delivered the opinion of the court.
These are suits by foreign corporations to recover taxes alleged to have been paid to the defendant, the Treasurer of Massachusetts, under duress, and in obedience to statutes held by this Court to be unconstitutional in
International Paper Co.
v.
Massachusetts,
It is unnecessary to go farther than to say that we agree with the defendant upon the latter point. As to the construction of the words, they mean, we have no doubt,' what was expressed more at length in an earlier statute on the same matter, that the petition “ shall take the place of any and all actions which might otherwise be maintained by such corporation on account of the assessment and collection of such tax, and shall be thé exclusive remedy.” Stat. 1867, c. 52, § 4; continued with slight change in Pub. Stats. (1882), c. 13, § 66, and abridged to the present form in Rev. Laws (1902), c. 14, § 67. The words embodied a fixed policy of the State and must stand whether the levy of the tax is good or bad.
But it is said that a State cannot tie up the plaintiffs to suits in its own courts, and this objection coupled with the suggestion that the legislature might shorten the time
*38
still farther or deny all remedy, if the defence is good, prevailed with the judge who decided these cases, as appears from
International Paper Co.
v.
Burrill,
The Constitution standing alone without more does not create a paramount unchangeable liability to an action of tort on the part of all persons who may take part in enforcing a state law that it invalidates. It leaves the remedies to Congress and the States. Congress acting under the Constitution has given to the courts of the United States a jurisdiction in equity that, speaking broadly, is the same in all the States and follows its own rules. Rev. Stats., § 913.
Boyle
v.
Zacharie,
Judgments reversed.
