On October 31, 1777, the Executive Council of Georgia authorized Thomas Stone and Edward Davies, as commissioners of the state, to purchase goods from Robert Farquhar, a South Carolina merchant, to help stationed
Continental Army troops in Savannah who were in dire need of supplies. Stone and Davies agreed to give Farquhar $169,613.33 (in indigo or continental currency) for his merchandise. However, at the time of Farquhar's death in 1784, he had not received payment for his merchandise. The estate filed a claim for the debt with the Georgia legislature in 1789, but was met with a committee report refusing payment. Instead, the committee suggested the estate sue Stone and Davies, as they had withdrawn the funds meant for Farquhar from the state treasury.
Prior history Alexander Chisholm, a merchant in Charleston and an executor to Farquhar's
estate, brought suit against the state of
Georgia in the U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Georgia. The circuit court heard the case in October 1791 under the caption of ''Farquhar's Executor v. Georgia''. Chisholm sought £100,000 sterling in payment and damages. Georgia governor
Edward Telfair argued that Georgia was "a free, sovereign and independent State...[and] cannot be drawn or compelled... to answer, against the will of the said State of Georgia, before any Justices of the federal Circuit Court for the District of Georgia or before any Justices of any Court of Law or Equity whatsoever", a stance of sovereign immunity.
Associate Justice James Iredell, who heard the case while
riding circuit, along with U.S. District Court Judge
Nathaniel Pendleton, dismissed the case, citing a lack of jurisdiction under the
Judiciary Act of 1789, on grounds that a state could not be sued by a citizen of another state in
federal circuit court.
Supreme Court Chisholm subsequently filed a new suit before the Supreme Court under its
original jurisdiction, likely in the February 1792 term. The case, captioned as
Chisholm, Executor v. Georgia, sought damages amounting to $500,000. When no representative for Georgia appeared before the Court in the August 1792 term, plaintiff's counsels John Hallowell and
Attorney General Edmund Randolph consented to hold over the case until the February 1793 term. Despite additional provision of notice by the Court, no attorneys or representatives for the state appeared in the February 1793 term. The Court then proceeded to hear Randolph's arguments. ==The court's decision==