At one time, Elio Del Vecchio held a $5,000 whole life insurance policy issued by Bankers National Life Insurance Company (Bankers Life). Many years later, he turned it in and replaced it with a $10,000 universal life policy. He thought, in essence, that he could transform the $5,000 policy into the $10,000 policy for free. When that turned out not to be true, he sued Conseco, Bankers Life, and Great American Reserve Insurance Company for defrauding him by inducing him to make the trade. Del Vecchio’s suit was brought on behalf of himself and other purchasers of the defendants’ life insurance products who had been similarly defrauded. Because we find that the federal courts do not have jurisdiction over this case, it must be dismissed on that basis.
I
In 1947, Del Vecchio purchased his $5,000 whole life insurance policy from Bankers Life. For the next 20 years, he paid premiums, and in 1967 Bankers Life informed him that he was “paid up” and that his policy would remain in effect without any further premium payments.
In 1982, a Bankers Life agent, Joseph Gennaco, contacted Del Vecchio and tried to convince him to turn in his $5,000 whole life policy and replace it with a $10,000 universal life policy. Gennaco told him that after his initial premium payment (equal to the value of his surrendered policy, which was $3,137.27), he would not have to make any further premium payments on the new policy. As Del Vecchio understood it, Gennaco in effect told him that he could double the size of his policy without having to pay any additional money-
After mulling over Gennaco’s proposal for a full two years, Del Vecchio purchased the new policy in 1984. The policy included a “Table of Premiums and Values,” and it explained the table as follows:
TABLE OF VALUES — Minimum Cash Values are shown in the table on Page 4 [“Table of Premiums and Values”] on the assumption that the Scheduled Premiums are paid as shown. These values are based on the Guaranteed Interest Rate and the Maximum Annual Risk Charges shown in the table on Page 9, and on the assumption that no loans, partial withdrawals nor additional premium payments are made.
In 1985, Del Vecchio received his first policy statement. The statement included the following language:
With no loans, partial withdrawals, or future increases made after this report date, based upon current assumptions, your policy will remain in force until maturity with no future premiums. And, based upon guaranteed assumptions, your policy will remain in force until 5/20/1997 with no future premiums.
For the next nine years, Del Vecchio continued to receive annual statements from Bankers Life. In 1994, however, he was distressed to observe that for the first time, the actual cash value of his policy was less than the cash value “guaranteed” by the policy, by $366. The actual cash value was $3,810 (the amount he would receive if he were to surrender his policy), while the “cash surrender loan value” listed for year 11 of the policy in the “Table of Premiums and Values” was $4,176. The shortfall increased every year thereafter. Del Vecchio never paid any premium payments beyond his initial payment on the new $10,000 policy.
Believing that he had been duped by the company’s representations at the time he made the switch in policies, Del Vecchio filed a class-action lawsuit in federal court in 1998. His complaint included six counts, all based on state law, including, among others, breach of contract, fraudulent misrepresentation, and breach of fiduciary duty. The district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment *977 on the basis that the statutes of limitations for Del Vecchio’s various claims had run. Del Vecchio appeals.
II
In his complaint, Del Vecchio asserted that federal jurisdiction was proper under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1332 and 1367. But in order to support jurisdiction under § 1332, two requirements must be satisfied: complete diversity of citizenship between the plaintiffs and the defendants, and the proper amount in controversy (now and when Del Vecchio sued, more than $75,000). Del Vecchio’s problem is not the citizenship requirement, as the parties are clearly diverse: Del Vecchio’s domicile is in Massachusetts, while each of the three corporate defendants is incorporated in either Indiana or Texas, and all have their principal place of business in Indiana. Rather, Del Vecchio’s difficulty lies in meeting the amount in controversy requirement.
Snyder v.
Harris,
Del Vecchio’s complaint included the following allegations about the amount in controversy:
The amount-in-controversy exceeds $75,-000, exclusive of interests and costs. Specifically, Plaintiff has alleged unjust enrichment and seeks the imposition of a constructive trust. As a result, he has an undivided interest in the full recovery in this action, which will substantially exceed the necessary jurisdictional amount.
From the language of his pleading, it appears that Del Vecchio was trying to evade
Snyder
by framing the amount in controversy in terms of what the defendants would have at stake if the class action were certified: their total unjust enrichment over which Del Vecchio seeks the imposition of a constructive trust. (Presumably, he is proposing to act as the trustee for the other class members.) Del Vecchio’s theory, however, amounts to a complete end-run around the principles enunciated in
Snyder. See In re Brand Name Prescription Drugs,
Furthermore, this case does not fit into the narrow exceptions to the anti-aggregation rule recognized by the
Snyder
Court. It is not a case where there is one
res
at issue, such as an estate. In those cases, it is proper to consider the value of the entire
res
for purposes of determining jurisdiction, for even if several plaintiffs have a claim to it, the recovery is nonetheless a unitary whole that must then be divided. See,
e.g., Shields v. Thomas,
Noting this problem with jurisdiction, and our duty to dismiss the case if jurisdiction is lacking,
McNutt v. General Motors Acceptance Corp.,
We have no quarrel in principle with the idea that punitive damages may sometimes be taken into account in deciding whether the proper amount is in controversy. As we have written before:
[w]here punitive damages are required to satisfy the jurisdictional amount in a diversity case, a two-part inquiry is necessary. The first question is whether punitive damages are recoverable as a matter of state law. If the. answer is yes, the court has subject matter jurisdiction unless it is clear “beyond a legal certainty that the plaintiff would under no circumstances be entitled to recover the jurisdictional amount.”
Cadek v. Great Lakes Dragaway, Inc.,
Indiana does allow the award of punitive damages for fraud and breach of fiduciary duty, and so the first of the two requirements mentioned above is met. See,
e.g., Erie Ins. Co. v. Hickman by Smith,
The defendants now assert that Del Vecchio’s compensatory damages could be as much as $15,000: $5,000 for the policy he traded in and $10,000 for the policy he bought. The defendants then reason that because Del Vecchio’s complaint includes claims for which Indiana law provides punitive damages may be available, it is entirely possible that punitive damages exceeding $60,000 would be awarded. This, we assume, is not because they are conceding that their behavior might rationally be seen by anyone as sufficiently culpable to deserve such an award; it is only an observation that a 4 to 1 ratio of punitive to compensatory damages is not uncommon for these sorts of claims under Indiana law. See,
e.g., Schimizzi v. Illinois Farmers Ins. Co.,
This seems like sheer speculation to us, however, and we do not find it a persuasive reason to conclude that Del Vecchio individually has alleged a claim exceeding $75,000 in value. And in any event, it is Del Vecchio who bears the burden of proving that the case is properly in federal court, as it is he who is trying to invoke federal jurisdiction.
McNutt,
In his supplemental brief on appeal, Del Vecchio abandons this theory for an entirely different tack. He now asserts (perhaps in partial response to some of the exchanges that occurred at oral argument) that his compensatory damages amount to a mere $600, which represents the amount of the cash value lost between the years 1988 and 1996. On top of that modest *980 figure, he claims that a punitive damage award in the (coincidental?) amount of $75,000 (a ratio of 125 to 1) would be appropriate here. With all due respect, these new claims strike us as bordering on the farcical. (Del Vecchio also asserts that he plans to represent a class of 200,000 policy holders who have been similarly defrauded, each of whom would be entitled to a similarly large punitive damage award. The total recovery that Del Vecchio expects is the enormous sum of $1.5 billion.)
Although it is not unheard of for Indiana courts to uphold punitive damage awards that exceed the underlying compensatory awards by several multiples, a multiplier of 125 lies at the very outer edge of awards that have been allowed. As we explained in
Anthony,
Ill
While we are not unsympathetic to the waste of effort represented by a case that has been fully litigated in the wrong court, both the Supreme Court and we ourselves have noted time and again that subject matter jurisdiction is a fundamental limitation on the power of a federal court to act. See,
e.g., Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Environment,
