The' Constitution of 1819 declared, “ The general assembly, shall direct, by law, in what manner, and in what courts, suits may be brought against the State.” Cons. Art. 6, § 9. In 1820 and 1827, statutes were enacted, investing the circuit court with jurisdiction of suits against the State, when instituted by a citizen of the State, prescribing the mode in which they should be’commenced, conducted, and defended, and the mode of obtaining satisfaction, if judgment was rendered against the State. Clay’s Dig. 339, §§ 143, 144, 145, 146. These statutes were substantially embodied in the Code of 1852, forming §§ 2138, 2139, 2140, 2172, thereof, and were carried into the Revised Code, forming §§ 2534, 2535, 2536, and 2571 thereof. In Ex parte Green & Graham (29 Ala. 52), the judge delivering the opinion asserted that these statutes did not authorize a suit in chancery against the State. The other judges, not deeming a decision of the question necessary in that case, expressed no opinion thereon. The doubt as to the liability of the State to be sued in chancery, thus created, led to the enactment of a statute investing the chancery courts with jurisdiction of suits by and against the State, when a citizen of the State, or a domestic corporation, was the adverse party. This statute forms § 3323 of the Revised Code.
At its present session the general assembly repealed the sections of the Revised Code authorizing suits either in the circuit court, or in the court of chancery against the State. The act is entitled, “ An Act to repeal sections 2534, 2536, 2571, 3323, of the Revised Code of Alabama.” The first section expressly repeals the sections named in the title. The second section declares all laws and parts of laws in conflict with the provisions of this act or which make any provisions for bringing or conducting suits against this State be and the same are hereby repealed. Section 2535 of the Revised Code which imposed on the solicitor of the circuit in which a suit was pending against the State, the duty of defending it, was not expressly repealed. There was no necessity for its repeal, as the office of solicitor of the circuit had been by the Constitution abolished, and it was of consequence incapable of operation.
At the passage of this repealing statute a suit was pending in the circuit court of Montgomery, brought against the State, by one W. A. C. Jones, a citizen of the State. After the passage of the statute, the attorney general moved the circuit court to strike the cause from the dockets. The motion was overruled, and the State by the attorney general -now moves the court for a mandamus compelling the circuit court to grant the motion it overruled.
It is said in Bacon’s Abridgment, “ The king cannot be sued by his subjects by writ, for he cannot issue a command to him*235self.” 8 Bac. Ab. 106. “ Tbe King,” said Chief Justice Markham, to Edward IV., “ cannot arrest a man upon suspicion of felony or treason, as any of his subjects may, because if he should wrong a man by such arrest, he can have no remedy against him.” 1 Hallam’s Const. Hist. 385. There were petitions allowed, by which the subject could obtain redress or restitution from the crown of real or personal property, or proceed for the recovery of a private debt. But for an obligation created by act of parliament, the faith of the parliament alone was trusted, and to that an appeal for performance must have been made. For the enforcement of such an obligation, it is not believed, it was ever supposed in England, there was or could be a judicial remedy. However this may be, the principle recognized in this country, as to the several States of the Union, is that expressed by C. J. Taney, in Beers v. State of Arkansas, 20 How. 529; “ It is an established principle of jurisprudence in all civilized nations that the sovereign cannot be sued in its own courts, or in any other, without its consent and permission; but it may, if it thinks proper, waive this privilege, and permit itself to be made a party defendant in a suit by individuals or by another State.” No liability or obligation can rest upon the State, not created by law. No officer of the State can by his act without authority of law, create such liability or obligation. In Vandyke v. State (24 Ala. 81), it was declared a payment to the comptroller of moneys due the State, can only be ratified by the sovereign power of the State, the law-making power, and of consequence that a suit against him, in the name of the State, for the recovery of such moneys, instituted by direction of the governor, was not a ratification, and could not be maintained. All obligations or liabilities resting upon the State, being creations of the legislative power of the,State, it is the good faith of the State alone, on which reliance is placed to perform the obligation, or discharge the liability. Legal remedies, or tbeir efficacy in enforcing the obligation or liability, are not contemplated as in cases of contracts between individuals. These are vain and useless against the State without the concurrence of the legislative power. Statutes are often passed permitting suits against the State. Such statutes are matters of grace, confer privileges, — they do not create rights, and are always construed like other statutes, conferring privileges or exemptions on the citizen. The power to withdraw is commensurate with the power to confer, and when the privilege is withdrawn, the citizen is remitted to the condition in which he stood when it was conferred. Many illustrations of the principle are given by Judge Cooley, in his work on Constitutional Limitations, and among others he mentions a statutory right to have cases reviewed on appeal which may be taken *236away, by a repeal of tbe statute, even as to causes which had been previously appealed. Cooley’s Const. Lim. 382. The principle has often been applied to suits against the State. In the case of Chisholm Ex'rs v. State of Ceorgia (2 Dallas, 419), the supreme court of the United States decides that it had jurisdiction of a suit against a State, by a citizen of another State. The decision led to the adoption of the 11th amendment of the Constitution of the United States, declaring “ 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.” When this amendment was adopted, the case of Hollingsworth v. State of Virginia, was pending in the supreme court, and the court unanimously declared it could not, after the adoption of the amendment, exercise any jurisdiction in any case, past or future, in which a State was sued by the citizens of another State, or by citizens, or subjects, of any foreign State. 3 Dallas, 378. The Constitution of Arkansas was in substance the same as our Constitution of 1819. “ The General Assembly shall direct by law, in what courts and in what manner suits may be commenced against the State.” The General Assembly of Arkansas made provisions for suits against the State. In reference to these, in the case of Beers v. Arkansas, supra, C. J. Taney, said : “ This permission (to sue the State) is altogether voluntary on the part of the sovereignty; it follows that it may prescribe the terms and conditions on which it consents to be sued, and the manner in which the suit shall be conducted, and may withdraw its consent whenever it may suppose that justice to the public requires it.” A similar opinion was expressed in Platenius v. State, 17 Ark. 518. In Huasaker v. Borden (5 Cal. 288), it is held, that as a county is a mere political subdivision of the State, there is no right of suit against it, except as permitted by statute, and the permission could be withdrawn or denied at any time the legislature may think proper. The doctrine was reaffirmed in Sharp v. Contra Costa County, 34 Cal. 284. Under the influence of these authorities we must hold the statutes authorizing suits against the State conferred privileges on the citizen, — their repeal operated a withdrawal of the privilege, and the circuit court was without further jurisdiction to proceed in the cause it was moved to strike from the docket..
It seemed to be admitted by the counsel of the respondent, that such would have been the result, under the Constitution of 1819, but that the present Constitution confers on the citizen the right of suit, and therefore it was not competent for the general assembly by any enactment to impair or defeat this *237right. The present constitutional provision is, “ that suits may be brought against the State in such courts as may by law be provided.” Const, art. 1, sec. 16. The words of the present Constitution are less mandatory, and less adapted to the creation of a right, than were the words of the Constitution of 1819, if there is any real change in their signification. The present provision was first introduced into the Constitution of 1865. The provision of the Constitution of 1819 had been incidentally considered in two cases in this court, [ White v. Governor, 18 Ala. 767; Ex parte Greene & Graham, 29 Ala. 52,] and it was said it was made the duty of the legislature to direct in what manner and in what courts suits should be brought against the State. If any change in the constitutional provision can be supposed to have been intended by the change in the phraseology, we would be inclined to the opinion, the change was superinduced by these decisions, $.nd the intent was not to create a duty on the legislature, but to confer a discretionary power coextensive with that recognized by the general “ jurisprudence of all civilized nations.” Nor can.any importance be attached to the place in the present Constitution in which the provision is found. It is found under the title “ Bill of Rights.” A bill of rights, as recognized in American constitutions, is declaratory of the general principles of republican government, and affirmatory of rights inherent in the people and the individual citizen, not surrendered to, and incapable of invasion by the government the Constitution ordains and establishes. It matters not whether these are declared by the Constitution a bill of rights, or in what part of the Constitution they may be found. It is these which are of controlling importance in the construction of the Constitution and the determination of governmental power. Incorporating in the Constitution a provision not connected with these under the title of “ Bill of Rights,” will not convert it into a right akin to these. The Constitution of the United States has no title of “ Bill of Rights,” yet the ten amendments first made to it have all the force and effect of, and were intended, as such. They are esteemed of the same importance as the most formal bill of rights in a State Constitution. In the Constitution of 1819, under the title of “ General Provisions,” was found the provision that in prosecutions for libel of public Officers the truth of the matter could be given in evidence, and that the jury had the right to determine the law and fact. This provision is now under the title of “ Bill of Rights.” It was not entitled to less consideration because of the place in which it was found in the Constitution of 1819, nor does it derive any additional potency from the place it now occupies. It conferred and now confers the full and free right to investigate and make public the official *238conduct of public men, witnout tbe terrors of a prosecution except for falsehood. It is tbe subject, tbe nature of a constitutional provision alone, that fixes its character as belonging to tbe class of rights usually expressed in the bill of rights, and which are chiefly derived from Magna Charta, and the petition of right.
A peremptory mandamus will be awarded commanding the circuit court to strike the cause from its docket.