In tort actions against State officials the rule of United States v. Lee[41] has been substantially incorporated into the Eleventh Amendment. In Tindal v. Wesley[42] the Lee Case was held to permit a suit by claimants to real property in South Carolina which they had purchased from the State sinking fund commission but which had been retaken by the State because the purchaser insisted on paying for the property with revenue bond scrip issued by the State. In other cases the Court had held that the immunity of a State from suit does not extend to actions against State officials for damages arising out of willful and negligent disregard of State laws.[43]

Suits to Recover Taxes

Recent decisions, however, have rendered suits against State officials to recover taxes increasingly difficult to maintain. Although the Court long ago held that the sovereign immunity of the State prevented a suit to recover money in the general treasury,[44] it also held that a suit would lie against a revenue officer to recover tax moneys illegally collected and still in his possession.[45] Beginning, however, with Great Northern Life Insurance Co. v. Read[46] in 1944 the Court has held that this kind of suit cannot be maintained unless the State expressly consents to suits in the federal courts. In this case the State statute provided for the payment of taxes under protest and for suits afterwards against State tax collection officials for the recovery of taxes illegally collected. The act also provided for the segregation by the collector of taxes paid under protest. The Read Case has been followed in two more recent cases[47] involving a similar state of facts, with the result that the rule once permitting such suits to recover taxes from a segregated fund has been distinguished away.

Consent of State to be Sued

Although dicta in some cases suggested that once a State consented generally to be sued in a court of competent jurisdiction,[48] suits could be maintained against it in the federal courts, later decisions involving statutory provisions for the payment of taxes under protest followed by a suit in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover do not authorize suits in the federal courts. These rulings are based on the assumption that when the court is dealing "with the sovereign exemption from judicial interference in the vital field of financial administration a clear declaration of the State's intention to submit its fiscal problems to other courts than those of its own creation must be found."[49] Long before these decisions it had been settled that a State could confine to its own courts suits against it to recover taxes.[50] Thus the questions involved in the cases laying down the above rule concerned only the lack of an express consent to suit in the federal courts.

Waiver of Immunity

The immunity of a State from suit is a privilege which it may waive at pleasure by voluntary submission to suit,[51] as distinguished from appearing in a similar suit to defend its officials,[52] and by general law specifically consenting to suit in the federal courts. Such consent must be clear and specific and consent to suit in its own courts does not imply a waiver of immunity in the federal courts.[53] It follows, therefore, that in consenting to be sued, the States, like the National Government, may attach such conditions to suit as they deem fit.

Notes

[1] 2 Dall. 419 (1793).

[2] Justice Frankfurter dissenting in Larson v. Domestic & Foreign Corp., 337 U.S. 682, 708 (1949).