delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a bill brought in the District Court by the State of Colorado to enjoin the superintendent of the Rocky Mountain National Park from enforcing certain regulations for the government of the park, which are alleged to be beyond the authority conferred by Acts of Congress and to interfere with the sovereign rights of the State. These regulations forbid any person to reside permanently, engage in any business, or erect buildings in the park without permission in writing from the Director of the National Parks Service, provide for the removal of disorderly persons and forbid their return without permission from the Director, and impose a fine or imprisonment or both for violating these regulations, the defendant, it seems, being the sole judge. The special subject of complaint is a further regulation subject to similar penalties that “ The park is open to automobiles operated for pleasure, but not to those carrying passengers who are paying, either directly or indirectly, for the use of machines. (Excepting, however, automobiles used by transportation lines operating .under .Government franchises.)” It is alleged that the defendant and his superior officers assert full authority over all highways in the park to the exclusion of the State and refuse permission to anyone operating automobiles for hire except one corporation which has received a permit: It is alleged that he asserts the right to exact a license fee .from privately owned vehicles, although it ’does not appear that this has been done in this park. There are many thousands of acres in the park owned by private persons, and there are houses and hotels that were built before the park was laid out. It is feared that the same jurisdic
The object of the bill is to restrain an individual from doing acts that ibis alleged that he has no authority to do. and that derogate from the quasi-sovereign authority of the State. There is no question that a bill in equity is a proper remedy and that it may be pursued against the defendant without joining either his superior officers or the United States.
Missouri
v.
Holland, 252
U. S. 416, 431.
Philadelphia Co.
v.
Stimson,
The park was created by the Act of January 26, 1915, c. 19; 38 Stat. 798. By § 2 the Act is not to “ affect any valid existing claim, location, or entry under the land laws of the United States, whether for homestead, mineral, right of way, or any other purpose whatsoever,” and by § 3 “no lands located within the park boundaries now held in private, municipal, or State, ownership shall be affected by or subject to the provisions of the Act.” By § 4 the park is put under the executive control of the Secretary of the Interior and it is made his duty to make such reasonable regulations, not inconsistent with the laws of the United States, as he deems proper for the management of the same, such “regulations being pri
It is said, although it does not appear in the record, that the decision below was based upon
Robbins
v.
United States,
Decree reversed.
