delivered the opinion of the court upon the pleadings, as follows:
In this cause there are demurrers to three pleas filed in the circuit court, and a special verdict found on an issue joined on the 4*b plea. The pleas were all sustained, and judgment was rendered lor the defendant.
To support this judgment, this court must concur in overruling all the demurrers; - for, if the plea to any one of the counts be bad, the plaintiff below is entitled, to damages on that count.
The covenant, on which the breach in the first count, is assigned, is in these words; “ that the legislature of the said state, (Georgia,) at the time of the passing of the act of sale aipresaid, bed good right to sell and dispose of the same, in manner pointed out by the said act.”
The breach of this covenant is assigned in these words; “now the said Fletcher saith that, at the time when the said act oi the legislature of Georgia, entitlеd an act, &c. was passed, the said legislature bad no authority to sell and dispose of the tenements aforesaid, or of any part thereoi, in the manner pointed out in the said act.”
To this plea the plaintiff demurred; and the defendant joined in the demurrer.
If it be admitted that sufficient matter is shown, in this plea, to have justified the defendant in denying the breach alleged in the count, it must also be admitted that he has not denied it. The breach alleged is, that the legislature had not authority to sell.. The bar set up is, that the governor had authority to convey. Certainly an állegation, that the principal has no 'right to give a'powеr, is not denied by alleging that he has given a proper power to the agent.
It is argued that the plea shows, although it does not, in terms, aver, that the legislature had authority to convey. The court does not mean to controvert this position, but its admission would not help the .Case. The matter set forth in the plea, as matter of inducement, may be argumentatively good, may warrant an averment which negatives the averment in the .declaration, but does not itself constitute that negative.
Had the plaintiff tendered an issue in fact upon this plfea, that the governor was legally empowered to sell and convey the premises, it would have been a departure from his-declaration;, for the count to which this plea is intended as a bar alleges no want of authority in the governor. He was therefore under the necessity of demurring.
, But it is contended that although the plea be sub. Stantially bad, the judgment, overruling the demurrer, is correct, because the declaration is defective.
The defect alleged in the declaration is, that the
It is not necessary that a breach should be assigned in the very words of the covenant. It is enough that the words of the assignment show, unequivocally, a substantial breach.- The assignment undbr consideration does show such a breach* If the legislature ' had no authority to convey, it had no right to convey.
It is, therefore, the opinion ot this court, that the circuit court erred in overruling the demurrer to the firpt plea by the defendant pleaded, and that their judgment ought therefore to be reversed, and that judgment on that plea be rendered for the plaintiff
After the opinion of the court was delivered, the parties agreed to amend the pleadings, and the cause ■was continued for further consideration.
The cause having been again argued at this term, -
delivered the opinion--of the court as follows :
The pleadings being nоw amended, this cause comes ■ on again to be heard on sundry demurrers, and on a. special verdict.
The suit was instituted on several covenants contained in a deed made by John Peck, the defendant in error, conveying to Robert Fletcher, the plaintiffin error, certain lands which were part of a large purchase made by-James Gunn and others, in the year 1795, from the state of Georgia, the contract for which w.as made in the form of a bill passed by the legislature of that state.
The first count in the declaration set forth a breach
The plea in bar sets forth the constitution of the state оf Georgia, and avers that the lands sold by the defendant to the plaintiff, were within that state. It then sets forth the granting act, and avers the power of the legislature to sell and dispose of the premises as pointed out by the act.
To this plea the plaintiff below demurred, and the defendant joined ip demurrer.
That the legislature of Georgia,( unless restrained by its own constitution, possesses the power of disposing of the unappropriated lands within its own limits, in such manner- as its own judgment shall dictate, is a proposition-not to be controverted., • The only questioti, then, presented by this demurrer, for the consideration of the court, is this, did the then constitution of the state of Georgia prohibit the legislature to dispose of the lands, which were the subject of this' contract, in the manner stipulated by the contract ?.
The question, whether a law be void for its repu gnancyto .the constitution's, at all times, a «question of much delicacy, which ought Seldom, if ever, to be-decided in the affirmative, in a doubtful case. The court, when impelled by duty to render such a judgment, would be unworthy of its station, could it be unmindful of the solemn obligations which that station imposes. Rut it is not on slight implication and vague-conjecture that the .legislature is to be pronounced to have transcended its powers, and its acts to be considered as void. The opposition between the constitution a,nd the law should be such that the judge feels a clear and strong conviction of -their incompatibility with each other.
In this case' th.e court can perceive no such opposition. In the constitution of Georgia, adopted in the
In overruling the demurrer, therefore, to the first plea, the circuit court committed no error.
The Sd covenant is, that all the title which the state of Georgia ever had in the premises had been legally conveyed to John Peck, the grantor.
The 2d count assigns, in substance, as a breach of this covenant, that the' original grantees from the state of Georgia promised and assured divers members of the legislature, then sitting in general assembly, that if the said members would assent to, and vote for, the passing of the act, and if. the said bill should pass, such members should have a share of, and be interested in, all the lands purchased from the said state by virtue of such law. And that divers of the said members, to whom the said promises were made, were unduly influenced thereby, and, under such influence, did vote for the passing of the said bill; by reason' whereof the said law was a nullity, &c. and so the title of the state of Georgia did not pass to the said Peck, &c.
The plea to this count, after protesting that the promises it alleges were not made, avers, that until alter the purchase made from the original grantees by James Greenleaf, under whom the said Peck claims, neither the said James Greenleaf, nor the said Peck, nor any of the mesne vendors between the said Greenleaf and Peck, had any notice or knowledge that any such promises or assurances were made by the said original grantees, or either of them, to any of the members of the legislature of the state of Georgia.
To this plea the plaintiff demurred generally, and the defendant joined in the demurrer.
it the. majority of the legislature be corrupted, it may well be doubted, whether it be within the province of the judiciary to control-their conduct, and,, if less than a majority act from impure motives, the principle by which judicial interference would be regulated, is not clearly discerned.
Whatever difficulties this subject might present, when viewed under aspeсts of which it may be susceptible, this court can perceive none in.-the_particular pleadings now under consideration.
This is not a bill brought by the state of Georgia, to annul the contract, nor does it appear to the court, by
This solemn question cannot be brought thus Collaterally and incidentally before the court. It would be indecent, in the extreme, upon a рrivate contract, between two individuals, to enter into an inquiry respecting the corruption of the sovereign power of a state. If the title be plainly deduced from.a-legislative act, which the legislature might constitutionally pass, if the act be clothed with all the requisite farms of a law, a court, sitting, as a court of law, cannot sustain a suit brought by one individual against another founded on the allegation that the act is a nullity, in consequence of the impure motives which influenced certain members of the legislature which passed the law.
The circuit court, therefore, did right in overruling this demurrer.
The 4th covenant in the deed is, that the title-to the premises has been, in no way, constitutionally or legally impaired by virtue of any subsequent act of an^ subsequent legislature of" the state of Georgia.
The third count recites the undue means practised On certain members of the legislature, as stated in the second count, and then"alleges that, in consequence of these practices, and of other causes, a subsequent legislature passed an act annulling and .rescinding the law under which the conveyance to the original grantees was made, declaring that conveyance void, and asserting the title of the state to the lands it contained. The,
After protesting, as before, that no such promises were made as stated in this count, the defendant agaih pleads that, himself and the first purchaser under the original grantees, and all Intermediate holders jpf die property, were purchasers withoutnotice.
To this plea there is a demurrer-andjcinder,
The importance and thcLdiffieulty of the questions, presented by these pleadings, are deeply felt- by the court.
The lands in controversy vested absolutely in James Gunn and others, the original grantees, by the conveyance of 'the governor, made in pursuance of attwrt nf assembly to which the legislature was fully, competent. Being thus in full possession of the legal, estate, they, for a valuable consideration, conveyed portions of the land to those who were willing to purchase, If the original transaction was infected with_fraud, these purchasers did not participate in it, and_hacL.no notice of it. They were innocent. -Yet the legislature of Georgia has involved thern in thejfate-of- the first parties to the transaction, and, if the act be valid, has annihilated their rights also.
The legislature of Georgia was a party to this transaction ; and for a party to pronounce its own dеed invalid, whatever cause may be assigned for its invalidity, müst be considered as a mere act of power which must find its vindication in a train of reasoning not often heard in courts of justice.
But the real party, it is said, are the people, and when their. agents are unfaithful, the acts of those agents cease to be obligatory.
It is, however, to be recollected that the people can
If the legislature of Georgia was not bound to submit its pretensions to those tribunals which aré established for the security of property, and to decide on human rights, if it might claim to itself the рower of judging in its own case,,yet. there are certain great, principles of justice, whose authority is universally acknowledged, that ought not to be entirely disregarded.
If the legislature be its own judge in its own case, it would seem equitable that its decision should be regulated by those rules which would have regulated the decision of a judicial tribunal. The question was, in its nature, a question of title, and the tribunal which decided it was either acting in the charác-, ter of a court of justice, and performing a duty usually assigned to a court, or it was exerting a mere áct bf power in which it was controlled only by its own will»
If a suit be brought to set aside a convéyance ob-tamed by fraud, and the fraud be clearly proved, the conveyance will be set aside, as between the parties; but the rights of third persons, who. are purchasers without notice, for a valuable consideration, cannot be disregarded. Titles, which, according to every legal test, are perfect, are acquired with that .confidence which is inspired by the opinion that the purchaser is safe. If there be any concealed defect, arising from the conduct of those who had held the property long before he acquired it, of which he had no notice, that concealed defect cannot be set up against him, He has paid his money for a title good at law, he is innocent, whatever may be the guilt of others, and equity will not subject him to the penalties attached to that guilt. All titles would be insecure, and the' inter»
A court of chancery, therefore, had a bill been brought to set aside the conveyance made to James Gunn and others, as beipg obtained by improper practices' with - the legislature, whatever might have been its decision as respected the. original grantees, would have been bound, by its own rules, and by the clearest principles of .equity, to leave unmolested those who were purchasers, without notice, for a valuable consi* deration.'
If the legislature felt itself absolved from those rules’ of property which are common to all the citizens of the United States, and from those principles of equity which are acknowledged in all our courts, its act is to be supported by its power alone, and the same power may deVest any other individual of his lands, if it shall be the will of the legislature so to exert it.
It is not intended to speak with disrespect of the legislature of Georgia, or of its acts. Far from it. The question is a general qu'estioh, and . is treated as ,'onéi For although such powerful objections (to. a legislative grant, as are allegеd against this, mdy-not again exist, yet the principle, on which alone ,.t{ys_rescinding act is to be supported, may be applied' to every case to which it shall be the will of any legislature to apply it. The principle is this; that a legislature may, by its own act, devest the vested estate" of any man whatever, for reasons 'which shall, by itself, be deemed sufficient.
In this case the legislature may have had ample proof that the original grant was obtained_hy_pmctiees which can never be too much '-eprohateri, arid wJiich would, have justified its abrogation so far as respected those to whom crime was imputable., But the grant, when issued, conveyed an estate in fee-simple to the grantee, clothed with all the solemnities which law-can bestow.
-1
his estate was transferrable; and those who purchased pqrts of it were not stained by that
Is the power of the legislature competent to the annihilation of such title, and to a resumption of the property thus held ?
The principle asserted is, that’ one legislature, is competent to repeal any act which a former legislature was competent to pass ; and tliat one legislature' cannot abridge the powers of a succeeding legislature.
The correctness of this principle, so far as rеspects general legislation, can never be' controverted. But, if an act be done under a law, a succeeding legislature cannot undo it. The past cannot be recalled by the most absolute power. Conveyances have been made,' those conveyances have vested legal estates, and, if those estates may be seized by the sovereign authority, still, that they originally -nested ia fl fact, and rannnt cease to be a fact. '
When, then, a láw is in its nature a contract, when absolute rights have vested under that contract, a repeal of the law cannot devest those rights; and. the-act of annulling them, if legitimate, is rendered so by a power applicable to the case of every indmdaal-itt the community.
It may well be doubted whether the nature of society and of government does not prescribe some limits to the legislative power j аnd,'- if any be prescribed, where are they to-be found, if the property of.-an individual, fairly and honestly acquired, may be seized without compensation.
It is the- peculiar province of the legislature to prescribe general rules for the government of society; the-application of those rules to individuals in society would seem to be the duty of other departments. How far the power of 'giving the law may involve every other power," in cases where the constitution is silent, never has been, and perhaps never can be, definitely stated.-
The. validity of -this rescinding act, then, might well.be doubted, were-Georgia a single sovereign power. Bui Georgia сannot be viewed as a single, unconnected, sovereign power, on whose legislature no other restrictious are imposed than may be found in its own constitution. ■ She is a part of a large- empire; she is-a member of the American - union; and 'that union has a constitution the supremacy of which all acknowledge, and which imposes limits to the legislatures of the several states, which none claim a right to pass. ¿The constitution - of the United State! declares that no 'state shall pass any. bill of attainder, ex post fació law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts.
Does the case now under consideration come within this prohibitory section of the constitution ?
In considering this very interesting question, we ^ immediately ask ourselves, what is a contract? Xs_a ^ I grant a contract?
A contract is a compact between two or more parties, and is either executory or executed. . An execu- ■ tory contract is one in whiсh a party binds himself to do, or not to do, a particular thing; such was the law under which the conveyance' was made by the governor. A contract executed1 is one in which the object
Since, then, in fact, a grant is a contract executed, the obligation of which still continues, and since the constitution uses the general term contract, without distinguishing between those which áre executory and those which are executed, it must be construеd to cornprehend the lattetuas-welk-as the former. A law. annulling conveyances between individuals, and declaring that the grantors should stand seised of their former estates, notwithstanding those grants, would be as repugnant to the constitution ás a law discharging the vendors of property from the obligation of executing their contracts by conveyances. It would be strange if a contract to convey was secured by the constitution, while an absolute conveyance remained unprotected.
If, under a fair construction' the constitution, grants are comprehended under the term contracts, is a grant from the state excluded from the operation of the provision ? Is the clause to be considered as Inhibiting the state from impairing the obligation of contracts between two individuals, but as excluding from that inhibition contracts made with itself?
The words themselves contain no suсh distinction. They are general, and are applicable to contracts of every description. If contracts made with the state are tó be exempted from their operation, the exception must arise from the character of tha contracting party, not from the words which are employed.
Whatever respect might have been felt for the state' sovereignties, it is not to be disguised that the framers of the constitution viewed, with some appre
No state, shall pass'any bill of attainder, ex post facie law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts.
A bill of attainder may affect the life' of an individual, or may confiscate his property, or may do both. ,
In this form the power of t.he legislature over the lives-and fortunes-of individuals is expressly restrained. What motive, then, for implying, in words which import a general prohibition to impair the obligation of ■contracts, an exception in favour of the right,to impair the obligation of those contracts • into which the state may enter?
The state legislatures can pass no
ex post facto
law. An
ex post facto
law is one which renders an act pu.nishable in a manner in which it was not punishable when it was committed. Such a law may inflict penalties on the person, or may inflict pecuniáry penalties which swell the public treasury. The legislature is then prohibited from passing a law by which a man’s estate, or any part of it, shall be, seized for a crime which was not dеclared, by some previous law, to render him liable to that punishment. 'Why, then, should violence be done to the natural meaning o£ words for the purpose of leaving to the legislature the power of ■ seizing, for public use, the estate of an individual in the form of a law annulling the title by which he holds •that estate? The court can perceive no sufficient ■ grounds for making this ^distinction. This rescinding act would have the effect of an,
ex post facto
law. It forfeits the estate of Fletcher' for a crime not committed by himself, but by those from whom he purchased.
The argument in favour of presuming an intention to except a case, not excepted by the words of the constitution, is susceptible, of some illustration from a principle originally ingrafted in that instrument, though no longer a part of it. The constitution, as passed, gave the сourts of the United States jurisdiction in suits brought against individual states. A state, then, which-violated its own contract was suable in the courts of the United States for that violation. Would it have been a defence in such a suit to say thát the stJtte had passed a law absolving itself from the contract ? It is scarcely to be conceived that such a defence could be set up. And yet, if a state is neither restrained by the general principles of our political institutions, nor by the words of the constitution, from impairing the obligation of its own contracts, such a defence would be á vaíIcT one. This feature is no longer found in the constitution; but it aids in the construction of those clauses with which it was originally associated.
It is, then, the unanimous opinion of the court, that, in this case, the estate having passed into the hands of a purchaser for a valuable consideration, without notice, the state of Gеorgia was restrained, either by general principles which are common to our free institutions, or by the particular provisions of the constitution of the United States, from passing a law whereby the estate of the plaintiff in the premises so purchased could be constitutionally and legally impaired and rendered null and void.
In overruling the demurrer to the Sd plea, therefore, there is no error.
The first covenant in the deed is, that the state of Georgia, at the time of the act of the legislature thereof, entitled as aforesaid, was legally seised in fee of the soil thereof subject only to the extinguishment of part of the Indian title thereon-
To this count the defendant pleads, that the state of Georgia was seised ; and tenders an issue on the fact in which the plaintiff joins. On this issue a special verdict is found.
The jury find the grant of Carolina by Charles second to the Earl of Clarendon and others, comprehending the whole country from 36 deg. 30 min. north lat. to 29 deg. north lat., and from the Atlantic to the South Sea.
They find that the northern part of this territory was afterwards erected into a separate colony,- and that the most northern part of the 35 deg. of north lat. was. the boundary line between North ánd South Carolina.
That seven of the eight proprietors of the Carolinas surrendered to George 2d in the year 1729, who appointed a Governor of South Carolina.
That, in 1732, George the 2d granted, to the Lord Viscount Percival and others, seven eighths of the territory between the Savannah and the Alatamaha, and extending we'st to the South Sea, and that the remaining eighth part, which was still the property of the heir of Lord Carteret., one of the original grantees of Carolina, was afterwards conveyed to them. This territory was constituted a colony and called Georgia.
That the Governor of South Carolina continued to exercise jurisdiction south of Georgia.
That, in 1752, the grantees surrendered to the crown. ■
That, -in. 1754, a governor was appointed by the crown, with a commission describing the boundaries of the colony.
That a treaty of peace was concluded between Great
That, in October, 1763, the King of Great Britain issued a proclamation, creating four new colonies, Quebec, East Florida, West Florida, and Grenada ; and prescribing the bounds of each, and further declaring that all the lands between the Alatamaba, and St. Mary's should be annexed to Georgia. The same proclamation contained a clause reserving, under the dominion and protection of the crown, for the use-of the Indians, all the lands on the western waters, and forbidding a settlement on them, or a purchase of them from the' Indians. The lands conveyed to the plaintiff lie on the western waters.
That, in November, 1763, a commission was issued to the Governor of Georgia, in- which the boundaries of that province are described, as extending westward to the Mississippi: A commission, describing boundaries of the same extent, was afterwards granted in 1764.
That a war broke out between Great Britain and her colonies, which terminated in a treaty of peace acknowledging them as sovereign and independent states.
That in April, 1787. a convention was entered into between the states of South' Carolina and Georgia settling the boundary line between them.
The juiy afterwards describe the situation of the lands mentioned, in the plaintiff’s declaration, in such manner that their lying within the limits of Georgia, as defined in the proclamation of 1763, in the treaty of peace, and in the convention between that state and South Carolina, has not been questioned.
The counsel for the plaintiff rest their argument on a single proposition,. They contend that the reservation for the use of the Indians, contained in the pro
The court does not understand the proclamation as it is understood by the counsel for the plaintiff. The reservation for the use of the Indians appears to be a temporary arrangement suspending, for a time, the settlement of the country reserved, and the powers of the royal gоvernor within the territory reserved, but is not conceived to amount to an alteration of the boundaries of the colony. If the language of the proclamation be, in itself, doubtful, the commissions subsequent thereto, which were given to the governors of Georgia, entirely remove the doubt.
The question, whether the vacant lands within the United States became a joint property, or belonged to the separate states, was a momentous question which, at one time, threatened to shake the American confederacy to its foundation. This important and dangerous contest has been compromised, and the compromise is not now to be disturbed.
It is the opinion of the court, that the particular land stated in the declaration appe.ars, from this special verdict, to lie within the state of Georgia, and that the state of Georgia had power to grаnt it.
Some difficulty was.produced by the language of the covenant, and of the pleadings. It was doubted whether a state can be seised in fee of lands, subject to the Indian title, and whether a decision that they were seised in fee, might.not be construed to amount to a decision that their grantee might maintain an ejectment for them, notwithstanding that title.
l he majority of the court is of opinion that the nature of the Indian title, which is certainly to be re*
Judgment affirmed with costs.
In this case I entertain, on two points, an opinion different from that which has been delivered by the court.
I do not hesitate to- declare that a state does not possess the power of revoking its own grants. But I do it on a general principle, on the reason and nature of things: a principle which will imposе laws .even oil the deity.
A contrary opinion can only be maintained upon tfie ground that no existing legislature. can abridge the powers of those which will succeed it. To a certain extent this'is certainly correct; but the distinction lies between power and interest, the right of jurisdiction and the right of soil.
The right of jurisdiction is essentially connected to, or rather identified with, the national sovereignty. To part with it is to commit á species of political suicidé. Iii fact, a power to produce its'own annihilation is an absurdity in terms. It is a power as utterly incommunicable to a political as to a natural person. But it is not so with the interests or property of a nation. Its possessions nationally are in nowise necessary 'to its poll ical existence;' they are entirely accidental, and' may be parted with in every respect similarly to those of the- individuals who '.compоse the community,When the legislature have once conveyed their inte-’ •rest or property in any subject to the individual, they have lost all control over it; have nothing to act upon; it has-passed from them; is. vested in die individual; becomes intimately blended with his existence, as essentially so as the blood that circulates through his system. The government may indeed demand of him the one or the other,, not .because they «are not his, but because whatever is his’is his country’s.
The security of a people against the misconduct of their rulers, must lie in the frequent recurrence to first principles, and the imposition of adequate constitutional restrictions. Nor would it be difficult, with the. same view, for laws to be framed which would bring the conduct of individuals under the review of adequate tribunals, and make them suffer under the consequences of their own immoral conduct.
I have thrown out these ideas that I may have it distinctly understood that my opinion on this point is not founded on the provision in the constitution of the United States, relative to laws impairing the obligation of contracts. It is much to be regretted that words of less equivocal signification, bad not been adopted in that article of the constitution; There. is reason to believe, from the letters of Publius, which are well-known to be entitled to the highest respect, that the object of the convention was to afford a general protection to individual rights against the acts of the state legislatures. Whether the words, “ acts impairing the obligation of contracts,” can be construed to have-the same force as- must have been given to the words “ obligation and effect of contracts,” is the difficulty in my mind.
There can be no solid objection to adopting the technical definition of the word “ contract,” given by Blackstorte. -The etymology, the classical signification, and the civil law idea of the word, will all support it. But the difficulty arises on the word obligation,”
I enter with great hesitation upon this question, because it involves a subject of the greatest delicacy and much difficulty. The states and the United States are continually legislating on the subject of contracts, prescribing the mode of authentication, the time within which suits shall be prosecuted for them, in many cases affecting existing contracts by the laws which they pass, and declaring them to cease or lose their effect for want of compliance, in the parties, with such statutory provisions. All these acts appear to be within the *■ most correct limits of legislative powers, and most beneficially exercised, and certainly could not have been Intended to be affected by this constitutional provision j yet where to draw the line, or how to define or limit the words, “ obligation of contracts,” will be found a subject of extreme difficulty.
To give if the general effect- of a restriction of the state powers in favour of private rights, is certainly going very far beyond the obvious and necessary import of the words, and would operate to restrict the states in the exercise of that right which every community must exercise, of possessing itself of the property of the individual, when necessary for public uses; a right which a magnanimous and just government will never exercise without amply indemnifying the individual, and which perhaps amounts to nothing more than a power to oblige him to sell and convey, when the piiblic necessities require it.
The other point on which I dissent from the opinion of the court, is relative to thе judgment which ought to be given on the first count.'. Upon that count we are
This is a question of much delicacy, and more fitted for a diplomatic or legislative than ajudicial inquiiy. But I am called upon to make a decision, ánd I must make it upon technical principles.
The question is, whether it can be correctly predicated of the interest or estate which the state of Georgia had in these lands, “ that the state was seised thereof, in fee-si rapté,”
To me it appears that the interest of Georgia in ■ that land amounted to nothing, more than a-mere possibility, and that her conveyance thereof could operate legally only as a covenant to convey of to.stand seised to a use.
The correctness of this opinion will depend upon - a just view of the state of the' Indian nations. This will be found to be very various. ' Some have totally-extinguished their national fire, and submitted themselves-to the laws of the states: others have, by treaty, acknowledged that they hold their national existence at the will of the state within which they reside: othеrs retain a limited sovereignty, and the-absolute proprietorship of their soil.' The latter is the case of • the tribes to the west of Georgia. We legislate upon the conduct of strangers or citizens within their limits, but innumerable treaties formed with them
I have been very unwilling to proceed to the decision of this cause at all. It appears to me to bear strong evidence, upon the face of it, of being a mere feigned case. It is our duty to decide on the rights, but not on the speculations of parties. My confi
