In this dеclaratory action the question on appeal is the correctness of the trial court’s judgment dismissing the action аs to some of the parties plaintiff for lack of jurisdictional amount in controversy, and as to other parties plаintiff, because of the pendency of a suit in the state court involving the same subject matter between the same parties.
The undisputed facts are well stated in the exhaustive and well-reasoned opinion of the trial court, reported in
In the second case, Manufacturers Casualty Insurance Co. v. Coker, 4 Cir.,
We agree that claimants may aggregate their claims to enforce a single title or right in which thеy have an undivided interest, but we seriously doubt whether plaintiffs with only a common or community of interest arising out of a single instrument may аggregate their claims to make up the jurisdictional amount. In any event, we know that the pecuniary consequence to each plaintiff is the test, unless of course the interest in the right asserted is undivided. See Thomson v. Gaskill,
A further contention not treated in the •decision of the trial court is to the effect •that since the court admittedly acquired jurisdiction of the claims of nine of the plaintiffs having the requisite jurisdictional amount, it thereby acquired ancillary or continuing..jurisdiction . of the non jurisdictional claims of the 39 other plaintiffs, and to avoid multiplicity of suits and expedite the administration of justice, the court should have retained jurisdiction of the whole suit for final and conclusive judgment adjudicating the rights of all of the parties under one instrument.
It is true that a federal court may assert jurisdictiоn of a claim which is a continuation of or incidental and ancillary to a principal claim over which it has jurisdiction even though it might not have jurisdiction of the ancillary proceedings if it were an independent and original action or proceedings. This is so because the ancillary claim is referable to or dependent upon the jurisdiction of the court over the principal suit or proceeding. See United States v. Acord, 10 Cir.,
Only one word need be said concerning the trial court’s discretion not to exercise its jurisdiction over the nine claims with the jurisdictional amount in controversy. The trial court has remanded the removed state-court litigation and that order is not reviewable. The questions involved in those claims must be determined under controlling state law. If the trial court should proceed to final judgment on the nine claims over which it has jurisdiction, and the state court should proceed to a contrary judgment on the 39 claims over which it has jurisdiction, an incongruous conflict would undoubtedly result a result which we ought to avoid. Cf. Franklin Life Ins. Co. v. Johnson, 10 Cir.,
Judgment is affirmed.
