Opinion
1812.
On general principles, the idea of an individual citizen compelling the sovereign to do an act, is repugnant to every idea of sovereignty; and the provision of the Constitution, that suits may be brought against the State in such manner, and in such courts, as the Legislature may by law direct, is a dead letter, until some mode of proceeding shall be pointed out by the Legislature.
Where, therefore, the Legislature passed an act prohibiting the registers from issuing a grant to a certain person, or his assigns, on a certain certificate, and an application was made by an assignee for a mandamus to compel the Register to issue the grant, it was held that the mandamus could not be granted, although the act was unconstitutional.
But it was held, also, that if a State issue a grant to any other person, the court of equity would, upon being satisfied of the right of the person claiming under the certificate, divest the title out of the grantee, and vest it in such person.
[Cited in: 9 Bax., 475, 479; 8 Lea, 263; 16 Lea, 535.]
The cause was argued in this Court by Haywood, Whiteside and Cooke, for the plaintiff; and by Balch, for the defendant.
The plaintiff filed his petition in the Circuit Court of Davidson County, in which he states that the commissioner of West Tennessee had issued a warrant or certificate to Thomas Dillon, for five thousand acres of land, No. 292; that the petitioner had procured' for a' full and valuable consideration, an assignment of three thousand two hundred and sixty acres, part of said warrant, and in pursuance of that assignment made an entry of three thousand acres, on the 28th day of March, 1810, and caused the same to be surveyed by a lawful surveyor. The petition also states that he lodged the plat of survey, with the necessary accompanying documents, with the register, for the purpose of obtaining a grant for the same; and that the plat had remained three months with the principal surveyor, according to law.
The Register refused to issue a grant thereon.
The Circuit Court issued a mandamus, but by agreement the question was referred to this Court.
On the service of the writ, the Register returned for cause that an entry had been made in John Armstrong's office for five hundred acres of land, No. 2,562; that on the entry a grant bad issued to Stokely Donnelson, not for five hundred, but for five thousand acres; that by an act of the Legislature of this State, passed on the 23d day of November, 1809, the Registers of the land offices for East and West Tennessee were expressly forbidden to issue a grant or grants to Thomas Dillon or his assignee, on any entry or entries made, or to be made by virtue of said warrant to Thomas Dillon; that the warrant issued to Dillon in consequence of the entry No. 2,562, and grant thereon to Stokely Donnelson; saving, however, a right to issue a grant for five hundred acres, the quantity expressed in the original entry, and no more.
The answer further stated that, upon the petition of Williams and one John C. M'Lemore, the Legislature in 1811 gave the assignee of Dillon a preference for twelve months to re-enter, upon a good and valid warrant, any land which had been entered by virtue of the warrant to Dillon. The Register, upon this state of the case, submitted to the Court whether he was bound to issue a grant or not.
It appears that the commissioner of West Tennessee issued the certificate or warrant to Dillon on the 15th day of August, 1809, expressing on the face of it that it was in consequence of grant No. 346, for five thousand acres to Stokely Donnelson which could not be identified; and that the grant was by virtue of entry No. 2,562.
The counsel for the plaintiff insist that the Act of 1809 is unconstitutional, and therefore ought to be disregarded, and that, consequently, a mandamus ought to be issued.
On the fullest consideration of this subject by the Court, it does not seem that one is necessary in consequence of the other.
The Legislature, by the Act of 1807, ch. 2, prescribed a mode for the purpose "of judging and ascertaining the validity of warrants and other legal evidences of unsatisfied claims to lands within this State." An officer of high responsibility was appointed by the Legislature for this purpose. After a full investigation of the evidence, he was authorized by law to declare claims invalid or otherwise; if the latter, he was to issue a warrant from under his hand, attested by his clerk. A warrant thus issued is assignable, and grants may issue to the assignee in consequence of such assignment.
Whether fraud could be imputed to Dillon, who obtained the warrant, is not material with the Court; the petitioner being a bona fide assignee for a valuable consideration without notice. But if it were necessary to inquire into this point, it does not appear. The Act of 1809, upon which a refusal to issue a grant is bottomed, does nor assert it; it only says that the grant to Donnelson, which enabled Dillon to get this warrant, was grounded on an entry of five hundred instead of five thousand acres. Now this might have been the fact and Dillon perfectly innocent. The presumption is that he purchased in confidence of the grant to Donnelson, which was for five thousand acres. It is not presumed, nor was it required that Dillon should know on what kind of a warrant that grant was bottomed. The grant itself does not refer to the entry on which the Act of 1809 says it was founded. No doubt Dillon showed the commissioner of land claims a regular conveyance, or conveyances, to prove that he was entitled to the five thousand acres expressed in the grant. We are bound to presume this, as the commissioner, who was a public officer particularly intrusted for this purpose, issued his warrant, which is conclusive evidence with all the world that the claim was a good one. It was an act of the State by one of its agents.
With this evidence Dillon was enabled to sell to Williams, the petitioner, upon a common principle of equity, that when one of two innocent persons must suffer, it ought to be him who trusts most.
Williams' claim is founded not on any personal confidence, but on his confidence in the act of the State by its commissioner.
That Williams gave a valuable consideration is not disputed; the assignment from Dillon is set out, his entry and survey are regular, and, but for the Act of 1809, no one can doubt but that the Register should have issued him a grant.
In this stage of the inquiry the main ground is perceived whether the Act of 1809 is constitutional; and, if it is not, whether a mandamus is the proper remedy, under all the circumstances of the case.
Two sections of the 11th article have been referred to. The 8th provides "that no person shall be deprived of his life, liberty or property, but by the judgment of his peers, or the law of the land." By the 20th it is provided "that no retrospective law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts shall be made." That the petitioner acquired a vested right by purchase of part of the warrant of Dillon we have no doubt, and that he can not be deprived of this right by any subsequent legislative act is equally clear. The Court have no hesitation in saying that, where the rights of two individuals are in judicial conflict, any act of the Legislature concerning them, obviously repugnant to the Constitution, is void. But this is not that case.
In order to show that a mandamus should issue, the 17th section of the 11 article has been referred to: It provides that all courts shall be open; and every man, for an injury done him, in his lands, goods, person or reputation, shall have remedy by due course of law, and right and justice administered without sale, denial or delay. Suits may be brought against the State in such manner, and in such courts, as the Legislature may by law direct; provided the right of bringing suit be limited to the citizens of the State.
This part of the Constitution, as to compelling the State to do an act, which in morality and justice it ought to perform, must be viewed as a dead letter, until some mode of proceeding shall be pointed out by the Legislature. As yet, no method has been pointed out.
The obligation contracted by the State, to issue a grant, or grants, to Dillon, or his assignee, we have no doubt the Stale is morally bound to comply with; but does the Constitution, or the nature of our government, furnish the means to the judicial department to compel an observance of this contract, in issuing a grant, when the State has expressly said it will not issue one?
The State, has, by its Act of 1809, prohibited its officers from issuing a grant, or grants, on this warrant.
It is proper that the judicial department should order those officers to do an act that is forbidden?
In all States, the disposition of the soil is an attribute of sovereignty, and emanates immediately from that source. Political considerations may interfere to prevent a State, temporarily, from discharging a moral obligation.
In deference to the State Legislature, we will presume that it did not design preventing the petitioner from obtaining a completion of his right forever; unless indeed the case were otherwise represented to them. If so, they have been deceived; and will, it is presumed, rescind that Act. The Court can not but perceive, that to grant a mandamus in this case, would, in effect, sanction the idea that the State may be sued; and then this writ would be resorted to as the appropriate means of redress. On general principles, the idea of an individual citizen or subject compelling the sovereign to do an act, is repugnant to every idea of sovereignty. It is true, the Constitution has said the Legislature shall have power to provide a remedy. This, however, they have not done; and until it be done, it is not in the power of the Court to do that, to which the Legislature are competent. Suppose the State indebted to an individual; this Court could not grant a mandamus compelling the treasurer to pay it.
There is an obligation, morally speaking, but it is an imperfect one, and the Legislature has not thought proper to give to the judicial department any power or means to compel the performance of it. Until the power shall be communicated, there can be no legal power whatever vested. A desire of self-preservation is the first law of all being. For the purpose of administering justice, the Constitution has vested in the different departments certain powers. Each department has its province marked out; within which, or within their respective orbits, each must move without collision — then the Constitution will be preserved from destruction. An assumption of power by one branch of the government, which properly belongs to another, weakens the main pillar on which it rests. By repeated acts of assumption, the fabric totters, falls, and with it all that is valuable.
The Legislature has forbidden its officers to issue a grant. Every act respecting the disposition of the soil, is an act of sovereignty; with the Legislature, where this power resides, it must remain, as to its exercise.
It is the province of the judicial department to determine between man and man; and not between the State and its citizens, where there is no vested perfect right to a grant, either legal or equitable. There is consequently but one party before us. He has a vested right to three thousand two hundred and sixty acres of the warrant — he has entered and surveyed three thousand acres of it; but we can not perceive any other individual in conflict. Then indeed the powers of this department of government would be called into action. In due course of law we could not, dare not, withhold redress; the Constitution commands it, and our oath puts a seal to that command.
It is not material to inquire in what respect an entry is a legal or an equitable claim to land. To some purposes, no doubt, it may possess legal attributes; in general, however, it must be considered as affording only an equitable right.
Considering Williams' claim as an equitable one, it is the peculiar business of a court of equity to protect him in the enjoyment of it, against any individual who has not a better one.
It is as inestimable maxim of our law, as governing the rights of individuals, that there shall be no injury without a remedy. Without a grant, it is certainly true that the petitioner can not sue, or defend himself in ejectment; but it is equally true, that when legal remedies fail in affording redress, or where there is a clear vested right, as in this case, to the land covered by the entry and survey, and no legal remedy exists, equity, which happily adapts its means to the end, will afford relief.
With the view we now possess of this subject, the Act of 1809 seems to be void, on account of its repugnance to the provisions of the Constitution; but this Court can not perceive that it possesses any physical power to compel the State to issue a grant. Should any individual hereafter endeavor to avail himself of that Act, by seating himself on the land, or obtaining a title thereto, a court of equity can not refuse redress, on the case being properly represented.
Such a mode of proceeding would be acting within the proper sphere of this department, avoid collision with the Legislature, and be consistent with the general principle laid down respecting the writ of mandamus now sought for. To obtain such a writ, the party applying must show that he has a legal right, and that he has no other legal specific remedy. 1 T. R. 404; 3 T. R. 652. In this case, the petitioner has not a legal right — he can not have that until the Legislature repeal the prohibitory Act.