On November 30, 1973, Donald L. Cale was discharged from his duties as a police officer for the City of Covington, Virginia. Chief of Police Donald Leet dismissed Cale for taking, while he was on duty, a plastic scalpel from the office of a deceased physician. Cale then brought this wrongful discharge action in the district court, only against the City of Covington, resting jurisdiction upon the existence of a federаl question and an amount in controversy exceeding $10,000. The cause of action was alleged to have arisen under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution. The complaint also included State law claims, the dismissal of which is not here contested. He demanded damages of $50,-000.
In its answer, the City pleaded that Cale’s complaint failed to state a cause of action, and, following discovery, moved for summary judgment. Considering Cale’s “complaint as a suit for monetary relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983,” the district court granted the City’s motion on the “well settled principle of law that a municipality is not a ‘person’ within the meaning of § 1983 and therefore is not amenable to suit for monetary relief under these statutes,” citing
City of Kenosha
v.
Bruno,
The first of three questions for review is whether the district court erred in deciding that 42 U.S.C. § 1983 prоvided Cale no remedy. While the decision of the district court was correct at the time of its decision, e. g.,
City of Kenosha v. Bruno,
The next question is whether the amount in controversy was sufficient to in
*313
voke the district court’s subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331. The City disputes Cale’s claim of $50,000 in damages, and argues that because Cale was later able to secure subsequent employment with about the same salary or wages, his damages were in fact less than the $10,000 jurisdictional amount required under § 1331. To agree with the City, however, we must determine “to a legal certainty that the claim is really for less than the jurisdictional amount . .
Mt. Healthy,
infra,
Although often litigated of late in the inferior federal courts, neither this court nor the Supreme Court has yet answered the question of whether or not an implied cause of action for damages exists against a municipality for the act of its employee under the Fourteenth Amendment with jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331, without the limitations imposеd by § 1983. We hold that it does not. Our opinion that no action of the type exemplified by
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents,
While it is true that the federal courts have determined the constitutionality of State and federal legislation under the Fourteenth Amendment, 1 Cale does not ask us merely to enforce the prohibitions of the Fourteenth Amendment as measured against a statute or regulation. Rather, he asks us to imply a cause of action for damages in that he was discharged in violation of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment because the discharge was without proper notice or heаring.
The beginning point of our analysis is the amendment itself, ratified in 1868. Our particular concerns are §§ 1 and 5 thereof. Section 1, in pertinent part, provides that no State shall “deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law.” Section 5 states that “The Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this artiсle.” We also consider 28 U.S.C. § 1331(a), which, for our purposes, was enacted in 1875. 2 It provides for original jurisdiction in the district courts over “all civil actions wherein the matter in controversy exceeds the sum or value of $10,000, exclusive of interest and costs, and arises under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States. . . ”
It is too well documented to bear citation that federal courts are сourts of limited jurisdiction and especially the inferior federal courts. And “in the legal system generally a jurisdictional grant does not in and of itself necessarily — or even ordinarily — imply a power to make substantive rules of decision. . . . ” The Federal Courts and the Federal System, Bator, Shapiro, Mishkin, and Wechsler (2d ed. 1973), p. 786. We need go no further than these elementary rules to arrive at our conclusion that the enactment of § 1331 did not of itself create any cause of action, nor do we think that one may be implied from the mere grant of jurisdiction. So, if there is to *314 be a cause of action implied in favor of the plaintiff against the City of Covington, it must be directly under the Constitution and in our case more particularly under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Due process decisions, especiаlly in recent years, have reached endless number. To repeat, plaintiff’s claim is based on the now familiar allegation that he was discharged as a policeman by the Chief of Police of the City of Covington without a hearing. He claims that his discharge without a hearing is a violation of the due process clause.
Assuming for the moment, without deciding, the validity of the plaintiff’s cause of action as alleged, the question arises as to whether there is jurisdiction in a federal court to hear it. This question has been answered in the affirmative for suits under § 1331 in
Mt. Healthy Board of Education v. Doyle,
Had the plaintiff sued the Chief of Police, he clearly may have stated a cause of action under'§ 1983, and we have directed remand on the issue of the City’s liability under § 1983 as construed by Monell. But the plaintiff persists that he has a right to sue the City, even apart from § 1983, for damages directly under the Fourteenth Amendment, claiming jurisdiction under § 1331. We thus turn to the question of whether or not to imply a cause of action under the Fourteenth Amendment against the City of Covington on account of the actions of its emplоyee.
There have been many opinions in the inferior federal courts which discuss the question, and we do not attempt to analyze them all or collect them here. Some are holdings directly on the point; some are more or less on the point; and some decide the jurisdictional question but speak of the cause of action. 3
On facts very similar to the case at hand, thе Eighth Circuit, in
Owen
v.
City of Independence,
The First Circuit, however, in
Kostka v. Hogg,
The Third Circuit, in two cases, has made it clear that it has not decided the question:
Gagliardi v. Flint,
*315
The Fifth and Seventh and Ninth Circuits have also discussed the question. We note that the holdings in those cases may strictly be said to relate to jurisdiction, and they were decided following
Bivens
and do not discuss that case. But, while their discussions may not be squarely on point, we should in candor relate that they indicate, if called upon to decide the question, thоse courts would probably decide that there was an implied cause of action under the Fourteenth Amendment with jurisdiction under § 1331 if they follow the thoughts expressed in the cases just following: see
Fitzgerald v. Porter Mem. Hosp.,
The Sixth Circuit, in
Amen v. City of Dearborn,
In our own circuit,
Burt v. Board of Trustees,
The eases which have hеld that the cause of action may be implied have generally followed that part of the reasoning of
Bivens
which concludes that when a general statute provides for a right to sue
for
an invasion of a federally protected right, federal courts may use any available remedy to make good the wrong done. See also
Bell v. Hood,
327 U.S. p. 684,
While the Supreme Court, in Mt. Healthy, has made it clear that it has not decided the question, there are cases which have mentioned it, early as well as late.
One of these is
Ex parte Virginia,
“It is not said the judicial power of the general government shall extend to enforcing the prohibitions and to protecting the rights and immunities guaranteed. It is not said that that branch of the government shall be authorized to declare void any action of a State in violation of the prohibitions. It is the power of Congress which has been enlarged. Congress is authorized to enforce the prohibitions by appropriate legislation. Some legislation is contemplаted to make the amendments fully effective.”100 U.S. 339 , 345,25 L.Ed. 676 (Italics are the Court’s). 7
Ex parte Virginia
was closely followed by the
Civil Rights Cases,
It is true that in the
Civil Rights Cases
the Court referred to the Fourteenth Amendment as self-executing,
Certainly the courts which decided these cases were aware of
Marbury v. Madison,
“The Fourteenth Amendment presents the first instance in our history of the investiture of congress with affirmative power, by legislation, to enforce an exрress prohibition upon the States. It is not said that the judicial power of the nation may be exerted for the enforcement of that amendment. No enlargement of the judicial power was required, for it is clear that had the fifth section of the fourteenth amendment been entirely omitted, the judiciary could have stricken down all state laws and nullified all state proceedings in hostility to rights and privilеges secured or recognized by that amendment. The power given is, in terms, by congressional legislation, to enforce the provisions of the amendment.”
With this understanding in mind, we believe that the Congress and Supreme Court of the time were in agreement that affirmative relief under the amendment should come from Congress.
When we add to this state of affairs
Ex parte Young,
What we think is clear is that the right was protected either by Marbury v. Madison, or Martin v. Hunter’s Lessee, or by § 1983, or by Ex parte Young. It is not doubted that the remedy may not be coextensive under any of these theories of judicial review or legislation for the protection of constitutionаl rights.
The acceptance of the teaching of these cases is undoubted and almost universal. Not without significance is that, in the 103 years of the present existence of § 1331, the Court has not decided the question now before us. Professor Dellinger, in his article on the subject,
Of Rights and Remedies: The Constitution as a Sword,
85 Harv.L.Rev. 1532 (1972), states that “. with one exception [footnote omitted] prior to
Bivens
the court has never explicitly exеrcised the judicial power to create a damage remedy in a case arising under the Constitution . . that exception being
Jacobs v. United States,
On the whole case, as previously indicated, we are of opinion there is no implied cause of action against the municipality under the Fourteenth Amendment, with jurisdiction under § 1331, for the acts of one of its employees.
Wе give weight to the fact that the amendment itself authorizes action by Congress, which Congress has exercised in § 1983, and which, even under Monell, does not permit untrammeled municipal liability. We also give weight to the reasoning that the granting of money damages against a municipality in the absence of legislative authorization actively involves the judiciary in policy decisions relating to the allocation of limited resources which in certain instances may raise serious questions concerning the enforceability of a court’s mandate. See Dellinger, p. 1533. Also taken into account is the fact that the plaintiff here has a remedy, perhaps not perfect, but that which was contemplated by Congress.
In our case, affirmative action by Congress should counsel hesitation.
Bivens, 403
U.S. p. 396,
In contrast to Bivens, which did not deal “with a question of ‘federal fiscal policy’ ” by allowing a suit against federal agents, we do deal with a question of State fiscal policy should we permit a suit against a municipal corporation based on respondeat superior and not subject to the limitations of § 1983, the only source for satisfaction of a judgment against it being the taxpayers who furnish the money to the municipality. Again, in contrast to Bivens which hаd no formulation of congressional policy as to whether the availability of money damages was necessary to enforce the Fourth Amendment, we have here a congressional policy that while money damages against an individual may be necessary to enforce the Fourteenth Amendment, they are in certain circumstances inappropriate against municipalities on account of the same act of the same employee.
Finally and not of the least importance, should we give as our opinion that there is an implied cause of action under the Fourteenth Amendment in the setting *318 here, it would seem impossible for Congress to undo it for the federal courts in adjudicating such acts of Congress would enter into a balancing procеdure to ascertain whether the remedy enacted by Congress is as adequate as a court implied remedy. That to us would seem to be a violation of the fifth clause of the Fourteenth Amendment which has expressly entrusted to Congress the “power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article.” As MonelI holds, Congress has done just this. We doubt that we should take away this constitutionally entrusted power by judicial decision. Indeed, it seems that our authority so to do is little better than doubtful if it should exist at all.
The judgment of the district court must be vacated and the case remanded. On remand, Cale should be allowed to proceed with his action under § 1983, but not allowed to proceed with it insofar as he claims it is based on an implied cause of action under the Fоurteenth Amendment.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. For example, in the
Slaughter-House Cases,
. A previous provision for catchall federal question jurisdiction was short lived, from 1801 to 1802. Wright, Miller, & Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure (1975), § 3563, n. 3.
. The cases and many other authorities are collected in the opinions we cite and in Professor Dellinger’s article, infra. See also Note: Damage Remedies Against Municipalities for Constitutional Violations, 89 Harv.L.Rev. 922 (1976).
. Certiorari was granted, however, in
Owen.
The judgment of the court of appeals was vacated without opinion and the case remanded for further consideration in the light of
Monell.
--U.S.-----,
. But see
Davis v. Passman,
. This construction of
Aldinger v. Howard
should now be reconsidered in light of
Monell.
See
. We note the reliance of
Monell
upon
Ex parte Virginia.
. Wright, Miller and Cooper address the precise question before us and state that the general tenor of the Aldinger opinion “suggests that the Court may be unwilling to imply a damages remedy that Congress has deliberately refused to give.” 1977 Pocket Part, § 3573. This statement, of course, was written before the decision in Monell.
