delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiffs in error sued the State of Ohio for damages for flooding lands by elevating the spillway of a state-maintained dam. The Supreme Court of the State affirmed the action of the lower courts in dismissing the petition on the ground that the State had not consented so to be sued, and we are asked to review this decisiop.
The plaintiffs in error agree, as they must, that their suit cannot be maintained without the consent of the State, but" they claim that such consent was given in an amendment to § 16 of Article I of the state constitution, adopted in 1912, which reads:
“Suits may be brought against the State, in such courts and in such manner, as may be provided by law.” ■
The State Supreme Court held that this amendment is not self-executing, and that the General Assembly of the State having failed to designate the courts and the Planner in which such suits might be brought, effective consent to sue had not been given. This decision, the plaintiffs in error claim, vaguely and indefinitely, somehow deprives them of their property without due process of law, in *34 violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
The right of individuals to sue a State, in either a federal or a state court, cannot be derived from the Constitution or laws of the United States. It can come only from the consent of the State.
Beers
v.
Arkansas, 20
How. 527;
Railroad Company
v.
Tennessee,
The further claim that the plaintiffs in error are deprived of their property without compensation in violation of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, is palpably groundless.
Barron
v.
Baltimore,
No federal question being presented by the record, the motion to affirm is denied and this court, sua sponte, .dismisses the writ of error for want of jurisdiction.
Dismissed.
