The facts of this case were discussed at the *185bar, on the motion to quash the alternative writ. But as some of them did not then appear of record, we refrained from any expression of opinion in overruling the motion. All the material facts are now before us for final adjudication.
It appears by the return that the license of the insurance company in force when these proceedings were commenced, expired by limitation pending the alternative writ; and that some three days after the motion to quash the alternative writ was denied, the respondent renewed the license .for another year. His doing so, under the circumstances, may have been an act of questionable propriety. But the fact itself is immaterial here, because it was agreed by counsel, if it were otherwise doubtful, that if a peremptory writ should be granted, it should cover any subsisting license issued by the respondent to the insurance company.
The motion to quash the alternative writ was argued for the respondent by the attorney general. The demurrer to the return was argued for the respondent by the learned counsel who represented the insurance company in the federal court, and a brief was afterwards submitted on his behalf by the attorney general. Different questions were raised for the respondent by the different counsel, which will be considered in proper order.
I. It was stated by the attorney general that the suit of the relator against the insurance company had been settled; that the relator has no further interest in the question, and therefore no further right to the writ. The fact does not appear of record, but it is immaterial.
So far as the private right of the relator is concerned, it is now well settled that this court would not assume original jurisdiction to enforce it. Attorney General v. Railroad Cos., 35 Wis., 425; Attorney General v. Eau Claire, 37 id., 400; State v. Baker, 38 id., 71; State v. Supervisors, id., 554. But, as it is said in Attorney General v. Railroad Cos., “ In a government like ours, 'public rights of the state and private *186rights of citizens often meet, and may well be involved in a single litigation. So it may be in the exercise of the original jurisdiction of the court.” “ The prerogative writs can issue only at the suit of the state or the. attorney general in the right of the state.” “ They may go on the relation of a private person, and may involve private right.” And the question before us is not upon the private right of the relator, and is independent of the accident that there is a relator in the case. The question on which the exercise of jurisdiction here must turn, is, whether the subject matter of the writ is one quod ad statum reipubliece jvertinet one affecting the sovereignty of the state, its franchises or prerogatives.” Attorney General v. Eau Claire. And on this question there appears to us to be no room for doubt.
Save by the voluntary license of the state, the insurance company has no right to carry on its business within the state. The state sees fit to grant a license to it, upon condition; instantly revocable, upon condition broken. The insurance company breaks the condition; but claims the right, notwithstanding, to act under the license throughout the state; claims that the condition is void, and that the license is therefore independent of the condition on which it was granted. And it assumes to carry on its business throughout the state, under the license, in defiance of the condition. Here is very plainly a direct and proximate interest of the state affecting the state at large, in some of its prerogatives, and raising “ a contingency requiring the interposition of this court to preserve the prerogatives of the state, in its sovereign character.” Attorney General v. Eau Claire.
The statute of the state devolves upon the respondent the imperative duty of revoking the license of the insurance company, upon condition broken, and prohibits a renewal of the license for three years. The respondent claims that the statute so far is void, and wholly disregards it. Upon condition broken, he refuses to revoke the subsisting license of the in*187surance company, and, upon its expiration, renews it. "Whether the respondent he right or wrong in his view, and that is for this court and not for him to determine, it is very certain that it concerns the state at large, that one of its principal officers executes his office in positive and deliberate disregard of a public statute defining its duties.
Such a case, when presented, is one eminently calling for the exercise of our original jurisdiction; one, with or without a relator, eminently fit to be presented to the court for adjudication. The writ of mandamus, in such a case, eminently serves its function as a prerogative writ.
II. It was objected to the statute, by the learned counsel who argued the demurrer, that it provides for no notice to the insurance company, gives it no opportunity of being heard on the question of revocation for condition broken. It might have been more provident to have required such notice; but that rested entirely in legislative discretion. It was for the legislature alone to say whether or not the insurance company should have license to act within the state; and if so, on what conditions, and how revocable, such license should be granted. Authorizing such a license, out of its mere discretion, it was competent for the legislature to impose any conditions, reasonable or unreasonable, and' to provide for revocation, upon any cause or no cause, in any manner it might see fit.
It was for the insurance company to elect whether it would seek or accept the license authorized, on the very terms on which it was offered, at its own peril of the very power of revocation reserved. And, having elected to accept the license, it cannot now set up a vested right in the license, inconsistent with the license and in defiance of the terms and conditions on which it was granted. It voluntarily ran the very risk of summary revocation, exporte, to which it now objects. It took the license eum onere, and has no just ground of complaint that the license is not more favorable to its interests.
"We have carefully examined the numerous authorities cited *188oa this point, and are unable to discover the application of any of them to the revocation of a voluntary license, in the precise manner reserved in the license itself.
III. It was likewise urged that the duty of revocation imposed upon the secretary of state, operates to confer judicial power on that officer.
We cannot think that either the power to grant a license or the power to revoke it involves the exercise of a judicial function. Both appear to us to he plainly and equally ministerial functions. The secretary, upon certain facts appearing to him, is authorized to issue a license; ujion certain other facts appearing to him, is required to revoke it. This is a common condition of ministerial duty. In such a case, the ministerial officer must exercise his personal intelligence in ascertaining the fact, upon which his authority is founded; but he acts upon his peril of the fact, and can in no sense be said to exercise a judicial function. If the use of personal judgment in such cases should be held to be judicial, the distinction between ministerial and judicial functions would be very much removed.
The secretary of state is a ministerial officer, authorized by law to perform different duties, upon different contingencies. If he make mistakes of facts in the performance of his functions, his action may be void or voidable only, in different circumstances. But he cannot judicially determine the facts on which he acts or refuses to act. This can only be done by the courts, whose duty it is, in proper cases, to review his action and determine the facts and his official duty upon them.
IY. It is contended, not that the statute of the state prescribing the condition upon which license shall be granted, is a violation of the federal constitution, but that it has been so adjudged by the supreme court of the United States; and that thereupon and thereby the statute has ceased to have any force.
For the purpose, as Waite, C. J., remarks (20 Wall., 459), *189of putting foreign insurance companies licensed to do business in this state, upon an equal footing with its own companies, sec. 22 of ch. 56 of 1870 requires foreign companies, before license, to file an agreement in the secretary’s office, not to remove causes against them from the state to the federal courts.
In Morse v. Ins. Co., 30 Wis., 496, the insurance company liad, in violation of its agreement, petitioned the state court to remove the cause from the state to the federal court, under the act of congress. This court held the agreement to be a valid relinquishment of the right of such removal, obligatory upon the insurance company, and gave judgment against it. The judgment of this court was taken by writ of error to the supreme court of the United States; and that court, in Ins. Co. v. Morse, 20 Wall., 445, reversed the judgment of this court, upon the ground that such an agreement did not deprive the insurance company of the right of removal to the federal court, under the constitution and laws of the United States.
The question was certainly not free from difficulty; and while we think, with all due deference, that the weight of authority and sound principle sustain the views of this coxirt, it is our duty and pleasure to submit to the decision of the federal court, on a point unquestionably within its final jurisdiction.
Under that decision, it follows that the jurisdiction of the state court in that case was ousted, upon the presentation of the petition to remove the cause to the federal court, and that all subsequent proceedings in the state courts were coram non judice. Gordon v. Longest, 16 Pet., 97; Kanouse v. Martin, 15 How., 198; Ins. Co. v. Dunn, 19 Wall., 214.
The sole question, therefore, before the federal court, upon the writ of error in Ins. Co. v. Morse, was, whether the right of the insurance company to remove the cause to the federal court remained, notwithstanding the agreement. Upon that point only is the judgment in that case conclusive on this *190court; upon that point only is the opinion of that court authoritative with this.
“ This court, and other courts organized under the common law, has never held itself bound by any part of an opinion, in any case, which was not needful to the ascertainment of the right or title in question between the parties. In Cohens v. The State of Virginia, 6 Wheat., 399, this court was much pressed with some portion of its opinion in the case of Marbury v. Madison, and Mr. Chief Justice Mabshall said: ‘It is a maxim not to be disregarded, that general expressions in every opinion are to be taken in connection with the case in which those expressions are used. If they go beyond the case, they may be respected, but ought not to control the judgment in a subsequent suit, when the very point is presented. The reason of this maxim is obvious. The question actually before the court is investigated with care, and considered in its full extent; other principles which may serve to illustrate it are considered in their relation to the ease decided, but their possible bearing on all other cases is seldom completely investigated.’ The cases of Ex parte Christy, 3 How., 292, and Jenness et al. v. Peck, 7 id., 612, are an illustration of the rule that any opinion given here or elsewhere cannot be relied on as a binding authority, unless the case called for its expression. Its weight of reason must depend on what it contains.” Carroll v. Carroll, 16 How., 275. The rule is elementary, but we choose to give it in the words of the court to whose opinion we consider it presently applicable.
Ins. Co. v. Morse was decided by a divided court. The opinion of the majority, delivered by Mr. Justice HuNt, applies to the agreement of the insurance company not to remove the cause to a federal court, the general and familiar rule, that parties cannot by contract oust the ordinary courts of their jurisdiction; citing to that effect several cases, English and American; and quoting the rule from Story’s Eq., § 670, in these words: “And where the stipulation, though *191not against the policy of the law, yet is an effort to divest the ordinary jurisdiction of the common tribunals of justice, sueb as an agreement, in case of any disputes, to refer the same to arbitrators, courts of equity will not, any more than courts of law, interfere to enforce that agreement, but they will leave the parties to their own good pleasure in regard to such agreements. The regular administration of justice might be greatly impeded or interfered with by such stipulations, if they were specifically enforced.”
Having held the rule to be otherwise applicable to the agreement of the insurance company, the opinion proceeds to inquire, whether the agreement gains validity from the statute of the state requiring it; and bolds that it does not, because the right of removal is given by the constitution and laws of the United States. And therefore the majority of that court reversed the judgment of 'this court, on the ground that the petition to remove the cause to the federal court bad ousted the jurisdiction of the state court.
So far the opinion deals with the question involved in the case. Having so held, the opinion bad exhausted the question before the court; bad exhausted its appellate jurisdiction to this court; bad exhausted its concern with the statute of the state. In its own view of the question before it, the only concern of that court with the statute of the state was, whether it could operate to take the agreement out of the general rule held to be applicable to it. The agreement was directly before the court; the statute at best was only before the court collaterally. And we may be pardoned for suggesting that, the validity of the statute not being directly involved in the decision, the declaration that it is unconstitutional overlooked the universal rule of all American courts, sanctioned by that court (Cooper v. Telfair, 4 Dallas, 14; Parsons v. Bedford, 3 Pet., 433; United States v. Coombs, 12 id., 72), that courts will avoid an interpretation or application of a statute rendering it unconstitutional; and will bold one so only in plain and per*192emptory oases. And witb tbe domestic policy of tbe statute, with tbe right of tbe state to refuse license to insurance companies refusing to make tbe agreement, that court bad no concern.
“This court bas no authority to revise the act of [Wisconsin] upon any grounds of justice, policy, or consistency to its own constitution. These are concluded by the decision of the public authorities of the state. The only inquiry for this court is, Does the act violate the constitution of the United States, or the treaties and laws made under it?” Carpenter v. Pennsylvania, 17 How., 456.
The statute of the state does not assume to prohibit insurance companies taking license under it, from removing actions on its policies from state to federal courts. It only provides that no insurance company shall be licensed under it, which shall not file an agreement not to remove them. So that the question in Insurance Co. v. Morse was not whether the statute was in violation of the right of removal, but whether the voluntary agreement of the insurance company was obligatory upon it. The only question upon the statute before the court was, whether it could operate to give validity to the agreement, held to be otherwise invalid. And it is sufficiently plain that the validity of the agreement, and the validity of the statute requiring the agreement, are entirely distinct questions. The invalidity of the agreement bas been determined by the court of last resort on the subject; but the statute remains. And we take it that no provision in the constitution, laws or treaties of the United States, is violated by a statute of the state prohibiting the license of the state to foreign corporations to do business within it, upon any condition whatever. The right of the state to refuse such license is absolute; and being absolute, it may be exercised at absolute discretion, not to be questioned or abridged, anywhere, under any pretense. It was within the appellate jurisdiction of the federal court to refuse effect to the agreement as ousting *193the jurisdiction of the federal courts; but it is not within its jurisdiction to hold foreign insurance companies entitled to license without the agreement. It can hold an insurance company not bound by the agreement when made, as repugnant to the constitution and laws of the United States; but it cannot excuse the agreement as a condition precedent to license under the state statute. So far the statute stands outside of its appellate jurisdiction to this court, raising a pure question of state policy and economy, in a matter within the absolute pleasure of the state. Conceding the invalidity of the agreement, the statute still prohibits license, within the mere discretion of the state, without the agreement, and the statutory license cannot issue without it. In authorizing voluntary licenses, with absolute right to annex any condition to them, the state may exact agreements morally although not legally binding on the licensees. It may be presumed there is some sense of decency even among corporations. It may be presumed that not every insurance company will voluntarily make such an agreement, as a condition of a voluntary and advantageous license, and then deliberately violate it, even with the sanction of the supreme court of the United States. In any view, such a violation is a scandalous breach of good faith, indicating a disposition to bad faith in all the dealings of the company. And, though the agreement be not obligatory in law, yet has the state a right to trust to it, as obligatory in conscience, and to refuse licenses to all insurance companies refusing to execute it. In that view of it, the federal court has no appellate jurisdiction to this court over the statute, and the declaration that it is unconstitutional was brutum ftolmen. To that extent at least, the state retains power over foreign corporations seeking to do business within it. The statute is indeed inoperative to give validity to the agreement, ousting the jurisdiction of the federal courts. So the supreme court of the United States has decided. But it is operative to prescribe the conditions on which the state, in the exercise of its sovereign au*194thority, sees fit to license foreign corporations within it. That is for this court, not that, to - determine. No foreign insurance company need come here under the agreement; coming, every foreign insurance company violating the agreement is guilty of a moral fraud upon the state. And, in upholding the statute to this extent, against the extrajudicial dictu/m of the supreme court of the United States, we may quote in our own behalf the language of one of the great chief justices of that court: “ A sanction is claimed to a breach of trust, and a violation of moral principle. In such a case, the mind submits reluctantly to the rule of law, and laboriously searches for something which shall reconcile that rule with what would seem to be the dictate of abstract justice.” Hannay v. Eve, 3 Cranch, 242.
The provision in sec. 22 of ch. 56 of 1870, requiring the agreement as a condition of license, was alone before the court in Insurance Co. v. Morse. And so far we have considered it by itself. But this wilt is applied for, not under that section, but under ch. 64 of 1872. And the two statutes taken together put the whole subject in a view which was not before .the court in that case, and could not properly be in any case of its appellate jurisdiction to a state court. The former-statute requires the agreement; the latter statute provides for the revocation of any license issued, upon violation of the agreement. And, the agreement being invalid to oust the jurisdiction of the federal courts, the two provisions together are equivalent to one requiring the revocation of a license issued to a foreign insurance company upon its application to remove an action on its policy from a state to a federal court.
The statute extended to these foreign insurance companies the privilege of doing business in this state on equal footing with domestic companies. Experience showed their power to harass the citizens of the state doing business with them, by removing actions on their policies from courts of the vicinage *195to distant and expensive tribunals. Hence tbe provisions of both statutes. And, conceding to the fullest extent the right of removal of actions commenced, ~we can see no pretense for questioning the power of the state, in the exercise of its absolute discretion on the subject, to revoke the license of a company exercising the rig'lit. The state has power to make its voluntary license subject to forbearance of a right, and revocable upon its exercise. The right may survive the license, but the license cannot survive its exercise. So grants are sometimes made upon condition to forbear a right. It was for the authorities of the state alone to judge that the exercise of the right is an abuse of the privilege of the license. With that question federal courts have no concern. They can hold, as they have, that the right exists in pending actions, but they have no jurisdiction over the question whether foreign corporations, exercising the right, shall be permitted by the state to do business within it. That is matter of state policy, state law, state jurisdiction.
The distinction between the validity of the agreement, and the validity of the statute, is readily illustrated. It is quite clear that the secretary of state takes no authority, under the statute, to license a foreign insurance company not executing the agreement. That is a condition precedent to his authority. This court would assuredly refuse to compel him to act in disregard of the statute which confers his authority. And we take it that the supreme court of the United States would hardly claim appellate jurisdiction to review our decision, or to compel a state officer to act officially for the state, in disregard of the letter of his authority, on the ground that the agreement, when executed, is inoperative to oust the jurisdiction of the federal court.
We have hitherto considered the agreement in the light in which it is held by the opinion in Ins. Co. v. Morse. But, with great deference, we are unable to consider the construction of the agreement there expressed to be correct, even with*196in. the views of the court itself. It is beld to be repugnant to the constitution and laws of the United States. But an agreement not to remove a cause from a state to a federal court, tbougb it will not be enforced as obligatory against removal, does not appear to be in itself repugnant to any law. The party may keep it in good faitb, without offense against the law. Courts will not indeed enforce it; but, in the language of Judge Stobt, leave the parties to their own good pleasure in regard to it. Had the insurance company, in that case, complied witb the agreement and not removed the cause, it would bave been guilty of no violation of the constitution or laws of the United States. In the view taken of it by the supreme court, it is ineffectual but not illegal. We bave seen no case bolding sucb an agreement illegal, tbougb it bas been sometimes called nugatory. In the leading case of Kill v. Hollister, 1 Wilson, 129, it was beld that an agreement to arbitrate did not bar the action, because there bad been no submission under it; the court intimating that a submission under it would bave been a bar. And it bas been beld that, tbougb sucb an agreement will not defeat an action brought under it, yet an action will lie on it for breach of it. Livingston v. Ralli, 5 Ellis & Bl., 132. See also Nutz v. Ins. Co., 6 Gray, 174; Hobbs v. Ins. Co., 56 Me., 417.
It appears to us to be very plain that the statute of 1870 is a valid enactment; that its validity was not involved in the decision of Ins. Co. v. Morse; that its validity, as a limitation upon the issue of licenses under state authority, was not within the appellate jurisdiction of the court; and that the declaration in the opinion that it is repugnant to the constitution and laws of the United States and therefore void, is but an improvident and erroneous expression of the learned judge who delivered the opinion. Witb all due deference, we may be permitted to say of it what Lord MaNSeield said of a dictum of Chief Justice Holt: “That is an obiter saying only; and not a resolution or determination of the court, or a direct *197solemn opinion of tbe great judge from whom it dropped.” Saunderson v. Rowles, 4 Burr., 2064.
The opinion proceeds to discuss the relations of foreign corporations to the state, in a scope wholly foreign to the judgment in the case, and in a tone inconsistent with decided cases in that court; and therefore, so far, of no authority there or here. It is sufficient for this case that that great tribunal has frequently and uniformly held that the corporations of one state have no right to migrate to another, there to exercise their franchises, except upon the assent of such other state; and that such assent may be granted upon such terms and conditions as the state granting it may think proper to impose. Ins. Co. v. French, 18 How., 404; Paul v. Virginia, 8 Wall., 168; Ducat v. Chicago, 18 id., 410; Ins. Co. v. Massachusetts, id., 566; Osborn v. Mobile, 16 id., 479.
Paul v. Virginia was the case of an insurance company of New York, doing business in Virginia, under a statute of the latter state prohibiting foreign insurance companies from doing business there without license to be granted upon conditions precedent. It was decided as late as 1868. And the court uses this language:
“ The corporation, being the mere creation of local law, can have no legal existence beyond the limits of the sovereignty where created. As said by this court in Bank of Augusta v. Earle, ‘It must dwell in the place of its creation, and cannot migrate to another sovereignty.’ The recognition of its existence evon by other states, and the enforcement of its contracts made therein, depend purely upon the comity of those states — a comity which is never extended where the existence of the corporation or the exercise of its powers are prejudicial to their interests or repugnant to their policy. Having no absolute right of recognition in other states, but depending for such recognition and the enforcement of its contracts upon their assent, it follows, as a matter of course, that such assent may be granted upon such terms and conditions as those states *198may think proper to impose. They may exclude the foreign corporation entirely; they may restrict its business to particular localities; or they may exact such security for the performance of its contracts with their citizens as in their judgment will best promote the public interest. The whole matter rests iu their discretion.” And this doctrine is expressly affirmed in Ducat v. Chicago, a like case in 1810.
The doctrine is so sound in itself, and so many of the decisions of that court on other subjects would be disturbed or subverted by a departure from it, that we feel safe in holding it to be the settled law of the federal supreme court, notwithstanding intimations to the contrary in the opinion in Ins. Co. v. Morse; another reason for regarding these as not sufficiently considered, as is apt to be the case with all obiter dicta.
V. But if we should be mistaken in all this, if the provision of the statute of 1810 requiring the agreement, be unconstitutional, there is another view of the case in our judgment conclusive of it.
Morse v. Ins. Co. was decided in 1874, and reported in 1875. The legislature of the state has since been in session. And there is no doubt that their attention was called to the decision. Tet, though they have since enacted at least one statute, ch. 300 of 1876, amending the general insurance laws, they have not repealed or modified the provision requiring the agreement. This is a strong confirmation of our view, derived from the statute itself and its history, that the legislature would not have adopted or retained the statute authorizing licenses to foreign insurance companies, without the provision for the agreement. It is not an independent juovision, to fall by itself. The other provisions of the statute in regard to license cannot be executed independently of it. It was evidently designed as a compensation for the provisions authorizing licenses, an inducement to them. And it is the settled doctrine of this court that, if it be unconstitutional, the whole statute authorizing licenses to foreign insurance companies is *199tuiconstitutional. Slauson v. Racine, 13 Wis., 398; Lynch v. The “Economy” 27 id., 69; State v. Dousman, 28 id., 541.
In that view of tbe statute, no license to foreign insurance companies would be authorized by law; the secretary of state would have acted without color of authority in issuing the license in question; the license would give no color of right to the insurance company to do business within the- state; and it would be our undoubted duty to compel the secretary to undo an official act, done without authority, an infringement upon the prerogatives of the state, and a usurpation of the sovereign authority.
YI. The return pleads in bar of the peremptory writ, an injunction of the circuit court of the United States for the western district of Wisconsin, issued upon a bill filed in that court by the insurance company against the secretary of state, restraining that officer from revoking the license of the state to the insurance company. And the brief of the attorney general takes the position, that the federal court had jurisdiction of the bill, and that jurisdiction of the subject matter having first attached in that court, the jurisdiction of that court is exclusive of the jurisdiction of this.
Upon the application to us for the alternative writ, the learned counsel for the relator made a statement, repeated on both arguments without contradiction, which has left a very painful impression on our minds. He stated that as early as July, 1875, the petition for the alternative writ was filed, and the writ issued, and we think served, in one of the circuit, courts of this state; and that, upon the suggestion of the attorney general in September, that the petition should, for convenience, be withdrawn Horn that court and immediately filed in this, the relator’s counsel assented, withdrew the petition from the circuit court, and sent it to the attorney general to be at once filed in this court according to’ the suggestion; that the relator’s counsel understood it to be so filed *200here, and the alternative writ issued; that it was not so filed; •but that in the meantime the proceeding was taken and tlie injunction issued in the federal court, of which the relator’s -counsel had no notice. It does not appear by the record of the proceeding annexed to the return, that the secretary of state or the attorney general appeared in the federal court or made any objection to the injunction. Indeed, the record implies that there was no such appearance or objection. As the facts, except perhaps the last, do not appear of record, we are without power to act upon them; but, if they are correctly stated, the present objection to our jurisdiction to issue the writ, appears to us to come with an ill grace from the chief law officer of the state. For it would be a grave encroachment upon the sovereign authority of the state, if state officers could so transfer judicial control over their official action for the state, and the prerogative jurisdiction of this court, to an inferior federal court. But it is quite certain that the federal court has not jurisdiction to bind the state, or to foreclose the authority of the state courts, on behalf of the state, over its own officers, in their duty to it, under its own laws.
As originally adopted, the federal constitution extended the judicial power of the United States to controversies “between a state and citizens of another state,” vesting in the supreme court of the United States original jurisdiction in all cases “in which a state shall be a party.” This grant of original jurisdiction, in such cases, to that great court, appears to have been considered exclusive. Federalist No. 80; Story’s Const., § 1682; 1 Kent, 298; Georgia v. Brailsford, 2 Dallas, 415; Cohens v. Virginia, 6 Wheat., 264.
The jurisdiction was probably intended to apply only to cases in which a state should be plaintiff. But it was held to embrace all controversies between states, whether plaintiffs or defendants, and citizens of other states, so far reducing a sovereign state to the condition of a private corporation. Chisholm v. Georgia, 2 Dallas, 419. This was probably a *201surprise, certainly an offense, to most — if not all — of the states. Says Chancellor KeNt:
“ The jndicial power, as it originally stood, extended to suits prosecuted against one of the United States by citizens of another state, or by citizens or subjects of any foreign state; but the states were not willing to submit to be arraigned as defendants before the federal courts at the instance of private persons, be the cause of action what it might. The decision of the supreme court of the United States in the case of Chisholm v. The State of Georgia, decided in 1793, in which it was adjudged that a state was suable by citizens of another state, gave much dissatisfaction, and the legislature of Georgia carried their opposition to open defiance of the judicial authority. The inexpediency of the power appeared so great, that congress, in 1794, proposed to the states an amendment to that part of the constitution, and it was subsequently amended in this particular, under the provision in the fifth article.” 1 Kent, 296.
The amendment is in these words: “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.”
The manifest object of the amendment was to preclude the federal courts from jurisdiction over a state, in any case, at the suit of private parties. And by all rules of construction, the prohibition should apply to all cases in which the interest of a state is so concerned that it ought otherwise to be a party. But the intent and letter of the amendment have been greatly narrowed by the effect given to it by the decisions of the snpreme court of the United States.
The constitution designed that court to be, as it is, a great national tribunal; a court of last resort on all questions of national character; and a court of dignity and authority unequaled by any tribunal known in modern history, not, *202perhaps, excepting the imperial chamber at Wetzlar, to which it has been compared. Federalist No. 80; Story’s Const., § 1679; 1 Kent, 296. And yet, that august tribunal has no general jurisdiction, but is essentially a court of defined and limited jurisdiction, original and appellate. We speak with profound deference to that court, in saying that it should be matter of surprise to no jurist, to no student of history, that so august a tribunal, so constituted and limited, should have from the beginning proved impatient of the limited scoj>e of its own authority, and that of the inferior federal courts on which its own jurisdiction chiefly rests; gradually and sometimes almost insensibly extending it, and signally illustrating the maxim, ampliare jv/risdietionem. Its views of federal jurisdiction have always been aggressive. • It has but illustrated a general human tendency, a common phase of judicial history, in gradually enlarging the letter of its jurisdiction by construction, until its jurisdiction by implication appears to exceed its jurisdiction by express grant; until it appears to be loaded down and impeded, we might almost say overwhelmed, by excess of jurisdiction, presumably never contemplated by the framers of the constitution.
And it was, perhaps, hardly to be expected that an amendment to the constitution, abolishing a jurisdiction originally granted by that instrument to federal courts, would be kindly regarded by so great a court so constituted, or favorably construed for the prohibition and against the jurisdiction. So it has surely proved.
The amendment appears to have been first before the court in Hollingsworth v. Virginia, 3 Dall., 378. The question was, the effect of the amendment upon pending suits. And the court “ delivered an unanimous opinion, that, the amendment being constitionally adopted, there could not bo exercised 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.” But a few years later, in a cause *203in which a state claimed an interest but was not a party, the court used this language:
“ The right of a state to assert, as plaintiff, any interest it may have in a subject which forms the matter of controversy between individuals in one of the courts of the United States, is not affected by this amendment; nor can it be so construed as to oust the court of its jurisdiction, should such claim be suggested. The amendment simply provides, that no suit shall be commenced or prosecuted against a state. The state cannot be made a defendant in a suit brought by an individual; but it remains the duty of the courts of the United States to decide all cases brought before them by citizens of one state against citizens of a different state, where a state is not necessarily a defendant. In this case, the suit was not instituted against the state or its treasurer, but against the execu-trixes of David Eittenhouse, for the proceeds of a vessel condemned in the court of admiralty, which were admitted to be in their possession. If the proceeds had been the actual property of Pennsylvania, however wrongfully acquired, the disclosure of that fact would have presented a ease on which it was unnecessary to give an opinion; but it certainly can never be alleged, that a mere suggestion of title in a state to property, in possession of an individual, must arrest the proceedings of the court, and prevent their looking into the suggestion, and examining the validity of the title.” United States v. Peters, 5 Cranch, 115. It will be presently seen that the suggestion here thrown out is the seed of great growth of jurisdiction, inconsistent with the spirit of the amendment, if not with its letter.
The amendment appears to have next come before the court in Cohens v. Virginia, 6 Wheat., 264. The state had prosecuted the plaintiffs in error criminally in one of her courts, and there was judgment of conviction against them. They sued out a writ of error from the federal supreme court to the state court, against the state; the state being defendant in *204error in that court. Notwithstanding the amendment, the court claimed jurisdiction of the cause, upon the ground that such a proceeding was not a suit within the meaning of the amendment, though it subjected the state to a judgment in that court, at the suit of a private party. And the court has hitherto adhered to that rule in numerous cases.
In Osborn v. U. S. Bank, 9 Wheat., 738, the court thus states the question: “ The direct interest of the state in the suit, as brought, is admitted; and, had it been in the power of the bank to make it a party, perhaps no decree ought to have been pronounced in the cause, until the state was before the court. But this was not in the power of the bank. The eleventh amendment of the constitution has exempted a state fz’om the suit of citizens of other states or aliens; and the very difficult question is to be decided, whether, in such a case, the court may act upon the agents employed by the state, and on the property in their hands.” And the court thus states its conclusion: “It may, we think, be laid down as a -rule which admits of no exception, that in all cases where jurisdiction depends on the party, it is the party named in the record. Consequently, the eleventh amendment, which restrains the jurisdiction granted by the constitution over suits against states, is, of necessity, limited to those suits in which a state is a party on the record. The amendment has its full effect, if the constitution be construed as it would have been construed had the jurisdiction of the court never been extended to suits brought against a state by the citizens of another state, or by aliens. The state not being a party on the record, and the court having jurisdiction over those who are parties on the record, the true question is, not one of jurisdiction, but whether, in the exercise of its jurisdiction, the court ought to make a decree against the defendants; whether they are to be considered as having a real interest, or as being only nominal parties.” The court then proceeds to show that the officers of the state, who were the parties to the record, were personally *205liable to tbe bank, and therefore bad a real, personal interest, under tbe state indeed, but distinct from tbe interest of tbe state; and upon that ground upheld tbe decree against them.
This is tbe leading case upon tbe subject. And it is very distinguishable from tbe case before us, in which the secretary of state has no interest whatever; is a mere nominal party, tbe state alone having tbe whole interest in tbe subject; a mere shadow of tbe state, set up for jurisdiction against tbe body, over which jurisdiction is prohibited by tbe constitution.
Tbe next case which we find is Governor of Georgia v. Madrazo, 1 Pet., 110. That was a case in admiralty, in which the governor of the state intervened in behalf of the state. And the court uses this language:
“ Previous to the adoption of the 11th amendment to the constitution, it was determined that the judicial power of the United States extended to a case in which a state was a party defendant. This principle was settled in the case of Chisholm v. Georgia, 2 Dal., 419. In that case, the state appears to have been nominally a party on the record. In the case of Hollingsworth v. Virginia, also, in 3 Dal., 378, the state was nominally a party on the record. In the case of Georgia v. Brailsford, 2 Dal., 402, the bill was filed by his excellency Edward Telfair, Esq., governor and commander-in-chief in and over the state of Georgia, in behalf of the said state. No objection was made to the jurisdiction of the court, and the case was considered as one in which the supreme court had original jurisdiction, because a state was a party. In the case of New York v. Connecticut, 4 Dal., 3, both states were nominally parties on the record. No question was raised in any of the cases respecting the style in which a state should sue or be sued; and the presumption is that the actions were admitted to be properly brought. In the case of Georgia v. Brailsford, the action is not in the name of the state, but it is brought by its chief magistrate in behalf of the state. The bill itself avows that the state is the actor, by its governor.
*206“ There is, however, no case in which a state has been sued without making it nominally a defendant.
“ Fowler et al. v. Lindsey et al., 3 Dal., 411, was a case in which an attempt was made to restrain proceedings in a cause depending in a circuit court; on the allegation that a controversy respecting soil and jurisdiction of two states had occurred in it.
“ The court determined that, a state not being a party on the record, nor directly interested, the circuit court ought to proceed in it. In the United States v. Peters, the court laid down the principle, that although the claims of a state may be ultimately affected by the decision of a cause, yet if the state be not necessarily a defendant, the courts of the United States are bound to exercise jurisdiction.
“ In the case of Osborn v. The Bank of the United States, 9 Wheat., 738, this question was brought more directly before the court. It was argued with equal zeal and talent, and decided on great deliberation. In that case, the auditor and treasurer of the state were defendants, and the title of the state itself to the subject in contest was Asserted. In that case, the court said: 'It may, we think, be laid down as a rule which admits of no exception, that in all cases where jurisdiction depends on the party, it is the party named in the record.’ The court added: ‘The state not being a party on the record, and the court having jurisdiction over those who are parties on the record, the true question is not one of jurisdiction, but whether, in the exercise of its jurisdiction, the court ought to make a decree against the defendants; whether they are to be considered as having a real interest, or as being only nominal parties.’
“ The information of the governor of Georgia professes to be filed on behalf of the state, and is in the language of the bill filed by the governor of Georgia on behalf of the state against Brailsford.
*207“ If, therefore, the state was properly considered as a party in that case, it may be considered as a party in this.
“The bill of Madrazo alleges that the slaves which be claims, ‘ were delivered over to the government of the state of Georgia, pursuant to an act of the general assembly of the said state, carrying into effect an act of congress of the United States, in that case made and provided; a part of the said slaves sold, as permitted by said act of congress, and as directed by an act of the general assembly of the said state; and the proceeds paid into the treasury of the said state, amounting to tbirty-eigbt thousand dollars or more.’
“ The governor appears, and files a claim on behalf of the state, to the slaves remaining unsold, and to the proceeds of those which are sold. He states the slaves to be in possession of the executive, under the act of the legislature of Georgia, made to give effect to the act of congress on the subject of ne-groes, mulattoes or people of color, brought illegally into the United States; and the proceeds of those sold to have been paid in the treasury, and to be no longer under bis control.
“ Tbe case made, in both tbe libel and claim, exhibits a demand for money actually in tbe treasury of the- state, mixed up with its general funds, and for slaves in possession of the government. It is not alleged, nor is it tbe fact, tbat this money has been brought into tbe treasury, or these Africans into tbe possession of tbe executive, by any violation of an act of congress. Tbe possession has been acquired by means wbicb it was lawful to employ.
“Tbe claim upon tbe governor is as a governor; be is sued not by bis name, but by bis title. Tbe demand made upon him, is not made personally, but officially. Tbe decree is pronounced not against the person, but the officer, and appeared to have been pronounced against tbe successor of tbe original defendant; as the appeal bond was executed by a different governor from him who filed tbe information. In such a case, *208where the chief magistrate of a state is sued, not by his name, but by his style of office, and the claim made upon him is entirely in his official character, we think the state itself may be considered as a party on the record. If the state is not a party, there is no party against whom a decree can be made. No person in his natural capacity is brought before the court as defendant. This not being a proceeding against the thing, but against the person, a person capable of appearing as defendant, against whom a decree can be pronounced, must be a party to the cause before a .decree can be regularly pronounced.
“ Rut were it to be admitted that the governor could be considered as a defendant in his personal character, no case is made which justifies a decree against him personally. He has acted in obedience to a law of the state, made for the purpose of giving effect to an act of congress; and has done nothing in violation of any law of the United States.
“ The decree is not to be considered as made in a ease in which the governor was a defendant in his personal character; nor could a decree against him in that character be supported.
“ This decree cannot be sustained as against the state, because, if the 11th amendment to the constitution does not extend to proceedings in admiralty, it was a case for the original jui’isdiction of the supreme court. It cannot be sustained as a suit prosecuted not against the state, but against the thing; because the thing was not in possession of the district court.
“We are therefore of opinion that there is error in so much of the decree of the circuit court as directs that the said slaves libelled by Juan Madrazo, and the issue of the females now in the custody of the government of the state of Georgia, or the agent or agents of the said state, be restored to the said Madrazo, as the legal proprietor thereof, and that the proceeds of those slaves who were sold by order of the governor or the said state, be paid to the.said Juan Madrazo; and that the same ought to be reversed; but that there is no error in so *209much of the decree as dismisses the information of the governor of Georgia, and the claim of "William Bowen.”
Governor of Georgia v. Madrazo was followed and affirmed in Kentucky v. Dennison, Governor, 24 How., 66. This was an application for mandamus, by the governor of Kentucky, against the governor of Ohio, within the original jurisdiction of the supreme court, to enforce the performance of an executive duty by the defendant governor. Of course, the mandamus could not go to the state, but to its officers only. And the objection was taken that it was not a case between two states, to give jurisdiction to the court under the constitution. But the court holds:
“ So, also, as to the process in the name of the governor, in his official capacity, in behalf of the state.
“ In the case of Madrazo v. The Governor of Georgia, 1 Pet., 110, it was decided, that in a case where the chief magistrate of a state is sued, not by his name as an individual, but by his style of office, and the claim made upon him is entirely in his official character, the state itself may be considered a party on the record. This was a case where the state was the defendant; the practice, where it is plaintiff, has been frequently adopted, of suing in the name of the governor in behalf of the state, and was indeed the form originally used, and always recognized as the suit of the state.
Thus, in the first case to be found in our reports, in which a suit was brought by a state, it was entitled, and set forth "in the bill, as the suit of The state of Georgia, by Edward Tel-fair, Governor of the said state, complainant, against Samuel Brailsford and others; ’ and the second case, which was as early as 1793, was entitled and set forth in the pleadings as the suit of His Excellency Edward Telfair, Esquire, Governor and Commander-in-Chief, in and over the state of Georgia, in behalf of the said state, complainant, against Samuel Brailsford and others, defendants.'
*210“ The cases referred to leave no question open to controversy as to the jurisdiction of tbe court. They show that .it has also been settled, that where the state is a party, plaintiff or defendant, the governor represents the state, and the suit may be, in form, a suit by him as governor in behalf of the state, where the state is plaintiff, and he must be summoned or notified as the officer representing the state, where the state is defendant.
“ We may therefore dismiss the question of jurisdiction without further comment; and it is very clear, that if the right claimed by Kentucky can be enforced by judicial process, the proceeding by mandamus is the only mode in which the object can be accomplished.”
What is said in Governor of Georgia v. Madrazo, and in Kentucky v. Dennison, of the governor of a state, applies equally to any other state officer, acting for the state, virtute officii. The question is not one of the dignity of the office, but of the representation of the state jpro hac vice. “ In the application of this principle, there is no difference between the governor of a state and officers of a state of lower grades. In this respect they are upon a footing of equality.” Davis v. Gray, 16 Wall., 203.
The opinions of the court in Osborn v. The Bank, and Governor of Georgia v. Madrazo, were both delivered by 1VT a~r.su aT.T., O. J. ; and the opinion in Kentucky v. Dennison, by Taney, C. J.; two of the most illustrious jurists known in the history of jurisprudence among the great English speaking, common law peoples. Their doctrines were surely well and wisely considered, are entitled to the most profound deference, and not lightly to be overruled. And these cases •are in entire accord upon two propositions, both conclusive of •the question before us:
1. That where a suit is prosecuted in a federal court, by a private party, against a state officer, in which the state has a direct interest but cannot be made a party, the officer himself *211must have an interest or liability in the subject matter, upon which the jurisdiction of the court can attach; and,
2. That where such a suit is prosecuted against a state officer having no such interest or liability, in his official capacity only, to affect a right of the state, the state is the real defendant, within the prohibition of the amendment of the constitution.
These rules are vital. Where there is such an interest or liability of the officer personally, the jurisdiction of a federal court might be held to attach against him personally, upon such interest or liability, without direct violation of the constitutional amendment prohibiting jurisdiction against the state. But where there is no such personal interest or liability of the officer, and the suit is against him in his official capacity only, for the purpose of reaching an interest or liability of the state, then jurisdiction attaches on the interest or liability of the state, not of the officer; the state is the real defendant, and the officer only a nominal defendant; and jurisdiction is as much prohibited as if the state itself were defendant. To hold that jurisdiction could, in such a case, be exercised against the state, in the person of its officer, would be a direct and mere evasion of the constitutional prohibition, which the judges of all courts, federal and state, are sworn to support; which no judicial construction of any court can erase from the paramount law of the land.
The subject matter of Governor of Georgia v. Madrazo came again before the court, ex parte Juan Madrazo, 7 Pet., 627, upon application to file a libel in admiralty against the state. The application was denied; the chief justice saying of it: “ It is a mere personal suit against a state to recover proceeds in its possession, and in such a case no private person has a right to commence an original suit in this court against a state.”
Osborn v. The Bank, Governor of Georgia v. Madrazo, and Kentucky v. Dennison, are so closely connected in prin*212ciple that we have considered them together, a little out of the order of the latter case. Between Governor of Georgia v. Madrazo and Kentucky v. Dennison, another case came before the court and has its place in the reports, in which the jurisdictional question might have properly arisen. This is Dodge v. Woolsey, 18 How., 331. It was the case of a bill filed in an inferior federal court, by a private party, against a tax collector of the state, to restrain the collection of a state tax. Several questions were raised and passed upon by the court in that case, quite foreign to the question which we are considering. The jurisdictional question before us, arising under the amendment of the constitution, appears not to have been raised at the bar or considered by the court. The jurisdiction of the federal courts over the subject matter in other respects is discussed, but not the jurisdiction over the state officer acting officially, without interest, within the constitutional prohibition. It appears quite obvious that this question was altogether overlooked. Indeed the court says of the case of State Bank v. Knoop, 16 How., 369: “It rules this in every particular, and to the opinion there given we have nothing to add, nor anything to take away.” State Bank v. Knoop did indeed involve the questions passed upon in. Dodge v. Woolsey but it was a writ of error to a state court, and could not possibly involve the jurisdiction of a federal court, in an original suit against a state officer acting officially. The oversight is the more to be regretted, because the assumption of jurisdiction in Dodge v. Woolsey disregards the two conditions before noticed, as solemnly established in Osborn v. The Bank and Governor of Georgia v. Madrazo, subsequently confirmed in Kentucky v. Dennison. But the rule applies to it, that a case which overlooks a point cannot be held to overrule cases expressly deciding the very point. And the positive rules of Osborn v. The Bank, and Governor of Georgia v. Madrazo, must be held to survive the silence of Dodge v. Woolsey. If this were otherwise, the *213negative authority of Dodge v. Woolsey, on the question of jurisdiction, must be taken to be overruled by the positive authority of the later case of Kentucky v. Dennison.
Then comes Davis v. Gray, 16 Wall., 203, where a receiver appointed in a cause pending in an inferior federal court filed his bill in the same court against the governor and another officer of a state, to restrain them in executing the law of the state. The question of jurisdiction was raised and discussed by the court. And Mr. Justice SwayNe, who delivered the opinion, says of the question:
“ A few remarks will be sufficient to dispose of the jurisdictional objections as to the appellants.
“ In Osborn v. The Bank of the United States, three things, among others, were decided:
“ (1) A circuit court of the United States, in a proper case in equity, may enjoin á state officer from executing a state law in conflict with the constitution or a statute of the United States, when such execution will violate the rights of the complainant.
“(2) Where the state is concerned, the state should be made a party, if it could be done. That it cannot be done is a sufficient reason for the omission to do it, and the court may proceed to decree against the officers of the state in all respects as if the state were a party to the record.
“ (3) In deciding who are parties to the suit, the court will not look beyond the record. Making a state officer a party does not make the state a party, although her law may have prompted Ms action, and the state may stand behind him as the real party in interest. A state can be made a party only by shaping a bill expressly with that view, as where individuals or corporations are intended to be put in that relation to the case.
“ Dodge v. Woolsey, The State Bank of Ohio v. Knoop, The Jefferson Branch Bank v. Skelly, Ohio Life and Trust Company v. Debolt and The Mechanics’ and Traders’ Bank *214v. Debolt proceeded upon tbe same principles, and were controlled by that authority, with respect to the jurisdictional question arising in each of those cases as to the defendant.”
And again, speaking of parties: “We feel no difficulty in disposing of the case as it is presented in the record.”
This case professes to follow Osborn v. The Bank; but it is extraordinary that it takes no notice of the essential rule cited from that case, that defendant state officers, to give jurisdiction, must themselves have an interest or liability in the subject matter. And it is more extraordinary still that, quoting several cases with at best a very remote bearing on the question, the opinion makes no reference to Governor of Georgia v. Madrazo or Kentucky v. Dennison; with both of which the opinion is directly in conflict, as well as with the rule in Osborn v. The Bank. And with all due respect, we think it may be said of Davis v. Gray, that, instead of following the well considered and established rules in Osborn v. The Bank, Governor of Georgia v. Madrazo and Kentucky v. Dennison, it rather follows, presumably by inadvertence, the blind lead of Dodge v. Woolsey, itself an incongruity, sandwiched in the reports between inconsistent decisions.
We cannot think tlxo vital principle established, in Osborn v. The Bank, or the judgments in Governor of Georgia v. Madrazo and Kentucky v. Dennison, overruled by Davis v. Gray. These cases are too solemn and of too high authority to be set aside sub silentio. We cannot but think that they were overlooked; the learned judge who delivered the opinion being misled by the unconsidered and unfortunate departure from those cases of Dodge v. Woolsey.
Woodruff v. Trapnall, 10 How., 190; Curran v. The State of Arkansas, 15 id., 304; State Bank v. Knoop, 16 id., 369; Ohio Life Ins. and Trust Co. v. Debolt, id., 416; The Bank v. Debolt, 18 id., 380, and The Bank v. Skelly, 1 Black, 436, cited-in the opinion to support jurisdiction in Davis v. Gray, were all writs of error to state courts, to be classed with *215Cohens v. Virginia. And tbeir authority for original jurisdiction in an inferior federal court is not perceived. And it may be said, in passing, that the learned judge who delivered the opinion was in error in saying that in Woodruff v. Trapnall a writ of mandamus was issued to the proper representative of the state. The judgment of the supreme court of the state was simply reversed in the usual form. So in Curran v. Arkansas the judgment of the state court was reversed; the federal supreme court simply following the state supreme court in holding that such a suit would lie against the state, by her own law, in her own courts.
When the decisions of a state court vary in interpreting state law, the supreme court of the United States makes its own election which it will follow. Gelpcke v. Dubuque, 1 Wall., 175. We may, with profound respect, presume here upon the like right of choice; and we prefer to hold the rules in Osborn v. The Bank, Governor of Georgia v. Madrazo and Kentucky v. Dennison, as the more authoritative and well considered cases to settle the law of that court, unless expressly overruled. When adjudications so solemn and so well considered are disregarded or forgotten in the court, none of us may presume to say, Indignor; but surely all of us should recall sounder and safer principles established in that great court. Quandoque bonus dormitat Homerus.
And the rules established in Osborn v. The Bank, Governor of Georgia v. Madrazo and Kentucky v. Dennison, exclude jurisdiction of the federal court of the bill and injunction pleaded by the secretary of state in this case.
Our conclusion would not be different, if we were to accept Davis v. Gray as overruling the earlier cases, and establishing a different rule. For that case does no.t go the length — no case which we have been able to find in that court does — of holding that the state would be bound in the exercise of its authority by the proceeding in the federal court against its officer. Conceding the power of the federal court to bind the officer, *216as between him and the plaintiff who sues him, the constitutional amendment absolutely prohibits it from binding the state, as against either the plaintiff or its own officer. In such a case the private party seeking his remedy against the officer, must be content with that, valeat quantum. He can have none against the state, or binding the state, or binding the officer against the state. Against the authority of the state over its own officer, against the officer’s duty to the state,' federal process in such a case can avail nothing. It is more than the case of one not bound by a judgment, because not a party. It is not the case of one without the jurisdiction of the court, but of one above the jurisdiction. It is' the case of a sovereign state, over which the charter creating the federal courts, for grave political reasons, prohibits jurisdiction in such cases; has abrogated the jurisdiction once improvidently granted. It would be a singular perversion of all judicial rule, to hold that the state could no,t be bound as a party, but is bound without being a party. And it would be a simple nullification of the constitutional amendment, to hold the state in any way bound by the judgment of a federal court against its officer, at the suit of a private party. That would he, not judicial construction, not judicial stretch of jurisdiction, but judicial revolution.
And it would involve the singular absurdity, that, while the original constitution, which expressly gave jurisdiction, at the suit of private parties, against a sovereign state, confined such jurisdiction to the supreme court of the United States, a court worthy of such jurisdiction, if any federal court could be, the amendment prohibiting such jurisdiction in any federal court would subject a sovereign state, in the person of its officer, and the administration of the state government, to the process of any petty federal court which congress might see fit to establish, at the suit of any vagabond citizen or corporation of another state doing business in it.
We abide by the letter and spirit of the constitution. Unfor*217tunately many tilings in its administration are tending toward centralization, which, the history and temper of the American people give grave warning might be closely followed by disintegration. The integrity of the union has been tried. The integrity of the states is on trial. Much rests upon the moderation and forbearance of the federal courts; as much perhaps upon the firmness of the state courts, refusing to abdicate state authority, in state matters, to assumption of federal jurisdiction. Ve will faithfully try to do our part. In refusing at the last term to assume a jurisdiction properly belonging to the federal courts, we had occasion to say, and we now repeat: “ It is perhaps unfortunate that the federal constitution left any ground for concurrent jurisdiction of the federal with the state courts. It has led to some mischievous confusion of adjudication, and some vicious usurpation of jurisdiction, by both federal and state courts. In this day, -this is a great and growing evil. And we propose, in this state, for the sake of judicial order, and of the integrity of the federal and state governments, to do what we may towards confining the courts of the state to state jurisdiction, and the courts of the United States to federal jurisdiction.” Bromley v. Goodrich, ante, p. 131.
YII. Had the federal court had jurisdiction of the bill and injunction pleaded by the secretary, to bind the state, it could not avail him in this case. Because the license in force when the bill was filed and the injunction issued, has expired by its own limitation. And it is only to that license that the in-j unction can relate. The injunction is indeed very loose and general; literally broad enough to restrain the secretary from revoking any license to the insurance company, for any cause, for all time. But it must receive a reasonable construction, and be confined to the things and the condition of things existing when issued. When the license existing at the time the bill was filed, expired, the injunction was spent. The secretary might have found ground for refusing a new license, dehors all matters pleaded in the bill; or the legislature might *218have repealed or modified tbe statute authorizing the license. The new license, therefore, created a new relation with the state, though it may have been but the renewal of an old relation which had expired by limitation. And the federal court which issued the injunction could hardly have intended, certainly had, in any view, no authority to bind the defendant for all time, outside of the actual condition of things pleaded in the record, or in new relations between the parties. Even federal jurisdiction, where it attaches, is not so comprehensive or prospective.
YIII. The writ in this case will issue in the right of the state, at any hazard to its officer. We apprehend, however, that there will be none. The state officer is bound to obey the state authority. And if any, one, to be found within the state, should molest any officer of the state for obeying the process of this court, in the administration of the state government, and the fact should be properly brought before us, we think we should be able to afford ample and summary remedy.
We regard this matter as a grave attempt to baffle state authority in the administration of state affairs, in a way to be a temptation for the use of a somewhat unjudicial adjective. And we are thoroughly in earnest, as is our duty under our oaths, to enforce state authority, in state affairs, over state officers, and on foreign corporations who come here, ex gratia of state law, and then set the law at defiance. We mean to suffer no trifling here. The writ must be so framed that the secretary not only shall promptly revoke the existing license, but shall refrain from granting any other license to the insurance company for three succeeding years, and that he certify the revocation to this court within twenty-four hours after service of the writ upon him.
Let the writ issue at once in accordance with this opinion.
The following is the order made in this case, omitting the formal preliminary clause:
*219“ It is ordered and adjudged that the said demurrer he and the same is hereby sustained to the said return; and it is further ordered and adjudged that a peremptory writ of mandamus do forthwith issue out of and under the seal of this court, to be directed to the said respondent commanding him, and in his absence the assistant secretary, of state, forthwith, within twenty-four hours after service of .the writ, to vacate, revoke and recall the authority, license or certificate mentioned in the respondent’s return, and every other existing authority, license or certificate made,' executed or given by the respondent to the Continental Insurance Company of the city of Mew York, to do or transact any business in this state, and absolutely to refrain and abstain, to the full period of three years, from granting, giving or issuing the same or any other authority, license or certificate to the said Continental Insurance Company of the city of Hew York to do or transact any business in this state, and to filé'with the clerk of this court, on the day next succeeding the service of this writ, a certified copy of the record or paper.whereby such authority, license or certificate shall have been and be so vacated, revoked and recalled. Which writ shall be returnable on the 5th day of September next.”
On the 16th of August, 1876, the respondent filed with the clerk of this court a certified copy of an. entry made that day in the Insurance Eecord kept in his office, showing that he had on that day revoked the license of the Continental Insurance Company of the city of Uew York, and had mailed an authenticated copy of the order revoking such license to the secretary of the company, and a similar copy to each of the agents of said company in this state. On the 24th of the same month, the respondent made due return of the peremptory writ, showing his compliance therewith.