- Page
- Purpose and early interpretation [929]
- Expansion of state immunity [930]
- Suits against state officials: two categories [930]
- Mandamus proceedings [932]
- Early limitation on injunction proceedings [932]
- Injunction proceedings today: Ex parte Young [933]
- Tort action against state officials [934]
- Suits to recover taxes [935]
- Consent of State to be sued [935]
- Waiver of immunity [936]
SUITS AGAINST STATES
Amendment 11
The Judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by Citizens of another State, or by Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State.
Purpose and Early Interpretation
The action of the Supreme Court in accepting jurisdiction of a suit against a State by a citizen of another State in 1793, in Chisholm v. Georgia[1] provoked such angry reactions in Georgia and such anxieties in other States that at the first meeting of Congress after this decision what became the Eleventh Amendment was proposed by an overwhelming vote and ratified with "vehement speed."[2] The earliest decisions interpretative of the amendment were three by Chief Justice Marshall. In Cohens v. Virginia,[3] speaking for the Court, he held that the prosecution of a writ of error to review a judgment of a State court, alleged to be in violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States, "does not commence or prosecute a suit against the State," but continues one commenced by the State. The contrary holding would have virtually repealed the 25th Section of the Judiciary Act of 1789 (see p. [554]), and brought something like anarchy in its wake. In Osborn v. Bank of the United States,[4] decided three years later, the Court laid down two rules, one of which has survived and the other of which was soon abandoned. The latter was the holding that a suit is not one against a State unless the State is a party to the record.[5] This rule the Court was forced to repudiate seven years later in Governor of Georgia v. Madrazo,[6] in which it was conceded that the suit had been brought against the governor solely in his official capacity and with the design of forcing him to exercise his official powers. It is now a well-settled rule that in determining whether a suit is prosecuted against a State "the Court will look behind and through the nominal parties on the record to ascertain who are the real parties to the suit."[7] The other, more successful rule was that a State official possesses no official capacity when acting illegally and hence can derive no protection from an unconstitutional statute of a State.[8]
Subsequent cases giving the amendment a restrictive effect are those holding that counties and municipalities are suable in the federal courts;[9] and that government corporations of the State are not immune when suable under the law which created them.[10] Meantime other cases have expanded the prohibitions of the amendment to include suits brought against a State by its own citizens,[11] by a foreign state,[12] by a federally chartered corporation,[13] or by a State as an agent of its citizens to collect debts owed them by another State.[14] These rulings are based on the premise expressed in Hans v. Louisiana[15] that the amendment "actually reversed the decision" in Chisholm v. Georgia and, as Chief Justice Hughes indicated in Monaco v. Mississippi,[16] had the effect of prohibiting any suit against a State without its consent except when brought by the United States[17] or another State.
Suits Against State Officials: Two Categories