delivered the opinion of the court.
Three separate libels
in rem
wеre filed in the United States District Court for the. Western District of New
The Attorney General of the State appeared in all three cases specially in behalf of the State and the Pеople thereof, and of Walsh, and filed a suggestion that the court was without jurisdiction to proceed against Walsh as Superintendent of Public Works for the reason that, as appeared upon the face of the proceedings, they were suits against the State of New York in which- the Statе had not consented tó be sued. The District Court denied motions to dismiss the monitions (The Henry Koerber, Jr., 268 Fed. Rep. 561), whereupon the Attorney General, on behalf of the State and the People - thereof,- and of Walsh as Superintendent and individually, under leave granted, filed in this court a petition for writs of prohibition and mandamus. An order to show cause was issued,- to which the District' Judge made a return, and upon this and the proceedings in the District Court the matter has been argued.
The record shows that the charters had expired according to their terms, and the tugs were in possession of the claimants, neither the State nor Walsh having any claim upon or interest in them. At no time has any res belonging to the State or to, Walsh, or in which they claim any interest, been attached or brought -under the jurisdiction of the Ffistriet Court. Nor is any relief asked against Mr. Walsh individually; the proceedings against him being strictly in his capacity as a public officer.
The .рower to issue writs of prohibition to the district courts when proceeding as courts of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction is specifically conferred upon this court by § 234, Judicial Code (Act. of March 3, 1911, c. 231, 36
That a State may not be sued without its consent is a fundamental rule of jurisprudence having so important a bearing upon the construction of the Constitution of the United States that it has become established by repeated decisions of thjs court that the entire judicial power granted by the Constitution-does not embrace authority to entertain a suit brought by private parties against a State without consent given: not one brought by citizens of another State, or by citizens or subjects of á foreign State, because of the Eleventh Amendment; and not even one brought by its own citizens, because of the fundamental rule of which the Amendment is but an exemplification.
Beers
v.
Arkansas,
Nor is the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction exempt from the operation of. the rule. It is true the Amendment speaks only of suits in law or equity; but this is because, as was pointed out in
Hans
v.
Louisiana, supra,
the Amendment was the outcome of a purpose to set aside the effect of the decision of this court in
Chisholm
v.
Georgia, 2
Dall. 419, which happened to be a suit at law brought against the State by a citizen of another State, the decision turning upon the construction of that clause of § 2 of Art. Ill of the Constitution establishing the judicial power in cases in law and equity between a State
Among the authorities to which wé are referred is Mr. Justice Story, who, in Ins' commentaries on the Constitution (1st ed., § 1683; 5th ed., § 1689), stated that it had been doubted whether the Amendment extended to cases of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction where the proceeding was
in rem
and not
in personam;
and whose , doubt was supported by a declaration proceeding from Mr. Justice Washington at the circuit,
United States
v.
Bright
(1809), Brightly, N. P. 19, 25, Note;
Much reliance is placed upon
Workman
v.
New York City,
We repeat, the immunity of a State from suit in personam in the admiralty brought by a private person without its consent, is clear.
As to what is to be deemed a suit against a State, the early suggestion that the inhibition might be confined to those in which the State was a párty to the record
(Osborn
v.
United States Bank,
Thus examined, the decided cases have fallen into two principal classes, mentioned in
Pennoyer
v.
McConnaughy,
As has been shown, the proceedings against which prohibition is here asked have no element of a proceeding
in rem,
and are in the nature'of an action
in personam
against Mr.-Walsh, not individually, but in his capacity as Superintendent of Public Works of the State of New York. The office is .established and its duties prescribed by the constitution of the State; Art. 5, § 3. He is “charged with the execution of all lаws relating to the repair and navigation of the canals, and also of those relating- to the construction and improvement of the canals,” with exceptions not material. By c. 264 of the Laws of 1919, effective May 3, the Superintendent is authorized to provide such facilities as in his judgment may be necessary- for the towing of. boats on the canals of the State, the towing service to be furnished under such rules and regulations as he shall adopt; and for that service he is authorized to impose and collect such fees as in his judgment may seem fair and reasonable; the moneys so collеcted to be deposited by him in the state treasury. For the carrying into effect of this act the sum of $200,000 was appropriated. Under these provisions of law Mr. Walsh, as Superintendent of Public' Works, chartered the tugs
Henry Koerber, Jr.,
and
Charlotte,
in the name and behalf of the People of the State of New York, for periods bеginning May 15 and ending at latest December 15, 1919; and it was under these charters that they were being operated when the disastérs occurred upon which the libels are founded and the petitions under Rule 59 are based. The decrees sought would affect Mr. Walsh in his official capacity, and not otherwise. Thеy might be satisfied out of any property of the State of New York in his hands as Superintendent of Public Works, or made a basis for charges upon the treasury of the State under
There is no substance in the contention that this result enables the State of New York to impose its local law upon the admiralty jurisdiction, to the detriment of the characteristic symmetry and uniformity of the rules of maritime law insisted upon in
Workman
v.
New York City,
The want of authority In the District Court to éntertain these proceedings
in personam
under Rule 59 (now 56) brought by the claimants against Mr. Walsh as Superintendent of Public Works, of the State of. New York, is so .clear, and the fact that the proceedings are in essence suits against the State without its consent is so evident, that instead of permitting them to run their slow course to final decree,, with inevitably, futile result, .the writ of prohibition should be issued as prayed.
Ex parte Simons,
Rule absolute for a writ of prohibition.
