38 S.E. 629 | S.C. | 1901
April 18, 1901. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This action was brought pursuant to a joint resolution of the General Assembly, approved February 17, 1900, 23 Stat., 554, to test the liability of the State to pay two notes taken by the superintendent of the State penitentiary for the hire of convicts, and by him indorsed to the plaintiff. The appeal comes from an order of Judge Klugh, overruling the State's demurrer to the complaint for insufficiency. The complaint, demurrer, order overruling and the exceptions thereto, are officially reported herewith.
The questions presented by the exceptions may be thus stated:
1. Whether Neal, as superintendent of the State penitentiary, had power to collect and receive the hire due the State for convicts.
2. Whether, if he had such power, he also had power, express or implied, to take negotiable notes therefor, and bind the State by his indorsement thereof to the plaintiff bank.
3. Whether the State is estopped to deny its liability by the alleged acquiescence in and approval of such negotiations, and the retention of the benefits thereof.
The first question has been recently determined by the case of State v. Neal,
The doctrine of equitable estoppel has no application to a sovereign State. Equitable estoppel rests upon an implication of fraud in the party sought to be estopped, and fraud ought not to be imputed to the sovereign. The State can only act under its Constitution and through its legislative enactments pursuant thereto, and can only ratify in the manner in which it could originally authorize; and if it could be estopped to assert the truth, the effect might be to fix upon the State responsibilities in conflict with its Constitution and laws. All men are bound to take notice of the special authority of the State's officers, and when dealing with them outside their authority, they assume the peril with their eyes open, and cannot be heard to say that they placed reliance upon the State. The question is not one of intention, but of power; and if the officer has not power to act, his action is not State action, and so affords no basis upon which to predicate estoppel against the State. And if it were in any sense a question of intention, the State's intention can only be evidenced in a constitutional way. On the question whether equitable estoppel applies to a State, respondent cites from a note to Williamson v. James, 4 A. E. Dec. in Equity, 367, to this effect: "The principles of estoppel also extended as far as they are applicable to a State — State v. Taylor, 28 La. An., 460; State v. Ober, 34 La. An., 359; State v. Flint c. R.R. Co.,
Nor do we think this action can be sustained, as contended by the respondent, as an action for money had and received. The State has only received that to which it was entitled, viz: money for the hire of convicts, received from the hands of the superintendent of the penitentiary. Plaintiff has paid no money to the State by mistake; for in the eye of the law plaintiff dealt with Neal, not with the State, and received from Neal all that it contracted for, the liability of the makers of the notes, supported by Neal's indorsement. In addition to this, as has already been shown, no equitable estoppel arises against the State as a basis for an implied contract, and the State cannot be made liable as *477 for an implied contract, when there was no power to make an express contract in the manner of this case.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed and the case remanded, with instructions to sustain the demurrer and dismiss the complaint.