*297 OPINION
Plaintiff Peter Bishop moves to remand his complaint to the state court from which it was removed by defendant General Motors. Because we hold that Bishop’s claim does not meet the amount in controversy required to establish federal subject matter jurisdiction, and because we decline to treat attorneys’ fees or highly speculative punitive damages as aggregable for purposes of meeting the amount in controversy, plaintiffs motion to remand will be granted.
I. BACKGROUND
Defendant General Motors (“GM”) is the manufacturer of the Chevrolet Lumina, Buick Regal, Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme and Pontiac Grand Prise. These automobiles are known collectively as the “GM W-Body Car” and are built on the same GM platform. This putative class action involves the owners and lessees of the GM W-Body cars for the model years 1988 to 1993. Plaintiff Peter Bishop owns a 1992 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme.
The GM W-body cars are outfitted with brakes that were designed and manufactured by Delphi Chassis Systems, a division of GM. Plaintiff contends that the brakes of the GM W-body cars are defective, that GM was aware of this defect prior to marketing the cars or shortly thereafter, and that GM failed to disclose this fact to present and future owners of the GM W-body cars. Plaintiff contends that he and the other purported members of his class have suffered economic harm as a result of having to pay for repairs or due to the diminution in the value of their cars because of public disclosure of the defect. Plaintiff does not assert that he or any other class member has been injured as a result of the brakes’ defect.
II. DISCUSSION
An action removed to federal court may be remanded to state court if the district court lacks subject matter jurisdiction. 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c). When confronted with a motion to remand, the removing party has the burden of establishing the propriety of removal.
Boyer v. Snap-On Tools Corp.,
1. Aggregating Common Interests
In
Snyder v. Harris,
Distinguishing between claims characterized as separate and distinct and those which are common and undivided has proved difficult. Cases in which the courts have applied the “common and undivided interest” rule to permit aggregation include: an action by the holders of two notes, both secured by the same lien, who were suing to assert that lien; a wrongful death action for the benefit of all surviving beneficiaries; an action by the dis-tributees of an estate against one alleged to have converted estate assets; an action by a debtor and his creditors seeking to collect the proceeds of a fire insurance policy; and an action by an Indian tribe to quiet title to a tract of land. See 14A Charles A Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure, § 3704 (2d ed. 1985).
More recently the Eleventh Circuit held in
Tapscott v. MS Dealer Service Corp.,
We believe that Tapscott represents an unwarranted and ill-considered extension of the doctrine of “common and undivided interest” to highly speculative punitive damages claims. The paradigm cases of “common and undivided interest” set forth supra are those which involve a single indivisible res, such as an estate, a piece of property (the classic example), or an insurance policy. These are matters that cannot be adjudicated without implicating the rights of everyone involved with the res. This is not trae of punitive damages. Individual plaintiffs can sue separately for punitive damages, and, whether they prevail on the merits or not, whether they are awarded punitive damages or not, the rights of subsequent plaintiffs remain unaffected. Indeed, one of the many cogent criticisms of punitive damages is that multiple punitive liability can both bankrupt a defendant and preclude recovery for tardy plaintiffs. See e.g., Dan B. Dobbs, Law of Remedies, § 3.11(8), p. 501 (2d ed. 1993).
The potential plaintiffs’ claims for punitive damages in this case are thus not a “single right”; rather, they are separate and distinct, to be brought together in a class action only for the convenience of the plaintiffs. 1 The test for aggregation is not the defendant’s interest, in our view, but whether the plaintiffs’ interests are inextricably intertwined.
In cases which do find a “common and undivided interest” the res is generally clearly defined. When dealing with a piece of property, an insurance policy, or an estate, a court can be reasonably confident of its value for jurisdictional purposes. But punitive damages are frequently little more than a lawyer’s fantasy. A precise amount is impossible to ascertain at the pleading stage. Such damages are very easy to plead and, given the large number of plaintiffs in many class actions, under the Tapscott rule the federal courts would have jurisdiction over any sizeable diversity class action with a colorable malice claim. 2 Such a result direct *299 ly contravenes the purpose behind the amount in controversy requirement, which is to limit the federal docket to substantial cases.
Finally, we believe it is inconsistent to permit the aggregation of punitive damages to meet the jurisdictional minimum when the Third Circuit has held explicitly that attorneys’ fees may not be aggregated to meet the jurisdictional minimum, 3 and where it has long been the law that compensatory damages may not be aggregated. 4
2. The Named Plaintiff
a. Compensatory Damages
In
Zahn v. International Paper Co.,
Whether
Zahn
continues to require that the jurisdictional amount be established by each and every class member is thus not clear in this Circuit. Nonetheless, even those courts which have declined to apply
Zahn
in its strictest sense have required that the named plaintiff meet the jurisdictional amount.
In re Abbott Laboratories,
The Third Circuit has held that, where a complaint does not request a precise monetary amount, the district court must make an independent inquiry into the value of the claims alleged.
Angus v. Shiley, Inc.,
A reasonable reading of the value of Bishop’s claim compels the conclusion that it is worth less than $50,000. Depending on the particular model, a 1992 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme has a (loan) value ranging from $7,075 to $12,200, according to the N.AD.A Official Used Car Guide, April 1996. We will assume that the value of the car has been reduced by $5,000 due to the cost of repairs and the diminution in value arising from public disclosure of the defect. 7 Tripling this figure under the Consumer Fraud Act, N.J.S.A. 56:8-19, provides a total award of only $15,000.
b. Attorneys’ Fees and Punitive Damages
Defendant argues that the $35,-000.01 difference can be made up by a combination of attorneys’ fees and punitive damages. The Third Circuit has insisted that courts look critically at claims where punitive damages or attorneys’ fees constitute the bulk of the amount in controversy.
Spellman v. Meridian Bank,
— F.3d-,-,
A trial judge has broad discretion with respect to setting both attorneys’ fees and punitive damages.
Cox v. Sears Roebuck & Co.,
With respect to attorneys’ fees Judge Dal-zell held, in a case with the same underlying facts, that attorneys’ fees could not rise to the level required to meet the jurisdictional amount.
Neff v. General Motors Corp.,
In determining how to calculate the attorneys’ fees attributable to Bishop, we must first consider whether to analyze such fees in terms of a class action or as an individual suit brought by plaintiff in his own behalf. Judge Dalzell’s analysis in Neff seems to have implicitly assumed the latter. Id. at 484. However, in Spellman, which was decided after Neff, the Third Circuit held that in calculating the amount in controversy in a putative class action “attorneys’ fees must be distributed across the class or across the claimants.” Id. at - at *9. Bishop is entitled only to his pro rata share of attorneys’ fees as a class member, an insignificant number in a class numbering over 3,000,000.
The same reasoning may also be applied to the issue of punitive damages. Under the New Jersey Consumer Fraud Act an award of treble damages is mandatory if plaintiff proves both an unlawful practice under the Act and a resulting ascertainable loss. N.J.S.A. 56:8-19;
Cox v. Sears Roebuck & Co.,
As with attorneys’ fees, Bishop’s claim for punitive damages may be valued either (i) from the perspective of an individual plaintiff suing on his own behalf or (ii) based on Bishop’s potential recovery as a class member. Although not expressed in so many words, GM would have us consider Bishop as an individual litigant. Under this approach, we would evaluate Bishop’s claim independently and determine whether punitive damages could rise to $35,000.01 (or less, after deducting attorneys’ fees) were he an individual plaintiff. GM’s enormous net worth, a factor that must be considered by a New Jersey jury in awarding punitive damages, 8 the absence of a requirement that punitive damages be proportionate to compensatory damages, 9 and the probability that legal fees in the context of an individual suit would total many thousands of dollars, make the $50,000 threshold seem possible, if still highly improbable.
We hold, however, that the better approach is to allocate to Bishop for jurisdictional purposes only his individual share as a class member of a single punitive damage award. Bishop would be required to establish a pro rata share of punitive damages equal to $35,000.01. Assuming that Bishop’s pro rata share of punitive damages is comparable to that of the other class members, the total punitive damages award in this case would have to be $105,000,030,000.00. (Three million multiplied by $35,000.01.) Notwithstanding GM’s size, such an award would be patently absurd and legally unsustainable.
We have chosen to value Bishop’s punitive damages on a pro rata basis. Although Bishop might have gained a larger award by proceeding independently, as he would be entitled to keep any punitive damages award for himself, he has chosen for other reasons to proceed as a class representative. Therefore, the “reasonable value” of his award is what he would receive if he prevailed in the present litigation. Because the present litigation is in fact a putative class action, 10 any award that Bishop might receive would necessarily have to be divided among the three million class members.
Spellman’s reasoning with respect to attorneys’ fees is also instructive. Judge Roth held that “attorneys’ fees must be distributed across the class” rather than being credited entirely to the jurisdictional account of the named plaintiff.
Spellman,
— F.3d at-,
III. CONCLUSION
The reasoning set forth in the Eleventh Circuit’s recent decision in Tapscott presents the only new argument for jurisdiction over a case which is similar to those dispatched to state court by other judges in this Circuit. 11 *302 As we explained earlier, however, we are not convinced that the reasoning of Tapscott with respect to treating punitive damages as “common and undivided” is sound, or that either the Third Circuit or the Supreme Court is likely to adopt it.
Moreover, we are reluctant to embrace a novel theory of jurisdiction absent clear guidance from the Third Circuit or the Supreme Court. To do so would be to risk infecting the case with reversible error that might taint it all the way to the Supreme Court. While GM might not find this prospect unappealing, it is distinctly distasteful to the plaintiffs and the Court. We have the utmost confidence that the New Jersey courts will provide GM with a fair hearing, the result of which will not be subject to challenge on jurisdictional grounds.
Defendant has requested that we certify any decision of remand to the Third Circuit pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), which states that a district judge may, when faced with a controversial issue of law whose resolution will advance the litigation, certify an interlocutory appeal to “the Court of Appeals which would have jurisdiction of an appeal of such action.” Under 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d), “an order remanding a case to the State court from which it was removed is not reviewable on appeal or otherwise.” The Third Circuit therefore does not have jurisdiction to hear an appeal, and we do not have the power to certify an interlocutory appeal.
In re Bear River Drainage Dist.,
We hold that Peter Bishop cannot meet the amount in controversy requirement for subject matter jurisdiction, and we decline to follow Tapscott’s ill-founded argument that punitive damages may be treated as a “common and undivided interest.” In accordance with
Boyer’s
directive that “all doubts should be resolved in favor of remand,”
Notes
. In addition, the individual class members' rights to punitive damages may vary in this case. For example, GM's potential liability to plaintiffs who purchased their cars before GM became aware of the defect might differ from its potential liability to plaintiffs who purchased afterwards. The
Tapscott
court itself noted that, in cases where punitive damages hinged on "individualized consideration of the egregiousness of the harm done to individual class members" aggregation might be inappropriate.
It is not even clear that plaintiffs have a viable cause of action under the Consumer Fraud Act or under New Jersey common law legal fraud. These laws are aimed at prohibiting misrepresentations upon which others rely.
See
N.J.S.A. 56:8-1.1;
Foont-Freedenfeld Corp.
v.
Electro-Protective Corp.,
. For example, Bishop asserts approximately three million class members. Complaint ¶ 7. Assuming that each class member is awarded *299 $15,000 as treble damages under the Consumer Fraud Act, punitive damages would need to be only $35,000.01, or $0.0167 per class member ($35,000.01 divided by three million class members). It is often difficult for a judge to say with certainty at the pleadings stage that a claim could not result in $0.0167 in punitive damages for each plaintiff. (This calculation does not include attorneys' fees, which, of course, would also be included in reaching the jurisdictional amount.)
.
Spellman v. Meridian Bank,
- F.3d -, -,
.
Snyder,
. The
Neff
court took the approach of considering the claims of the named plaintiffs, as do we, and found that the named plaintiffs could not reach the amount in controversy, as do we. An alternative approach was advocated by Judge Lechner in
Garcia v. General Motors,
As we will show, the named plaintiff does not meet the amount in controversy in this case, and so we need not reach the Abbott Laboratories issue of supplemental jurisdiction over the unnamed class members. In any event, the "Zahn question” is really a false issue in this case. Because Bishop's claim is comparable to that of every other class member, and because we will value attorneys’ fees and punitive damages on a pro rata basis, our analysis of Bishop’s claim as the named class representative is similar to a full-fledged Zahn analysis such as that of Judge Lechner in Garcia.
. Although other Circuits have agonized over the precise burden of proof required to estimate the amount in controversy and who carries it,
see Neff,
. In
Neff,
the plaintiffs alleged between $2,206 and $3,704 in damages on the same underlying facts.
.
See, e.g., Herman v. Sunshine Chemical Specialties,
.
See, e.g., Leimgruber v. Claridge Associates,
.
See Spellman,
- F.3d-, -
.
See, e.g., Weinberg v. Sprint Corp.,
Only one case in the Third Circuit has even offhandedly suggested that punitive damages may be aggregated for jurisdictional purposes.
In re General Motors Corporation Pickup Truck Fuel Tank Products,
