in 1890.|The
Fuller Court in 1890.
Justice Joseph Bradley, writing for the Court, first examined the discussions surrounding the ratification of the Constitution. He noted that
Alexander Hamilton had written a passage in
The Federalist Papers, in
Federalist No. 81, assuring his audience that the Constitution would not remove the states' traditional immunity from lawsuits. The Court then examined similar language in statements made by
James Madison and
John Marshall in the
Virginia convention held to ratify the Constitution. Both asserted that the federal power to hear claims brought by a state against a citizen of another state would not apply in the reverse, hence that one state could not be sued in federal court by citizens of another. The Court suggested that the framers of the Constitution had not addressed the possibility of a citizen suing his own state because such a thing would simply be inconceivable to them. At the time the Constitution was written, states had
always been immune from such suits, unless the state itself
consented to be sued. Furthermore, the
Judiciary Acts of 1789 and
1802 had granted the federal courts
jurisdiction "concurrent with the courts of the several states," indicating that
the Congress had not contemplated the possibility that the federal courts would have any powers unknown to the state courts. Finally, the Court noted the argument made by Justice Marshall in another case, that the Supreme Court could hear
appeals of a state's successful suit against a citizen precisely because this was not the same thing as a citizen's suit against the state. Instead, Marshall compared them to suits against the United States, which were clearly forbidden at the time. ==Harlan's concurrence==