COURT Dartmouth College v. Woodward. [Feb’y of which, the corporate existence is perpetuated by new elections, made from time to time; and in others, by a continual accession of new members, without any corporate act. Some of these corporations are, from the particular purposes to which they are devoted, denominated spiritual, and some lay; and the latter are again divided into civil and eleemosynary corporations. It is unnecessary, in this place, to enter into any examination of civjl corporations. Eleemosynary corporations are such as are constituted for the perpetual distribution of the free-alms and bounty of the founder, in such manner as he has directed ; and in this class, are ranked hospitals for the relief of poor and impotent persons, and colleges for the promotion of learning and piety, and the support of persons engaged in literary pursuits. 1 Bl. Com. 469, 470, 471, 482. 1 Kyd on Corp. 25 ; 1 Wooddes. 474 ; Attorney-General v. Whorwood, 1 Ves. 534 ; St. John’s College v. Todington, 1 W. Bl. 84 ; s. c. 1 Burr. 200 ; Philips v .Bury, 1 Ld. Raym. 5s. c. 2 T. R. 346; Porter’s Case, 1 Co. 22 b, 23. Another division of corporations is into public and private. Public corporations are generally esteemed such as exist for public political purposes only, such as towns, cities, parishes and counties ; and in many repects, they are so, although they involve some private interests ; but strictly speaking, public corporations *are such only as are founded by the government, -1 for public purposes, where the whole interests belong also to the government. If, therefore, the foundation be private, though under the charter of the government, the corporation is private, however extensive the uses may be to which it is devoted, either by the bounty of the founder, or the nature and objects of the institution. For instance, a bank created by the government for its own uses, whose stock is exclusively owned by the government, is, in the strictest sense, a public corporation. So, an hospital created and endowed by the government for general charity. But a bank, whose stock is owned by private persons, is a private corporation, although it is erected by the government, and its objects and operations partake of a public nature. The same doctrine may be affirmed of insurance, canal, bridge and turnpike companies. In all these cases, the uses may, in a certain sense, be called public, but the corporations are private ; as much so, indeed, as if the franchises were vested in a single person. This reasoning applies in its full force to eleemosynary corporations. An hospital, founded by a private benefactor, is, in point .of law, a private corporation, although dedicated by its charter to general charity. So, a college, founded and endowed in the same manner, although, being for the promotion of learning and piety, it may extend its charity to scholars from every class in the community, and thus acquire the charactei' of a public institution. ^bis is fbe unequivocal doctrine of the authorities ; and cannot be -* *shaken but by undermining the most solid foundations of the common law. Philips v. Bury, 1 Ld. Raym. 5, 9 ; s. c. 2 T. R. 346. It was, indeed, supposed at the argument, that if the uses of an eleemosynary corporation be for general charity, this alone would constitute it a public corporation. But the law is certainly not so. To be sure, in a certain sense, every charity, which is* extensive in its reach, may be called a public charity, in contradistinction to a charity embracing but a few definite objects. In this sense, the language was unquestionably used by Lord Habdwicke in the case cited at the argument; Attorney- General v. Pearce, 318 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 670 Dartmouth College v. Woodward 2 Atk. 87 ; 1 Bac. Abr. tit. Charitable Uses, E, 589 ; and in this sense, a private corporation may well enough be denominated a public charity. So it would be, if the endowment, instead of being vested in a corporation, were assigned to a private trustee ; yet, in such a case, no one would imagine, that the trust ceased to be private, or the funds became public property. That the mere act of incorporation will not change the charity from a private to a public one, is most distinctly asserted in the authorities. Lord Hardwicke, in the case already alluded to, says,te the charter of the crown cannot make a charity more or less public, but only more permanent than it would otherwise be ; but it is the extensiveness which will constitute it a public one. A devise to the poor of the parish is a public charity. Where testators leave it to the discretion of a trustee to choose out the objects, though each particular *object may be said to be private, yet in the extensiveness r*g4i of the benefit accruing from them, they may properly be called public L charities. A sum to be disposed of by A. B., and his executors, at their discretion, among poor house-keepers, is of this kind.” The charity, then, may, in this sense, be public, although it may be administered by private trustees ; and for the same reason, it may thus be public, though administered by a private corporation. The fact, then, that the charity is public, affords no proof that the corporation is also public ; and consequently, the argument, so far as it is built on this foundation, falls to the ground. If, indeed, the argument were correct, it would follow, that almost every hospital and college would be a public corporation ; a doctrine utterly irreconcilable with the whole current of decisions since the time of Lord Coke, (a) When, then, the argument assumes, that because the ‘charity is public, the corporation is public, it manifestly confounds the popular, with the strictly legal, sense of the terms. And if it stopped here, it would not be very material to correct the error. But it is on this foundation, that a superstructure is erected, which is to compel a surrender of the cause. When the corporation is said, at the bar, to be public, it is not merely meant, that the whole community may be the proper objects of the bounty, but that the government have the sole right, as trustees of the public interests, to regulate, control and direct the corporation, and its funds and its franchises, at its own good will and pleasure. Now, such *an authority does not r*g»™ exist in the government, except where the corporation, is in the strict- *-est sense, public ; that is, where its whole interests and franchises are the exclusive property and domain of the government itself. If it had been otherwise, courts of law would have been spared many laborious adjudications in respect to eleemosynary corporations, and the visitatorial powers over them, from the time of Lord Holt down to the present day. Hex v. Bury, 1 Ld. Raym. 5 ; s. c. Comb. 265 ; Holt 715 ; 1 Show. 360 ; 4 Mod. 106 ; Skin. 447, and Ld. Holt’s opinion from his own MS., in 2 T. R. 346. Nay, more, private trustees for charitable purposes would have been liable to have the property confided to their care taken away from them, without any assent or default on their part, and the administration submitted, not to the control of law and equity, but to the arbitrary discretion of the government. Yet, who ever thought before, that the munificient gifts of pri-vate donors for general charity became instantaneously the property of the (a) The case of Sutton Hospital, 10 Co. 23. 319 672 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. government; and that the trustees appointed by the donors, whether corporate or unincorporated, might be compelled to yield up their rights to whomsoever the government might appoint to administer them ? If we were to establish such a principle, it would extinguish all future eleemosynary endowments ; and we should find as little of public policy, as we now find of law to sustain it. An eleemosynary corporation, then, upon a private foundation, being a private corporation, it is next to be considered, what is deemed a foundation, *«721 *an^ who i8 the founder. This cannot be stated with more brevity J and exactness, than in the language of the elegant commentator upon the laws of England : “ The founder of all corporations (says Sir William Blackstone), in the strictest and original sense, is the king alone, for he only can incorporate a society ; and in civil corporations, such as mayor, commonalty, &c., where there are no possessions or endowments given to the body, there is no other founder but the king ; but in eleemysonary foundations, such as colleges and hospitals, where there is an endowment of lands, the law distinguishes and makes two species of foundation, the one fundatio incipiens, or the incorporation, in which sense the king is the general founder of all colleges and hospitals ; the other fundatio perficiens, or the dotation of it, in which sense, the first gift of the revenues is the foundation, and he who gives them is, in the law, the founder ; and it is in this last sense, we generally call a man the founder of a college or hospital.” 1 Bl. Com. 480 ; 10 Co. 33. To all eleemosynary corporations, a visitatorial power attaches, as a necessary incident; for these corporations being composed of individuals, subject to human infirmities, are liable, as well as private persons, to deviate from the end of their institution. The .law, therefore, has provided, that there shall somewhere exist a power to visit, inquire into, and correct all irregularities and abuses in such corporations, and to compel the original purposes of the charity to be faithfully fulfilled. 1 Bl. Com. 480. The na-*0*741 ^ure an<^ extent of this visitatorial power has been expounded *with J admirable fulness and accuracy by Lord Holt in one of his most celebrated judgments. Phillips v. Bury, 1 Ld. Raym. 5 s. c. 2 T. R. 346. And of common right, by the dotation, the founder and his heirs are the legal visitors, unless the founder has appointed and assigned another person to be visitor. For the founder may, if he please, at the time of the endowment, part with his visitatorial power, and the person to whom it is assigned will, in that case, possess it in exclusion of the founder’s heirs. 1 Bl. Com. 482. This visitatorial power is, therefore, an hereditament founded in property, and valuable, in intendment of law ; and stands upon the maxim, that he who gives his property, has a right to regulate it in future. It includes also the legal right of patronage, for as Lord Holt justly observes, 11 patronage and visitation are necessary consequents one upon another.” No technical terms are necessary to assign or vest the visitatorial power; it is sufficient if, from the nature of the duties to be performed by particular persons, under the charter, it can be inferred, that the founder meant to part with it in their favor ; and he may divide it among various persons, or subject it to any modifications or control, by the fundamental statutes of the corporation. But where the appointment is given in general terms, the whole power vests in the appointee. Bden v. Foster, 2 P. Wms. 325 ; Attorney - General v. 320 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 674 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. Middleton, 2 Ves. 327 ; St. Johns College n. Todington, 1 W. Bl. 84.; s. c. 2 Burr. 200 ; Attorney - General n. Clare College, 3 Atk. 662 ; s. c. 1 Ves. 78. In the construction *of charters, too, it is a general rule, that if r*g/,g the objects of the charity are incorporated, as for instance, the master L and fellows of a college, or the master and poor of a hospital, the visitatorial power, in the absence of any special appointment, silently vests in the founder and his heirs. But where trustees oi* governors are incorporated to manage the charity, the visitatorial power is deemed to belong to them in their corporate character. Philips v. Bury, 1 Ld. Raym. 5 ; s. c. 2 T. R. 346 ; Green v. Rutherforth, 1 Ves. 472 ; Attorney - General v. Middleton, 2 Ibid. 327 ; Case of Sutton Hospital, 10 Co. 23, 31. When a private eleemosynary corporation is thus created, by the charter of the crown, it is subject to no other control on the part of the crown, than what is expressly or implicitly reserved by the charter itself. Unless a power be reserved for this purpose, the crown cannot, in virtue of its prerogative, without the consent of the corporation, alter or amend the charter, or divest the corporation of any of its franchises, or add to them, or add to, or diminish, the number of the trustees, or remove any of the members, or change or control the administration of the charity, or compel the corporation to receive a new charter. This is the uniform language of the authorities, and forms one of the most stubborn, and well settled doctrines of the common law. (a) But an eleemosynary, like every other corporation, is subject to the general law of the land. It may forfeit its corporate franchises, by misuser or non-user *of them. It is subject to the controling authority of its legal visitor, who, unless restrained by the terms of the charter, may •-amend and repeal its statutes, remove its officers, correct abuses, and generally superintend the management of the trusts. Where, indeed, the visitatorial power is vested in the trustees of the charity, in virtue of their incorporation, there can be no amotion of them from their corporate capacity. But they are not, therefore, placed beyond the reach of the law. As managers of the revenues of the corporation,' they are subject to the general superintending power of the court of chancery, not as itself possessing a visitatorial power, or a right to control the charity, but as possessing a general jurisdiction, in all cases of an abuse of trust, to redress grievances and suppress frauds. 2 Fonbl. Eq., B. 2, pt. 2, ch. 1, § 1, note a ; Coop. Eq. Pl. 292 ; 2 Kyd on Corp. 195 ; Green v. Rutherforth, 1 Ves. 462 ; Attorney-General v. Foundling Hospital, 4 Bro. C. C. 165 ; s. c. 2 Ves. jr. 42 ; Rden v. Foster, 2 P. Wms. .325 ; 1 Wooddes. 476 ; Attorney- General v. Price, 3 Atk. 108 ; Attorney -General v. Lock, 3 Ibid. 164 ; Attorney - General v. Dixie, 13 Ves. 519; Ex parte Kirby Ravensworth Hospital, 15 Ibid. 304,314; Attorney-General n. Earl of Clarendon, 17 Ibid. 491, 499 ; Rerkhamstead Free School, 2 Ves. & B. 134 ; Attorney - General v. Corporation of Carmarthen, Cooper 30 ; Mayor, &c., of Colchester v. Lowten, 1 Ves. & B. 226 ; Rex v. Watson, 2 T. R. 199 ; Attorney- General v. Utica Ins. Co., 2 Johns. Ch. 371 ; Attorney-General v. Middleton, 2 Ves. 327. And where a corporation is a mere trustee of a charity, a court of equity will go yet further ; and though it cannot appoint or remove a corporator, it will, yet, in a case of (a) See Rex v. Pasmore, 3 T. R. 199, and the cases there cited. 4 Wheat.—21 321 *677 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. *gross fraud, or abuse of trust, take away the trust from the corporation, and vest it in other hands. Mayor, a just and legal view of the *subject ? If the cor- J poration had no existence, so as to become a contracting party, neither had it, for the purpose of receiving a grant of the franchises. The truth is, that there may be a priority of operation of things in the same grant; and the law distinguishes and gives such priority, wherever it is necessary to effectuate the objects of the grant. Case of Sutton Hospital, 10 Co. 23 ; Buckland v. Fowcher, cited, Ibid. 27-8, and recognised in Attorney- General v. Bois yer, 3 Ves. jr. 714, 726-7 ; s. p. Highmore on Mort. 200, &c. From the nature of things, the artificial person called a corporation, must be created, before it can be capable of taking anything. When, therefore, a charter is granted, and it brings the corporation into existence, without any act of the natural persons who compose it, and gives such corporation any privileges, franchises or property, the law deems the corporation to be first brought into existence, and then clothes it with the granted liberties and property. When, on the other hand, the corporation is to be brought into existence, by some future acts of the corporators, the franchises remain in abeyance, until such acts are done, and when the corporation is brought into life, the franchises instantaneously attach to it. There may be, in intendment of law, a priority of time, even in an instant, for this purpose. Ibid. And if the corporation have an existence, before the grant of its other franchises attaches, what more difficulty is there in deeming the grant of these franchises a contract with it, than if granted by another instrument, at a subsequent period? It behooves those also, who hold, that a grant to a corporation, not then *6921 *n existence> is incapable *of being deemed a contract, on that account, J to consider, whether they do not, at the same time, establish, that the grant itself is a nullity, for precisely the same reason. Yet such a doctrine would strike us all, as pregnant with absurdity, since it would prove that an act of incorporation could never confer any authorities, or rights or property on the corporation it created. It may be admitted, that two parties are necessary to form a perfect contract ; but it is denied, that it is necessary, that the assent of both parties must be at the same time. If the legislature were voluntarily to grant land in fee, to the first child of A., to be hereafter born ; as soon as such child should be born, the estate would vest in it. Would it be contended, that such grant, when it took effect, was revocable, and not an executed contract, upon the acceptance of the estate ? The same question might be asked, in a case of a gratuitous grant by the king, or the legislature, to A. for life, and afterwards, to the heirs of B., who is then living. Take the case of a bank, incorporated for a limited period, upon the express condition that it shall pay out of its corporate funds, a certain sum, as the consideration for the charter, and after the corporation is organized, 828 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 692 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. a payment duly made of the sum, out of the corporate funds ; will it be contended, that there is not a subsisting contract between the government and the corporation, by the matters thus arising ex post facto, that the charter shall not be revoked, during the stipulated period ? Suppose, an act declaring that all persons, who should thereafter pay into the public treasury a Stipulated sum, should be tenants in common of certain *lands belong-ing to the state, in certain proportions ; if a person, afterwards born, L pays the stipulated sum into the treasury, is it less a contract with him, than it would be with a person in esse at the time the act passed ? We must admit, that there may be future springing contracts, in respect to persons not now in esse, or we shall involve ourselves in inextricable difficulties. And if there may be, in respect to natural persons, why not also in respect to artificial persons, created by the law, for the very purpose of being clothed with corporate powers ? I am unable to distinguish between the case of a grant of land or of franchises to an existing corporation, and a like grant to a corporation brought into life for the very purpose of receiving the grant. As soon as it is in esse, and the franchises and property become vested and executed in it, the grant is just as much an executed contract, as if its prior existence had been established for a century. Supposing, however, that in either of the views which have been suggested, the charter of Dartmouth College is to be deemed a contract, we are yet met with several objections of another nature. It is, in the first place, contended, that it is not a contract, within the prohibitory clause of the constitution, because that clause was never intended to apply to mere contracts of civil institution, such as the contract of marriage, or to grants of power to state officers, or to contracts relative to their offices, or to grants of trust to be exercised for purposes merely public, where the grantees take no beneficial interest. It is admitted, that the state legislatures have *power to enlarge, p _. repeal and limit the authorities of public officers, in their official L capacities, in all cases, where the constitutions of the states respectively do not prohibit them ; and this, among others, for the very reason, that there is no express or implied contract, that they shall always, during their continuance in office, exercise such authorities ; they are to exercise them only during the good pleasure of the legislature. But when the legislature makes a contract with a public officer, as in the case of a stipulated salary for his services, during a limited period, this, during the limited period, is just as much a contract, within the purview of the constitutional prohibition, as a like contract would be between two private citizens. Will it be contended, that the legislature of a state can diminish the salary of a judge, holding his office during good behavior? Such an authority has never yet been asserted, to our knowledge. It may also be admitted, that corporations for mere public government, such as towns, cities and counties, may in many respects be subject to legislative control. But it will hardly be contended, that even in respect to such corporations, the legislative power is so transcendent, that it may at its will take away the private property of the corporation, or change the uses of its private funds, acquired under the public faith. Can the legislature confiscate to its own use the private funds which a municipal corporation holds under its charter, without any default or consent of the corporators ? If a municipal corporation be capable of holding 329 694 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. devises and legacies to charitable uses (as many municipal corporations *are), does the legislature, under our forms of limited government, J possess the authority to seize upon those funds, and appropriate them to other uses, at its own arbitrary pleasure, against the will of the donors and donees ? From the very nature of our governments, the public faith is pledged the other way ; and that pledge constitutes a valid compact; and that compact is subject only to judicial inquiry, construction and abrogation. This court have already had occasion, in other causes, to express their opinion on this subject; and there is not the slightest inclination to retract it. Terrett v. Taylor, 9 Cranch 43 ; Town of Pawlet v. Clark, Ibid. 292. As to the case of the contract of marriage, which the argument supposes not to be within the reach of the prohibitory clause, because it is matter of civil institution, I profess not to feel the weight of the reason assigned for the exception. In a legal sense, all contracts, recognised as valid in any country, may be properly said to be matters of civil institution, since they obtain their obligation and construction jure loci contractus. Titles to land, constituting part of the public domain, acquired by grants under’ the provisions of existing laws by private persons, are. certainly contracts of civil institution. Yet no one ever supposed, that when acquired bond fide, they were not beyond the reach of legislative revocation. And so, certainly, is the established doctrine of this court. Ibid. A general law, regulating * divorces from the contract of marriage, like a law regulating *reme- J dies in other cases of breaches of contracts, is not necessarily a law impairing the obligation of such a contract, (a) It may be the only effectual mode of enforcing the obligations of the contract on both sides. A law punishing a breach of a contract, by imposing a forfeiture of the rights acquired under it, or dissolving it, because the mutual obligations were no longer observed, is, in no correct sense, a law impairing the obligations of the contract. Could a law, compelling a specific performance, by giving a new remedy, be justly deemed an excess of legislative power? Thus far the contract of marriage has been considered with reference to general laws regulating divorces upop breaches of that contract. But if the argument means to assert, that the legislative power to dissolve such a contract, without such a breach on either side, against the wishes of the parties, and without any judicial inquiry to ascertain a breach, I certainly am not prepared to admit such a power, or that its exercise would not entrench upon the prohibition of the constitution. If, under the faith of existing laws, a contract of marriage be duly solemnized, or a marriage settlement be made (and marriage is always in law a valuable consideration for a contract), it is not easy to perceive, why a dissolution of its obligations, without any default or assent of the parties, may not as well fall within the prohibition, as any other contract for a valuable consideration. A man has just as good a right to his wife, as to the property acquired under a marriage ^contract. 'J He has a legal right to her society and her fortune ; and to divest such right, without his default, and against his will, would be as flagrant a violation of the principles of justice, as the confiscation of his own estate. I leave this case, however, to be settled, when it shall arise. I have gone (a) See Holmes Lansing, 3 Johns. Cas. 73. 330 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 697 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. into it, because it was urged with great earnestness upon us, and required a reply. It is sufficient now to say, that as at present advised, the argument derived from this source, does not press my mind with any new and insurmountable difficulty. In respect also to grants and contracts, it would be far too narrow a construction of the constitution, to limit the prohibitory clause to such only where the parties take for their own private benefit. A grant to a private trustee, for the benefit of a particular cestui que trust, or for any special, private or public charity, cannot be the less a contract, because the trustee takes nothing for his own benefit. A grant of the next presentation to a church is still a contract, although it limit the grantee to a mere right of nomination or patronage. 2 Bl. Com. 21. The fallacy of the argument consists, in assuming the very ground in controversy. It is not admitted, that a contract with a trustee is, in its own nature, revocable, whether it be for special or general purposes, for public charity or particular beneficence. A private donation, vested in a trustee, for objects of a general nature, does not thereby become a public trust, which the government may, at its pleasure, take from the trustee, and administer *in its own way. The truth r*ggg is, that the government has no power to revoke a grant, even of its •-own funds, when given to a private person, or a corporation, for special uses It cannot recall its own endowments, granted to any hospital or college, or city or town, for the use of such corporations. »The only authority remaining to the government is judicial, to ascertain the validity of the grant, to enforce its proper uses, to suppress frauds, and, if the uses are charitable, to secure their regular administration, through the means of equitable tribunals, in cases where there would otherwise be a failure of justice. Another objection growing out of, and connected with that which we have been considering, 'is, that no grants are within the constitutional prohibition, except such as respect property in the strict sense of the term ; that is to say, beneficial interests in lands, tenements and hereditaments, &c., which may be sold by the grantees, for their own benefit : and that grants of franchises, immunities and authorities not valuable to the parties, as property, are excluded from its purview. No authority has been cited to sustain this distinction, and no reason is* perceived to justify its adoption. There are many rights, franchises and authorities, which are valuable in contemplation of law, where no beneficial interest can accrue to the possessor. A grant of the next presentation to a church, limited to the grantee alone, has been already mentioned. A power of appointment, reserved in a marriage settlement, either to a party or a stranger, to appoint uses in favor of third persons, without compensation, is another instance. *A grant of lands r ■ • to a trustee, to raise portions or pay debts, is, in law, a valuable grant, L and conveys a legal estate. Even a power, given by will, to executors, to sell an estate for payment of debts is, by the better opinions and authority, coupled with a trust, and capable of survivorship. Co. Litt. 113 a, Harg. & Butler’s note 2 ; Sugden on Powers 140 ; Jackson v. Jansen, 6 Johns. 73; Franklin v. Osgood, 2 Johns. Cas. 1 ; s. c. 14 Johns. 527 ; Zebach n. Smith, 3 Binn. 69 ; Lessee of Moody v. Vandyke, 4 Ibid. 7, 31 ; Attorney - General y. Gleg, 1 Atk. 356 ; 1 Bac. Abr. 586 (Gwillim’s edit.). Many dignities and offices, existing at common law, are merely honorary, and without profit, and sometimes are onerous. Yet a grant of them has never been supposed the 331 699 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. less a contract on that account. In respect to franchises, whether corporate or not, which include a pernancy of profits, such as a right of fishery, or to hold a ferry, a market or a fair, or to erect a turnpike, bank or bridge, there is no pretence to say, that grants of them are not within the constitution. Yet they may, in point of fact, be of no exchangeable value to the owners. They may be worthless in the market. The truth, however, is, that all incorporeal hereditaments, whether they be immunities, dignities, offices or franchises, or other rights, are deemed valuable in law. The owners have a legal estate and property in them, and legal remedies to support and recover them, in case of any injury, obstruction or disseisin of them. Whenever they are the subjects of a contract or grant, they are just as much within the reach the constitution as any other grant. *Nor is there any solid - J reason why a contract for the exercise of a mere authority should not be just as much guarded, as a contract for the use and dominion of property. Mere naked powers, which are to be exercised for the exclusive benefit of the grantor, are revocable by him, for that very reason. But it is otherwise, where a power is to be exercised in aid of a right vested in the grantee. We all know, that a power of attorney, forming a part of a security upon the assignment of a chose in action, is not revocable by the grantor. For it then sounds in contract, and is coupled with an interest. Walsh v. Whitcomb, 2 Esp. 565 ; Bergen n. Bennett, 1 Caines’ Cas. 1,15; Raymond v. Squire, 11 Johns. 47. So, if an estate be conveyed in trust for the grantor, the estate is irrevocable in the grantee, although he can take no beneficial interest for himself. Many of the best settled estates stand upon conveyances of this nature; and there can be no doubt, that such grants are contracts within the prohibition in question. In respect to corporate franchises, they are, properly speaking, legal estates, vested in the corporation itself, as soon as it is in esse. They are not mere naked powers, granted to the corporation ; but powers coupled with an interest. The property of the corporation rests upon the possession of its franchises ; and whatever may be thought, as to the corporators, it cannot be denied, that the corporation itself has a legal interest in them. It may sue and be sued for them. . Nay, more, this very right is one of its ordinary *franchises. “It is likewise^a franchise,” says Mr. Justice -* Blackstone, “ for a number of persons to be incorporated and subsist as a body politic, with power to maintain perpetual succession, and do other corporate acts ; and each individual member of such corporation is also said to have a franchise or freedom.” 2 Bl. Com. 37 ; 1 Kyd on Corp. 14, 16. In order to get rid of the legal difficulty of these franchises being considered as valuable hereditaments or property, the counsel for the defendant are driven to contend, that the corporators or trustees are mere agents of the corporation, in whom no beneficial interest subsists ; and so nothing but a naked power is touched, by removing them from the trust ; and then to hold the corporation itself a mere ideal being, capable indeed of holding property or franchises, but having no interest in them which can be the subject of contract. Neither of these positions is admissible. The former has been already sufficiently considered, and the latter may be disposed of in a few words. The corporators are not mere agents, but have vested rights, m their character, as corporators. The right to be a freeman of a corporation, is a valuable temporal right. It is a right of voting and acting in the cor- 332 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. Dartmouth College v. Woodward. 701 porate concerns, which the law recognises and enforces, and for a violation of which it provides a remedy. It is founded on the same basis as the right of voting in public elections ; it is as sacred a right; and whatever might have been the prevalence of former doubts, since the time of Lord Holt, such a right has always been deemed a valuable franchise or privilege. Ashby v. White, 2 Ld. Raym. 938 ; 1 Kyd on Corp. 16. *This reasoning, which has been thus far urged, applies with full po-go force to the case of Dartmouth College. The franchises granted by L the charter were vested in the trustees, in their corporate character. The lands and other property, subsequently acquired, were held by them in the same manner. They were the private demesnes of the corporation, held by it, not, as the argument supposes, for the use and benefit of the people of New Hampshire, but, as the charter itself declares, “ for the use of Dartmouth College.” There were not, and in the nature of things, could not be, any other cestui que use, entitled to claim those funds. They were, indeed, to be devoted to the promotion of piety and learning, not at large, but in that college and the establishments connected with it : and the mode in which the charity was to be applied, and the objects of it, were left solely to the trustees, who were the legal governors and administrators of it. No particular person in New Hampshire possessed a vested right in the bounty ; nor could he force himself upon the trustees as a proper object. The legislature itself copld not deprive the trustees of the corporate funds, nor annul their discretion in the application of them, nor distribute them among its its own favorites. Could the legislature of New Hampshire have seized the land given by the state of Vermont to the corporation, and appropriated it to uses distinct from those intended by the charity, against the will of the trustees ? This question cannot be answered in the affirmative, until it is established that the legislature may lawfully take the property of A. and give it to B.; and if it *could not take away or restrain the corporate funds, upon what pretence can it take away or restrain the corpor- l ate franchises ? Without the franchises, the funds could not be used for corporate purposes ; but without the funds, the possession of the franchises might still be of inestimable value to the college, and to the cause of religion and learning. Thus far, the rights of the corporation itself, in respect to its property and franchises, have been more immediately considered. But there are other rights and privileges, belonging to the trustees, collectively and severally, which are deserving of notice. They are intrusted with the exclusive power to manage the funds, to choose the officers, and to regulate the corporate concerns, according to their own discretion. jus patronatus is vested in them. The visitatorial power, in its most enlarged extent, also belongs to them. When this power devolves upon the founder of a charity, it is an hereditament, descendible in perpetuity to his heirs, and in default of heirs, it escheats to the government. Rex v. St. Catherines Hall, 4 T. R. 233. It is a valuable right, founded in property, as much so as the right of patronage in any other case. It is a right which partakes of a judicial nature. May nbt the founder as justly contract for the possession of this right, in return for his endowment, as for any other equivalent ? and if, instead of holding it as an hereditament, he assigns it in perpetuity to the trustees of the corporation, is it less a valuable hereditament in their hands ? The right is not merely a 333 *704 SUPREME COURT Dartmouth College v. Woodward. [Feb’y collective right in all the trustees ; *each of them also has a franchise in it. Lord Holt says, “it is agreeable to reason, and the rules of law, that a franchise should be vested in the corporation aggregate, and yet the benefit redound to the particular members, and be enjoyed by them in their private capacities. Where the privilege of election is used by particular persons, it is a particular right vested in each particular man.” Ashby v. White, 2 Ld. Raym. 938, 952 ; Attorney- General v. Dixie, 13 Ves. 519. Each of the trustees had a right to vote in all elections. If obstructed in the exercise of it, the law furnished him with an adequate recompense in damages. If ousted unlawfully from his office, the law would, by a mandamus, compel a restoration. It is attempted, however, to establish that the trustees have no interest in the corporate franchises, because it is said, that they may be witnesses, in a suit brought against the corporation. The case cited at the bar certainly goes the length of asserting, that in a suit brought against a charitable corporation, for a recompence for services performed for the corporation, the governors, constituting the corporation (but whether intrusted with its funds or not by the act of incorporation does not appear), are competent witnesses against the plaintiff. Weller n. Governor of the Foundling Hospital, 1 Peake’s Cas. 153. But assuming this case to have been rightly decided (as to which, upon the authorities, there may be room to doubt), the corporators *being technically parties to the record {Attorney-Gen-• -* eralv. City of London, 3 Bro. C. C. 171 ; s. c. 1 Ves. jr. 243 ; Burton v. Hinde, 5 T. R. 174 ; Nason v. Thatcher, 7 Mass. 398 ; Phillips on Evid. 42, 52, 57 and notes ; 1 Kyd on Corp. 304, &c. ; Highmore on Mortm. 514), it does not establish, that in a suit for the corporate property vested in the trustees in their corporate capacity, the trustees are competent witnesses. At all events, it does not establish, that in a suit for the corporate franchises to be exercised by the trustees, or to enforce their visitatorial power, the trustees would be competent witnesses. On a mandamus to restore a trustee to his corporate or visitatorial power, it will not be contended, that the trustee is himself a competent witness, to establish his own rights, or the corporate rights. Yet, why not, if the law deems that a trustee has no interest in the franchise ? The test of interest assumed in the argument proves nothing in this case. It is not enough, to establish, that the trustees are sometimes competent witnesses ; it is necessary to show, that they are always so, in respect to the corporate franchises, and their own. It will not be pretended, that in a suit for damages for obstruction in the exercise of his official powers, a trustee is a disinterested witness. Such an obstruction is not a damnum absque injurid. Each trustee has a vested right, and legal interest, in his office, and it cannot be divested but by due course of law. The illustration, therefore, lends no new force to the argument, for it *7061 d°es no^ establish, that when their own rights *are in controversy, the J trustees have no legal interest in their offices. The principal objections having been thus answered, satisfactorily, at least, to my own mind, it remains only to declare, that my opinion, after the most mature deliberation is, that the charter of Dartmouth College, granted in 1769, is a contract within the purview of the constitutional prohibition.. I might now proceed to the discussion of the second question ; but it is necessary previously to dispose of a doctrine which has been very seriously 334 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 706 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. urged at the bar, viz., that the charter of Dartmouth College was dissolved at the revolution, and is, therefore, a mere nullity. A case before Lord Thurlow has been cited in support of this doctrine. Attorney- General v. City of London, 3 Bro. C. C. 171 ; s. c. 1 Ves. jr. 243. The principal question in that case was, whether the corporation of William & Mary College, in Virginia (which had received its charter from King William and Queen Mary), should still be permitted to administer the charity, under Mr. Boyle’s will, no interest having passed to the college, under the will, but it acting as an agent or trustee, under a decree in chancery, or whether a new scheme for the administration of the charity should be laid before the court. Lord Thurlow directed a new scheme, because the college, belonging to an independent government, was no longer within the reach of the court. And he very unnecessarily added, that he could not now consider the college as a corporation, or as another report (1 Ves. Jr. 243) states, *that he ptyoy could not take notice of it, as a corporation, it not having proved its *■ existence, as a corporation, at all. If, by this, Lord Thurlow meant to declare, that all charters acquired in America from the crown, were destroyed by the revolution, his doctrine is not law ; and if it had been true, it would equally apply to all other grants from the crown, which would be monstrous. It is a principle of the common law, which has been recognised as well in this, as in other courts, that the division of an empire works no forfeiture of previously-vested rights of property. And this maxim is equally consonant with the common sense of mankind, and the maxims of eternal justice. Terrett v. Taylor, 9 Cranch 43, 50 ; Kelly v. Harrison, 2 Johns. Cas. 29 ; Jackson v. Lunn, 3 Ibid. 109 ; Calvin’s Case, 7 Co. 27. This objection, therefore, may be safely dismissed without further comment. The remaining inquiry is, whether the acts of the legislature of New Hampshire, now in question, or any of them, impair the obligations of the charter of Dartmouth College. The attempt certainly is to force upon the corporation a new charter, against the will of the corporators. Nothing seems better settled, at the common law, than the doctrine, that the crown cannot force upon a private corporation a new charter; or compel the old members to give up their own franchises, or to admit new members into the corporation. Lex v. Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge, 3 Burr. 1656 ; Lex v. Pasmore, 3 T. R. 240 ; 1 Kyd on Corp. 65 ; Lex v. Larwood, Comb. 316. Neither can the crown compel a man *to become a member of such r*H0Q corporation, against his will. Lex v. Dr. Askew, 4 Burr. 2200. As *-little has it been supposed, that under our limited governments, the legislature possessed such transcendent authority. On one occasion, a very able court held, that the state legislature had no authority to compel a person to become a member of a mere private corporation, created for the promotion of a private enterprise, because every man had a right to refuse a grant. Ellis v. Marshall, 2 Mass. 269. On another occasion, the same learned court declared, that they were all satisfied, that the rights legally vested in a corporation cannot be controlled or destroyed by any subsequent statute, unless a power for that purpose be reserved to the legislature in the act of incorporation. Wales v. Stetson, 2 Mass. 143, 146. These principles are so consonant with justice, sound policy and legal reasoning, that it is difficult to resist the impression of their perfect correctness. The application of 335 708 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. them, however, does not, from our limited authority, properly belong to the appellate jurisdiction of this court in this case. A very summary examination of the acts of New Hampshire will abundantly show, that in many material respects they change the charter of Dartmouth College. The act of the 27th of June 1816, declares that the corporation known by the name of the Trustees of Dartmouth College shall be called the Trustees of Dartmouth University. That the whole number of k.ql trustees shall be twenty-one, a majority *of whom shall form a quorum; J that they and their successors shall hold, use, and enjoy for ever, all the powers, authorities, rights, property, liberties, privileges and immunities, heretofore held, &c., by the trustees of Dartmouth College, except where the act otherwise provides ; that they shall also have power to determine the times and places of their meetings, and manner of notifying the same ; to organize colleges in the university ; to establish an institute, and elect fellows and members thereof ; to appoint and displace officers, and determine their duties and compensation ; to delegate the power Of supplying vacancies in any of the offices of the university for a limited term ; to pass ordinances for the government of the students ; to prescribe the course of education ; and to arrange, invest and employ the funds of the university. The act then provides for the appointment of a board of twenty-five overseers, fifteen of whom shall form a quorum, of whom five are to be such ex officio, and the residue of the overseers, as well as the new trustees, are to be appointed by the governor and council. The board of overseers are, among other things, to have power, “ to inspect and confirm, or disapprove and negative, such votes and proceedings of the board of trustees as shall relate to the appointment and removal of president, professors, and other permanent officers of the university, and determine their salaries ; to the establishment of colleges and professorships, and the erection of new college buildings.” The act then provides, that the president and professors shall nominated by the trustees, and appointed by the overseers, *and shall be liable to be suspended and removed in the same manner ; and that each of the two boards of trustees and overseers shall have power to suspend and remove any member of their respective boards. The supplementary act of the 18th of December 1816, declares, that nine trustees shall form a quorum, and that six votes at least shall be necessary for the passage of any act or resolution. The act of the 26th of December 1816, contains other provisions, not very material to the question before us. From this short analysis, it is apparent, that, in substance, a new corporation is created, including the old corporators, with new powers, and subject to a new control; or that the old corporation is newly organized and enlarged, and placed under an authority hitherto unknown to it. The board of trustees are increased from twelve to twenty-one. The college becomes a university. The property vested in the old trustees is transferred to the new board of trustees, in their corporate capacities. The quorum is no longer seven, but nine. The old trustees have no longer the sole right to perpetuate their succession, by electing other trustees, but the nine new trustees are, in the first instance, to be appointed by the governor and council, and the new board are then to elect other trustees, from time to time, as vacancies occur. The new board, too, have the power to suspend or remove any member, so that a minority of the old board, co-operating with the new 336 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 710 Dartmouth College v. W oodward. trustees, possess the unlimited power to remove the majority of the old board. The powers, too, of the corporation are varied. It has authority to organize new colleges in*“ the university, and to establish an insti-tute, and elect fellows and members thereof.” A board of overseers -is created (a board utterly unknown to the old charter), and is invested with a general supervision and negative upon all the most important acts and proceedings of the trustees. And to give complete effect to this new authority, instead of the right to appoint, the trustees are in future only to nominate, and the overseers are to approve, the president and professors of the university. If these are not essential changes, impairing the rights and authorities of the trustees, and vitally affecting the interests and organization of Dartmouth College, under its old charter, it is difficult to conceive what acts, short of an unconditional repeal of the charter, could have that effect. If a grant of land or franchises be made to A., in trust for special purposes, can the grant be revoked, and a new grant thereof be made to A., B. and C., in trust for the same purposes, without violating the obligation of the first grant? If property be vested by grant in A. and B., for the use of a college, or an hospital, of private foundation, is not the obligation of that grant impaired, when the estate is taken from their exclusive management, and vested in them in common with ten other persons ? If a power of appointment be given to A. and B., is it no violation of their right, to annul the appointment, unless it be assented to by five other persons, and then confirmed by a distinct body ? If a bank or insurance company, by the terms of its charter, be under the management of directors, elected by the stockholders, would not the *rights acquired by the charter be im-paired, if the legislature should take the right of election from the *-stockholders, and appoint directors unconnected with the corporation? These questions carry their own answers along with them. The common sense of mankind will teach us, that all these cases would be direct infringements of the legal obligations of the grants to which they refer; and yet they are, with no essential distinction, the same as the case now at the bar. In my judgment, it is perfectly clear, that any act of a legislature which takes away any powers or franchises vested by its charter in a private corporation, or its corporate officers, or which restrains or controls the legitimate exercise of them, or transfers them to other persons, without its assent, is a violation of the obligations of that charter. If the legislature mean to claim such an authority, it must be reserved in the grant. The charter of Dartmouth College contains no such reservation ; and I am, therefore, bound to declare, that the acts of the legislature of New Hampshire, now in question, do impair the obligations of that charter, and are, consequently, unconstitutional and void. Tn pronouncing this judgment, it has not for one moment escaped me, how delicate, difficult and ungracious is the task devolved upon us. The predicament in which this court stands in relation to the nation at large, is full of perplexities and embarrassments. It is called to decide on causes between citizens of different states, between a state and its citizens, and between d iff erent states. It stands, therefore in the midst of *jealousies and rivalries of conflicting parties, with the most momentous inter- *-ests confided to its care. Under such circumstances, it never can have a 4 Wheat.—22 337 713 SUPREME COURT [Feb’y Dartmouth College v. Woodward. motive to do more than its duty ; and I trust, it will always be found to possess firmness enough to do that. Under these impressions, I have pondered on the case before us with the most anxious deliberation. I entertain great respect for the legislature, whose acts are in question. I entertain no less respect for the enlightened tribunal whose decision we are called upon to review. In the examination, I have endeavored to keep my steps super antiquas vias of the law, under the guidance of authority and principle. It is not for judges to listen to the voice of persuasive eloquence, or popular appeal. We have nothing to do, but to pronounce the law as we find it; and having done this, our justification must be left to the impartial judgment of our country. Duvall, Justice, dissented, (a) **7141 *Upon the suggestion of the plaintiff’s counsel, that the defendant J had died since the last term, the court ordered the judgment to be entered nunc pro tunc as of that term, as follows :— Judgment.—This cause came on to be heard, on the transcript of the record, and was argued by counsel : And thereupon, all and singular the premises being seen, and by the court now here fully understood, and p-i mature deliberation being thereupon had, *it appears to this court, -1 that the said acts of the legislature of New Hampshire, of the 27th of June and of the 18th and 26th of December, Anno Domini 1816, in the (a) In the discussions which arose in France, in 1786, upon the new charter then recently granted to the French East India company, it seems to have been taken for granted, by the lawyers on both sides, to whom the questions in controversy were submitted by the company, and by the nierchants who considered themselves injured by its establishment, that if the charter had regularly issued according to the forms of the French law, it was irrevocable, unless forfeited 'for non-user or misuser. The advocates (MM. Lacretelle and Blonde) who were consulted by the merchants of the kingdom opposed to the establishment of the company, denied its legal existence, on the ground, that the king had been surprised in his grant ; that it was not yet perfected by the issuing of letters-patent, nor duly registered by the parliaments ; and that it both might and ought to be suppressed, as an illegal grant of exclusive privileges, contrary to the true principles of commercial philosophy. On the other hand, it was contended by the company, that their grant was irrevocable ; that it was but a renewal and confirmation of the charter of the old company, which had been suspended in 1769, in consequence of the immense losses of capital sustained in the calamitous war of 1756 (but which suspension was at the time solemnly protested against by the parliament of Paris as illegal) ; that their new grant might still be perfected by letters-patent, which the faith of the king was pledged to issue ; and that the privileges thus granted to them were irrevocably vested, as a right of property, of which they could not be deprived by any authority in the kingdom. “ En effet, quand le roi accorde un privilège exclusif, ce privilège est le prix d'une mise de fonds, dans un commerce hazardeux, dont l'entre-prize est jugée avantageuse à l'etat. Delà naît par conséquent un contrat synallagmatique, qui se forme entre le souverain et les actionnaires. Delà naît un droit de propriété qui devient inébranlable pour le souverain lui-même." And of this opinion were the advocates (MM. Hardoin, Gerbier and De Bonnieres) consulted by the company. See a Collection of Tracts on the French East India company, Paris, 1788, in the Library of Congress. 338 1819] OF THE UNITED STATES. 715 Dartmouth College v. Woodward. record mentioned, are repugnant to the constitution of the United States, and so not valid ; and therefore, that the said superior court of judicature of the state of New Hampshire erred, in rendering judgment on the said special verdict in favor of the said plaintiffs ; and that the said court ought to have rendered judgment thereon, that the said trustees recover against the said Woodward, the amount of damages found and assessed, in and by the verdict aforesaid, viz., the sum of $20,000 : Whereupon, it is considered, ordered and adjudged by this court, now here, that the aforesaid judgment of the said superior court of judicature of the state of New Hampshire be, and the same hereby is, reversed and annulled : And this court, proceeding to render such judgment in the premises as the said superior court of judicature ought to have rendered, it is further considered by this court, now here, that the said trustees of Dartmouth College do recover against the said William Woodward the aforesaid sum of $20,000, with costs of suit; and it is by this court, now here, further ordered, that a special mandate do go from this court to the said superior court of judicature, to carry this judgment into execution. 339 APPENDIX NOTE I. On Charitable Bequests. (By Mr. Justice-Story.) Very few cases upon the subject of charitable donations have originated in the United States; in some of which, however, it is highly probable, the English doctrines on this subject may be of limited, and perhaps, even of general application. Where this is not the case, they may gratify professional curiosity, and afford materials for illustration in analogous branches of the law, as there is hardly any portion of the science in which more ingenious reasoning and indefatigable diligence have been employed. The object of the following sketch is to give a connected view of some of the principal features of the system. It is highly probable, that the rudiments of the law of charities were derived from the civil law. One of the earliest fruits of the emperor Constantine’s real or pretended zeal for Christianity was a permission to his subjects to bequeath their property to the church, (a) This permission was soon abused to so great a degree, as to induce Valen-tinian to enact a mortmain law* by which it was restrained. (&) But this restraint was gradually relaxed, and in the time of Justinian, it became fixed, as a maxim of Roman jurisprudence, that legacies to pious uses, which included all legacies destined for works of charity, whether they related to spiritual or temporal concerns, were of *peculiar favor, and to be deemed privileged testaments.(c) The construction of testaments of this nature was most liberal; and the legacies were never permitted to be lost, either by the uncertainty or failure of the persons or objects for which they were destined. Hence, if a legacy was given to the church, or to the poor generally, without any description of what church or what poor, the few sustained it, by giving it, in the first case, to the parish church of the place where the testator lived ; and in the latter case, to the hospital of the same place; and if there was none, then to the poor of the same parish, (d) And in all cases where the objects were indefinite, the legacy was carried into effect under the direction of the judge having cognisance of the subject.^) So, if a legacy were given for a definite object, which either was previously accomplished, or which failed, it was, nevertheless, valid, and applied under judicial direction to some other object, {g} The high authority of the Roman law, coinciding with the religious notions of the times, could hardly fail to introduce the principles of pious legacies into the common (a) Cod. Theodos. L. 16, t. 2, leg. 4. (6) Ibid. leg. 20. (c) 2 Domat, Loix Civiles, L. 4, t. 2, § 6, 1.1,2, 7, p. 161, 163 ; Ferriere, Diet. h. t.; Swinburne, p. 1, § 16, p. 103. () in assenting to that opinion, has judiciously remarked, that, as at an early period, the Ordinary had power to apply a portion of every man’s personal estate to charity, when, afterwards, the statute compelled a distribution, it is not impossible, that the same favor should have been extended to charity, in wills which, by their own force, purported to authorize such a distribution. Be the origin, however, what it may, it cannot be *denied, that many of the privileges attached to pious legacies have been for ages incorporated into the English law. Indeed, in former times, the Construction of charitable bequests was pushed to a most alarming extravagance; and though it has been in a great measure checked in later and more enlightened times, there are still some anomalies in the law of this subject, which are hardly reconcilable with any sound principles of judicial interpretation, or the proper exercise of judicial authority. The history of the law of charitable bequests, previous to the statute of 43 Elizabeth, c. 4. which is emphatically called the statute of Charitable Uses, is extremely obscure, (c) Few traces remain of the exercise of jurisdiction over charities, in any shape, by any courts, previous to that period.- Of the jurisdiction of chancery, nothing is ascertained with precision; and the few cases to be found at law turned mainly on the question whether the uses were charitable, or whether they were superstitious, within the statutes against superstitious uses. One of the earliest cases is Porter’s Case, 1 Co. 22 5, in 34 & 35 Eliz., already alluded to in the decision of the supreme court in the text (ante, p. 33), but there the parties made out their case at law, upon general principles, without reference to any peculiar rules of construction as to charities; and Lord Eldon seems to think, that this was the usual course, prior to the time of Lord Ellesmere. (cZ) The statute of Elizabeth is now considered as the principal source of the law of charities, and has given rise to various questions. It is to this statute that the very extensive jurisdiction at present exercised by the court of chancery over subjects of this nature is generally, if not exclusively, to be referred. The statute, in its preamble, (e) enumerates certain uses which *it deems J charitable. These are gifts, devises, &c., for the relief of aged, impotent and poor people; for maintenance of sick and maimed soldiers and mariners; for schools of learning, free schools and scholars of universities; for repairs of bridges, ports, havens, causeways, churches, sea-banks, and highways; for education and preferment of orphans; for or towards the relief, stock or maintenance for houses of correction; for marriages of poor maids; for supportation, aid and help of young tradesmen, handicraftsmen and persons decayed; for relief or redemption of prisoners or captives; and for aid or ease of any poor inhabitants, concerning payments of fifteenths, setting out of soldiers, anck other taxes. These are all the classes of uses which the statute reaches. Since the passage of the staute, it has become a general rule that no uses are to be considered as charitable, and entitled, as such, to the protection of the law, except such as fall within the words or obvious intent of the statute. Sir William Grant has observed, that the word “charity,” in its widest extent, denotes all good affections men ought to bear towards each other; in its most restricted and common sense, relief of the poor. In neither of these senses, is it employed in the court of chancery. There, its signification is chiefly derived from the statute of Elizabeth, (y) And, therefore, where a testatrix bequeathed her personal estate to the Bishop of Durham, &c., upon (a) White v. White, 2 Bro. C. C. 12. (6) Moggridge v. Thackwell, 7 Ves. 36, 69 ; Mills v. Farmer, 1 Merivale 55, 94, 95. (e) There was, in fact, a statute passsed respecting charitable uses, in 39 Eliz., c. 9 ; but it was repealed by the statute 43 Eliz. See 342 Com. Dig., Charitable Uses, N, 14. (d) Attorney-General v. Boyer, 3 Ves. 714, 726. (e) See the statute at large, 2 Inst. 707 ; Bridgman’s Duke on Charit. Usés, c. 1. (ff) Morices. Bishop of Durham, 9 Ves. 399. APPENDIX. 6 Charitable Bequests. trusty to pay her debts and legacies, &c., and to dispose of the ultimate residue to such objects of benevolence and liberality as the Bishop of Durham, in his own discretion, shall most approve of; and sh‘e appointed the Bishop her sole executor: upon a bill brought by the next of kin to establish the will and all the legacies, except the residuary bequest, and to declare that void, and a resulting trust for the next of kin, it was held, first, by the master of the rolls, and afterwards on appeal by the lord chancellor, that the residuary bequest was void, and that the property was a resulting trust for the next of kin, upon the ground, that objects of benevolence and liberality were not necessarily such as were within the statute of Elizabeth, and, *therefore, were r objects too indefinite to be executed by the court ; and if so, then the trust was L void; for there can be no valid trust, over which the court of chancery will not assme a control. The master of the rolls said, those purposes are considered as charitable which the statute enumerates, or which, by analogies, are deemed within its spirit or intendment; and to some such purpose every bequest to charity generally shall be applied. But it is clear that liberality and benevolence can find numberless objects not included in the statute, in the largest construction of it. The use of the word “ charitable,” seems to have been purposely avoided in this will. The question is not whether the bishop may not apply the residue upon purposes strictly charitable, but whether he is bound so to apply it. (a) The statute appoints a mode of inquiring into, and enforcing, all charitable uses, bequests, &c., by a commission issuing out of chancery; and the commissioners, upon such inquiry, are authorized to set down such orders, judgments and decrees, as that the lands, &c., may be faithfully employed for the charitable uses to which they were appointed ; which orders, judgments and decrees are to stand good, until undone and altered by the court of chancery, upon due complaint of the party grieved. The statute, then, after enumerating certain exceptions to its operation, gives authority to the court of chancery to take order for the due execution of the orders, judgments and decrees of the commissioners, returned into chancery, and upon any complaint in the premises, and the hearing thereof, to “annul, diminish, alter or enlarge the said orders, judgments and decrees, &c., as shall be thought to stand with equity and good conscience, &c.” Shortly after the statute passed, it became a question, whether the court of chancery could grant relief by original bill, in cases within the statute, or whether the remedy was confined to the process by commission. That doubt remained until the reign of Charles IL, when the question was finally settled in *favor of the jurisdiction r .+g by original bill. (&) It is not quite certain, upon what grounds the court arrived at this conclusion. The probability is, that in cases of charitable uses of a definite nature, where the trustees were alive, and the objects were certain, the court exercised a general jurisdiction by original bill, upon the same grounds as other bills ; for definite trusts are maintained upon its ordinary jurisdiction. And as the court might, upon all commissions, alter, amend and enlarge the decrees of the commissioners, in all cases of charities within the statute, whether definite or indefinite, the proceeding in both cases became mixed in practice, and was inveterately established, before its correctness was very extensively questioned. And it was, in reality, more convenient for all parties, that the court should do that, in the first instance, which it certainly could do, after the return of the commission, upon complaint, so that public convenience and private interest might produce a general acquiescence in a course, which settled the law of the case without any circuity, until it became too late successfully to combat its regularity, (c) (a) Morices. Bushop of Durham, 9 Yes. 399. s. c. 10 Id. 522. (6) Attorney-General v. Newman, 1 Ch. Cas. 157; s. c. 1 Lev. 284; West v. Knight, 1 Ch. Cas. 134; Anon., Ibid. 267; Parish of St. Dunstan v. Beauchamp, Ibid. 193 ; 2 Fonbl. Eq. b. 3, p. 2, c. 1, § 1. (c) See Attorney-General v. Dixie, 13 Ves. 519; Kirkby Ravensworth Hospital, 15 Ibid. 305 ; Green v. Rutherforth, 1 Ibid. 362; Attorney-General v. Earl of Clarendon, 17 Ibid. 491, 499; 2 Fonbl. Eq. b. 3, p. 2, c. 1, § 1, note a ; Cooper’s Eq. Pl. 292 ; Bailiffs, &c., of Burford v. Lenthall, 2 Atk. 550. 343 8 APPENDIX. Charitable Bequests. Be this as it may, it is very certain, that chancery will now relieve by original bill, or information, upon gifts, bequests, &c., within the statute of Elizabeth; and informations by the attorney-general to settle, establish or direct charitable donations, are very common in practice, (a) But where the gift is not a charity within the statute, no information lies in the name of the attorney-general to enforce it. (5) And if an information be brought in the name of the attorney-general, and it appears to be such a charity as the court ought to support, though the information be mistaken in the title or prayer of relief, yet the bill will not be dismissed, but the court will support and establish *the charity in such manner as by law it may.(c) But the jurisdiction J of chancery over charities does not exist, where there are local visitors appointed ; for it then becongs to them and their heirs to visit and control the charity. ( *but where the execution is to be by a trustee, with general or J some objects pointed out, whether such trustee survive the testator or not, there, the administration of the trust will be taken by the court of chancery (either as personal delegate of the crown or as a court of equity), and managed under a scheme reported by a master, and approved by the court. (6) As to the remedy for misapplication of the charity funds, &c., in cases within the statute of Elizabeth, a proper, though not an exclusive remedy, is by commission under the statute, (c) But as the statute does not extend to any college, hospital or free school, which have special visitors, or governors or overseers appointed by their founders, (d) it is necessary to consider what is the remedy for frauds or misconduct in such cases. As to this, it may be observed, that all trustees, who are the managers of the revenues of such charities, are subject to the general superintending power of the court of chancery, not as, of itself, possessing a visitatorial power or a right to control the charity, but as possessing a general jurisdiction of an abuse of trusts, to redress grievances, and suppress frauds, (e) And if a corporation be the mere trustee of a charity, and grossly abuses the trust, the court of chancery will take it away from them, and vest it in other hands, (g) But the general controlling power of the court over charities, does not extend to a charity regulated by governors, under a charter, unless they have also the management of the revenues, and abuse their trust; and this will not be presumed, but must be apparent, and made out in evidence. (A) *It seems, that with a view to encourage the discovery of charitable dona-J tions, given for indefinite purposes, it is the practice for the crown, to reward the (a) Moggridge v. Thackwell, 7 Ves. 36, 83, 85, 86; Mills v. Farmer, 1 Meriv. 55; Paice v. Archbishop of Canterbury, 14 Ves. 364; Attorney-General v. Mathews, 2 Lev. i67 ; Attorney-General v. Wansay, 15 Ves. 231; Attorney-General v. Price, 17 Ves. 371; Waldo v. Caley, 16 Ibid. 206. (6) Ibid. (c) Bridg. Duke 590, 602. This proceeding appears to have almost fallen practically into disuse. Edin. Review, vol. 31, p. 503. It has been mentioned before, that the proceedings may be by information or original bill; and by a recent statute (52 Geo. III., c. 101), a more summary remedy is given by petition. 350 (d) Stat. 43 Eliz., c. 4, 2d proviso. Attorney-General v. Smart, 1 Ves. 72; Attorney-General v. Harrow School, 2 Ibid. 551. (e) Fonbl. b. 2, p. 2, c. 1, § 1, note a ; and the authorities cited by Mr. Justice Story, in the case of Dartmouth College v. Woodward (ante). See also, Attorney-General v. Utica Ins. Co., 2 Johns. Ch. 371, 384, 38t>. (g) Attgrney-General v. Mayor, &c., of Coventry, 7 Bro. P. C. 235 ; Attorney-General v. Earl of Clarendon, 17 Ves. 491, 499; Attorney-General v. Utica Ins. Co.,J2 Johns. Ch. 389. Bridg. Duke 574, &c. (7i) Attorney-General v. Foundling Hospital, 2 Ves. jr. 42. APPENDIX. South American Civil War. 22 persons who make the communication, if they can bring themselves within the scope of the charity, by giving them a part of the fund; and the like practice, whether well or ill founded, takes place in relation to escheats, (a) These are the principal doctrines and decisions under the statute of Elizabeth, of charitable uses, which it seemed most important to bring in review before the learned reader. And it may not be useless to add, that the statute of mortmain and charities of the 9th of George IL, c. 36, has very materially narrowed the extent and operation of the statute of Elizabeth, and has formed a permanent barrier against what the statute declares a “public mischief,” which “had of late greatly increased, by many large and improvident alienations or dispositions made by languishing and dying persons, or by others, to uses, called charitable uses, to take place after their deaths, to the disherison of their lawful heirs.” It was the original design of this note, to have included a summary view of the principal clauses of this statute, and the decisions which have followed it; but it is already extended to so great a length, that it is thought best to omit it. The learned reader will, however, find a very accurate statement of both in Mr. Justice Blackstone’s Commentaries (2 Bl. Com. 268), and in Bridgman’s Duke on Charitable Uses, and Highmore’s History of Mortmain and Charitable Uses. This statute was, never extended to or adopted by the colonies, in general. (5) But certain of the provisons of it, or of the older statutes of mortmain (7 Edw. I., stat. 2, De Religiosis; the 13 Edw. I., c. 32 ; the 15 Richard IL, c. 5; and the 23 Hen. VIII., c. 10), have been adopted by some of the states of the Union ;(c) and it deserves the consideration of every wise and enlightened American legislator, whether provisions similar to those of *this celebrated statute are not proper to be enacted in this pgg country, with a view to prevent undue influence and imposition upon pious and feeble minds, hn their last moments, and to check that unhappy propensity, which sometimes is found to exist, under a bigotted enthusiasm, and the desire to gain fame as a religious devotee, at the expense of all the natural claims of blood and parental duty to children. NOTE n. Different public Acts by which the Government of the United States has recognised the existence of a Civil War between Spain and her American Colonies. Extract from the President’s Message to Congress, November 17th, 1818. “ In suppressing the establishment at Amelia Island, no unfriendliness was manifested towards Spain, because the post was taken from a force which had wrested it from her. The measure, it is true, was not adopted in concert with the Spanish government, or those in authority under it ; because, in transactions connected with the war in which Spain and the colonies are engaged, it was thought proper, in doing justice to the United States, to maintain a strict impartiality towards both the belligerent parties, without consulting or acting in concert with either. It gives me pleasure to state, that the governments of Buenos Ayres and Venezuela, whose names were assumed, have explicitly disclaimed all participation in those measures, and even the knowledge of them, until communicated by this government, and have also expressed their satisfaction that a course of proceedings had been suppressed, which, if justly imputable to them, would dishonor their cause. (a) Per Lord Eldon, in Moggridge v. Thack-well, 7 Ves. 36, 71. (6) Attorney-General v. Stewart, 2 Motivale 143. (c) 3 Binn. Appendix, 626 ; Laws of New York, sess. 36, c. 60, § 4 ; 2 Caines Cas. 337. 351 23 APPENDIX. South American Civil War. “ The civil war, which has so long prevailed between Spain, and the provinces in *241 South America, still continues without any *prospect of its speedy termination. The information respecting the condition of those countries, which has been collected by the commissioners, recently returned from thence, will be laid before congress, in copies of their reports, with such other information as has been received from other agents of the United States. “ It appears, from these communications, that the government at Buenos Ayres declared itself independent, in July 1816, having previously exercised the power of an independent government, though in the name of the king of Spain, from the year 1810: that the Banda Oriental, Entre Rios and Paraguay, with the city of Santa Fe, all of which are also independent, are unconnected with the. present government of Buenos Ayres: that Chili had declared itself independent, and is qlosely connected with Buenos Ayres: that Venezuela has also declared itself independent, and now maintains the conflict with various success; and that the remaining parts of South America, except Monte Video, and such other portions of the eastern bank of the La Plata as are held by Portugal, are still in the possession of Spain, or in a certain degree, under her influence. “By a circular note addressed by the ministers of Spain to the allied powers with whom they are respectively accredited, it appears, that the allies have undertaken to mediate between Spain and the South American provinces, and that the manner and extent of their interposition would be settled by a congress, which was to have met at Aix-la-Chapelle, in September last. From the general policy and course of proceeding observed by the allied powers in regard to this contest, it is inferred, that they will confine their interposition to the expression of their sentiments, abstaining from the application of force. I state this impression, that force will not be applied, with the greater satisfaction, because it is a course more consistent with justice, and likewise authorizes a hope that the calamities of the war will be confined to the parties only, and will be of shorter duration. “From the view taken of this subject, founded on all the information that we have been able to obtain, there is good cause to be satisfied with the course heretofore pur-*251 sued by the United *States, in regard to this contest, and to conclude, that it is J proper to adhere to it, especially in the present state of affairs.” Extract from Mr. Commissioner Rodney’s report. “Their private armed vessels are subjected to very strict regulations, agreeable to their prize code, which is among the original papers presented, and herewith delivered. It may be proper, in this place, to introduce the subject of the irregular conduct of the privateers under the patriot flag, against which the commissioners were directed to remonstrate. Having taken an opportunity of explaining to Mr. Tagle, the secretary of state, the proceedings of our government relative to Amelia Island and Galveston, agreeable to their instructions, the commissioners embraced a suitable occasion, to urge the just cause of complaint, which the malpractices of private armed vessels, wearing the patriot colors, had furnished our government. On both topics they had long and interesting conversations. With the conduct of the government respecting Amelia Island and Galveston, Mr. Tagle expressed himself perfectly satisfied, and he disclaimed for his government any privity or participation in the lodgments made at those places, by persons acting in the name of the patriots of South America. In reference to the acts of cruisers under the patriot flags, he said, he was sensible that great irregularities had occurred, though his government had done everything in their power to prevent them, and were willing, if any instance of aggression were pointed out, to direct an inquiry into the case, and if the facts were established, to punish those concerned, and redress the individuals. He professed his readiness to adopt any measures that would more effectually prevent a recurrence of such acts, in which he expressed his belief, that the privateers of Buenos Ayres had rarely participated, though the character of the government had suffered from the conduct of others. He stated, that they had, on 352 APPENDIX. South American Civil War. 25 one occasion, sent out some of their public vessels to examine all cruisers wearing the Buenos Ayrean flag, to see that they were lawfully commisioned, *and to ascer-tain whether they had violated their instructions.” L Extract from Mr. Commissioner Bland’s report. “In a short time after our introduction to the director, and in about a week after our arrival, we waited on the secretary of state, as being the most formal and respectful mode of making our communications to this new and provisional government. We stated to the secretary, that our government had not viewed the struggle now pending between the revolutionary provinces of South America and Spain, merely as a rebellion of colonists ; but as a civil war, in which each party was entitled to equal rights and equal respect; that the United States had, therefore, assumed, and would preserve with the most impartial and the strictest good faith, a neutral position; and in the preservation of this neutrality, according to the established rules of the law of nations, no rights, privileges or advantages would be granted by our government to one of the contending parties, which would not, in like manner, be extended to the other. The secretary expressed his approbation of this course; but, in an interview subsequent to the first, when the neutral position of the United States was again spoken of, he intimated a hope, that the United States might be induced to depart from its rigid neutrality in favor of his government; to which we replied, that as to what our government might be induced to do, or what would be its future policy towards the patriots of South America, we could not, nor were we authorized to say’anything. “We stated to the secretary, that it had been understood, that many unprincipled and abandoned persons, who had obtained commissions as privateers, from the independent patriot government, had committed great depredations on our commerce; and had evidently got such commissions, not so much from any regard to the cause of independence and freedom, as with a view to plunder ; and that we entertained a hope, that there would be a due degree of circumspection exercised by *that govern- r.^ ment, in granting commissions, which in their nature were so open to abuse. “ The secretary replied, that there had hitherto been no formal complaint made against any of the cruisers of Buenos Ayres; and if any cause of complaint should exist, his government would not hesitate to afford proper redress, on a representation and proof of the injury ; that the government of Buenos Ayres had taken every possible precaution in its power, in such cases ; that it had established and promulgated a set of rules and regulations for the government of its private armed vessels, a copy of which should be furnished us; and that it had, in all cases, as far as practicable, enjoined and enforced a strict observance of those regulations, and the law of nations.” Extract from Mr. Commissioner Bland’s report relative to Chili. “I then told him, that the government of the United States had been informed, that some of the cruisers, under the real flag of the patriot authorities, had committed considerable violations' on our commerce; that if any such wrongs were to be committed by armed vessels, sailing under the Chileno flag, he could not but perceive, how inevitably such acts would tend to disturb ail harmony between the two countries, and to crush, in the very formation, every friendly relation that might be begun, and desired to be matured, between the two nations; since my government would feel itself bound to protect the rights of its citizens against the insults or injuries of any other people, however deeply it might regret the repulsive measures it was thus driven to adopt; and that the president would wish to be informed, if there were any prize courts yet established in the country; and, if any, what regulations had been adopted for the government of the public and private armed vessels of Chili. The director said, that whatever cause of complaint the United States might have against the people of any other of the patriot powers, none, he felt satisfied could be made against Chilenos, or those under the flag of Chili; because, until very *lately, there were no shipping r^g or vessels of any kind belonging to it, excepting, indeed, some fishing boats; and -1 Whe^t.—23 353 28 APPENDIX. South American Civil War. that within a few months only, some few vessels had been commissioned; that he had heard of abuses committed under the flag of other patriot powers ; and to prevent the like, as far as practicable, from being perpetrated by those of Chili, it had been determined to put on board each, an officer, and such a number of marines as would be able to control and prevent the mischievous propensities of seamen; that with regard to matters of prize, they were brought before the ordinary and temporary tribunals of the country, until more formal and systematic institutions could be established: and, that for the regulation and government of armed vessels, a set of rules and orders had been adopted, a copy of which should be furnished me, which was accordingly handed me, and accompanies this as document marked A.”(a) An Ordinance of the Government of Buenos Ayres, regulating Privateers. By the Supreme Director of the United Provinces of South America. The bloody war which King Ferdinand VII. has, since his restoration to the throne of his ancestors, prosecuted, through his myrmidons, against all the inhabitants of the new world, who have claimed their natural freedom, demands that a recourse should be had to those measures of retaliation, which the law of nations permits, in order to make the Spanish nation sensible of the consequences attending the barbarous obstinacy of her monarch, fascinated by corrupted ministers, against the just claims of the injured Americans. The insults offered to mankind by the cruel agents of the Court of Madrid, and the approbation by whieh it has confirmed all the acts of devastation, which, in contempt of divine and human laws, the Spanish leaders have committed, both with fire and *901 sword, through all parts of America, unfortunately visited *by them, would, in the opinion of all the world, justify any act of reprisals. But being unwilling to tarnish, by acts unworthy of an enlightened age, the holy principles on which the emancipation of the United Provinces of the South rests, and resolved to regulate my conduct by that system of war which is received among civilized nations; being likewise aware of the advantages obtained by the privateers of the free governments of America: I have determined to give a suitable encouragement and extent to the hostilities by sea, in order to increase the losses which King Ferdinand himself, in his decree of the 8th of February of the present year, confesses to have already been caused to his subjects by this kind of warfare, which is to be vigorously prosecuted, until Spain shall acknowledge the independence proclaimed by the sovereign congress of these provinces, with the direction and security of which I am intrusted. And for the purpose of intercepting the navigation and commerce of both countries, by opposing the naval force equipped in regular form, by the state or by private individuals, I have resolved, that privateering shall henceforth be continued against the subjects of Ferdinand VII. and their property, and that the same be done, strictly observing the provisions and regulations laid down and enacted in the following provisional Ordinance: A provisional Ordinance to regulate Privateering. Abt. I. This government will grant commissions or letters of marque to those persons who may apply for the same, to arm any vessel, in order to act as a privateer against all vessels sailing under the enemy’s flag; the requisite bond being previously given therefor, at the naval department. In such application, a description must be given of the kind of vessel intended for that purpose, her tonnage, arms, ammunitions and crew. IL A commission being granted to arm any vessel as a privateer, the commandant of the marine will give, by all the means within his power, every facility to expedite m the fitting out of *any such vessel, allowing her to receive all the men she may require, excepting such as are enlisted for the service of the state, or actually («) This document corresponds verbatim with the prize code of Buenos Ayres which follows. 354 APPENDIX. South American Civil War. 30 employed therein. The equipment of the vessel being finished, the said commandant will deliver to her captain a copy of this ordinance, together with all other regulations made known to him through the private channel of communications of the naval department, touching the manner in which he is to act, in particular cases, with neutral vessels, more especially, of such nations the flags of which may be entitled to certain immunities or privileges arising from the treaties or agreements made with them for the punctual observance thereof in what concerns them. III. The officers of the commissioned vessels or privateers are under the protection of the laws of these United Provinces; and they shall enjoy, even if foreigners, all the privileges and immunities of any other citizen thereof, whilst employed in their service. IV. The owners of such privateers are at liberty to enter into any agreement they may think fit, with the officers and crew of the same, provided they do not contain any clause contrary to the laws and ordinances of the government. It being the duty of the owners, as aforesaid, to present a copy of the agreements they may make to the department of the general commandant of the marine, where care must be taken that the same be strictly fulfilled. V. The owners of privateers, on giving bond, will be furnished from the public magazines of the state with the guns, muskets, gunpowder and ammunitions they may be in want of, for the complete equipment of the privateer; under the condition to return, after the expiration of the cruise, the articles thus supplied; they not being obliged to make any allowance for the deterioration or consumption thereof, caused by their use in the service. And in case of either wreck or capture of the privateer, the same being proved, they shall be discharged from all responsibility. VI. The privateers are to be visited, at the time of their departure, by the commissioners appointed by the commandant-general of the marine, who shall read to them the penal laws, *a copy whereof must be given to their commanders, with injunc-tions to read them to the crew, once a week, mention of which circumstance is to be made in the certificate of the visit; should the privateers be cleared out in friendly ports, they shall be visited by the consuls or agents of the government, in pursuance of their private instructions. VII. All merchandise, liquors, and other articles fit for the consumption of the country, which may be imported as proceeding from captured cargoes, must be appraised by the custom-house, the same as any other cargo of commerce, and out of the sum total of duties which may result therefrom, a third part shall be deducted for the benefit of the captors. VIII. All prizes must be sent to the ports of these United Provinces, there to be adjudged in the customary lawful way in such cases,; but should there occur any extraordinary circumstance to prevent it, the commander of the privateer, consulting his security, may exercise his own discretion in this respect, reserving documents justifying the same, in order to present them in due time before the competent tribunal. IX. Silver and gold, whether coined or in bars, or in bullion, being a capital proceeding from capture, shall pay to the treasury of the state, at the rate of six per centum, as a compensation for the benefits granted in the fifth and seventh articles. -X. Silver and gold, manufactured into articles of luxury, shall, on their importation, pay the same duties as any other commercial article, according to the particular valuation that may be made of them. XI. The privateers that may take from the enemy important communications, officers of rank, &c., or that may cause similar damages to the enemy, shall be rewarded in a manner worthy the generosity of the government, and in proportion to the importance of the service they may have thus rendered. XII. The government offers a reward to all privateers that shall capture a transport of the enemy with troops, ammunition or other warlike accoutrements, destined to commit hostilities against the free countries of America, or to reinforce any part of the Spanish dominions: which reward shall be regulated *according to the circum- ^*32 stances of the case, and in proportion to the amount of the capture. 355 32 APPENDIX. South American Civil War. XIII. The commanders of the privateers employed to destroy the Spanish commerce, without being cruel in the treatment of the prisoners, shall burn and sink on the high seas every enemy’s vessel which they may think proper not to man as a prize, owing, to her small value. And they are prohibited, under the penalties which the case may require, either to restore or leave in the possession of the enemy, under any pretext whatever, any vessel of the said class; any favor of this nature being considered as an hostility against the United Provinces. XIV. Captured vessels shall be free of all duties, those of the port excepted. XV. All articles of war captured shall be free of duties. In case the same are wanted by this government, it may take them at the rate of ten per centum below the current prices in the market. XVI. Should any negro slaves be captured, they must be sent to the ports of these United Provinces; and the government will allow as a bounty, the sum of fifty dollars for each of such slaves as may be fit to take up arms, from the age of twelve tb forty years inclusively, they being obliged to serve four years in the armies, and then they shall be free of duties. Should they be either over or under that age, or unfit for the army, they will be absolutely free, and this government will distribute them in guardianship. XVII. Any negroes captured, that on account of the blockade or unfitness of the vessel, &c., cannot be brought into the ports of these United Provinces, shall be sent to those of the free nations of America, and there given up to the disposal of those governments, with the express condition not to sell them as slaves, under the penalties to the transgressors of being deprived of all their privileges (whatever their services may be), and also of the protection of the laws of these United Provinces, who detest slavery, and have prohibited this cruel traffic in human beings. XVIII. The cognisance of the prizes which the privateers *may bring or J send jnto our ports shall exclusively belong to our courts. XIX. Should, it be declared by the sentence of the court, that the captured vessel is not a lawful prize, or that there is no reason to detain her, she shall be forthwith set at liberty, without causing her the least expense, being exempted even from the duties of the port. And in case of said vessel being detained any longer, under that or any other pretext, all the damages which on that account may fall on her owners, shall be laid to the charge of the persons causing the same. XX. If the captor does not acquiesce in the sentence of the court of prizes, and intends to appeal from it, having a special power from the parties interested, he is allowed So to do to the Supreme Director, on his giving, previously to the entering of such an appeal, the proper bond, to the satisfaction of the captured captain, to answer unto him for all the damages and detriments which may have a right to claim of the said captor, after the confirmation of the first sentence, on account of the detention and demurrage, loss of time and freight, damages, and deterioration of both vessel and cargo, and any other occurrences. Which damages, together with the costs of prosecution, shall be paid unto the captured captain by the captor, before his leaving the port; and in case of his not being able to make payment, recourse shall be had to the oonds or sureties he may have given, who, without any further step or delay, shah be compelled to do it, by all the rigor of the law. XXI. No person enjoying a salary from the naval department shall exact any fees, stipend or contribution, for services rendered in the adjudication of prizes. They are also prohibited to take or appropriate to themselves any merchandise, or other articles of prize goods, under the penalty of confiscation, and of the loss of their employment. XXII. Privateers and letters of marque are authorized to board all commercial vessels of any nation, and to oblige them to exhibit their sea-letters, passes, commissions and passports, together with the documents showing the ownership of the vessel^ charter-parties or agreements of freight, the journal or log-book, the roll d'equipage, *04-,. and the lists of the crew and passengers. *This examination shall be made, J without employing any violence, or causing any damage or considerable detention 356 • APPENDIX. South American Civil War. 34 to the vessels on board whereof the same is to be performed, and whose master or captain, with the above-said documents, shall be ordered on board the privateer, that her captain may attentively examine them himself, or cause the ’ same to be done by the interpreter he may have for that purpose. And in case no cause be found to detain the vessel any longer, she shall be permitted freely to continue her navigation. Should any vessel resist this examination, the privateer may compel her to do it, by force. But the officers, as well as other individuals belonging to the crews of said privateers, can in no case exact or require any contribution from the captain, sailors or passengers of the vessels they may board, neither cause, nor permit to be caused, to them, any extortion or violence of any kind whatsoever, under the penalty of being exemplarily punished, even unto death, according to the enormity of the case. XXIII. When the captain of the vessels on board of which there shall be any articles belonging to enemies, shall bona, fide declare them so to be, the removal thereof shall be made, without interrupting the navigation or detaining them longer than it shall be necessary, the safety of the vessel permitting the same. In this case, the captains shall be furnished with a receipt for the articles thus removed, therein expressing all the circumstances attending the same; and, should the privateer be unable to pay them in cash, the proportionate amount of freight of said articles, up to the place of their destination, according to the bills of lading or agreement of freight, he will furnish them with a note or draft for the same amount on the owner or agent of the said privateer, who shall be obliged to pay it, on its being presented; the captains or commanders* of the privateers being hereby ordered to bring, in such cases, the declaration made by the captain of the detained vessel, signed by him and authenticated in the most formal manner. XXIV. All vessels found navigating without lawful passes, sea-letter, or commissions from the republics, provinces or states, having authority to grant them, shall be detained; as well as those that may fight under a flag other than that of the *prince or state by which their commission may have been granted ; as likewise ¡-*$5 such as may be found holding different commissions from several princes or states; all of which are declared a good prize; and in case of their being armed in war, their commanders and officers shall be considered as pirates. XXV. Vessels of pirates, and such as may have been taken possession of by their revolted crews, shall be declared good prize, together with all the articles appertaining thereto, or found on board the same; excepting such as may be proved to belong to persons who neither directly or indirectly have contributed to the piracy, and are not enemies. XXVI. It being unlawful, within the jurisdiction of this state, to arm any vessel in order to act as a privateer, without my permission, as likewise to admit, for that purpose, a commission or letters of marque from any other prince or republic, eVen if allied with this, any vessel found on the high seas, with such commissions, or without any commission at all, shall be adjudged a good prize, and her captain or commander punished as pirates. XXVII. All armed vessels, whether commissioned cruisers, or merchant vessels with letters of marque, navigating under the flag, or with a commission from princes or states enemies to this government, shall be good prize, together with all the articles that may be found on board thereof, even if belonging to citizens of these United Provinces, in case of their having shipped them after the delaration of war, and the requisite time being elapsed for their having notice thereof. XXVIII. Merchant vessels belonging to any nation whatsoever, that may make any defence, after the privateer’s hoisting up her flag, shall be declared good prize, unless her captain should prove that the privateer gave him sufficient motive for such a resistance. XXIX. Such vessels as may be found without the papers and documents specified in the 22d article, or the most important of them, to wit, the sea-letter, pass or commission, the bills of lading of the cargo, and other documents, in order to prove r*gg that it, as well as the vessel, are neutral property, shall be *declared a good 357 36 APPENDIX. South- American Civil War. prize ; unless on proof of their being lost by inevitable accident. All the documents that may be presented must be signed in due form, in order to be admitted in proof. XXX. Should the captains, or other individuals of the vessels detained by the privateers, or by any of the vessels belonging to the navy of the state, throw overboard any papers; if this fact be proved in due form, by that very act, they shall be declared good prize. And the same construction is to be given to the foregoing, and any other articles touching the same matter. XXXI. Privateers are prohibited to attack, to commit any kind of hostilities, or to capture, the vessels of the enemy, that may be found in the ports of allied or neutral princes or states; as likewise those that may be within cannon-shot of their fortifications. It being declared, in order to remove all doubts, that the distance of the cannon-shot must be observed, even if there should be no batteries on the spot where the capture may take place, provided the distance be the same, and that the enemy shall likewise respect this immunity in the territory of the neutral or allied powers. XXXII. The vessels that privateers may capture in the ports, or within the reach of the cannon-shot of the territory of allied or neutral powers, even in the case of their being in fresh pursuit, and attacking them from sea, are declared to be no prize, as taken in a spot which is entitled to immunity; provided the enemy respect the same in like manner. XXXIII. Every privateer that may retake a national vessel within twenty-four hours after her capture, shall be entitled to one-half of the value of said prize for salvage, the other half being restored for the benefit of the original owner of said vessel; which division is to be made speedily and summarily, in order to diminish the costs as much as possible. But if the re-capture should take place after the lapse of twenty-four hours from the capture, the privateer thus retaking her shall be entitled to the whole value of the same. XXXIV. If a vessel should be found on the sea, or brought into our ports, without the bills of lading of her cargo, or other documents by which the ownership thereof may be ascertained, *and not having on board persons belonging to her own J crew, both the captor and the captain of said prize shall be separately examined touching the circumstances in which the said vessel was found when taken possession of. Her cargo is likewise to be inspected by intelligent persons, and every possible means resorted to, in order to discover the true owner. Should this not be found out, an inventory of the whole shall be made, and everything kept deposited, to restore them to whomsoever shall, within a year, prove to be such; unless there should be ground to declare the same good prize; giving, in all events, the third part of the value to the captors. If the owner does not appear in the above said term, the other two remaining thirds shall be divided, as derelict goods, into three parts; one of which is likewise to be given to the captors, and the other two, to be applied to the use of the state. XXXV. In any of the aforesaid cases, and when the privateer shall detain a vessel, care shall be taken to collect all her papers, of what kind soever they may be, and that the clerk shall make a correct memorandum thereof, giving a receipt to the captain or supercargo of the vessel thus detained, for them ; and warning him not to conceal any papers he may have, it being declared, that only such as he may exhibit shall be admitted in the adjudication of the capture. This being done, the captain of the privateer shall secure the papers in a bag or package, sealed; which he must deliver to the prize-master, with orders to deliver the same to the government. The captain of the privateer, or any individual of her crew, who from any motive whatever, may conceal, break or embezzle any of said papers, shall be condemned to corporal punishment, as the circumstances of the case may require; the captain being over and above obliged to make good the damages ; and other individuals to be sent to the public works for ten years. XXXVI. The captain of the privateer shall, at the same time, take care to have the hatches of the vessels thus detained, nailed up, and to seal them in such a manner as 358 APPENDIX. 37 South American Civil War. to render it impossible to open them without breaking the seals. He must secure the keys of the cabin, and other passages, and cause all the articles that may be found on deck, to be*locked up—taking *down, if the time should permit it, a memoran-dum of everything that may be easily mislaid, in order to put them under the L charge of the person who shall be appointed to command the same vessel. XXXVII. The articles that may be found on deck, or in the cabin, state-rooms or forecastle, shall not be permitted to be plundered, the right of so doing (commonly called pendolage), being absolutely prohibited; which, however, may be tolerated only in the case of the vessel’s having shown resistance, even to the point of being boarded. But care must always be taken to prevent the disorders that an excessive license may produce. XXXVIII. When the crew of a vessel, detained as aforesaid, shall be removed on board the privateer, the clerk shall, in the presence of the master, take a deposition from him, the mate and other individuals of such detained vessel, touching the circumstances of her navigation, voyage and cargo—writing down everything that may be necessary to the adjudication of the capture. He is also to interrogate them, whether they have on board any jewels or other valuables, not expressed in the bills of lading of the cargo, in order that proper measures may be taken to prevent their being embezzled. XXXIX. The prize-master appointed to command any vessel, detained as aforesaid, shall be furnished with a detailed information, comprising everything that may appear from the above mentioned depositions—making him responsible for whatever, owing to his omission or fault, may be lost. And it is hereby declared, that any person who shall, without license, break open the sealed hatches, trunks, bales, casks, packages or lockers, where there may be any articles of merchandise, shall not only lose that part which of right might belong to him, should they be declared a good prize, but a prosecution shall be instituted against him, and be punished according to the result thereof. XL. No other papers or documents are to be admitted, in order to decide upon the lawfulness or unlawfulness of the capture, but those that were produced and found on board the prize vessel. However, if, in case of a defect of papers to determine the cause, the captain of the captured vessel should »offer to prove his having lost r^gg them by unavoidable accident, the court will grant him a sufficient term for that purpose; regarding the summary manner with which such causes are to be determined. XLI. If, before sentence is pronounced on the prize, it should become necessary to unload the whole or part of the cargo, in order to prevent the loss thereof, the hatches are to be broken open in the presence of the commandant of the marine, or commissioners appointed by him, and of the respective parties concerned, who must be present at that act. An inventory shall then be made of all the articles that may be unladen; which with the assistance and knowledge of the officer of the revenue appointed by the collector of the customs, must be deposited either in the hands of a trusty person, or in store-houses of which the master or supercargo of the captured vessel is to keep a key. XLII. Should the sale of any articles be deemed necessary, owing to the impossibility of preserving them, such sale must be effected at public auction, with all the customary solemnities, in the presence of the captured captain, and with the assistance of the officer of the custom-house, as aforesaid; and the proceeds thereof are to be deposited with a trusty person, to be delivered to whom the same may belong, after the sentence is pronounced on the capture. XLIII. No person, whatever his rank or condition may be, is permitted secretly to buy or conceal anything, knowing it to belong to the prize or detained vessel, under the penalty of making restitution for the same, and of a fine, triple the value of the goods concealed or clandestinely bought, and even of corporal punishment, as the case may be; the cognisance of which causes shall exclusively belong to the courts of prize, as incidental thereto. 359 39 APPENDIX. South American Civil War. XLIV. If the vessel detained should not be condemned as good prize, her master or owner, together with her officers and crew, shall be forthwith reinstated in the possession of the same; restoring unto them whatever may belong to her, witnont retaining the least thing. She is to be furnished with a suitable safe-conduct, in order that she may prosecute her voyage, without any further detention; she is declared free of *401 *duties of the port, and before her departure is to be indemnified by the captor, for all the expenses, damages and losses that may have been caused to her, and which she may have a right to claim, with justice, should her case be comprehended among those specified in the 22d and 30th articles. But such claim is not to be admitted, if she should have given reasonable cause for suspicion to the capturing vessel, or incurred any other penalty comprised in this ordinance, in consequence of which a prosecution may have been instituted; all of which may appear from the proceedings had thereon. XLV. Should the captured vessel be condemned as good prize, the captors shall be permitted the free use of her, previously paying the duties due to the treasury of this government. The whole amount resulting from sales of the captures made by vessels of war, shall be divided into two parts; one of them containing three-fifths, for the use of the crew and mariners, and the other two-fifths for the officers. No person, whether belonging to the navy or army, being a passenger, or going as a transport on board said vessels, at the time of the capture, shall, under any pretext whatever, be comprehended in the distribution. But it shall be the duty of the commander of such vessel to inform the chief officer of the naval department, whether any of the persons going on board as passenger, or otherwise, has distinguished himself by a special service in the action: to the end, that if he should deem it just, he may order such person to share according to his rank, as if he had been comprehended amongst the number belonging to the complement of the vessel. XLV. Any other decrees, orders or regulations, prior or contrary to this present provisional ordinance, are, by virtue hereof, declared void anp without any effect. Done at the Fortress of Buenos Ayres, on the 15th day of May 1817. Juan Mastin de Pueyrredon. Mathias de Yrigoyen, Secretary of War and of the Navy. The foregoing is a copy from the original. Yrigoyen. *41] *Official Report, &c., of the Secretary of State to Congress. Washington, Jan. 29. I transmit to the house of representatives, in compliance with the the resolution of the 14th of this month, a report from the secretary of state, concerning the applications which have been made by any of the independent governments of South America, to have a minister or consul-general accredited by the United States, with the answers of this government to the applications addressed to it. James Monroe. ' The Report. The secretary of state, to whom has been referred the resolution of the house of representatives, of the 14th inst., requesting of the president information whether any application has been made by any of the independent governments of South America, to have a minister or consul-general accredited by the government of the United States, and what was the answer given to such application ; has the honor of submitting copies of applications made by Don Lino de Clemente, to be received as the representative of the republic of Venezuela; and of David C. De Forest, a citizen of the United Provinces, to be accredited as consul-general of the United 360 APPENDIX. 41 South American Civil War. Provinces of South America, with the answers respectively returned to them. The reply of Mr. de Forest is likewise inclosed, and copies of the papers, signed and avowed by Mr. Clemente, which the president considered as rendering any communication between this department and him, other than that now inclosed, improper. It is to be observed, that while Mr. Clemente, in March 1817, was assuming, with the name of deputy from Venezuela, to exercise with the United States powers transcending the lawful authority of any ambassador, and while in January 1818, he was commissioning, in language disrespectful to this government, Viricente Pazos, in the name of the republic of Venezuela, *to “protest against the invasion of Amelia [*4.2 Island, and all such further acts of the government of the United States, as were contrary to the rights and interests of the several republics, and the persons sail ing under their respective flags, duly commissioned he had, himself, not only never been received by the government of the United States, as deputy from Venezuela, but had never presented himself to it in that character, or offered to exhibit any evidence . whatsoever, of his being invested with it. The issuing of commissions, authorizing acts of war against a foreign nation, is a power which even a sovereign cannot lawfully exercise, within the dominions of another at amity with him, without his consent. Mr. Pazos, in his memorial to the president, communicating the commission signed by Mr. Clemente, at Philadelphia, and given to General McGregor, alleges, in its justification, the example of the illustrious Franklin, in Europe; but this example, instead of furnishing an exception, affords a direct confirmation of the principle now advanced. The commissions issued by the diplomatic agents of the United States in France, during our revolutionary war, were granted with the knowledge and consent of the French government, of which the following resolution from the secret journal of congress, of the 23d of December, 1776, is decisive proof : “ Resolved, that the commissioners (at the court of France) be authorized to arm and fit for war any number of vessels, not exceeding six, at the expense of the United States, to war upon British property ; and that commissions and warrants be for this purpose sent to the commissioners: provided the commissioners be well satisfied this measure will not be disagreeable to the court of France.” It is also now ascertained, by the express declaration of the supreme chief, Bolivar, to the agent of the United States, at Angostura, “that the government of Venezuela had never authorized the expedition of General McGregor, nor any other enterprise against Florida or Amelia.” Instructions have been forwarded to the same agent, to give suitable explanations to the government of Venezuela, of the motives for declining further communication with Mr. Clemente, and assurances that it *will readily ¡-*4$ be held with any person not liable to the same or like objection. The application of Mr. de Forest, to be accredited as consul-general of the United Provinces of South America, was first made in May last; his credential was a letter from the supreme director of Buenos Ayres, Pueyrredon, announcing his appointment by virtue of articles concluded, in the names of the United States of America, and of the United Provinces of Rio de la Plata, between persons authorized by him, and W. G. D. Worthington, as agent of this government, who neither had, nor indeed pretended to have, any power to negotiate such articles. Mr. de Forest was informed, and requested to make known to the supreme director, that Mr. Worthington had no authority whatsoever, to negotiate on the part of the United States any article to be obligatory on them, and had never pretended to possess any full power to that effect. That any communication interesting to the supreme director, or to the people of Buenos Ayres, would readily be held with Mr. de Forest, but that the recognition of him as a consul-general from the United Provinces of South America, could not be granted, either upon the stipulation of supposed articles, which were a nullity, or upon the commission, or credential letter of the supreme director, without recognising thereby the authority from which it emanated, as a sovereign and independent power. With this determination, Mr. de Forest then declared himself entirely satisfied. But shortly after the cmfimencement of the present session of congress, he renewed his solicitations, by the note dated the 9th of December, to be accredited as the consul-361 43 APPENDIX. South American Civil War. general of the United Provinces of Sooth America, founding his claim on the credentials from his government, which had been laid before the president last May. A conversation was shortly afterwards held with him, by direction of the president, in which the reasons were fully explained to him upon which the formal acknowledgment of the government of Buenos Ayres, for the present, was not deemed expedient. They were also, at his request, generally stated in the note dated 81st of December. g.It has not been thought necessary on the part of this government, *to pursue J the correspondence with Mr. de Forest any further ; particularly, as he declares himself unauthorized to agitate or discuss the question with regard to the recognition of Buenos Ayres as fen independent nation. Some observations, however, may be proper, with reference to circumstances alleged by him, arguing that a consul-general may be accredited, without acknowledging the independence of the government from which he has his appointment. The consul of the United States; who has resided at Buenos Ayres, had no other credential than his commission. It implied no recognition by the United States of any particular government; and it was issued before the Buenos Ayres declaration of independence, and while all the acts of the authorities there, were in the name of the king of Spain. • During the period while this government declined to receive Mr. Onis, as the minister of Spain, no consul received an exequatur under a commission from the same authority. The Spanish consuls, who had been received before the contest for the government of Spain had arisen, were suffered to continue the exercise of their functions, for which no new recognition was necessary. A similar remark may be made with regard to the inequality alleged by Mr. de Forest, to result from the admission of Spanish consuls, officially to protect before our tribunals the rights of Spmish subjects generally, while he is not admitted to the same privileges, with regard to those of the citizens of Buenos Ayres. The equality of rights to which the two parties to a civil war are entitled in their relations with neutral powers, does not extend to the rights enjoyed by one of them, by virtue of treaty stipulations contracted before the war ; neither can it extend to rights, thé enjoyment of which essentially depends upon the issue of the war. That Spain is a sovereign and independent power, is not contested by Buenos Ayres, and is recognised by the United States, who are bound by treaty to receive her consuls. Mr. de Forest’s credential letter, asks that he may be received by virtue of a stipulation in supposed articles concluded by Mr. Worthington, but which he was not authorized to make; so that the reception of Mr. de Forest, upon the cre-dential on which he founds his claim, would imply *a recognition, not only of -* the government of the supreme director, Pueyrredon, but a compact as binding upon the United States, which is a mere nullity. Consuls are, indeed, received by the government of the United States, from acknowledged sovereign powers, with whom they have no treaty. But the exequatur for a consul-general can obviously not be granted, without recognising the authority from whom his appointment proceeds as sovereign. “The consul,” says Vattel (book 2, chap. 2, § 24), “is not a public minister ; but as he is charged with a commission from his sovereign, and received in that quality, by him where he resides, he should enjoy, to a certain extent, the protection of the law of nations.” If, from this state of things, the inhabitants of Buenos Ayres cannot enjoy the advantage of being officially represented before the courts of the United States, by a consul, whjle the subjects of Spain are entitled to that privilege, it is an inequality resulting from the nature of the contest in which they are engaged, and not from any denial of their rights, as parties to a civil war. The recognition of them, as such, and the consequent admission of their vessels into the ports of the United States, operates with ,an inequali ty against the other party to that contest, and in their favor. It was stated in conversation to Mr. de Forest, and afterwards in the note of the 31st of December, that it would be desirable to the United Stotes, to understand whether Buenos Ayres itself claims an entire, or only an imperfect independence. That the necessity of an explanation upon this point arose from the fact, that in the 362. APPENDIX. South American Civil War. 45 negotiation of the supposed article with Mr. Worthington, the supreme director had declined contracting the engagement, though with the offer of reciprocity, that the United States should enjoy at Buenos Ayres the advantages and privileges of the most favored nation. That the reasons given by him for refusing such an engagement was, that Spain having claims of sovereignty over Buenos Ayres, the right must be reserved, of granting special favors to her, for renouncing them, which other nations, having no such claims to renounce, could not justly expect to obtain. Without discussing *the correctness of this principle, it was observed, the United States, in acknowl- * edging Buenos Ayres as independent, would expect either to be treated on the *• footing of the most favored nation, or to know the extent and character of the benefits which were to be allowed to others, and denied to them; and that while an indefinite power should be reserved, of granting to any nation advantages to be withheld from the United States, an acknowledgment of independence must be considered premature. Mr. de Forest answers, that this reservation must appear to every one contrary to the inclination, as well as interest of the government of Buenos Ayres; that it must have been only a proposition of a temporary nature, not extending to the acknowledgment by the United States of the independence of South America, which he is confident would have rendered any such reservations altogether unnecessary, in the opinion of the government of Buenos Ayres, who must have seen they were treating with an unauthorized person, and suggested the idea, from an opinion of its good policy; and, he adds, that Portugal is acknowledged by the United States as an independent power, although their commerce is taxed higher in the ports of Brazil than that of Great Britain. It had not been intended to suggest to Mr. de Forest, that it was in any manner incompatible with the independence or sovereignty of a nation, to grant commercial advantages to one foreign state, and to withhold them from another. If any such advantage is granted for an equivalent, other nations can have no right to claim its enjoyment, even though entitled to be treated as the most favored nations, unless by the reciprocal grant of the same equivalent. Neither had it been intended to say, that a nation forfeited its character of acknowledged sovereignty, even by granting, without equivalent, commercial advantages to one foreign power, and withholding them from another. However absurd and unjust the policy of a nation granting to one, and refusing to another, such gratuitous concessions, might be deemed, the question, whether they affected its independence or not, would rest on the concessions themselves. The idea meant to be conveyed was, that the reservation of an indefinite *right to grant hereafter special favors to Spain, for the renunciation of her claims of sovereignty, left it uncertain whether the independence of Buenos Ayres would be complete or imperfect, and it was suggested, with a view to give the opportunity to the supreme director of explaining his intention in this respect, and to intimate to him, that while such an indefinite right was reserved, an acknowledgment of independence must be considered as premature. This caution was thought the more necessary, inasmuch as it was known, that at the same time, while the supreme director was insisting on this reservation, a mediation between Spain and her colonies had been solicited by Spain, and agreed to by the five principal powers of Europe, the basis of which was understood to be a compromise between the Spanish claim to sov ereignty, and the colonial claim to independence, Mr. de Forest was understood to have said, that the congress at Tucuman had determined to offer a grant of special privileges to the nation which should be the first to acknowledge the independence of Buenos Ayres. He stated in his notes, that he knew nothing of any such resolution by that congress, but that it was a prevailing opinion at Buenos Ayres, and his own opinion also, that such special privileges would be granted to the first recognising power, if demanded. It has invariably been avowed by the government of the United States, that they would neither ask nor accept of any special privilege or •ddvantage for their acknowledgment of South American independence ; but it appears, that the supreme director of Buenos Ayres, far from being prepared to grant special favors to the United States for taking the lead in the acknowl- • 363 47 APPENDIX. South American Civil War. edgment, declined even a reciprocal stipulation, that they should enjoy the same advantages. as other nations. Nor was this reservation, as Mr. de Forest supposes, defeasible, by theMicknowledgment, on the part of the United States, of South American independence. The supreme director could not be ignorant, that it was impossible for this government to ratify the articles prepared by his authortiy with Mr. Worthington, and yet to withhold the acknowledgment of independence. He knew, that if that * instrument should be ratified, the United *States must thereby necessarily be J the first to grant the acknowledgment, yet he declined inserting in it an article, securing to each party, in the ports of the other, the advantages of the most favored nation. It is, nevertheless, in conformity to one of those same articles, that Mr. de Forest claimed to be received in the formal character of consul-general. With regard to the irregularities and excesses committed by armed vessels, sailing under the flag of Buenos Ayres, complained of in the note of the 1st of January, it was not expected, that Mr. de Forest would have the power of restraining them, otherwise than by representing them to the supreme director, in whom the authority to apply the proper remedy is supposed to be vested. The admission of Mr. de Forest, in the character of consul-general, would give him no additional means of suppressing the evil. Its principal aggravation arises from the circumstance, that the cruisers of Buenos Ayres are almost, if not quite, universally manned and officered by foreigners, having no permanent connection with that country, or interest in its cause. But the complaint was not confined to the misconduct of the cruisers. It was stated, that blank commissions for privateers, their commanders and officers, had been transmitted to this country, with the blanks left to be filled up here, for fitting out, arming and equipping them, for purposes prohibited by the laws of the United States, and in violation of the law of nations. It was observed, that this practice, being alike irreconcilable with the rights and the obligations of the United States, it was expected by the president, that being made known to the supreme director, no instance of it would again occur hereafter. No reply to this part of the note has been made by Mr. de Forest, for it is not supposed, that he meant to disclaim all responsibility of himself, or of the government of Buenos Ayres, concerning it, unless his character of consul-general should be recognised. As he states that he has transmitted a copy of the note itself to Buenos Ayres, the expectation may be indulged, that the exclusive sovereign authority of the United States, within their own jurisdiction, will hereafter be respected. All which is respectfully submitted. Department of State, January 28, 1819. A John Quincy Adams. *49] Correspondence with Mr. Clemente. No. 1. Lino de Clemente to the Secretary of State. Most Excellent Sir:—Having been appointed by the government of the republic of Venezuela, its representative near the United States of North America, I have the honor to inform you of my arrival in this city, for the purpose of discharging the trust committed to me: to effect this, I have to request, that you .will please to inform me at what time it will be convenient for you to afford me an opportunity of presenting my respects to you personally; and of communicating to yon the object of my arrival in the federal city. I avail myself of this occasion to tender you the assurance of the high consideration and respect, with which, I am, &c. Lino de Clemente. Washington, Dec. 11, 1818—8th year of the Republic. The Honorable John Q. Adams. No. 2. The Secretary of State to Don L. de Clemente. Department of State, Washington, December 16, 1818. Sir:—Your note of the 11th inst. has been laid before the president of the United States, by whose direction ! have to inform you, that your name having been avowedly 364 APPENDIX. South American Civil War. 49 affixed to a paper drawn up within the United States, purporting to be a commission to a foreign officer, for undertaking and executing an expedition in violation of the laws of the United States, and also to another paper avowing that act, and otherwise insulting to this government, which papers have been transmitted to congress, by the message of the president, of the 25th of March last, I am not authorized to confer with you, and that no further communication will be received from you at this department. I am, &c. J. Q. Adams. Correspondence with Mr. de Forest. No. 5. Mr. de Forest to the Secretary of State. I have the honor to announce to Mr. Adams, that I have again arrived in this district, in order to renew my solicitations *to be accredited by this government r as the consul-general of the United Provinces of South America, founding my *■ claim on the credentials from my government, in the month of May last. The information recently acquired by this government, respecting the provinces of South America, I presume, has established the fact beyond doubt, that Buenos Ayres, their capital, and a large portion of their territory, are, and have been, free and inde-dependent of the government of Spain, for more than eight years ; and possess ample ability to support their independence in future. That a regular system of government is established by their inhabitants, who show themselves, by the wisdom of their institutions, sufficiently enlightened for self-government; and that they look up to this great republic as a model, and as to their elder sister, from whose sympathies and friendship, they hope and expect ordinary protection at least. The messages of the president of the United States, as well the last as the present year, have created a general belief, that the United States have placed us on an equal footing with Spain, as it respects our commercial operations ; but, Sir, it is found not to be the case. A consul of Spain is known and respected as such by your tribunals of justice, which enables him, ex officio, to protect and defend the interests of his countrymen. Whereas, the verbal permission I have to act in the duties of my office, will not avail in your tribunals; and a number of instances have already occurred, where the property of my absent fellow-citizens has been jeopardized, for want of a legally authorized protector. The case of the Spanish schooner----, a prize to our armed vessels Buenos Ayres and Tucuman, which was brought into Scituate, some time since, by her mutinous crew, after having murdered the captain and mate, by throwing them overboard, is a striking instance of the necessity of there being resident here an accredited agent, to superintend the commercial concerns of South America; and without such accredited agent, our citizens cannot be considered as completely protected in their rights. I request you, Sir, to lay this communication before the president of the United States, as early as may be convenient, and to assure him, that I duly appreciate the friendly reception I *met with from his government, on my arrival in this country; and that, as circumstances have since materially altered, I have no L doubt but I shall receive his permission to act, in the accustomed form. While I remain, with the highest consideration and respect, Sir, your most obedient servant. Georgetown, Dec. 9. D. C. de Forest. The Honorable John Q. Adams, Secretary of State. No. 6. Mr. de Forest to the Secretary of State. I took the liberty, on the 9th inst. of addressing a note to Mr. Secretary Adams requesting to be accredited as the consul-general of the United Provinces of South America; and have now the honor of informing Mr. Adams that I have lately received an official communication from the. government of Buenos Ayres, directing me to inform the government of this country, that the supposed conspiracy against the person of the supreme director, proves to have originated with an obscure and disap- 365 51 APPENDIX. South American Civil War. pointed individual; who, to gain adherents, pretended to be connected with people of the first respectability and influence, several of whom he named, but who have convinced the government that they had no knowledge whatever of his base project. The supreme director, anxious to do away any unfavorable impressions which the report of such an affair might cause at this distance, has ordered me to assure the president of he United States, that the government of South America was never more firmly supported, nor its prospects more brilliant, than at the present time. I have the honor, &c. (Signed) David C. de Forest. Georgetown, December 12, 1818. No. 7. Mr. Adams to Mr. de Forest. Mr. Adams presents his compliments to Mr. de Forest, and has the honor of assuring him, by direction of the president of the United States, of the continued interest *521 he ^a^es welfare and prosperity of the provinces of La Plata, and of J *his disposition to recognise the independent government of Buenos Ayres, as soon as the time shall have arrived when that step may be taken with advantage to the interests of South America, as well as of the United States. In the meantime, he regrets an exequatur to Mr. de Forest, as consul-general of the United Provinces of South America, cannot be issued, for reasons stated in part by the president, in his message to congress, at the commencement of the present session ; and further explained to Mr. de Forest by Mr. Adams, in the conversation which he has had the honor of holding with him. Mr. de Forest must have seen, that any privileges which may be attached to the consular character, cannot avail in the judicial tribunals of this country, to influence in any manner the administration of justice ; and with regard to the schooner brought into Scituate, such measures have been taken, and will be taken, by the authorities of the United States, as are warranted by the circumstances of the case, and by the existing laws. With respect to the acknowledgment of the government of Buenos Ayres, it has been suggested to Mr. de Forest, that, when adopted, it will be merely the recognition of a fact, without pronouncing or implying an opinion with regard to the extent of the territory or provinces under their authority, and particularly without being understood to decide upon their claim to control over the Banda Oriental, Santa Fe, Paraguay, or any other provinces disclaiming their supremacy or dominion. It was also observed, that in acknowledging that government as independent, it would be necessary for the United States to understand, whether Buenos Ayres claims itself an entire or only an imperfect independence. From certain transactions between persons authorized by the supreme director and an agent of the United States (though unauthorized by their government), after the declaration of independence by the congress at Tucuman, and ■within the last year, it appears, that the supreme director declined contracting the engagement, that the United States should hereafter enjoy at Buenos Ayres the advantages and privileges of the most favored nation, although with the offer of a reciprocal stipulation on the part of the United *States. The reason assigned by the J supreme director was, that Spain, having claims to the sovereignty of Buenos Ayres, special privileges and advantages might ultimately be granted to the Spanish nation, as a consideration for the renunciation of those claims. It is desirable, that it should be submitted to the consideration of the government of Buenos Ayres, whether, while such a power is reserved, their independence is complete; and how far other powers can rely, that the authority of Spain might not be eventually restored.. It has been stated by Mr. de Forest, that the congress at Tucuman had passed a resolution to offer special advantages to the nation which should first acknowledge their independence, upon which the question was proposed, whether such a resolution, if carried into effect, would not be rather a transfer of dependence from one nation to another, than the establishment of independence ? rather to purchase support than to obtain recognition ? The United States have no intention of exacting favors of Buenos Ayres for the acknowledgment of its independence ; but in acknowledging it, they will expect 366 APPENDIX. South American Civil War. 53 either to enjoy, in their intercourse with it, the same privileges and advantages as other foreign nations, or to know precisely the extent and character of the benefits which are to be allowed to others, and denied to them. It should, indeed, be known to the supreme director, that, while such an indefinite power is reserved of granting to any nation, advantages to be withheld from the United States, an acknowledgment of independence must be considered premature. In adverting to these principles, it was observed to Mr. de Forest, that their importance could not but be peculiarly felt by the United States, as having been invariably and conspicuously exemplified in their own practice, both in relation to the country whose colony they had been, and to that which was the first to acknowledge their independence. In the words of their declaration, issued on the 4th of July 1776, they resolved thenceforth “to hold the British nation, as they hold the rest of mankind, enemies in war, in peace friendsand in the treaty of amity and commerce, concluded on the 6th of February 1778, between the United States and France, being the first acknowledgment by a foreign power of the independence of *the United States, * . and the first treaty to which they were a party, the preamble declares, that the *• king of France and the United States, “willing to fix, in an equitable and permanent manner, the rules which ought to be followed relative to the correspondence and commerce which the two parties desire to establish between their respective countries, states and subjects, have judged that the said end could not be better obtained, than by taking for the basis of their agreement the most perfect equality and reciprocity, and by carefully avoiding all those burdensome preferences, which are usually sources of debate, embarrasment and discontent; by leaving also each party at liberty to make, respecting commerce and navigation, those interior regulations which it shall find most convenient to itself; and by founding the advantage of commerce solely upon reciprocal utility, and the just rules of free intercourse; reserving withal to each party the liberty of admitting, at its pleasure, other nations to a participation of the same advantage.” In the second article of the same treaty, it was also stipulated, that neither the United States nor France should thenceforth grant any particular favor to other nations, in respect of commerce and navigation, which should not immediately become common to the other nations, freely, if the concession was free, or for the same compensation, if.conditional. In answer to Mr. de Forest’s note of the 12th instant, Mr. Adams has the honor of assuring him, that the president has received with much satisfaction the information contained in it; and will derive great pleasure from every event which shall contribute to the stability and honor of the government of Buenos Ayres. Mr. Adams requests Mr. de Forest to accept the assurance of his distinguished consideration. Washington, Dec. 31, 1818. No. 8. Mr. Adams to Mr. de Forest. Mr. Adams presents his compliments to Mr. de Forest, and in reference to the case of the schooner brought into Scituate, mentioned in Mr. de Forest’s communication of the 9th inst., as well as to several others which have occurred, of a similar character, requests him to have the goodness to impress upon the *government of Buenos Ayres, the necessity of taking measures to repress the excesses and irregularities committed by many armed vessels, sailing under their flag, and bearing their commissions. The government of the United States have reason to believe that many of these vessels have been fitted out, armed, equipped and manned in the ports of the United States, and in direct violation of their laws. Of the persons composing the prize-crew of the vessel at Scituate, and now in confinement upon charges of murder and piracy, it is understood, that three are British subjects, and one a citizen of the United States. It is known, that commissions for private armed vessels, to be fitted out, armed and manned in this country, have been sent from Buenos Ayres to the United States, with the names of the vessels, commanders and officers, in blank, to be filled up here, and have been offered to the avidity 367 55 APPENDIX. South American Civil War. of speculators, stimulated more by the thirst for plunder, than by any regard for the South American cause. Of such vessels, it is obvious, that neither the captains, officers nor crews can have any permanent connection with Buenos Ayres, and from the characters of those who alone could be induced to engage in such enterprises, there is too much reason to expect acts of atrocity, such as those alleged against the persons implicated in the case of the vessel at Scituate. The president wishes to believe that this practice has been without the privity of the government of Buenos Ayres, and he wishes their attention may be drawn to the sentiment, that it is incompatible both with the rights and obligations of the United States—with their rights, as an offensive exercise of sovereign authority by foreigners, within their jurisdiction, and without their consent—with their obligations, as involving a violation of the neutrality which they have invariably avowed, and which it is their determination to maintain. The president expects, from the friendly disposition manifested by the supreme director towards the United States, that no instance of this cause of complaint will hereafter be given. Mr. Adams requests Mr. de Forest to accept the renewed assurance of his distinguished consideration. Washington, Jan. 1, 1819. *56] *No. 9. Sir:—It is not my intention to give any unnecessary, trouble to the department of state; but having had the honor of receiving two notes from Mr. Secretary Adams, on the 4th instant, dated December 31st, and January 1st, some explanation appears to be necessary. In the first place, ! do not suppose “that any privileges which may be attached to the consular character, can avail in the judicial tribunals of this country, to influence, in any manner, the administration of justice.” But I suppose, that a consul, duly accredited, is ex officio, the legal representative of his fellow-citizens, not otherwise represented by an express power: and that the tribunals of justice do, and will, admit the legality of such representation. Mr. Adams has misunderstood me, in another observation, which was in substance, that there was a general opinion prevailing at Buenos Ayres, that the power first recognising our independence, would expect some extraordinary privilege or advantage therefor; and that, in my opinion, the government of Buenos Ayres would readily grant it, if demanded. I know nothing, however, of any resolution having been passed on this subject by the congress at Tucuman. It appears, from the relation of a fact in Mr. Adams’s note of the 31st ultimo, that the government of Buenos Ayres had intimated a desire (in the course of a negotiation with an agent of the United States) to reserve the right of granting more extraordinary privileges to Spain, on the settlement of a general peace, which must appear to every one contrary to their inclination, as well as interest; and it can be accounted for only by supposing that the proposition of the United States agent was merely of a temporary nature, and did not extend to an acknowledgment, by the United States, of the independence of South America; which act, I am confident, would have rendered any such reservation altogether unnecessary, in the opinion of the government of Buenos Ayres, who must have seen that they were treating with an unauthorized person, and must have thought it good policy, at this time, to suggest such an idea. Indeed, were $ , the government of Buenos Ayres to pursue that course, *they might plead the -* example of a neighboring power, acknowledged to be independent by the United States; and its chief, both illustrious and legitimate. It is well known, that the government of Brazil taxes the commerce of the United States about thirty per cent, higher than that of Great Britain. It may be, that Great Britain is entitled to this preference, on account of important services rendered by her to the king of Portugal; and permit me to ask you, sir, what services could be rendered to any nation already in existence, so great as -would be the acknowledgment by Great Britain, or by the United States, of 368 APPENDIX. South American Civil War. 57 the independence of South America ? Such recognition, merely, by either of these powers, would probably have the immediate effect of putting an end to the cruel and destructive war, now raging between Spain and South America, and crown with never-fading laurels the nation thus first using its influence in favor of an oppressed, but high-minded people. The account given by Mr. Adams, in his note of the 1st instant, respecting the irregular conduct of vessels sailing under the Buenos Ayres flag, has caused me much mortification, and has already been transmitted to my government, by the Plattsburgh; as also a copy of Mr. Adams’s frank and friendly communication of the 31st ultimo. The supreme director will certainly be desirous to adopt the most prompt and efficacious measures within his power, to remedy the evils complained of. But pray, sir, what can he do more than has already been done ? The government of Buenos Ayres have established the most just rules and regulations for the government of their vessels of war, as well as of commerce; and have sent me to this country, invested with the title and powers of their consul-general; as well as to guard against any breach of those rules and regulations, by their citizens and vessels frequenting these seas, and the ports of these United States, as to protect them in their rights: but, sir, without a recognition of my powers, on the part of the government, I can have no right whatever to question any individual on the subject of his conduct; nor can any responsibility attach to me, nor to my government, Muring such a state of things, for irregu-larities committed. L A considerable number of our seamen are foreigners by birth, who have voluntarily entered our service ; therefore, it is not a matter of surprise, that, of the mutineers of the prize crew of the vessel at Scituate, three should have been born Englishmen, and one a North American. It is, however, an absolute fact, to which I am personally knowing, that the captors of that prize (the Buenos Ayres and Tucuman privateers), .were legally fitted out at Buenos Ayres, early in the last year, from which port they sailed on a cruise off Cadiz; and it will afford the government of South America much satisfaction, to learn that the United States will prosecute those mutineers, and punish such as are found guilty of crimes, according to the laws. Before I close this note, I beg leave to make a few observations, in answer to one of the reasons for not accrediting me, given by Mr. Adams, by direction of the president of the United States, in a conversation which I have had the honor of holding with him viz : “ That the act of accrediting me as consul-general, would be tantamount to the formal acknowledgment of the independence of the government which sent me.” I do not profess to be skilled in the law of nations, nor of diplomacy, nor would I doubt the correctness of any opinion expressed by the president, for whose person and character I have entertained the most profound respect; yet, I must say, that I cannot understand the difference between the sending of a consular agent, duly authorized, to Buenos Ayres, where one was accredited from this country, four or five years ago, and has continued ever since in the exercise of the duties of his office, and the reception of a similar agent here. I also beg leave to mention, that I was in this country, soon after the arrival of the present minister of Spain, the Chevalier de Onis ; and recollect to have heard it observed, that being a political agent, he was not accredited, because the sovereignty of Spain was in dispute ; but that the consuls, who acknowledged the same government (one of the claimants to the sovereignty, and the one actually in possession of it), were allowed to exercise their functions. *If this was the case at r*gg that time, the government of the United States must have then had a different opinion on this subject, from what it now has. Mr. Adams will please to bear in mind, that I have only solicited to be accredited as a consular agent, having never agitated the question of an acknowlegment of our independence as a nation, which most certainly is anxiously desired by the government and people of South America, but which being a political question, I have never asked. Mr. Adams will also be pleased to accept the renewed assurances of my most distinguished consideration and respect (Signed) David C. de Forest. Georgetown, January 8, 1819. 4 Wheat.—24 369 59 APPENDIX. South American Civil War. No. 10. The Supreme Director of the United Provinces of La Plata, to his Excellency, the President of the United States of North America. Most Excellent Sir :—The supreme government of these provinces have long exerted their zealous efforts to ’establish the closest and most amicable relations with the United States of America, to which the most obvious interests seem mutually to invite them. This desirable object has hitherto been frustrated, by the events of the times ; but the moment appears at length to have arrived, which presents to the people of these provinces, the flattering prospect of seeing their ardent wishes accomplished. In consideration of these circumstances, and in conformity with the 23d of the articles agreed upon with citizen William G. D. Worthington, the agent of your government in these provinces, I have nominated citizen David C. de Forest, their consul-general to the United States, with the powers specified in his commission and instructions, respectively. I therefore request your excellency, to grant him the attention and consideration, which in the like case will be afforded to the public agents of your excellency resident in these regions. I avail myself of this renewed occasion of reiterating to your excellency, assurances of the’sentiments of respect and consideration, with which I have the honor to be, your excellency’s most obedient and most humble servant, (Signed) Jn. Mm. de Pueyrredon. 370 INDEX TO THE MATTERS CONTAINED IN THIS VOLUME. The References in this Index are to the Star *pages. ADMIRALTY. 1. Where the pleadings in an admiralty cause are too informal and defective to pronounce a final sentence upon the merits, the cause will be remanded by this court to the circuit court, with directions to permit the pleadings to be amended, and for further proceedings. The Divina Pastor a.........*52, 64 2. A collector of the customs, who makes a seizure of goods, for an asserted forfeiture, and before the proceedings in rem are consummated by a sentence of condemnation, is removed from office, acquires an inchoate right, by the seizure, which, by the subsequent decree of condemnation, gives him an absolute vested right to his share of the forfeiture, under the collection act of the 2d March 1799. Van Ness v. Buel........*74 8. In case of civil salvage, where, under its peculiar circumstances, the amount of salvage is discretionary, appeals should pot be encouraged, upon the ground of minute distinctions of merit, nor will the court reverse the decision of an inferior court, unless it manifestly appear that some important error has been committed. The Sybil........... *98 4. The demand of the ship-owners for freight and general average, in such a case, is to be pursued against that portion of the cargo which is adjudged to the owners of the goods, by a direct libel or petition; and not by a claim interposed in the salvage cause.Id. 5. Any citizen may seize property forfeited to the use of the government, either by the municipal law, or as prize, in order to enforce the forfeiture; and it depends upon the government, whether it will act upon the seizure; if it proceed to enforce the forfeiture by legal process, this is a suffi- cient confirmation of the seizure. The Caledonian.............. . ...............*100 6. The admiralty possesses a general jurisdiction in cases of suits by material-men, in personam and in rem. The General Smith................ ............*438 7. Where the proceeding by material-men is in rem, to enforce a specific lien, it is incumbent upon the party to establish the existence of such lien, in the particular case.....Id. 8. Where repairs have been made, or necessaries furnished to a foreign ship, or to a ship in the port of the state to which she does not belong, the general maritime law gives the party a lien on the ship itself for his security, and he may maintain a suit in rem, in the admiralty, to enforce his right.. Id. 9. But as to repairs or necessaries in the port or state to which the ship belongs, the case is governed altogether by the local law; and no lien is implied, unless by that law... .Id. 10. By the common law, material-men furnishing repairs to a domestic ship have no particular lien upon the ship itself for their demand................................. . .Id. 11. A shipwright who has taken a ship into his possession to repair it, is not bound to part with the possession, until he is paid for the repairs; but if he parts with the possession (of a domestic ship), or. has worked upon it, without taking possession, he has no claim upon the ship itself...........Id. 12. The common law being the law of Maryland on this subject, material-men cannot maintain a suit in rem, in the district court of Maryland, for supplies furnished to a domestic ship, although they might have maintained a suit in personam in that court..........Id. See Duties, 1-3: Domicil: License; Practice, 5, 6: Prize. 371 62 INDEX. ALIEN. 1. An alien may take an estate in lands by the act of the parties, as by purchase, but he cannot take by the act of the law, as by descent. Orr v. Hodgson.....................*453 2. Where a person dies, leaving issue, who are aliens, the latter are not deemed his heirs in law; but the estate descends to the next of kin, who have an inheritable blood, in the same manner as if no such alien issue were in existence................'....;..........Id. 3. The 6th article of the treaty of peace of 1783, between the United States and Great Britain, completely protected the titles of British subjects to lands in the United States, which would have been liable to forfeiture, by escheat, for the defeat of alienage; that article was not meant to be confined to' confiscations jure belli......................Id. 4. The 9th article of the treaty of 1794, between the United States and Great Britain, applies to the title of the parties, whatever it is, and gives it the same legal validity as if the parties were citizens ; it is not necessary, that they should show an actual possession or seisin, but only that the title was in them, at the time the treaty was made............Id. 5. The 9th article of the treaty of 1794, did not mean to include any other persons than such as were British subjects or citizens of the United States..........................Id. See Chancery, 29. AMENDMENTS. See Admiralty, 1. BANKRUPT. See Constitutional Law, 1, 2, 5 : Lex Loci. CHANCERY. 1. In 1790, S. H., a citizen of Virginia, made his last will, containing the following bequest: “Item, what shall remain of my military certificates, at the time of my death, both principal and interest, I give and bequeath to The Baptist Association that, for ordinary, meets at Philadelphia, annually, which I allow to be a perpetual fund for the education of youths of the Baptist denomination, who shall appear promising for the ministry, always giving a preference to the descendants of my father’s family : ” In 1792, the legislature of Virginia passedzan act repealing all English statutes : In 1795, the testator died : The Baptist Association in question had existed as a regularly organized body, for many years before the date of his 372 will; and in 1797, was incorporated by the legislature of Pennsylvania, by the name of “ The Trustees of the Philadelphia Baptist AssociationHeld, that the association, not being incorporated at the testator’s decease, could not take this trust as a society. Baptist Association v. Hart's Ex' rs..........*1 2. The above bequest could not be taken by the individuals who composed the association at the death of the testator; the subsequent incorporation of the association did not give it the capacity of taking this bequest; there ■ are no persons who could entitle themselves to the benefit of this legacy, were it not a charity; and it is not sustainable in this court, as a charity. .......................Id. 3. Such a legacy would be sustained in England...................................... Id 4. The English statute of 43 Eliz. gives validity to some devises to charitable uses, which were not valid, independent of that statute........................................Id. 5. Charitable bequests, where no legal interest is vested, and which are too vague to be claimed by those for whom the beneficial interest was intended, cannot be established by a court of equity, exercising its ordinary jurisdiction, independent of the statute 43 Eliz..................................... Id. 6. Such charitable bequests cannot be established by a court of equity, enforcing the prerogative of the king as parens patrice, independent of the statute 43 Eliz.............Id. 7. If, in England, a charitable bequest of this nature, could be enforced by virtue of the king’s prerogative as parens patrice, queere ? How far the principle is applicable in the courts of the United States ?..............Id. 8. Note on charitable bequests, Appendix, Note I......................................*3 9. The rudiments of the law of charities derived from the Roman law...................Id. 10. The statute of the 43 Eliz., c. 4, the principal source of the law of charities....Id. *5 11. No cases are considered as charitable, unless they fall within the words or intent of the statute.................................Id. *6 12. Modes of relief under the statute... .Id. **l 13. What charities are within the statute.....................................Id. *9 14. Mode of construing charitable bequests.. Id. 15. How far a court of equity, sitting m one jurisdiction, can execute charitable bequests for foreign objects in another jurisdiction....................................Id. *17 16. Mode of administering charities in chancery....................................Id. *19 17. Remedy for misapplication of charity funds................................. Id. *21 18. The circuit courts of the Union have chancery jurisdiction in every state; they have INDEX. 63 the same chancery powers, and the same rules of decision in equity cases in all the states. United States v. Howland. .*108, 115 19. The circuit court has jurisdiction, on a bill in equity filed by the United States against the debtor of their debtor, they claiming a priority under the act of 1799, § 65, notwithstanding the local law of the state where the suit is brought allows a creditor to proceed against the debtor of his debtor by a peculiar process at law.................Id. 20. Upon a bill in equity, filed by the United States, proceeding as ordinary creditors against the debtor of their debtor, for an account, &c., the original debtor to the United States ought to be made a party, and the account taken between him and his debtor.. Id. 21. The equitable lien of the vendor of land for unpaid purchase-money, is waived by any act of the parties, showing that the lien is not intended to be retained; as, by taking separate securities for the purchase-money. Brown v. Gilman......................*255, 296 22. An express contract'that the lien shall be waived to a certain extent, is a waiver of the lien to any greater extent................Id. 23. Where the deed itself remains an escrow, until the first payment is made, and is then delivered as the deed of the party, and the vendor consents to rely upon the negotiable notes of the purchaser, indorsed by third persons, for the residue of the purchasemoney, this is such a separate security as extinguishes the lien.....................Id. 24. Note on the subject of lien on land for unpaid purchase-money..................Id. *292 25. Bill for rescinding a contract for the sale of lands, on the ground of defect of title, dismissed, with costs. Orr v. Hodgson.. .*453 26. Under the registry act of Ohio, which provides that certain deeds “ shall be recorded in the county in which the lands, tenements and hereditaments, so conveyed or affected, shall be situate, within one year after the day on which such deed or conveyance was executed ; and unless recorded in the manner and within the time aforesaid, shall be deemed fraudulent against any subsequent bond fide purchaser, without knowledge of the existence of such former deed of conveyance,” lands lying in Jefferson county were conveyed by deed; and a new county, called Tuscarora county, was erected, partly from Jefferson, after the execution and before the recording of the deed, in which new county the lands were included, and the deed was recorded in Jefferson: Held, that the registry was not sufficient, either to preserve its legal priority, or to give it the equity arising from constructive notice. Astor v. Wells. .*467, 486 27. Notice of a prior incumbrance to an agent, is notice to the principal..............Id. 28. Under the statute of fraudulent conveyances of Ohio, which provides, that “every gift, grant or conveyance of lands, tenements, hereditaments, &c., made or obtained with intent to defraud creditors of their just and lawful debts and damages, or to defraud or deceive the person or persons who shall purchase such lands. &c., shall be deemed utterly void, and of no effect,” held, that a bond fide purchaser, without notice, could not be affected by the intent of the grantor to defraud creditors.... .............. .Id. 29. A court of equity will not decree the specific performance of an agreement concerning lands, in favor of aliens who are incapable of holding the estate to their own use. Orr v. Hodgson.........................*465 CHARITIES. See Chancery, 1-15, 17, 18. COLLECTOR. See Admiralty, 2. CONSTITUTIONAL LAW. 1. Since the adoption of the constitution of the United States, a state has authority to pass a bankrupt law, provided such law does not impair the obligation of contracts, within the meaning of the constitution, art. 1, § 10; and provided there be no act of congress in force, to establish a uniform system of bankruptcy, conflicting with such law. Sturges v. Crowninshield.......................*122, 192 2. The act of New York, passed on the 3d of April 1811 (which not only liberates the person of the debtor, but discharges him from all liability for any debt contracted previous to his discharge, on his surrendering his property in the manner it prescribes), so far as it attempts to discharge the contract, is a law impairing the obligation of contracts, within the meaning of the constitution of the United States, and is not a good plea in bar of an action brought upon such contract...........♦.....................Id. 3. Whenever the terms in which a power is granted by the constitution to congress, or whenever the nature of the power itself requires that it should be exercised exclusively by congress, the subject is as completely taken away from the state legislatures, as if they had been expressly forbidden to act on it.. ..........................Id. *193 373 64 INDEX. 4. Statutes of limitation and usury laws, unless retroactive in their effect, do not impair the obligation of contracts, and are constitutional.................................Id. *206 5. A state bankrupt or insolvent law (which not only liberates the person of the debtor, but discharges him from all liability for the debt), so far as it attempts to discharge the contract, is repugnant to the constitution of the United States; and it makes no difference in the application of this principle, whether the law was passed before or after the debt was contracted. McMillan v. McNeill. .*209 6. The act of assembly of Maryland, of 1793, c. 30, incorporating the Bank of Columbia, and giving to the corporation a summary process by execution, in the nature of an attachment, against its debtors, who have, by an express consent in writing, made the bonds, bills or notes by them drawn or indorsed, negotiable at the bank, is not repugnant to the constitution of the United States or of Maryland. Bank of Columbia v. Okely...............,...............*236, 240 7. But the last provision in the act of incorporation, which gives this summary process to the bank, is no part of its corporate franchises, and may be repealed or altered at pleasure, by the legislative will.......... .Id. 8. Congress has power to incorporate a bank. McCulloch v. State of Maryland............*316 9. The government of the Union is a government of the people; it emanates from them ; its powers are granted by them; and are to be exercised directly on them, and for their benefit................................... Id. 10. The government of the Union, though limited in its powers, is supreme within its sphere of action; and its laws, when made in pursuance of the constitution, form the supreme law of the land................... Id. 11. There is nothing in the constitution of the United States, similar to the articles of . confederation, which excludes incidental or , implied powers......................... Id. 12. If the end be legitimate, and within the . scope of the constitution, all the means which are appropriate, which are plainly adapted to that end, and which are not prohibited, may constitutionally be employed to carry it into effect.................................Id. 13. The power of establishing a corporation is not a distinct sovereign power or end of government, but only the means of carrying into effect other powers which are sovereign. Whenever it becomes an appropriate means of exercising any of the powers given by the constitution to the government of the Union, it may be exercised by that government .........';........................ .Id. 14. If a certain means to carry into effect an of the powers expressly given by the constitution to the government of the Union, be an appropriate measure not prohibited by the constitution, the degree of its necessity is a question of legislative discretion, not of judical cognisance........................ .Id. 15. The act of the 19th April 1816, “to incorporate the subscribers to the Bank of the United States,” is a law made in pursuance of the constitution......................... Id. 16. The Bank of the United States has, constitutionally, a right to establish its branches or offices of discount and deposit within any state...................................... Id. 17. The state, within which a branch of the Bank of the United States may be established, cannot, without violating the constitution, tax that branch......................Id. 18. The state governments have no right to tax any of the constitutional means employed by the government of the Union to execute its constitutional powers........................Id. 19. The states have no power, by taxation or otherwise, to retard, impede, burden or in any manner control, the operation of the constitutional laws enacted by congress to carry into effect the powers vested in the national government...................................Id. 20. This principle does not extend to a tax paid by the real property of the Bank of the United States, in common with the other real •property in a particular state, nor to a tax imposed on the proprietary interest which the citizens of that state may hold in this institution, in common' with the other property of the same description throughout the state.. Id. 21. The charter granted by the British crown to the trustees of Dartmouth College, in New Hampshire, in the year 1769, is a contract, within- the meaning of that clause of the constitution of the United States (art. 1, § 10), which declares, that no state shall make any law impairing the obligation of contracts. The charter was not dissolved by the revolution. Dartmouth Coileye v. Woodward..................................*518 22. An act of the state legislature of New Hampshire, altering the charter of Dartmouth College, in a material respectj without the consent of the corporation, is an act impairing the obligation of the charter, and is unconstitutional and void......................Id. 23. Under its charter, Dartmouth College was a private, not a public corporation. That a corporation is established for the purpose of general charity, or for education generally, does not, per se, make it a public corporation, liable to the control of the legislature... .Id. See Chancery, 18: Practice, 3, 4. 374 INDEX. 65 CONTRACT. 1. A. offered to purchase of B. two or three hundred barrels of flour, to be delivered at Georgetown (District of Columbia), by the first water, and to pay for the same $9.50 per barrel; and to the letter containing this offer, required an answer, by the return of the wagon by which the letter was sent: this wagon was, at that time, in the service of B., and employed by him in conveying flour from his mill to Harper’s Ferry, near to which place A. then was: his offer was accepted by B., in a letter sent by the first regular mail to Georgetown, and received by A. at that place; but no answer was ever sent to Harper’s Ferry: Held, that the acceptance, communicated at a different place from that indicated by A., imposed no obligation binding upon him. Eliason v. Henshaw... .*225 2. An offer of a bargain, by one person to another, imposes no obligation upon the former, unless it be accepted by the latter, according to the terms on which the offer was made; any qualification of, or departure from, those terms, invalidates the offer, unless the same be agreed to by the party who made it.. ..Id. See Frauds, 4. COVENANT. 1. Where the defendant in ejectment, for lands in North Carolina, has been in possession, under title in himself, and those under whom he claims, for a period of seven years, or upwards, such possession is, by the statute of limitations of North Carolina, a conclusive legal bar against the action by an adverse claimant, unless such claimant bring himself, by positive proof, within some of the disabilities provided for by that statute: in the absence of such proof, the title shown by the party in possession is so complete, as to prove, in an action upon a covenant against incumbrances, that a recovery obtained by the adverse claimant was not by a paramount legal title. Somerville?. Hamilton...............*230, 233 2. Qucere ? Whether, in an action upon a covenant against incumbrances, the plaintiff is bound to show that the adverse claimant recovered, in the suit by which the plaintiff is evicted, by title paramount, or whether the recovery itself is primd fade evidence of that fact?..........................Id. DEED. See Chancery, 26-28: Evidence, 1: Frauds, 3. DOMICIL. 1. The property of a house of trade, established in the enemy’s country, is condemnable as prize, whatever may be the personal domicil of the partners. The Friendschaft.. .*105 DUTIES. 1. By the conquest and military occupation of a portion of the territory of the United States, by a public enemy, that portion is to be deemed a foreign country, so far as respects our revenue laws. United States v. Rice......*247, 254 2. Goods imported into it, are not imported into the United States, and are subject to such duties only as the conqueror may impose.............................. .Id. 3. The subsequent evacuation of the conquered territory by the enemy, and resumption of authority by the United States, cannot change the character of past transactions; the jus postiliminii does not apply to the case ; and goods previously imported do not become liable to pay duties to the United States, by the resumption of their sovereignty over the conquered territory...............Id. See Priority. -EJECTMENT. 1. A patent issued on the 18th November 1784, for 1000 acres of land, in Kentucky, to J. 0. who had previously, in July 1784, covenanted to convey the same to M. G., the ancestor of the lessor of the plaintiff, and on the 23d June 1786, M. G. made an agreement with R. B., the defendant in ejectment, to convey to him 750 acres, part of the tract of 1000 acres, under which agreement, R. B. entered into possession of the whole tract; and on the 11th April 1787, J. C., by direction of M. G., conveyed to R. B., the 750 acres, in fulfilment of said agreement, which were severed by metes and bounds from the tract of 1000 acres. J. C. and his wife, on the 26th April 1791, made a conveyance in trust of all his property, real and personal, to R. J. and E. C.: on the 12th February 1813, R. J., as surviving trustee, conveyed to the heirs of M. G., under a decree in equity, that part of the 1000 acres not previously conveyed to R. B., and in the part so conveyed under the decree, was included the land claimed in ejectment. R. B., the defendant, claimed the land in controversy, under a patent for 400 acres, issued on the 15th September 1795, founded on a survey made for B. N., May 12th, 1782; and under a deed of the 13th of December 1796, 375 66 INDEX. from one Coburn, who had, in the winter and spring of 1791, entered into and fenced a field, within the bounds of the original patent for 1000 acres to J. C., claiming to hold the same under B. N.’s survey of 400 acres: Held, that upon the issuing of the patent to J. C., in November 1784, the possession then being vacant, he became, by operation of law, vested with a constructive actual seisin of the whole tract included in his patent; that his whole title passed by his prior conveyance to M. G. (the ancestor of the plaintiff’s lessor); and that when it became complete at law, by the issuing of the patent, the actual constructive seisin of J. C. passed to M. G., by virtue of that conveyance. Also held, that when, subsequently, in virtue of the agreement made in June 1786, between M. G. and R. B. (the defendant), the latter entered into possession of the whole tract, under this equitable title, his possession being consistent with the title of M. G., and in common with him, was the possession of M. G. himself, and inured to the benefit of both, according to the nature of their respective titles. And that, when, subsequently, in April 1787, by the direction of M. G., J. 0. conveyed to the defendant 750 acres, in fulfilment of the agreement between M. G. and the defendant, and the same were severed by metes and bounds, in the deed, from the tract of 1000 acres, the defendant became sole seised, in his own right, of the 750 acres so conveyed; but as he still remained in the actual possession of the residue of the tract, within the bounds of the patent, which possession was originally acquired under M. G., the character of his tenure was not changed by his own act, and therefore he was quasi tenant to M. G., and, as such, continued the actual seisin of the latter, over his residue at least, up to the deed from Coburn to the defendant in 1798. Also held, that if Coburn, in 1791, when he entered and fenced a field, &c., had been the owner of B. N.’s survey, his actual occupation of a part would not have given him a constructive actual seisin of the residue of the tract included in that survey, that residue being at the time of his entry and occupation in the adverse seisin of another person (M. G.), having an older and better title; but there being no evidence that Coburn was the legal owner of B. N.’s survey, his entry must be considered as an entry without title, and consequently, his disseisin was limited to the bounds of his actual occupancy. Barry. Gratz.......*213 2. The deed from J. C. and wife, to D. J. and E. C., in 1791, was not within the statute of champerty and maintenance of Kentucky; for as to all the land not in the actual occu 376 pancy of Cobum, the deed was operative, the grantors and those holding under them having at all times had the legal seisin... .Id. 3. The deed of 1813, from R. J., surviving trustee, under the decree in equity, was valid, without being approved by the court, and recorded in the court, according to the statute of Kentucky of the 16th February 1808. .Id. 4. Where the defendant in ejectment, for lands in North Carolina, has been in possession under title in himself, and those under whom he claims, for a period of seven years, or upwards, such possession i$, by the statute of limitations of North Carolina, a conclusive legal bar against the action by an adverse claimant, unless such claimant brings himself, by positive proof, within some of the disabilities provided for by that statute. Somerville v. Hamilton................*230, 233 5. An agreement, by parol, between two proprietors of adjoining lands, to employ a surveyor to run the dividing line between them, and that it should be thus ascertained and settled, which was executed, and the line accordingly run and marked on a plat by the surveyor, in their presence, as the boundary, held to be conclusive, in an action of ejectment, after a corresponding possession of 20 years by the parties, and those claiming under them respectively. Boyd v. Graves...........................*513 See Evidence, 1-4. ERROR. See Practice, 1-4. EVIDENCE. 1. The party who sets up a title must furnish the evidence necessary to support it. If the validity of a deed depend on an act in pais, the party claiming under it is as much bound to prove the performance of the act, as he would be bound to prove any matter of record on which the validity of the deed might depend. Williams v. Peyton..........*^11 2. In the case of lands sold for the non payment of taxes, the marshal’s deed is not even primd facie evidence that the pre-requisites required by law have been complied with..................................Id. 3. A deed, more than thirty years old, proved to have been in the possession of the lessors of the plaintiff in ejectmont, and actually asserted by them as the ground of their title, in a chancery suit, is admissible in evidence, without regular proof of its execution. Barr v. Gratz.............................*221 4. In general, judgments and decrees are INDEX. 67 evidence only in suits between parties and privies; but the doctrine is wholly inapplicable to a case, where a decree in equity was introduced on the trial of an ejectment, not as per se binding upon any rights of the other party, but as an introductory fact to a link in the chain of the plaintiff’s title, and cons J Luting a part of the muniments of his estate........................... .Id. 5. The seal to the commission of a new government, not acknowledged by the government of the United States, cannot be permitted to prove itself; but the fact, that the vessel cruising under such commission is employed by such new government, may be established by other evidence, without proving,the seal. The Estrella............................*303 6. Where the privateer, cruising under such a commission, was lost, subsequent to the capture in question, the previous existence of the commission on board was allowed to be proved by parol evidence..............Id. See Covenant, 1, 2: Ejectment, 4. FRAUDS. 1. E. B. C., having an interest in a cargo at sea, agreed with J. W. for the sale of it, and J. W. signed the following agreement in writing: “ J. W. agrees to purchase the share of E. B. C. in the cargo of the ship Aristides, W. P. Z., supercargo, say at $2522.83, at fifteen per cent, advance on said amount, payable at five months from this date, and to give a note or notes for the same, with an approved indorser.” In compliance with this agreement, J. W. gave his notes for the sum. mentioned, and in an action upon the notes, the want of a legal consideration, under the statute of frauds, being set up as a defence, on the ground of the defect of mutuality in the written contract; the court below left it to the jury to infer from the evidence, an actual performance of the agreement; the jury found a verdict for the plaintiff, and the court below rendered judgment thereon. The judgment affirmed by this court. Weightman v. Caldwell........................ *85 2. Note on the 17th section of the statute of frauds, as to the sale of goods.......Id. *89 3. A deed made upon a valuable and adequate consideration, which is actually made and the change of property bond fide, or such as is purported to be, cannot be considered as a conveyance to defraud creditors. WAeaton v. Sexton..................... ... .*503, 507 4. An agreement by parol, between two proprietors of adjoining lands, to employ a surveyor to run the dividing line between them, and that it should be thus ascertained and settled, which was executed, and the line ac- cordingly run and marked on a plat, by the surveyor, in their presence, as the boundary, is conclusive, in an action of ejectment, after a correspondent possession of 20 years by the parties and those claiming under them. Such an agreement is not within the statute of frauds, as being a contract for the sale of lands, or any interest in or concerning them. Boyd v. Craves..........., .*513 See Chancery, 26-28. INSOLVENT LAW. See Constitutional Law, 1, 2, 5. JURISDICTION. See Chancery, 5-7, 18, 19 : Prize, 2, 3, 7, 9. LEX LOCI. 1. A discharge under a foreign bankrupt law is no bar. to an action in the courts of this country, on a contract made here. McMillan v. McNeill.........................*209, 213 LIBEL. See Practice. LICENSE. 1. A vessel and cargo, which is liable to seizure as enemy’s property, or for sailing under the pass or license of the enemy, may be seized after her arrival in a port of the United States, and condemned as prize of war. The delictum is not purged, by the termination of the voyage. The Caledonian.......... .*100 2. The circumstance of a vessel having been sent into an enemy’s port for adjudication, and afterwards permitted to resume her voyage, held to raise a violent presumption, that she had a license, which the claimant not having repelled by explanatory evidence, condemnation was pronounced. The Langdon Cheves.............................*103 LIMITATION OF ACTIONS. See Constitutional Law, 4: Ejectment, 4. LOCAL LAW. 1. The statute of charitable uses of the 43 Eliz., c. 4, is not in force in Virginia. Baptist Association v. Hart's Ex'rs................*1 2. If there is nothing in a patent to control the call for course and distance, the land must be bounded by the courses and distances of of the patent, according to the magnetic meridian; but it is a general principle, that 377 68 INDEX. the course and distance must yield to natural objects called for in the patent. McIver's Lessee v. Walker...............*444, 447 8. All lands are supposed to be actually surveyed, and the intention of the grant is to convey the land, according to the actual survey; consequently, distances must ■ be lengthened or shortened, and courses varied, so as to conform to the natural objects called for...................,...............Id. 4. If a patent refer to a plat, annexed, and if in that plat, a water-course be laid down as running through the land, the tract must be so surveyed as to include the water-course, and to conform as nearly as may be to the plat, although the lines, thus run, do not correspond with the courses and distances mentioned in the patent, and although neither the certificate of survey nor the patent called for that water-course.............. .Id. 5. The rule which prevails in Kentucky and Ohio, as so land titles, is, that, at law, the patent is the foundation of title, and neither party can bring his entry before the court: but a junior patentee, claiming under. an elder entry, may, in chancery, support , his equitable title. McArthur v. Browder.................1.........*488, 491 6. A description which will identify the lands, is all that is necessary to the validity of a grant: but the law requires that an entry should be made with such certainty, that subsequent purchasers may be enabled to locate the adjacent residuum.................Id. fJ. An entry for 1000 acres of land in Ohio, on Deer creek, “beginning where the upper line of Ralph Morgan’s entry crosses the creek, running with Morgan’s line, on each side of the creek, 400 poles, thence up the creek, 400 poles in a direct line, thence from each side of the given line, with the upper line, at right angles with the side lines, for quantity,” is a valid entry........................Id. 8. Distinction between amending and withdrawing an entry..........................Id. See Chancery, 19: Constitutional Law, 6, 7: Covenant, 1: Ejectment, 1-4. POWER. 1. In the case of a naked power, not coupled with an interest, the law requires that every pre-requisite to the exercise of that power should precede its exercise. Williams v. Peyton.............................*1*1^ ^9 PRACTICE. 1. A writ of error will not lie on a judgment of nonsuit. Evans v. Phillips........*73 378 2. The refusal of the court to grant a motion for a new trial, affords no ground for a writ of error. Barr v. Gratz................*220 8. Where a cause is brought to this court, by writ of error, or appeal, from the highest court of law or equity of a state, under the 25th section of the judiciary act of 1789, upon the ground, that the validity of .a statute of the United States was drawn in question, and that the decision of the state court was against its validity, &c.; or that the validity of a statute of a state was drawn in question, as repugnant to the constitution of the United States, and the decision was in favor of its validity; it must appear, from the record, that the act of congress, or the constitutionality of the state law was drawn into question. Miller v. Nicholls......*311, 315 4. But it is not required, that the record should, in terms, state a misconstruction of the act of congress, or that it was drawn into question; it is sufficient to give this court jurisdiction of the cause, the record should show that an act of congress was applicable to the case....................................Id. 5. Depositions, taken on further proof, in one prize cause, cannot be invoked into another. The Experiment.. I.......... i....*84 6. Practice of invoking testimony in prize causes..................................Id. 7. A sale under a fi. fa., duly issued, is legal, as respects the purchaser, provided the writ be levied upon the property, before the return-day, although the sale be made after the return-day, and the writ be never actually returned. Wheaton v. Sexton... .*503, 506 8. Depositions taken according to the proviso in the 30th section of the judiciary act of 1789,under a dedimuspotestatem, “according to common usage, when it may be necessary to prevent a failure or delay of justice,” are, under no circumstances, to be considered as taken de bene esse, whether the witnesses reside beyond the process of the court or within it; the provisions of the act relative to depositions taken de bene esse being confined to those taken under the enacting part of the section. Sergeant v. Biddle... .*508 See Admiralty, 1, 4, 5: Chancery, 20. PRIORITY. 1. The United States are not entitled to priority over other creditors, under the act of 1799, § 65, upon the ground of the debtor having made an assignment for the benefit of creditors, unless it is proved, that the debtor has made an assignment of all his property. United States v. Howland.......*108, 116 2. Where the deed of assignment conveys only INDEX. 69 the property mentioned in a schedule annexed to the deed, and the schedule does not purport to contain all the property of the party who made it, the onus probandi is thrown on the United States, to show that the assignment embraced all the» debtor’s property.......Id. 8. The decisions on the subject of the priority of the United States in case of insolvency, &c., collected.............................Id. *118 PRIZE. 1. The government of the United States having recognised the existence of a civil war between Spain and her colonies, but remaining neutral, the courts of the Union are bound to consider as lawful those acts which war authorizes, and which the new governments in South America may direct against their enemy. The Divina Pastora..............*52, 63 2. Unless the neutral rights of the United States (as ascertained by the law of nations, the acts of congress, and treaties) are violated by the cruisers sailing under commissions from those governments, captures by them are to be regarded by us as other captures, jure belli, are regarded; the legality of which cannot be determined in the courts of a neutral country...............................Id. 8. Note on the jurisdiction of neutral courts over belligerent captures made in violation of the neutral jurisdiction...............A7. *65 4. Different public acts by which the government of the United States has recognised the existence of a civil war between Spain and her colonies: Appendix, Note II.........*23 5. Prize code of Buenos Ayres and Chili... Id. 6. Where restitution of captured property is claimed, upon the ground, that the force of the cruiser making the capture has been augmented within the United States, by enlisting men, the burden of proving such enlistment is thrown upon the claimant; and that fact being proved by him, it is incumbent upon the captors to show, by proof, that the persons so enlisted were subjects or citizens of the prince or state under whose flag the cruiser sails, transiently within the United States, in order to bring the case within the proviso of the 2d section of the act of June 5th, 1794, and of the act of the 20th April 1818. The Estrella...................*298, 306 7. The right of adjudicating on all captures and questions of prize belongs exclusively to the courts of the captor’s country: but, it is an exception to this general rule, that where the captured vessel is brought, or voluntarily comes, infra prcesidia of a neutral power, that power has a right to inquire whether its own neutrality has been violated by the cruiser which made the capture; and if such violation has been committed, is in duty bound to restore to the original owner property captured by cruisers illegally equipped in its ports............................Id. 8. No part of the act. of the 5th June 1794, is repealed by the act of the 3d March 1817. The act of 1794 remained in force, until the act of the 20th April 1818, by which all the provisions respecting our neutral relations were embraced, and all former laws on the same subject were repealed.............. .Id. 9. In the absence of any act of congress on the subject, the courts of the United States would have authority, under the general law of nations, to decree restitution of property captured in violation of their neutrality, under a commission, issued within the United States, or under an armament, or augmentation of the armament, or crew of the capturing vessel, within the same...............Id. 10. A cruiser, equipped at the port of Cartha-gena, in South America, and commissioned under the authority of the Province of Car-. thagena, one of the United Provinces of New Grenada, at war with Spain, sailed from the said port, and captured on the high seas, as prize, a vessel and cargo belonging to the subjects of the king of Spain, and put a prize-crew on board, and ordered her to proceed to the said port of Carthagena: the captured vessel was afterwards fallen in with by a private armed vessel of the United States, and the cargo taken out and brought into the United States for adjudication, as the property of their enemy. The original Spanish owner, and the prize-master from the Carthagenian privateer, both claimed the • goods. The possession was decreed to be restored to the Carthagenian prize-master. Neustra Señora de la Caridad...........*497 11. War having been recognised to exist between Spain and her colonies, by the government of the United States, it is the duty of the courts of the United States, where a capture is made by either of the belligerent parties, without any violation of our neutrality, and the captured prize is brought innocently within our jurisdiction, to leave things in the same state they find them; or to restore them to the state from which they have been forcibly removed by the act of our own citizens........................... la. 12. The Spanish treaty held not to apply to the above case, as the court could not consider the Carthagenian captors as pirates, and the capture was not made within the jurisdictional limits of the United States, the only two cases in which the treaty enjoins restitution....................................Ld, See Domicil : License : Practice, 5, 6. 379 70 z INDEX. SALE. See Chancery, 21-24. STATUTES OF KENTUCKY. See Ejectment, 2, 3: Local Law. > STATUTES OF MARYLAND. See Constitutional Law, 6, 7. STATUTES OF NORTH CAROLINA. See Covenant, 1: Ejectment, 4. 380 STATUTES OF OHIO. See Chancery, 26, 28: Local Law. I STATUTES OF VIRGINIA. See Local Law, 1. TRADE WITH THE ENEMY. See License, 1. TREATY. See Auen: Prize, 12.