all the judges concurring, gave the opinion of the Court:
The first question in natural order is that of jurisdiction. It is, therefore, the first which the Court will consider.
It is understood, as admitted in argument, that if the act intended to be enjoined be not a merely ministerial act, the Court has no jurisdiction to enjoin the officers of the Treasury from performing it.
This doctrine was first promulgated by the Supreme Court of the United States, in Marbury vs. Madison, 1 Cranch, 165, where Marshall, C. J., says : “ If some acts be examinable and others not, there must be some rule of law to guide the Court in the exercise of its jurisdiction;” and in the next page he says : “ Where the heads of departments are the political or confidential agents of the Executive merely to execute the will of the President, or rather to act in cases in which the Executive possesses no constitutional or legal discretion, nothing can be more perfectly clear than that their acts are only politically examinable.” And again, in page 170, lie says: “ The province of the Court is solely to decide on the rights of individuals, not to eriquire how the Executive or executive officers, perform duties in w7hich they have discretion. Questions, in their nature political, or which are, *356by the Constitution and laws, submitted to the Executive, can never be made in this Court.”
The Chief Justice then prooceeds to show that the act required to be done (the delivery of the commission to Mr. Marbury) was purely a ministerial act in respect to which the Executive had no discretion.
In the case of Kendall vs. U. S., 12 Peters, 609, Mr. Justice Thompson in delivering the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States, says:
“Under the first head of inquiry it has been considered by the counsel on the part of the Postmaster General (Mr. Kendall) that this is a proceeding against him to enforce the performance of an oflicial duty, and the proceeding has been treated as an infringment upon the executive Department of the Government, which has led to a very exclusive range of argument upon the independence and duties of that department; but which, according to the view taken by the Court of this case, is entirely misapplied. We do not think that the proceedings in this case interfere, in any respect whatever, with the rights or duties of the Executive, or that it involves any conflict of powers between the executive and judicial department of the Goverment. The mandamus does not seek to direct or control the Postmaster General in the discharge of any official duty partaking, in any respect, of an executive character, but to enforce the performance of a mere ministerial act, which neither he nor the President had any authority to deny or control.”
Again he says: “ The executive power is vested in a President, and as far as his powers are derived from the Constitution he is beyond the reach of any other department, except in the mode prescribed by the Constitution through the impeaching power. But it by no means follows that every officer in every branch of that department is under the exclusive direction of the President. Such a principle, we apprehend, is not, and certainly cannot be claimed by the President.”
“ There are certain political duties imposed upon many *357officers of the executive departnent, the discharge of which is under the direction of the President. But it would be an alarming doctrine that Congress cannot impose upon any executive officer any duty they may think proper which is not repugnant to any rights secured and protected by the Constitution; and in such cases the duty and the responsibility grow out of, and are subject to the control of, the law, and not to the direction of the President. And this is emphatically the case where the duty enjoined is of a mere ministerial character.”
“Let us proceed, then,” he says, “ to an examination of the act required, by the mandamus, to be performed by the Postmaster General; and his obligation to perform, or his right to resist the performance, must depend upon the Act of Congress of the 2d of July, 1836. This is a special act for the relief of the relators Stockton and Stokes, and was passed, as appears on its face, to adjust and settle certain claims which they had for extra service as contractors for carrying the mail. These claims were, of course, upon the United States through the Postmaster General. The real parties to the dispute were therefore the relators and the United States. The United States could not, of course, be sued, or the claims in any way enforced against the United States without their consent, obtained through act of Congress, by which they consented to submit these claims to the solicitor of the Treasury to inquire into the equity of the claims, and to make such allowances therefor as, upon a full examination of all the evidence, should seem right according to the principles of equity; and the act directs the Postmaster General to credit the relators with whatever sum, if any, the solicitor shall decide to be due to them for or on account of any such services or contract.”
Again (p. 611) the Court says: “ Under this law the Postmaster General is vested with no discretion or control over the decisions of the solicitor, nor in any appeal or review of that decision - provided for by the act. The terms of the submission was a matter entirely within the discre*358tion of Congress; and if they thought proper to vest such a power in any one, and especially as the arbritrator was an officer of the Government, it did not rest with the Postmaster General to control Congress or the solicitor in that affair.”
Again (p. 613) the Court says: “ The act required bj? the-law to be done by the Postmaster General is simply to credit the relators with the full amount of the award of the solicitor. This is a precise, definite act, purely ministerial, and about which the Postmaster General had no • discretion whatever. The law, upon its face, shows the existence of accounts between the relators and the Post Office Department. No money was required to be paid, and none could have been drawn out of the Treasury without further legislative provision, if this credit should overbalance the debit standing against the relators. But this was a matter with which the Postmaster General had no concern. He was not called upon to furnish the means of paying such balance,, if any should be found. He was simply required to give the credit. This was not an official act in any other sense than being a transaction in the Department where the bo.oks and accounts were kept; and was an official act in the same sense that an entry in the minutes of a Court pursuant to an order of the Court, is an official act. There is no room -for the exercise of any discretion, official or otherwise ; all that is shut out by the direct and positive command of the law, and the act required to be done is, in any just sense, a mere ministerial act.”
But the case now before this Court is very different from that of Stockton & Stokes. This is an application upon a bill in 'equity filed for an injunction to inhibit the Secretary of the Treasury and the Second Comptroller from paying to Betsey McIntosh the sum of $3,840 less by the sum-which has been paid to the defendant, John H. Eaton, so that including the sum so already paid to him, the one-half of the said certificate in favor of Betsey McIntosh may be held, subject to the final decree of this Court. This application. *359is founded upon the supposition that this Court may, by its final decree, order the Secretary of the Treasury to pay to the complainant MeElrath half of the amount of the said certificate including what has been paid to the defendant, Eaton; for if this Court can not make such a final decree, the injunction, if granted, will be vain and nugatory.
This, then, is the question of jurisdiction, and depends iipon the question whether the payment of this claim by the Secretary of the Treasury is an official executive act or is purely a ministerial act, as in the case of Stockton & Stokes.
The difference between ministerial acts and executive official acts is clearly stated by the Supreme Court in Decatur vs. Paulding, 14 Peters, 514, 515.
Mr. Chief Justice Taney, in delivering the opinion of the Court, said: “ In the case of Kendall vs. United States, 12 Peters, 524, it was decided in this Court that the Circuit Court for Washington County in the District of Columbia has the power to issue a mandamus to an officer of the Federal Government commanding him to do a ministerial act. The first question, therefore, to be considered in this case is, whether the duty imposed upon the Secretary of the Navy, by the resolution in favor of Mrs. Decatur, was a ministerial act.”
“ The duty required by the resolution was to be performed by him as the head of one of the executive departments of the Government in the ordinary discharge of his official duties. In general such duties,-whether imposed by act of Congress or by resolution, are not mere ministerial duties.”
“ The head of an executive department of the Government in the administration of the various- and important concerns of his office, is continually required to exercise judgment and discretion. He must exercise his judgment in expounding the laws and resolutions of Congress under which he is from time to time required to act.”
“ The Court could not entertain an appeal from the decision of one of the Secretaries, nor revise his judgment in any case where the law authorized him to exercise discretion *360or judgment; nor can it by mandamus directly upon the officer guide and control his judgment or discretion in the matters committed to his care in the ordinary discharge of his official duties.”
Again (p. 516) he said: “ The interference of the Courts with the performance of the ordinary duties of the executive departments of the Government would be productive of nothing but mischief, and we are quite satisfied that such a power was never intended to be given to them.”
“ The doctrines which this Court now hold in relation to the executive departments of the Government are the same that was dictinctly announced in the case of Kendall vs. The United States, 12 Pet, 524.”
Again (p. 616), he said : “We have referred to these passages in the opinion of the Court in the case of Kendall vs. The United States, in order to show clearly the distinction between a ministerial act required to be done by the head of an executive department, and a duty imposed upon him in his official character as the head of such department, in which judgment and discretion are to be exercised. There was in that case a difference of opinion in the Court in relation to the power of the Court to issue the mandamus. But there was no difference of opinion respecting the act to be done. The Court was unanimously of opinion that in its character the act was merely ministerial. In the case before us it is clearly otherwise, and the resolution in favor of Mrs. Decatur imposed a duty on the Secretary of the Navy which required the exercise of judgment and discretion ; and in such a case the Circuit Court had no right, by mandamus, to control his judgments and guide him in the exercise of a discretion which the law had confided to him.”
The same doctrines are affirmed by the Supreme Court, in the case of Brashear vs. Mason, 6 How., 100, where Mr. Justice Nelson, in delivering the opinion of the Court, says: ‘We are of the opinion that if the plaintiff has made out a title to his pay as an officer of the U. S. Navy, a mandamus would not lie, in the Court below, to enforce *361the payment. The Constitution provides that no money shall be drawn from the Treasury but in consequence of appropriations made by law.’ ” (Art. 1, sec. 9.)
And it is declared by Act of Congress, May 7th, 1822, 3 Stat. at Large, 689, sec. 3, “ that all moneys appropriated for the use of the War and Navy Departments shall be drawn from the Treasury by warrants of the Secretary of the Treasury, upon requisitions of the Secretaries of these Departments, countersigned by the Second Comptroller.”
And in p. 101, Mr. Justice Nelson says : “In the case of Decatur vs. Paulding, 14 Peters, 497, it was held by this Court that a mandamus would not lie from the Circuit Court of the District of Columbia to the Secretary of the Navy to compel him to pay to the plaintiff a sum of money claimed to be due her as a pension under a resolution of Congress.” “ The Court distinguish the case from Kendall vs. United States, 12 Peters, 524, where there was a mandamus to enforce the performance of a mere ministerial act not involving, on the part of the officer, the exercise of any judgment or discretion.” ■
In the case before this Court, the Secretary of the Treasury, in executing the resolution of Congress of the 14th March, 1848, was called on by the complainant to pay to him, as assignee of Betsey McIntosh, one-half the sum appropriated by that resolution, less the sum already paid the defendant, J. H. Eaton.
The validity and construction of the power of attorney and assignment set up by McElrath, and the applicability and construction of the Act of Congress, July 29th, 1846, ch. 66, are necessarily involved in the duty required of. the Secretary of the Treasury to execute the resolution of March 14th, 1848.
It may be observed, also, that the resolution of the 14th of March, 1848, requires the Secretary of the Navy to pay the money to Betsey McIntosh (herself), not to her executors, administrators or assigns. That the supposed assignment to McElrath, if it be an assignment, purports to be of *362only a part of the debt due by the United States, and that the power of attorney to McElrath does not expressly authorize him to receive the money or any part of it, but purports to be only a power to prosecute the claim to allowance or judgment; so that, upon these points, also, it would be necessary that the Secretary, before ordering the payment of the- money, should decide whether he could lawfully pay the money to any other person than Betsey McIntosh herself — whether it would not be contrary to the policy of the law, especially in the case of an Indian claim, to pay' a part only of the claim, and he must also decide whether the power of attorney was duly executed.
These are all acts of executive discretion, in which the Secretary has sought the advice and opinion of the Attorney General of the United States, and can, in no just sense, be said to be mere ministerial acts.
In the exercise of this discretion, this Court has no right to guide or control the executive officer, or to entertain any appeal from his decision.
Upon these authorities, and by these reasons, this Court is satisfied that the payment of the claim of Betsey McIntosh is not a mere ministerial act, but is a duty appertaining to the office of the Secretary of the Treasury in the discharge of which he has a discretion which this Court has not jurisdiction to control; and being of that opinion the Court deems it unnecessary, as it would be unwilling, to give any opinion upon the other questions which have been raised in argument.
The Court, therefore, refuses to grant the injunction prayed for against the Secretary and Second Comptroller of the Treasury.