delivered the opinion of the Court.
The District Court, composed of three judges (U. S. C., Tit. 28, §380), granted an interlocutory injunction restraining the appellants, Ross S. Sterling, Governor of the State of Texas, W. W. Sterling, Adjutant General of the State, and Jacob F. Wolters, Brigadier General of the Texas National Guard, from enforcing their military or executive orders regulating or restricting the production of oil from complainants’ wells and from interfering in any manner
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with the lawful production of oil from complainants’ property.” 57 F. (2d) 227. By stipulation, .causes of action set forth in the amended bill of complaint against these defendants and others were severed and the suit proceeded to trial upon the merits against these defendants separately and was submitted upon the pleadings and the evidence taken on the application for the interlocutory injunction. The court entered final judgment making the interlocutory injunction permanent, and appeals have been taken to this Court from both the interlocutory order and the final judgment. As the case is now here on the latter appeal (No. 453), the appeal from the interlocutory order (No. 11) will be dismissed.
Champlin Refining Co.
v.
Corporation Commission,
Previously, on August 16, 1931, Governor Sterling had issued a proclamation stating that certain counties (in which complainants’ properties were located) were in “ a state of insurrection, tumult, riot, and a breach of the peace,” and declaring “ martial law ” in that territory. The Governor directed Brigadier General Wolters to assume supreme command of the situation and to take such steps as he might deem necesary in order “ to enforce and uphold the majesty of the law,” subject to the orders of thе Governor as Commander in Chief, as given through the Adjutant General. From that time, General Wolters acted as “commanding officer of said military district.”
When the District Court made its temporary restraining order in this suit, as above stated, Governor Sterling, learning that the orders made by the Railroad Commis
On November 20, 1931, by leave of the District Court, complainants filed an amended bill making Governor Sterling and W. W. Sterling, Adjutant General, parties to the suit and alleging that the above mentioned military and executive orders limiting production were without justification in law or in fact, were arbitrary and capricious, and were repugnant to the State and Federal constitutions. Complainants alleged that there had been no request by the civil authorities for the use of the military forces; that all courts in said area were
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open and transacting their ordinary business ”; that there were “ no armed bodies of civilians in said area ” nor “ ,any bodiеs of men threatening bloodshed, violence or destruction ”; but that, on the contrary, “ the citizens in said community are in a quiet, peaceable condition - and amenable and obedient to any process which might be served upon them.” Defendants, Governor Sterling, Adjutant General Sterling, and General Wolters, answered the bill setting forth the executive proclamation and orders, and the declaration of martial law, and asserting the validity of the acts assailed. By a supplemental petition, in response to the answer, complainants denied that the Governor, under the constitution and statutes of the State, could lawfully exercise the authority he had assumed, and specifically alleged that if any statute of the State conferred such authority it contravened stated pro
Upon that application, the District Court received the evidence submitted by both parties, and considering it to be “without substantial conflict,” stated that it established the following facts:
In August, 1931, the Legislature of Texas passed an amended oil and conservation act. Chap. 26, Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. Texas, Arts., 6008, 6014, 6029, 6032, 6036, 6049c. The Governor in issuing his proclamation of August 16th recited the provisions of the constitution and statutes of Texas for the conservation of oil and gas and the existence in the East Texas oil field, the territory in question, of an organized group of oil and gas producers who were said to be in a state of insurrection against the conservation laws; that the civil officers did not have a sufficient force to compel them to obey; that by reason of their reckless production enormous physical waste was being created; that this condition had brought about such a state of public feeling that if the state government could not protect the public’s interest they would take the law into their own hands; that this condition had caused threats of acts of violence; that it was necessary to give the Railroad Commission time to have hearings and promulgate proper orders to put the law into force; that a state of “insurrection, tumult, riot and breach of the peace existed in the defined area ” and that there was “ serious danger threatening to citizens and property, not only there, but in other oil producing areas of the State ” ; and that it was necessary “ that the reckless and illegal exploitation ” should be stopped until such time as the said resources might be properly conserved and developed
The District Court also found that after the restraining order against the Commission had been issued in this suit, the defendants, Governor Sterling and General Wolters, “ determined not to brook court interference with the program of restricted production which they determined to continue.” Acting “ in the real, though mistaken, belief that the federal court, while competent as to the Commission, was during the continuance of the proclaimed state of war without jurisdiction over their action,” by virtue of the claim, which the District Court found to bе wholly without support in the evidence, “ that war conditions were prevailing in the field, and that military necessity required the action,” they “ ousted the Commission from the fixing of and superintendence over the daily production allowed, and have since controlled production by purported military orders.”
As to the actual conditions in the area affected by these orders the District Court made the following finding:
“ It was conceded that at no time has there been any actual uprising in the territory. At no time has any military force been exerted to put riots or mobs down. At no time, except in the refusal of defendant Wolters to observe the injunction in this case, have the civil authorities оr courts been interfered with or their processes made impotent. Though it was testified to by defendants that from reports which came to them they believed that, if plaintiffs’ wells were not shut in, there would be dynamiting of property in the oil fields, and efforts to close them and any others which opened by violence, and that, if that occurred, there would be general trouble in the field, no evidence of any dynamite having been used, or show of violence practiced or actually attempted, or even threatened against any specific property in the field, was offered. We find, therefore, that not only was there never any actual riot, tumult, or insurrection, which would crеate a state of war existing in.the field, but that, if all of the conditions had come to pass, they would have resulted merely in breaches of the peace to be suppressed by the militia as a civil force, and not at all in a condition constituting, or even remotely resembling, a state of war.” 57 F. (2d) p. 231.
Referring to the testimony of Governor Sterling and General Wolters that the orders had not been issued for the purpose of affecting prices, nor even per se to limit production, but “ as acts of military necessity to suppress actually threatened war ” as they believed from reports brought to them that “unless they kept the production of oil down to within 400,000 barrels, a warlike riot and insurrection, in fact a state of war, would ensue,” the District Court said:
“We find no warrant in the evidence for such belief. Looking at it in the light most favorable to defendants’ contention, it presents nothing more than threats of violence or breaches of the peace. The testimony showed that martial law had not ousted the commission from making and enforcing rules regulating conservation, except alone as to production from the field. One of their witnesses testified: ‘ Now the Governor with his military-representatives has taken over the proration end but the conservation end is still with the Commission.’ The evidence shows no insurrection nor riot, in fact, existing at any time in the territory, no closure of thе courts, no failure of civil authorities. It shows that at no time has there been in fact any condition resembling a state of war, and that, unless the Governor may by proclamation create an irrebuttable presumption that a state of war exists, the actions of the Governor and his staff may not be justified on the ground of military necessity.” Id.
Having thus found the facts, the District Court, maintaining its jurisdiction, examined the provisions of the constitution and statutes of the State to ascertain whether they had conferred upon the Governor the power he had assumed to exercise. The court concluded that not only was no such affirmative authority conferred but that express provisions of the сonstitution withheld such power; that when the Governor calls out the troops of Texas, it is not as a military but as a civil officer; that their powers and duties are derived from the civil law; and that at no time and under no conditions are their actions above court review. The court held that, under the constitution of Texas, courts may not be closed or their processes interfered with by military orders, that courts cannot be ousted by the agencies detailed to aid them, and that their functions cannot be transferred to tribunals unknown to the constitution. In this view, the court decided that appellants “without warrant of law ” had been depriving complainants of their undoubted right to operatе their own properties in a prudent and reasonable way, in accordance with the laws of the State. 57 F. (2d) pp. 236-241. The final judgment, entered pursuant to the stipulation of the parties and upon the same record, rests upon the same findings and conclusions.
First.
The District Court had jurisdiction. The suit is not against the State. The applicablе principle is that where state officials, purporting to act under state authority, invade rights secured by the Federal Constitution, they are subject to the process of the federal courts in order that the persons injured may have appropriate relief.
Ex parte Young,
As the validity of provisions of the state constitution and statutes, if they could be dеemed to authorize the action of the Governor, was challenged, the application for injunction was properly heard by three judges.
Stratton
v.
St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co.,
Second. Appellants rely upon Article IV, §§ 1, 7 and 10 of the state constitution, and Articles 5778, 5830, 5834 and 5889 of the Revised Civil Statutes of the State, 1925. The provisions' of the state constitution make the Governor the Chief Executive Officer of the State and Commander in Chief of its military forces, with “ power to call forth the militia to execute the laws of the State, to suppress insurrections, repel invasions, and protect the frontier.” The Governor “ shall cause the laws to be faithfully executed.” The statutes cited are set forth in the margin. 1
“ Sec. 12. The writ of habeas corpus is a writ of right, and shall never be suspended ....
“ Sec. 24. The military shall at all times be subordinate to the civil authority.
“ Sec. 28. No power- of suspending laws in this State shall be exercised except by the Legislature.
“ Sec. 29. To guard against transgressions of the high powers herein delegated, we declare that everything in this ‘ Bill of Rights ’ is excepted out of the general powers of the government and shall forever remain inviolate, and all laws contrary thereto, or to the following provisions, shall be void.”
Appellees contend that the subsequent Articles of the Constitution are to be construed in harmony with these provisions of the Bill of Rights, and that these show clearly that it was not the intention of the people of Texas to confer upon the Governor the authority to declare martial law, but only to suppress insurrections, to repel invasions and to afford the protection necessary to presеrve the peace, acting in aid, and not in subversion, of the civil authority and of the jurisdiction of the courts. These provisions, said the District Court, “were written into the fundamental law as direct inhibitions upon the executive, by men who had suffered under the imposition of martial law, with its suspension of civil authority, and the ousting of the courts during reconstruction in Texas.” “ In every convention,” said the court, “ in every gathering assembled, protesting the suppression of free speech, the interference with the processes, the judgments, the decrees of courts, these men had denounced martial tyranny, and sought relief against it, and, when they met
While we recognize the force of these observations, and the question of the interpretation of the provisions of the state constitution is before us, it is still a matter of local law, as to which the courts of the State would in any event have the final word. We do not find it necessary to determine that question and we shall not attempt to explore the history of Texas or to review the decisions of the state courts cited by the appellees. 2 We pass to the consideration of the federal question presented, and for that purpose we shall assume, without deciding, that the law of the State authorizes what the Governor has done.
Third.
The existence and nature of the complainants’ rights are not open to question. Their ownership of the oil properties is undisputed. Their right to the enjoyment and use of these properties subject to reasonable regulation by the State in the exercise of its power to prevent unnecessary loss, destruction and waste, is protected by the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Ohio Oil Co.
v.
Indiana,
If this extreme position could be deemed to be well taken, it is manifest that the fiat оf a state Governor, and not the Constitution of the United States, would be the supreme law of the land; that the restrictions of the Federal Constitution upon the exercise of state power would
Fourth.
The application of these principles does not fail to take into account the distinctive authority of the State. In the performance of its essential function, in promoting the security and well-being of its people, the State must, of necessity, enjoy a broad discretion. The range of that discretion accords with the subject'of its exercise.
Jacobson
v.
Massachusetts,
By virtue of his duty to “ cause the laws to be faithfully executed,” the Executive is appropriately vested with the discretion to determine whether an exigency requiring military aid for that purpose has arisen. His decision to that effect is conclusive. That construction, this Court has sаid, in speaking of the power constitutionally conferred by the Congress upon the President to call the militia into actual service, “ necessarily results from the nature of the power itself, and from the manifest object contemplated.” The power
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is to be exercised upon sudden emergencies, upon great occasions of state, and under circumstances which may be vital to the existence of the Union.”
Martin
v.
Mott,
It does not follow from the fact that the Executive has this range of discretion, deemed to be a necessary incident of his power to suppress disorder, that every sort of action the Governor may take, no matter how unjustified by the exigency or subversive of private right and the jurisdiction of the courts, otherwise available, is conclusively supported by mere executive fiat. The contrary
We need not undertake to determine the intended significance of the expression “ martial law,” and all its possible connotations, as it was employed in the Governor’s proclamation. Nor are we concerned with the permissible scope оf determinations of military necessity in all their conceivable applications to actual or threatened disorder and breaches of the peace. Fundamentally, the question here is not of the power of the Governor to proclaim that a state of insurrection, or tumult, or riot, or breach of the peace exists, and that it is necessary to call military force to the aid of the civil power. Nor does the question relate to the quelling of disturbances and the overcoming of unlawful resistance to civil authority. The question before us is simply with respect to the Gover
Appellants’ contentions find their appropriate answer in what was said by this Court in
Ex parte Milligan,
Fifth. The argument of appellants intimates, while it reserves the question, that it may be possible for the courts to call upon the Governor, after the alleged emergency has passed, to account for what he has done, but that they may not entertain a proceeding for injunction. The suggestion confuses the question of judicial power with that of judiciаl remedy. If the matter is one of judicial cognizance, it is because of an alleged invasion of a right, and the judicial power necessarily extends to the granting of the relief found to be appropriate according to the circumstances of the case. Whether or not the injured party is entitled to an injunction will depend upon equitable principles; upon the nature of the right invaded and the adequacy of the remedy at law. If the court finds that the limits of executive authority have been transgressed, and that in view of the character of the injury equitable relief by injunction is essential in order to afford the protection to- which the injured party is entitled, it can not be said that the judicial power is fettered because the injury is attributable to a military order.
In the present case, the findings of fact made by the District Court are fully supported by the evidence. They leave no room for doubt that there was no military necessity which, from any point of view, could be taken to justify the action of the Governor in attempting to limit
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
No. 11, appeal dismissed..
No. IffiS, judgment affirmed.
Notes
“ Revised Civil Statutes of Texas, 1925 :
“Art. 5778. The Governor shall have power in the case of insurrection, invasion, tumult, riot or breach of peace, or imminent danger thereof, to order into the active service of this State any part of the militia that he may deem proper.
“Art. 5830. When an invasion of, or an insurrection in, this State is made or threatened, or when the Governor may deem it necessary for the enforcement of the laws of this State, he shall call forth the active militia or any part thereof to repel, suppress, or enforce the same, and if the number available is insufficient he shall order out suсh part of the reserve militia as he may deem necessary.
“Art. 5834. The Governor may order the active militia, or any part thereof, to assist the civil authorities in guarding the prisoners, or in conveying prisoners from and to any point in this State, or discharging other duties in connection with the execution of the law as the public interest or safety at any time may require.
“Art. 5889-. Whenever any portion of the military forces of this State is employed in aid of the civil authority, the Governor, if in his judgment the maintenance of law and order will thereby be promoted, may, by proclamation, declare the county or city in which the troops are sérving, or any special portion thereof, to be in a state of insurrection.”
Ex parte Coupland,
