This ease is here on appeal from the District Court of the United States for the District of Kansas. Appellant brought action in the district court of Sedgwick county, Kan., against Empire Natural Gas Company, a Delaware
At the time the order was made by the Publie Utilities Commission eases were pending in this court on appeal involving certain rights of the Wichita Natural Gas Company, predecessor in interest of Kansas Gas & Electric Company in the matter of rates for gas furnished to the inhabitants of various cities of Kansas, and the order provided that, if the said Wichita Natural Gas Company should prevail in these appeals, the local distributing companies could in eaeh city charge and collect from each domestie consumer of gas therein, in addition to the regular rates, the sum of $2 every month from January 1, 1920, to the 1st day of the month following the determination of appeals. Without reviewing such litigation, it is sufficient to say that the same resulted in favor of the Wichita Natural Gas Company; decisions being rendered in this court on or about August 17, 1920. Appellant was notified on June 12, 1922, that he was indebted to appellees for the use of the Empire Natural Gas Company in the sum of $16, being the $2 per month provided for by the order of the Kansas Public Utilities Commission for a period of 8 months, and that unless he paid the bill withip 48 hours, service of natural gas would be discontinued to his premises and would not be resumed until the bill was paid. The 8 months was the period from January 1, 1920, to the 1st day of the first month following the decision in this court before referred to. Appellant thereupon commenced this action.
The ease was removed to the District Court of the United States for the District of Kansas, referred to a master, report made by him, which was confirmed by the court, and decision entered in favor of appellees herein. No question was raised in the trial court as to jurisdiction. Upon appeal and submission to this court it was apparent to us from the record then presented that jurisdiction in the federal court was lacking. Following the procedure laid down by this court in Lamed v. Jenkins,
As our attention to the question of jurisdiction was challenged in the former appeal (298 F[ 299), it is natural that we again survey the record on this question; it being the duty of this court to deny jurisdiction as to itself and as to the court from which the record comes, if it is apparent from the whole record and the nature of the case that the jurisdictional amount is not really involved. A general allegation under such circumstances that-the amount in controversy exceeds the jurisdictional requirement is of no avail. Garvin v. Kogler (C. C. A.)
What is the matter in controversy here,. and does its sum or value exceed $3,000,. exclusive of interest and costs? The matter in dispute is the alleged right to collect from appellant for 8 months the $2 per month extra charge allowed to appellees by the Public Utilities Commission of the state-of Kansas for supplying natural gas to-its consumers in the city of Wichita and to-bring about payment by appellant by turming off the supply of gas being furnished to him. It is clear appellant has no right involved in the controversy equaling in value the jurisdictional amount. If appellant succeeds in his suit, the result is that appellees could not collect the $16 by shutting off the natural gas, or possibly in any other way.
In Poster on Federal Practice, § 13, tho author states tho rule as follows: “In a suit for an injunction, the value of the matter in dispute is that of the object of the bill, namely, the value, to the plaintiff, of the right for which he prays protection, or the value, to the defendant, of the acts of which the plaintiff prays prevention.”
Rose’s Code of Federal Procedure, § 129, note (g), is in part as follows: “In a suit for an injunction the matter in dispute is not determined by the amount which the complainant might recover at law for tho acts complained of, but by the value of tho right to be protected or the extent of the injury to be prevented by the injunction.”
In Smith v. Adams,
In Mississippi & Missouri Railroad Co. v. Ward,
Whitman v. Hubbell (C. C.)
In Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Kuteman,
In Butchers’ & Drovers’ Stockyards Co, v. Louisville & N. R. Co.,
In City of Hutchinson et al. v. Beckham et al.,
Tn Riverside
&
A. Ry. Co. v. City of Riverside et al. (C. C.)
In Board of Trade of City of Chicago v. Celia Commission Co. et al.,
In Studebaker v. Salina Waterworks Co. (D. C.)
In Martin v. City Water Co. of Chillicothe, Mo. (D. C.)
In Scott v. Donald,
In Berryman v. Board of Trustees of Whitman College,
In Western & Atlantic Railroad v. Railroad Commission of Georgia et al.,
In Sovereign Camp, Woodmen of the World, v. E. E. O’Neill, B. F. Vaughan, R. H. Buck, et al.,
It would unduly extend this opinion to refer to numerous other eases where jurisdiction has been sustained. Wé find none closely in point. No rules as to how jurisdictional amount shall be arrived at can» be laid down governing every case, for there are different shades of fact differentiating the various eases, and each one is dependent upon its own particular facts and circumstances.
This case is not claimed to be what is sorpetimes termed a class case. No one here is suing to maintain any one else’s right. Appellant is a single litigánt, suing for himself alone; he speaks for none other. There is no question of joint or common, undisputed, united interest collectively ag
The question involved is not the value of the right to conduct a business unmolested and uninterfered with, as in Bitterman v. Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co.,
The question of the value of a right to maintain a schedule of rates, as in Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Kuteman,
It is not a case whore the amount involved will ripen within any reasonable time into the jurisdictional amount, as in Martin v. City Water Co. of Chillicothe, Mo. (D. C.)
Any judgment in this ease settles nothing, except the right of appellees to collect from this particular appellant and to collect by the coercive method threatened. As far as the alleged rights of appellees are related to appellant they amount in value to $16. If appellees should win the ease, they are at liberty to use the coercive measure of collection by shutting off the natural gas. Of course, the decision of the case may have an effect upon the thousands of other consumers of natural gas in the city of Wichita, and it may not. So far as this record is concerned, we are not advised whether they have paid the additional rate of $2 for the 8 months. If they have not, a decision of the federal court that the order of the Public Utilities Commission of December 22, 1919, was void, and that collection of the $2 per month could not be made, would not tend to instill in them a desire to pa.y it. On the other hand, a decision of the court that the order was legal, and that such coercive measures could be used, might accelerate payments. All this would indirectly bear on the value of appellees’ rights. It is perfectly apparent, however, that the value of the matter in dispute in this particular case between these particular parties, unaffected by its relationship to other parties similarly situated, is $16 and no more. If, in arriving at a value of a right claimed, a court may consider the value of such right as augmented by its relationship to and effect upon other persons not parties to the case, then the door to federal jurisdiction would be opened wide.
Many eases decided in the courts affect others indirectly who are not parties thereto. ‘ The alleged rights of appellees as against others who are not parties to the suit are not in dispute in this ease, within the meaning of the statute. We think “the value of the matter in controversy,” as the term is used in section 24 of the Judicial Code, means the pecuniary result to either party which the judgment entered in the case would directly produce, either at once or in the future. Where the right (the value of which is taken as the test) exists in favor of many persons as against one, or in favor of one as against many, and in its nature is separable, then the separable values cannot be added together to make the jurisdictional sum, and the separable valué furnishes the jurisdictional test. These propositions are abundantly sustained by decisions of the federal courts.
The leading case is Elgin v. Marshall,
In Opelika City v. Daniel,
in Bruce v. Manchester & Keene R. R.,
In Market Co. v. Hoffman,
In Gibson v. Shufeldt,
In The Sydney,
In New England Mortgage Security Co. v. Gay,
In Walter v. Northeastern Railroad Co.,
In Colvin v. Jacksonville,
In Fishback v. Western Union Telegraph Co.,
In Edwards v. Bates County,
In Citizens’ Bank v. Cannon,
In Wheless v. St. Louis et al.,
In Rogers v. Hennepin County,
In Scott et al. v. Frazier et al.,
In Lion Bonding Co. v. Karatz,
In Cowell et al. v. City Water Supply Co. et al.,
In Eberhard et al. v. Northwestern Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
The court in Wetsel et al. v. Empire Gas
&
Fuel Co. (C. C. A.)
Testing the present ease by Elgin v. Marshall, and the line of eases following it, and by the decision of this court in Cowell v. City Water Supply Co.,
In view of our conclusion as to want of jurisdiction in the trial court, we re
Reversed.
