This case comes to us on an interlocutory appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b). At issue is the proper way to measure the amount in controversy, required for federal diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332, in the context of a suit seeking-, inter alia, an equitable accounting. The district court held that the defendants’ costs for performing the accounting may be considered in calculating the amount in controversy. We reverse.
I. STATEMENT OF THE FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On September 3, 1999, Plaintiffs Hector H. Garcia and Inland Ocean, Inc. 1 filed a putative class action in the 49th Judicial District Court of Zapata County, Texas, on behalf of all Texas royalty and leasehold interest holders “from whom [the defendants] purchased oil and/or condensate between January 1, 1975 and December 31, 1989.” Alleging that the defendants surreptitiously failed to reimburse them for certain oil and gas overages, the plaintiffs sought (1) an equitable accounting to determine whether any part of the overages could be attributed to individual plaintiffs’ well sites, (2) restitution damages, and (3) attorney’s fees and costs. The plaintiffs did not demand a specific amount of monetary damages, as the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure prohibit a plaintiff from doing so. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 47(b).
The defendants timely removed the case to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas under 28 U.S.C. § 1441(b) based on federal diversity jurisdiction, asserting that the amount in controversy exceeds $75,000 and that the parties are diverse.
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See
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On agreement of the parties, the case was transferred to the Houston Division of the district court. The plaintiffs filed a second motion to remand on the basis that the costs of performing an equitable accounting should not be considered part of the “amount in controversy” under § 1332. On August 27, 2002, a magistrate judge recommended that the plaintiffs’ motion be denied, because the defendants’ affidavit “makes it clear that the costs of an accounting for even a single claimant in this matter would exceed the jurisdictional amount.” The district court subsequently adopted the magistrate’s findings in full and denied the motion to remand. At the plaintiffs’ request, however, the district court stayed the case pending an interlocutory appeal to this court on the following controlling question of law: “In a class action seeking damages and an accounting, assuming diversity, [may] accounting costs to defendants in a range of $322,800 to $899,400 for examining the claim of a single plaintiff meet the amount in controversy requirement of the diversity statute?” We hold that they may not.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
We review the district court’s denial of a motion to remand for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction
de novo. Allen v. R & H Oil & Gas Co.,
B. Burden of Proof
In resolving this question, we recognize that “[t]he intent of Congress drastically to restrict federal jurisdiction in controversies between citizens of different states has always been rigorously enforced by the courts.”
St. Paul Mercury Indem. Co. v. Red Cab Co.,
Here, the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure barred the plaintiffs from requesting a specific amount of damages in their state court petition.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 47(b). In a similar case, we held that “[w]hen the plaintiffs complaint does not allege a specific amount of damages, the removing defendant must prove by a pre
To date, no party has attempted to establish that the defendants owe more than $75,000 in restitution damages to any individual plaintiff in this case. In fact, the value of each plaintiffs property, which was allegedly converted by the defendants, will not be determined unless the plaintiffs achieve the equitable accounting relief they have requested. Nonetheless, the district court held that the defendants satisfied their burden of establishing that more than $75,000 is “in controversy” in this case. In a sworn affidavit, the defendants’ accountant estimated that it will cost at least $300,000 per plaintiff to determine the amount of oil and gas condensate removed from each plaintiffs well sites during the years in question. The plaintiffs did not proffer any evidence disputing the cost of the equitable accounting, 3 and the court concluded that the requisite jurisdictional amount was satisfied.
C. Analysis
Whether the district court’s conclusion that the defendants have met their burden is correct, the plaintiffs argue, depends on the viewpoint by which the amount in controversy is measured. Plaintiffs claim that our precedent dictates that “the value of the plaintiffs right sought to be enforced must exceed the jurisdictional amount in order to confer federal jurisdiction.”
Vraney v. County of Pinellas,
The defendants argue that it does not matter which viewpoint we follow. Alternatively, they urge us to follow an “either-party viewpoint” for determining the amount-in-controversy requirement. Emphasizing that the accounting relief requested by the plaintiffs is equitable in nature, the defendants argue that we should consider the costs of providing that relief as the amount in controversy. According to the defendants, because it will
We conclude that the defendants are correct when they argue that it does not matter from which viewpoint the amount in controversy is viewed. Unlike the defendants, however, we believe that the costs of an equitable accounting should not be considered in determining the sum or value of the matter in controversy in the instant case. These costs are collateral to the true object of the litigation: reimbursement to the plaintiffs for the oil and gas condensate allegedly converted by the defendants.
The defendants urge us to remember that the first form of relief demanded by the plaintiffs is an “equitable accounting.” If a court eventually determines that the plaintiffs have established a right to receive this relief, then the defendants believe that they will be forced to bear the costs of calculating how much oil and gas condensate was taken from each of the plaintiffs’ wells between 1975 and 1989. Thus, the defendants argue, the litigation will necessarily resolve the controversy over whether the defendants are legally obliged to perform the accounting — essentially providing the plaintiffs the “value” of avoiding these expenses. Because they have proffered affidavit evidence demonstrating that these costs exceed § 1332’s jurisdictional amount, the defendants argue that they have met their burden to establish that federal jurisdiction is proper.
We do not agree. According to the Supreme Court, in cases seeking equitable relief “it is well established that the amount in controversy is measured by the value of the object of the litigation.”
Hunt v. Wash. State Apple Adver. Comm’n,
An accounting is a species of compulsory disclosure, predicated upon the assumption that the party seeking relief does not have the means to determine how much — or, in fact, whether — any money properly his is being held by another. The appropriate remedy, particularly where the determinations may be detailed and complex, is an order to account in a proceeding in which the burden of establishing the non-existence of money due to the plaintiff rests upon the defendant. Because of the very nature of the remedy, that burden cannot rest upon plaintiff, but must shift to the defendant once facts giving rise to a duty to account have been alleged and admitted.
Rosenak v. Poller,
Our decision comports with the manner by which we measure the jurisdictional amount in actions where a trustee is compelled to perform an accounting of the assets in a trust or when an administrator is ordered to account for the value of the property in an estate. In
Davidson v. Blaustein,
the court reviewed the law in this area and found that “[wjhere affirmative relief is sought by an accounting, the amount in controversy is measured by the value of the res, the damage to the res sought to be redressed, or the monetary value of the complainant’s share of the res which is distributable.”
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we find that the defendants have not met their burden of proving that this case satisfies the amount-in-eontroversy requirement of § 1332. Therefore, we REVERSE and instruct the district court to REMAND this case to state court. Costs shall be borne by the defendants.
Notes
. A third plaintiff, the Estate of Alice Barnes, was voluntarily dismissed from the case without prejudice on January 2, 2002, and will not be discussed in this opinion.
. In their notice of removal, the defendants also claimed that Koch Oil Company of Texas, Inc. had been fraudulently joined by the plaintiffs. The district court agreed, and this issue has not been, preserved on appeal. In addition, the defendants asked the district court to attribute all of the plaintiffs' attorney's fees to the named class representatives in order to calculate the amount in controversy. The defendants have since conceded, however, that class action attorney’s fees cannot be aggregated in this manner.
See Coghlan v. Wellcraft Marine Corp.,
. In both their second motion to remand and their briefs on appeal, plaintiffs argue that it will not cost $75,000 to perform the equitable accounting. They have provided no record evidence to support this claim, however.
. The defendants’ argument is based on their assumption that we implicitly approved of the either-party viewpoint in
Duderwicz v. Sweetwater Savings Association,
We also disagree with the defendants’ assertion that our decision in
Webb
indicates that this circuit no longer focuses solely on the plaintiff's viewpoint to determine the amount in controversy in cases seeking equitable relief.
See Webb,
