delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought by Marshall and another, beihg citizens of Wisconsin, against the town of Elgin, Minn., to recover the amount due upon certain coupons or interest warrants, detached from municipal bonds, alleged to have been issued by it, in aid of a railroad company. The defence set up was that the bonds and coupons were void, the statute, under the assumed authority of which they had been issued, being, as was alleged, unconstitutional. The cause was tried by the court without the intervention of a jury, and it is part of the finding that, at the time of rendering the judgment, the plaintiffs were the owners of the bonds and coupons mentioned in the complaint. Judgment was given for the amount, $1,660.75, due thereon, being for the interest on fifteen bonds of $500 each. The town brought this writ of error.
. The case has been fully presented in argument upon its merits, as they appear from the finding; but as we consider ourselves obliged to dismiss the writ of error, for want of jurisdiction, we have considered no other question.
It is true that the point actually litigated and determined in this action was the validity of the bonds, and as between these parties, in any subsequent action upon other coupons, or upon the bonds themselves, this judgment, according to the principles stated in
Cromwell
v.
County of Sac,
And accordingly the plaintiff in error, in support of the jurisdiction of this court, relies on what was said in
Troy
v.
Evans,
97 id. 1, that,
“prima facie,
the judgment against a defendant in an action for money is the measure of our jurisdiction in his behalf. This
prima facie
case continues until the contrary is shown; and if jurisdiction is invoked because of the collateral effect a judgment may have in another action, it must appear that the judgment conclusively settles the rights of the parties in a matter actually in dispute,, the sum or value of which exceeds the required amount.” The point was not involved in the decision of that case, as the writ of error was in fact dismissed; and what was said, in the opinion, seems to have been rather intended as a concession for the sake of argument, than as a statement of a conclusion of law. The inference now sought to be drawn from it we are not able to adopt. In- our opinion, sects. 691 and 692, Rev. -Stat., which, as amended by sect. 3 of the act of Feb. 16, 1875, c. 77, limit the jurisdiction of this court, on writs of error and appeal, to review final judgments in civil actions, and final decrees in cases of equity and of admiralty and maritime jurisdiction, to those where the matter” in dispute, exclusive of costs, exceeds the sum or value of $5,000, have reference to the matter -which is directly in dispute, in the particular cause in which the judg
. The rule, it is true, is an arbitrary one, as it is based upon a fixed amount, representing pecuniary value, and, for that reason, excludes the jurisdiction of this court, in cases which involve rights that, because they are priceless, have no measure • in money.
Lee
v. Lee,
Undoubtedly, Congress, in establishing a rule for determining the appellate jurisdiction of this court, among other reasons of convenience that dictated the adoption of the money value of the matter in dispute, had in view that it was precise and definite. Ordinarily, it would appear in the pleadings and judgment, where the claim must be stated and determined ; but where the recovery of specific property, real or personal, is sought, affidavits of value were permitted, from the beginning, as a suitable mode of ascertaining the fact, and bringing it upon the record.
Williamson
v. Kincaid,
The language of the rule limits, by its own force, the required valuation to the matter in dispute, in the particular action or suit in which the jurisdiction is invoked; and it plainly excludes, by a necessary implication, any estimate of value as to any matter not actually the subject of that litigation. It would be, clearly, a violation of the rule, to add to the value of the matter determined any estimate in money, by
Accordingly this court has uniformly been strict to adhere to and enforce it.
In
Grant
v.
McKee,
Stinson
v.
Dousman,
Gray
v. Blanchard,
Indeed, so strictly has it been applied, that, in cases where, although the entire matter in dispute in the suit exceeds in value the jurisdictional limit, nevertheless, if there are several and separate interests in that sum, belonging to distinct parties, and constituting distinct causes of action, although actually united in one suit' and growing out of the same transaction, the jurisdiction of the court has been constantly denied. We have had occasion to repeat and apply this principle in several cases at the present term.
Ex parte Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co., Schwed
v.
Smith, Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co.
v.
Waterman, Adams
v.
Crittenden, ante,
pp. 5, 188, 265, 576. In some of these cases, the value of the matter in dispute, actually, determined against the party invoking our appellate jurisdiction, actually was largely in excess of its limit, and yet its exercise was forbidden, because it was divided into distinct claims, no one of. which was sufficient of itself to entitle either party to an appeal, although the .decision in one was necessarily the same in all, because rendered upon precisely the same state of facts.
Russell
v.
Stansell,
To entertain jurisdiction in the present case would be, in our opinion, to unsettle the principle of construction by which, in
Dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
Note . — Plainview v. Marshall, error to the same court, was submitted at the same time and by the counsel who argued the preceding case. Mr. Justice Matthew's, who delivered the opinion of the court, remarked, that the two cases did not differ in any material respect, the value of the matter in dispute in each being less than $5,000. For the same reasons the writ of error in this case was
Dismissed.
