after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
We are solely concerned in this case in determining whether or not the Circuit Court possessed jurisdiction over the claim asserted in the petition. Act of March 3,1891, c. 517, § 5.
• From the facts heretofore detailed the following questions arise:
First. Should the Circuit Court have taken into consideration, for the purpose of ascertaining the adequacy of the jurisdictional amount, the claim of plaintiff upon the interest coupons attached to the two one thousand dollar bonds ?
Second. Did the court rightly hold that the amount of the claim upon the funding bonds was not an item “in dispute” between the parties, and therefore not proper to be taken into account in determining whether the court possessed jurisdiction?
As to the first point. By the act of Congress of March 3, 1887, c. 373, as amended August 13,1888, c. 866, 25 Stat. 434, original jurisdiction was conferred upon Circuit Courts of the United States, “concurrent with the courts of the several States, of all suits of a civil nature at common law or in equity, ... in which there sh^ll be a controversy between citizens of different States in which the matter in dispute exceeds, exclusive of interest and costs, the sum or value of two thousand dollars.”
It is contended that an indebtedness for the face amount of coupons is an indebtedness for “ interest ” -within the meaning of the statute.
The nature of a coupon was thus defined in
Aurora
v.
West,
“ Coupons are written contracts for the payment of a definite sum of money, on a given day, and being drawn and executed in a form and mode for the very purpose that they may be separated from the bonds, it is held that they are negotiable, and that a suit may be maintained on them without the necessity of producing the bonds to which they were attached.”
*272
Each matured coupon upon a negotiable bond is a separable promise, distinct from the promises to pay the bond or other coupons, and gives rise to a separate cause of action.
Nesbit
v.
Riverside Independent District,
“Each matured coupon is a separable promise, and gives rise to a separate cause of action. It may be detached from the bond and sold by itself. Indeed, the title to several matured coupons of the same bond may be in as many different persons, and upon each a distinct and separate action be maintained. So, while the promises of the bond and of the coupons in the first instance are upon the same paper, and the coupons are for interest due upon the bond, yet the promise to pay the coupon is as distinct from that to pay the bond, as though the two promises were placed in different instruments upon different paper.”
Not only may a suit be maintained upon an unpaid coupon, in advance of the maturity of the principal debt, but the holder of a coupon is entitled to recover interest thereon from its maturity.
Amy
v.
Dubuque,
As the face of the bonds amounted? to the sum of two thousand dollars, the addition of the demand based upon the coupons brought the sum in dispute within the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court. It is, therefore, unnecessary to consider whether the controversy as to the funding bonds did not involve a real matter “in dispute” between the parties.
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded with directions to set aside the order dismissing the action for want of jurisdiction, and for further proceedings in conformity to law.
