delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question here is whether petitioner’s complaint was properly dismissed on the ground that the matter in controversy did not really and substantially exceed $3,000 as required by §§ 24 and 37 of the Judicial Code. 1
Filed in the federal court for the Middle District of Alabama, petitioner’s complaint alleged that he had been induced to purchase an insurance certificate through fraudulent misrepresentations of respondents’ agent bear
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ing upon its actual value, and claimed $200,000 as actual and punitive damages.
2
The record shows that at the time of the dismissal petitioner had paid only $202.35 on his certificate, and that its maximum potential value was only $1,000. From this the District Court declared that it was “apparent to a legal certainty,”
St. Paul Mercury Indemnity Co.
v.
Red Cab Co.,
Where both actual and punitive damages are recoverable under a complaint each must be considered to. the extent claimed in determining jurisdictional amount. 4 Therefore even though the petitioner is limited to actual damages of $1,000, as both courts held, the question remains whether it is apparent to a legal certainty from the complaint that he could not recover, in addition, sufficient punitive damages to make up the requisite $3,000. If the controlling law is that of South Carolina, where the *241 alleged fraudulent misrepresentations are said to have occurred, petitioner clearly might recover an award exceeding $3,000. 5 Respondents urge however that the law of Alabama, where the insurance certificate was issued and mailed, must control. We need not pass upon this question for we are satisfied that under the law of Alabama as well as that of South Carolina petitioner’s allegations of fraud if properly proved might justify an award exceeding $3,000.
Respondents assert that petitioner’s complaint does not allege that type of “gross fraud” essential for an award of punitive damages under Alabama law. The Supreme Court of Alabama has declared that in an action for deceit “gross fraud” which will support punitive damages may be defined as “representations made with a knowledge of their falseness (or so recklessly made as to amount to the same thing), and with the purpose of injuring the plaintiff.”
Southern Building & Loan Assn.
v.
Dinsmore,
Respondents also maintain that, even if it would warrant some punitive damages, the complaint could not under Alabama law warrant enough to support a judgment of $3,000. It is true as respondents point out that the Alabama Supreme Court has said that the amount of punitive damages “ought ... to bear proportion to the actual damages sustained,”
Mobile & Montgomery R. Co.
v.
Ashcraft,
The judgment of dismissal is reversed and the cause remanded to the District Court for further proceedings.
Reversed.
Notes
36 Stat. 1091, 1098; U. S. C. Tit. 28, §§41, 80. The complaint alleged diversity of citizenship as the basis for federal jurisdiction.
The complaint further alleged official misconduct on the part of certain officers of respondent society, and joined them as separate defendants. Petitioner contends that these allegations with the accompanying prayers for relief are sufficient in themselves to establish that the matter in dispute exceeds $3,000, on any of three theories: A class action under Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure; a derivative action against the officers for the benefit of the society; or an original action to reorganize a mutual insurance society properly brought by a member. As our decision indicates, we find it unnecessary to pass upon these contentions.
Barry
v.
Edmunds,
Respondents did not seriously contend otherwise, and the South Carolina cases cited to us apparently foreclosed such a contention:
Baddy
v.
Greensboro-Fayetteville Bus Lines,
191 S. C. 538,
Had petitioner’s complaint been filed in a state court in Alabama, it would have supported a verdict and judgment for punitive damages. The Alabama Supreme Court holds that, “It is not necessary
*242
to claim punitive damages specially, for they are not special damages. It is not necessary to allege the matter of aggravation which justifies their recovery.”
Fidelity-Phenix Fire Ins. Co.
v.
Murphy,
In
U. S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co.
v.
Millonas,
