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In 1979, the New Jersey Legislature created the New Jersey Transit Corporation (NJ Transit) as a "body corporate and politic with corporate succession" and constituted it as an "instrumentality of the State exercising public and essential governmental functions" but "independent of any supervision or control" by the New Jersey Department of Transportation. N. J. Stat. §27:25-4(a). The State gave NJ Transit significant authority, including the power to make bylaws, sue and be sued, make contracts, acquire property, raise funds, own corporate entities, adopt regulations, and exercise eminent domain powers. §§27:25-5, 27:25-13. NJ Transit's organic statute provides that "[n]o debt or liability of the corporation shall . . . constitute a debt [or] liability of the State," and that "[a]ll expenses . . . shall be payable from funds available to the corporation." §27:25-17. NJ Transit is governed by a board of directors (Board). §27:25-4(b). The Governor may remove Board members and may veto Board actions; the Legislature may veto some eminent domain actions. §§27:25-4(b), (f); §27:25-13(h). NJ Transit is now the third largest provider of bus, rail, and light rail transit, operating within an area that includes New Jersey, New York City, and Philadelphia.
In 2017, Jeffrey Colt was struck by an NJ Transit bus in Midtown Manhattan; a year later, Cedric Galette was injured when an NJ Transit bus crashed into a car in which he was a passenger in Philadelphia. Both sued NJ Transit for negligence in their respective home state courts. NJ Transit moved to dismiss both lawsuits, arguing that it is an arm of New Jersey entitled to sovereign immunity. The New York Court of Appeals held that NJ Transit is not an arm of New Jersey; the Pennsylvania Supreme Court held the opposite, concluding NJ Transit is an arm of New Jersey. This Court consolidated the cases and granted certiorari to resolve the conflict.
Held: NJ Transit Corporation is not an arm of New Jersey and thus is not entitled to share in New Jersey's interstate sovereign immunity. Pp. 5-23.
(a) Sovereign immunity is " 'personal' " to the State and extends only to arms of the State itself, College Savings Bank v. Florida Prepaid Postsecondary Ed. Expense Bd.,
(1) The Court's early cases focused on whether an entity was a separate legal person from the State, with the corporate form serving as a key marker of separate legal personhood. A "corporation" was understood as "an artificial person" that could "sue and be sued by its own members" and "contract with them . . . as with any strangers." Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheat. 518, 667-668. In Bank of United States v. Planters' Bank of Ga., 9 Wheat. 904, the Court held that a state-chartered bank was not an arm of Georgia because it was a "corporation" and judgments would be satisfied by the corporation's property, not the State's. Subsequent cases reaffirmed this holding even when the State exerted significant control over the bank. See, e.g., Bank of Kentucky v. Wister, 2 Pet. 318, 323-324. The Court also applied the same reasoning to cities and counties created as municipal corporations. See Lincoln County v. Luning,
(2) Beginning in the mid-20th century, the Court began taking a more holistic view of an entity's relationship with the State, but remained focused on whether the State structured the entity to be legally separate, with corporate status remaining central. In Moor v. County of Alameda,
(b) The Court's precedents have consistently and predominantly examined whether the State structured the entity as a legally separate entity liable for its own judgments. The clearest evidence of legal separateness is when the State created a corporation with traditional corporate powers to sue and be sued, hold property, make contracts, and incur debt. A State might create a corporation precisely because of its independent legal status, allowing the State to distance itself from burdens the corporate entity may incur. When a State makes such a decision, courts should presume the corporation enjoys all the advantages and disadvantages of separate legal status, including that it is no longer part of the State itself. Other aspects of state law may also indicate legal separateness, such as defining the entity as a "separate legal entity" or excluding it from the definition of "State" for other purposes.
The Court's precedents also focus on whether the entity is liable for its own judgments or whether the State is formally liable. One central rationale for sovereign immunity is protecting States' "ability to make [their] own decisions about 'the allocation of scarce resources.' " Lewis v. Clarke,
Finally, courts may consider the degree of control the State exerts over the entity, but should do so with caution because "ultimate control of every state-created entity resides with the State," even those that are not arms of the State. Hess,
(c) Even if an entity is not an arm of the State, a particular suit or remedy may require dismissal due to sovereign immunity if the State is nevertheless the real party in interest. See, e.g., Hopkins v. Clemson,
(d) Applying these principles, NJ Transit is not an arm of New Jersey. To start, New Jersey structured NJ Transit as a legally separate entity: It was created as a "body corporate and politic with corporate succession" possessing typical corporate powers, such as the power to "[s]ue and be sued," "enter into contracts," and "acquire . . . property." §§27:25-4(a), 27:25-5(a), (j), (r). NJ Transit's corporate status serves as strong evidence it is not an arm of the State. Although NJ Transit's organic statute labels it an "instrumentality of the State," §27:25-4(a), that term lacks the historical weight of the corporate form and says little about arm-of-the-State status. Other aspects of New Jersey law undercut any inference from the term "instrumentality": The New Jersey Tort Claims Act and Contractual Liability Act exclude entities with sue-and-be-sued authority from the definition of "State." §§59:1, 59:3, 59:13-2.
Second, as NJ Transit concedes, the State is not formally liable for any of NJ Transit's debts or liabilities under New Jersey law. §27:25-17.
Finally, the control New Jersey exerts over NJ Transit does not change the conclusion. Although the State exerts substantial control--e.g., Governor's appointment and removal powers, §27:25-4(b); cabinet member chairing the Board, §27:25-4(d); gubernatorial veto power, §27:25-4(f); legislative veto over some eminent domain actions, §27:25-13(h)--New Jersey law also states NJ Transit "shall be independent of any supervision or control by the [transportation] department" and requires it to "exercise independent judgment." §§27:25-4(a), 27:25-4.1(b)(2)(d). This level of control does not meaningfully affect NJ Transit's status with respect to the arm-of-the-State analysis given that it is a legally separate corporation responsible for its own judgments. Pp. 15-17.
(e) NJ Transit's and its amici's counterarguments are unavailing. NJ Transit contends corporate status is not dispositive, but NJ Transit is a corporation with all the hallmarks of separate legal personhood, and the Court has not previously found a similarly structured corporation to be an arm of the State. NJ Transit's reliance on State Highway Comm'n of Wyo. v. Utah Constr. Co.,
NJ Transit argues its description as serving "public and essential governmental functions," §27:25-4(a), and its delegation of substantial public powers demonstrate an intent by New Jersey to create it as an arm of the State. The arm-of-the-State analysis, however, focuses not on whether the entity serves public functions but on whether the State chose to serve those functions through its own apparatus or through a legally separate entity. Cities and counties serve public functions and exercise police powers but are not arms of the State. Assessing what qualifies as an essential governmental function can also be "unsound in principle and unworkable in practice." Garcia v. San Antonio Metropolitan Transit Authority,
NJ Transit also contends that the Court should consider its practical financial relationship with the State, including the degree of state funding and the likelihood the State would pay its judgments. Neither Lake Country nor Hess supports this position: Lake Country's discussion of practical consequences relied on real-party-in-interest cases, while its arm-of-the-State analysis discussed only whether the Compact expressly provided that obligations would not bind the States.
Finally, NJ Transit points to cases outside the sovereign immunity context to argue that the Court should place more weight on the State's control over, and practical financial relationship with, the entity. Those cases, however, warned that an entity can count as part of the State for some but not other purposes, and thus have little bearing on the arm-of-the-State analysis.
Amici States urge the Court to adopt a rule that a State's own characterization of an entity should be dispositive. This position focuses on the label the State places on an entity, rather than on whether the State structured the entity as legally separate. It also prioritizes one characterization ("instrumentality") over another ("body corporate"), and there is no good reason to believe the State intended NJ Transit to be part of the State itself by using "instrumentality" when it simultaneously used "body corporate," a term traditionally understood to create a "[s]eparate legal personality," First Nat. City Bank v. Banco Para el Comercio Exterior de Cuba,
No. 24-1021, 332 A. 3d 776, reversed; No. 24-1113, 43 N. Y. 3d 463, 264 N. E. 3d 774, affirmed; and both cases remanded.
Sotomayor, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
Opinion of the Court
607 U. S. ____ (2026)
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Washington, D. C. 20543, pio@supremecourt.gov, of any typographical or other formal errors.
Nos. 24-1021 and 24-1113
CEDRIC GALETTE, PETITIONER 24-1021 v. NEW JERSEY TRANSIT CORPORATION NEW JERSEY TRANSIT CORPORATION, et al., PETITIONERS 24-1113 v. JEFFREY COLT, et al.on writ of certiorari to the supreme court of pennsylvania, eastern district
on writ of certiorari to the court of appeals of new york
[March 4, 2026]
Justice Sotomayor delivered the opinion of the Court.
States are generally entitled to immunity from being sued in another State's courts without their consent. That sovereign immunity is personal to the State and thus extends only to arms of the State itself, not to legally independent entities that the State creates.
This pair of cases arises out of two accidents, one in New York City and one in Philadelphia, in which New Jersey Transit buses struck and injured people. Both victims sued New Jersey Transit, a corporation created by the New Jersey Legislature, in their respective home courts in New York and Pennsylvania. The highest courts in those States diverged as to whether New Jersey Transit is an arm of New Jersey. The Court granted certiorari to resolve whether New Jersey Transit is an arm of New Jersey and thus entitled to the State's sovereign immunity. It is not. Accordingly, the judgment of the New York Court of Appeals is affirmed and the judgment of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court is reversed.
I
A
Starting in the 1960s and 1970s, New Jerseyans increasingly drove to work. This shift led railroads to curtail commuter-rail services connecting the New Jersey suburbs to New York City and caused significant highway congestion. The New Jersey Legislature responded by providing heavy subsidies and operational assistance to the major private rail and bus companies that served the region, but service remained severely fragmented.
In search of a new solution, the Legislature in 1979 created the New Jersey Transit Corporation (NJ Transit). See N. J. Public Transportation Act of 1979, N. J. Stat. §27:25-1 et seq. (2026). The State structured the entity as a "body corporate and politic with corporate succession." §27:25-4(a). The "corporation" was "constituted as an instrumentality of the State exercising public and essential governmental functions." Ibid. It was "allocated within the Department of Transportation," but "the corporation" was "independent of any supervision or control by the department or by any body or officer thereof." Ibid.
The State gave NJ Transit significant authority. For instance, it has the power to: make its own bylaws; sue and be sued; enter into contracts; acquire or deal in and with real or personal property; raise funds from fares, gifts, grants, or loans; own and control any corporate entity acquired or formed to carry out its objectives; adopt rules and regulations as necessary; and exercise eminent domain powers. §§27:25-5, 27:25-13. Moreover, NJ Transit's organic statute provides that "[n]o debt or liability of the corporation shall be deemed or construed to create or constitute a debt, liability, or a loan or pledge of the credit of the State." §27:25-17. It also states that "[a]ll expenses incurred by the corporation . . . shall be payable from funds available to the corporation" and that "no liability or obligation shall be incurred by the corporation beyond the extent to which moneys are available." Ibid.
The corporation is governed by a board of directors (Board). §27:25-4(b). The Board has 13 members, 11 of whom are voting members. Ibid. The voting members consist of three ex officio members from the Governor's cabinet, six members appointed with the advice and consent of the Senate, and two members appointed on the recommendation of the President of the Senate and Speaker of the General Assembly. Ibid. The Governor may remove any Board member (eight of whom only for cause) and may veto any action the Board takes. §§27:25-4(b), (f ). The Legislature may also veto some eminent domain actions. §27:25-13(h).
Once created, the Board adopted its own bylaws and hired a President and CEO to manage day-to-day operations. It then acquired and consolidated the assets of several major rail and bus services operating in and around New Jersey. In the last several decades, the Legislature has appropriated funding for NJ Transit's operational budget each year, covering anywhere from 15% to 46% of that budget. Brief for NJ Transit 35. NJ Transit also receives funding from the State and the Federal Government for its capital projects.1 NJ Transit's revenues have fluctuated over time; in 2024, it generated $832 million in operating revenues.2
Today, NJ Transit is the Nation's third largest provider of bus, rail, and light rail transit, operating within a 5,300-square-mile area that includes New Jersey, New York City, and Philadelphia.
B
In 2017, Jeffrey Colt was crossing 40th Street in Midtown Manhattan when an NJ Transit bus struck him and knocked him to the ground. A year later, Cedric Galette was a passenger in a car driving down Market Street in Philadelphia when an NJ Transit bus crashed into the car. Both were seriously injured.
Colt and Galette sued NJ Transit for negligence in their respective home state courts: Colt in New York and Galette in Pennsylvania. NJ Transit moved to dismiss both lawsuits, arguing that it is an arm of New Jersey and thus entitled to New Jersey's sovereign immunity.
The New York Court of Appeals held that NJ Transit is not an arm of New Jersey. 43 N. Y. 3d 463, 466, 264 N. E. 3d 774, 776 (2024). The court first observed that the Federal Courts of Appeals have analyzed whether an entity is an arm of the State using "an array of multifactor and multistep tests." Id., at 472, 264 N. E. 3d, at 780.3 It then distilled from those cases a three-factor inquiry: "(1) how the State defines the entity and its functions, (2) the State's power to direct the entity's conduct, and (3) the effect on the State of a judgment against the entity." Id., at 473, 264 N. E. 3d, at 781. Applying those factors, the court held that NJ Transit is not an arm of New Jersey and that Colt's suit could thus proceed.
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court, however, held the opposite, concluding that NJ Transit is an arm of New Jersey. 332 A. 3d 776, 779 (2025). It applied its own six-factor test, which considers: " '(1) the legal classification and description of the entity within the governmental structure of the State, both statutorily and under its caselaw; (2) the degree of control the State exercises over the entity, both through the power of appointment, and the power to subsequently veto its actions; (3) the power of the entity's board to independently raise revenue on its own; (4) the degree of funding provided by the State to the entity relative to other funding sources; (5) whether any monetary obligation incurred by the entity is binding upon the State; and (6) whether the core function of the entity . . . can be categorized as a function which is normally performed by local government or State government.' " Id., at 785-786 (brackets omitted). Under that test, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court concluded that NJ Transit is an arm of New Jersey and thus dismissed Galette's suit.
This Court granted certiorari to resolve the conflict and consolidated the cases.
II
A State's immunity from suit is a "fundamental aspect of the sovereignty which the States enjoyed before the ratification of the Constitution, and which they retain today." Alden v. Maine,
Sovereign immunity, however, is " 'personal' " to the State itself. College Savings Bank v. Florida Prepaid Postsecondary Ed. Expense Bd.,
A
1
When examining the relationship between the State and an entity it created, this Court's early cases focused on whether the entity was a separate legal person from the State. One key marker of separate legal personhood was the corporate form. At common law, a "corporation" was "an artificial person, existing in contemplation of law, and endowed with" "certain immunities, privileges, and capacities in its collective character, which do not belong to the natural persons composing it." Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheat. 518, 667 (1819). As a result of its separate legal personhood, a corporation could "sue and be sued by its own members" and "contract with them in the same manner as with any strangers." Id., at 667-668.
This Court first applied this idea of corporate personhood to the arm-of-the-State inquiry in Bank of United States v. Planters' Bank of Ga., 9 Wheat. 904 (1824). It held that a state-chartered bank was not an arm of Georgia because it was a "corporation" and "the judgment" would "be satisfied by the property of the corporation, not by that of the individual corporators." Id., at 907. Chief Justice Marshall explained that the "State of Georgia, by giving to the Bank the capacity to sue and be sued, voluntarily strips itself of its sovereign character, so far as respects the transactions of the Bank, and waives all the privileges of that character." Id., at 907-908. Subsequent cases reaffirmed Planters' Bank's holding, relying on the corporate status of other state-chartered banks to deny them sovereign immunity. That was true even when the State exerted significant control over the bank, such as by being its sole shareholder or possessing appointment and removal power over its officers. See, e.g., Bank of Kentucky v. Wister, 2 Pet. 318, 323-324 (1829); Briscoe v. Bank of Kentucky, 11 Pet. 257, 326-327 (1837); Curran v. Arkansas, 15 How. 304, 309 (1853).
The Court applied the same reasoning to cities and counties that were created as municipal corporations. The Court explained that the corporate form of such entities, which included the power to "sue and be sued," likewise made them legal persons separate from the sovereign and thus not entitled to share in the State's sovereign immunity. See Lincoln County v. Luning,
Employing similar logic, the Court also held that entities created by the Federal Government were not its "arms" when they possessed the separate personhood of a corporation. See, e.g., Metropolitan R. Co. v. District of Columbia,
2
Beginning in the mid-20th century, the Court began to consider additional features of an entity's relationship with the State in the arm-of-the-State inquiry. Even so, the analysis remained focused on discerning whether the State had structured the entity to be legally separate, and corporate status remained central to that analysis.
For example, in Moor v. County of Alameda,
Resting on the firmly established rule that municipal corporations and counties are not arms of the State, the Court in Mt. Healthy City Bd. of Ed. v. Doyle,
The Court again asked whether an entity was "comparable to a county or municipality" or rather an arm of the State in Lake Country Estates, Inc. v. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency,
Finally, in Hess v. Port Authority Trans-Hudson Corporation,
B
Although the Court's arm-of-the-State cases have accounted for various considerations over time, those precedents have consistently, and predominantly, examined whether the State structured the entity as a legally separate entity liable for its own judgments.
The clearest evidence that a State has created a legally separate entity is that it created a corporation with the traditional corporate powers to sue and be sued, hold property, make contracts, and incur debt. See Planters' Bank, 9 Wheat., at 907-908; Lincoln County,
In fact, a State might choose to create a corporation, rather than an unincorporated government agency, precisely because of its independent legal status. This move allows the State to distance the entity from burdens that apply to the State itself or to distance the State from the burdens that the corporate entity may incur. For instance, States initially created banks as corporations in part because States themselves are not permitted to "emit Bills of Credit" under the Constitution. Art. I, §10; see Briscoe,
The corporate form, however, is not the only structure that signals the State has created a legally separate entity. Other aspects of state law may indicate legal separateness as well. Most obviously, the entity could be described as a " 'separate legal entity.' " Lake Country,
The Court's precedents also focus on whether the entity is liable for its own judgments or whether the State is formally liable, i.e., whether "any judgment" against the entity "must be satisfied out of the state treasury." Hess,
In contrast to formal legal liability, an entity's practical financial relationship with the State, such as its expectation that the State would cover its judgments if needed, has less relevance. Just as a State cannot lose its sovereign immunity by "requir[ing] a third party to reimburse it" (such as by buying insurance), Regents,
Finally, the Court's cases also suggest that courts may consider the degree of control the State exerts over the entity, but courts should do so with caution. Control is not especially probative because "ultimate control of every state-created entity resides with the State," even those that are not arms of the State. Hess,
In fact, this Court has never once found a corporation that was liable for its own judgments to be an arm of the State, even when the State had significant control over the entity. That includes cases in which the State was the sole shareholder, possessed appointment and removal powers over the entity's officers, and " 'manage[d]' " the entity's " 'affairs.' " Wister, 2 Pet., at 323-324 (Bank of Commonwealth of Kentucky); see Briscoe,
C
Even if an entity is not an arm of the State, the Court has long recognized that a State's sovereign immunity may still require dismissal of the action if the State is the real party in interest in that particular case. Although the arm-of-the-State and the real-party-in-interest doctrines are related, they can provide separate bases for dismissal.
When a State is not named as a defendant in a lawsuit, it may still be the real party in interest. For instance, a damages claim against a state or federal officer in their official capacity is barred by sovereign immunity because "[t]he real party in interest is the government entity, not the named official." Lewis,
This Court's decision in Hopkins v. Clemson,
III
A
Under the principles articulated above, NJ Transit is not an arm of New Jersey.
To start, New Jersey structured NJ Transit as a legally separate entity. NJ Transit was created as a "body corporate and politic with corporate succession." N. J. Stat. §27:25-4(a). Consistent with that label, NJ Transit possesses typical corporate powers, such as the power to "[s]ue and be sued," "enter into contracts," and "[p]urchase, . . . or otherwise acquire, . . . real or personal property," among others. §§27:25-5(a), (j), (r). It also has the power to "[m]ake and alter bylaws," "[s]et and collect fares," raise funds from "gifts, grants, or loans," "[e]stablish" its own "operating divisions, "[a]dopt and maintain" its own "employee benefit programs," and even "[o]wn" and "control" any "corporate entity" that it "acquired" or "formed" to carry out its statutory objectives. §§27:25-5(c), (g), (m), (n), (t), (u). NJ Transit's corporate status serves as strong evidence that it is not an arm of the State. See, e.g., Planters' Bank, 9 Wheat., at 907-908; Hess,
True, NJ Transit's organic statute also labels it an "instrumentality of the State." §27:25-4(a). The term "instrumentality," however, lacks the historical weight the corporate form does and says little about whether an entity is an arm of the State. See, e.g., Regents,
Second, the State is not formally liable for any of NJ Transit's debts or liabilities. New Jersey law provides that "[n]o debt or liability of the corporation shall be deemed or construed to create or constitute a debt, liability, or a loan or pledge of the credit of the State." §27:25-17. Before this Court, NJ Transit concedes that "New Jersey is not formally liable for NJ Transit's debts." Brief for NJ Transit 34.
Finally, the control that New Jersey exerts over NJ Transit does not change the overall conclusion here. Undoubtedly, the State exerts a substantial amount of control over NJ Transit. The Governor has appointment and removal powers over the Board, §27:25-4(b); a state cabinet member (the Commissioner of Transportation) chairs the Board, §27:25-4(d); the Governor may veto any of the Board's actions, §27:25-4(f ); and the Legislature may veto some eminent-domain actions, §27:25-13(h). On the other hand, New Jersey law states that NJ Transit "shall be independent of any supervision or control by the [transportation] department or by any body or officer thereof," and requires that it "exercise independent judgment." §§27:25-4(a), 27:25-4.1(b)(2)(d). In addition, the Governor's removal authority for 8 of the 13 board members is limited to for-cause removal. §27:25-4(b). This level of control does not meaningfully affect NJ Transit's status, given the fact that it is a legally separate corporation and is responsible for its own judgments.
B
NJ Transit's and its amici's counterarguments are unavailing. To start, NJ Transit contends that formal corporate status, which ordinarily includes a sue-and-be-sued power, is not dispositive in the arm-of-the-State analysis. True: As described above, the "corporation" label itself is not dispositive. See supra, at 10-11. NJ Transit, however, is a corporation that has all the hallmarks of separate legal personhood, such as the power to sue and be sued, make contracts, and hold property in its own name, which all indicate that it is not an arm of the State and does not share in its immunity from suit. This Court has not previously found a similarly structured corporation to be an arm of the State.
NJ Transit also contends that this Court's precedents have placed little weight on the formal aspects of corporate separateness, such as sue-and-be-sued clauses, citing State Highway Comm'n of Wyo. v. Utah Constr. Co.,
Next, NJ Transit argues that New Jersey demonstrated its intent to create NJ Transit as an arm of the State by describing it as serving "public and essential governmental functions," §27:25-4(a), and delegating to it "substantial plenary public powers," such as the power to operate a police force, exercise eminent domain power, and promulgate regulations, Brief for NJ Transit 22. The arm-of-the-State analysis, however, focuses not on whether the entity serves public functions, but rather on whether the State has chosen to serve those public functions through its own apparatus or through that of a legally separate entity. That is why the Court has long recognized that cities and counties are not arms of the State despite serving public functions and exercising police powers. See Lincoln County,
Moreover, assessing what qualifies as an essential governmental function can be "unsound in principle and unworkable in practice." Garcia v. San Antonio Metropolitan Transit Authority,
NJ Transit also contends that the Court should consider not only formal liability, but also the practical reality of its financial relationship with the State. According to NJ Transit, this includes whether and to what degree the State funds the entity and whether the State is likely to voluntarily pay the entity's judgments. Brief for NJ Transit 34-37. In support of this position, NJ Transit relies on Lake Country and Hess. Neither case bears the weight NJ Transit places on it.
It is true, as Lake Country explained, that this Court has allowed entities to invoke sovereign immunity "in order to protect the state treasury from liability that would have had essentially the same practical consequences as a judgment against the State itself."
Turning to Hess, that case framed the inquiry as asking whether the "State [was] in fact obligated to bear" the entity's judgments "both legally and practically," and mentioned that the entity had generated its own revenue for years.
Hinging an entity's arm-of-the-State status to the practical realities of state funding also risks arbitrary distinctions and inconsistent treatment of the same entity. These cases illustrate the problem: In the last 35 years, New Jersey's funding of NJ Transit's annual operating budget has oscillated anywhere from 15% to 46% of the budget. Brief for NJ Transit 35. Although NJ Transit maintains that it is and has always been an arm of New Jersey, it offers no meaningful way to decide how much funding is enough to prove it is "financially integrated with the State and financially dependent on it." Id., at 34. The more apt question instead is whether the State would be formally obligated to pay the entity's judgments. See, e.g., Planters' Bank, 9 Wheat., at 907; Moor,
More generally, NJ Transit advocates for an arm-of-the-State inquiry that places more weight on the State's control over, and practical financial relationship with, the entity. For support, NJ Transit points to a series of cases outside the sovereign immunity context. See Biden v. Nebraska,
Finally, 23 States contend as amici curiae that the current use of multifactor balancing tests in the lower courts has created significant uncertainty. To address this problem, they urge this Court to adopt a rule that a State's own characterization of an entity, such as New Jersey's labeling of NJ Transit as an "instrumentality of the State," should be dispositive.
One problem with the States' position is that it focuses on the label a State places on an entity, rather than assessing whether the State structured the entity as legally separate. See supra, at 12. Another problem is that the States' position prioritizes one of New Jersey's characterizations, the term "instrumentality," over another, "body corporate." There is no good reason to believe that the State intended for NJ Transit to be part of the State itself by using the word "instrumentality," when it simultaneously used the word "body corporate," a term traditionally understood to create a "[s]eparate legal personality." First Nat. City Bank,
Of course, all States maintain the power to "structure themselves as they wish." Berger v. North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP,
IV
NJ Transit is not an arm of New Jersey and thus is not entitled to share in New Jersey's interstate sovereign immunity. The judgment of the New York Court of Appeals is affirmed, the judgment of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court is reversed, and the cases are remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
*Together with No. 24-1113, New Jersey Transit Corporation et al. v. Colt et al., on certiorari to the Court of Appeals of New York.
See NJ Transit Corp., New Jersey Transit Corporation Annual Financial Report (Year Ended June 30, 2024), p. 11, https://perma.cc/Z2H5-ZJ48.
Id., at 4.
See, e.g., Fresenius Medical Care Cardiovascular Resources, Inc. v. Puerto Rico and Caribbean Cardiovascular Center Corp., 322 F. 3d 56, 68 (CA1 2003); Mancuso v. New York State Thruway Auth., 86 F. 3d 289, 293 (CA2 1996); Karns v. Shanahan, 879 F. 3d 504, 513 (CA3 2018); Springboards to Education, Inc. v. McAllen Independent School Dist., 62 F. 4th 174, 178-179 (CA5 2023); Kohn v. State Bar of Cal., 87 F. 4th 1021, 1027-1030 (CA9 2023) (en banc); Puerto Rico Ports Auth. v. Federal Maritime Comm'n, 531 F. 3d 868, 874 (CADC 2008) (Kavanaugh, J.).
After this Court granted certiorari, NJ Transit filed an application for stay of Colt's pending damages trial in the Supreme Court of the State of New York. This Court stayed the trial pending issuance of the mandate in these cases.
This discussion is not intended to exhaust all considerations that may be relevant to the arm-of-the-State analysis, and instead focuses on the considerations most pertinent to these cases. Additional considerations may apply, for example, in cases involving bistate entities or unincorporated entities. See Hess,
NJ Transit has never argued that New Jersey is the real party in interest in either of these two cases. These cases therefore do not implicate whether dismissal is required on this ground.
NJ Transit also relies on several cases that did not squarely confront the arm-of-the-State inquiry. Two cases addressed whether, and to what extent, a "sue and be sued" clause waives sovereign immunity. See Thacker v. TVA,
Hess also discussed two Circuit cases involving "transit facilities that place[d] heavy fiscal tolls on their founding States."
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No. 24-1021
Argued: January 14, 2026
Decided: March 04, 2026
Court: United States Supreme Court
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