after stating the case as above reported, delivered the opinion of the court.
The question presented by this motion can hardly be considered an open one. But the subject has been so often misunderstood, that the court has thought it convenient to revieAV the former decisions, and the grounds on which they rest.
By the act of February 16, 1875, c. 77, § 3, which differs from earlier laws only in increasing the amount required to give this court appellate jurisdiction from a Circuit Court of the United States, it is necessary that “the matter in dispute *29 sba.11 exceed the sum or value of five thousand dollars, exclusive of costs.” 18 Stat. 316.
The sum or value really in dispute between the- parties in the case before this court, as shown by the whole record, is the test of its appellate jurisdiction, without regard to the collateral effect of the judgment in another suit between the same or other parties.
Elgin
v. Marshall,
The value of property sued for is not always the matter in dispute. In replevin, for instance, if the action is brought as a means of trying the title to property, the value of the property replevied is the matter in dispute; but if the replevin is of property distrained for rent, the amount for which avowry is made is the real matter in dispute, and the limit of jurisdiction.
Peyton
v.
Robertson,
When the object of a suit is to apply property worth more, to the- payment of a debt for less, than the jurisdictional amount, it is the amount of the debt, and not the value of the property, that determines the jurisdiction of this court. This is well illustrated by two cases, in one of which the appeal was taken by the creditor, and in the other by a mortgagee of the property.
In
Farmers' Bank of Alexandria
v.
Hooff,
In
Ross
v.
Prentiss,
When a suit is brought by two or more plaintiffs, or against two or more defendants, or to recover or charge property owned or held by different persons, (which more often happens under the flexible and comprehensive forms of proceeding in equity and admiralty, than under the stricter rules of the common law,) the question what is the matter in dispute becomes more difficult. Generally speaking, however, it may be said, that the joinder in one suit of several plaintiffs or defendants, who might have sued or been sued in separate actions, does not ’enlarge the appellate jurisdiction; that when property or money is claimed by several persons suing together, the test is whether they claim it under one common right, the adverse party having no interest in its apportionment or distribution among them, or claim it under separate and distinct rights, each of which is contested by the adverse party; that when two persons are sued, or two parcels of property are sought to be recovered or charged, by one person in one suit, the test is whether the defendants’ alleged liability to the plaintiff, or,claim to the property, is joint or several; and that, so far as affected by any such joinder, the right of appeal is mutual, because the matter in dispute between the parties is that which is asserted on the one side and denied on the other.
In the leading case of
Oliver
v.
Alexander,
Upon like reasons, in
Rich
v.
Lambert,
The decisions in cases of salvage illustrate the application of the rule to different states of facts. From a decree on a libel for salvage of a ship and cargo, or of several parcels of goods, belonging to different owners, when the salvage demanded against the whole exceeds the jurisdictional limit, but the amount chargeable on the property of each owner is within it, no appeal lies, either by the salvors or by the owners.
Stratton
v.
Jarvis,
Upon like grounds, it was held in the case of
The Mamie,
105 U, S. 773, that from a decree dismissing a petition to obtain the benefit of the act of Congress limiting the liability of shipowners, the owner of the vessel might appeal, even if
*33
the value of the thing surrendered was less than $5000, when the claims against it were for much more than twice that sum in the aggregate, though for only $5000 each; because, as explained in
Ex parte Baltimore & Ohio Railroad,
To the same class- may perhaps be assigned Rodd v. Heartt, 17 Wall. 354, where the appeal, which the court declined to dismiss, was by many creditors, secured by one mortgage for more than $5000, from a decree m rem, postponing that mortgage to claims of material men upon the vessel; but the report, both of the facts and the opinion, is so brief, that it is difficult to ascertain exactly upon what ground the court proceeded.
In equity, as in admiralty, when the sum sued for is one in which the plaintiffs have a joint and common interest, and the defendant has nothing to do with its distribution among them, the whole sum sued for is the test of the jurisdiction.
The earliest case of that class is Shields v. Thomas, 17 How. 3, in which this court held that an appeal would lie from a decree in equity, ordering a defendant, who had converted to his own use property of an intestate, to pay to the plaintiffs, distributees of the estate, a sum of money exceeding $2000, and apportioning it among them in shares less than that sum. The case was distinguished from those of Oliver v. Alexander and Rich v. Lambert, above cited, upon the following grounds:
“ The matter in controversy,” said Chief Justice Taney, “ was the sum due to the representatives of the deceased collectively; and not the particular sum to which each was entitled, when the amount due was distributed among them, according to the laws of the State. They all claimed under one and the same title. They had a common and undivided interest in the claim; and it was perfectly immaterial to the appellant how it was to be shared among them. He had no *34 controversy with either of them on that point; and if there was any difficulty as to the proportions in which they were to share, the dispute was among themselves, and not with him.
“It is like a contract with several to pay a sum of money; It may be ..that the money, when recovered, is to be divided between them in equal or unequal proportions. Yet, if a controversy arises on the contract, and the sum in dispute upon it exceeds two thousand dollars, an appeal would clearly lie to this court, although the interest of each individual was less than that sum.”
To the same class belongs
Freeman
v.
Dawson,
In
Market Co.
v.
Hoffman,
But in equity, as in admiralty, when several persons join in one suit do assert several and distinct interests, and those interests alone are in dispute, the amount of the interest of each is the limit of the appellate jurisdiction.
In
Seaver
v.
Bigelows,
In that case, indeed, the whole amount of both debts did not exceed $2000. But the opinion, as appears by the reasoning above quoted, and-by the reference in it to
Oliver
v.
Alexander
and
Rich
v.
Lamberto
above cited, was evidently framed to cover two other cases, argued and decided contemporaneously with
Seaver
v. Bigelows, which do not appear in the official reports, except in this brief note: “ Similar decree made for the same reason in the case, of
Field
v. Bigelow, and in one branch of
Myers
v.
Fenn."
*36
So in
Russell
v.
Stansell,
The same rule has been applied in many recent cases where the appeal has been taken by the party who had been ordered by the decree below to pay several distinct- claims amounting, together to more than $5000.
In
Schwed
v.
Smith,
*37
In Farmers’
Loan & Trust Co.
v.
Waterman,
In
Fourth National Bank
v.
Stout,
In
Stewart
v.
Dunham,
Upon the same principle, neither party can appeal from a decree upon a bill by a single plaintiff to enforce separate and distinct liabilities against several defendants, if the sum for which .each is alleged or found to be liable' is less than the jurisdictional amount. For instance, it was decided in
Paving Co.
v.
Mulford,
In the less frequent instances in which similar questions have arisen in proceedings at common law, the same distinctions have been maintained.
Where a writ of mandamus was issued to compel a county clerk to extend upon a tax-collector’s books a sum sufficient to pay several distinct judgments held by different persons, it was held that the case was like
Seaver
v.
Bigelows
and
Schwed
v.
Smith,
above cited, and the defendant’s right of appeal was determined by the amount of each judgment.
Hawley
v.
Fairbanks,
108
U. S. 543.
But where the writ commanded a collector to collect a tax of one per cent upon the propertof a county, which had' already been levied for the joint benefit of all the relators, it 'was held that the case was like
Shields
v.
Thomas
and
The Connemara,
above cited, and that the right of appeal depended upon the whole amount of the tax.
Davies
v.
Corbin,
In ejectment against two defendants for two parcels of land, if each defendant claims only one parcel, the value of each parcel is the limit of appellate jurisdiction.
Tupper
v.
Wise,
In Henderson v. Wadsworth, 115 U. S. 264, 276, where, in an action against heirs upon a debt of their ancestor, separate judgments were rendered against them for their proportionate-shares, it was held that no one who had been thus charged with less than $5000 could appeal; and Mr. Justice Woods, in delivering judgment, referred to many of the cases above cited, and declared it to be well settled that “ where a judgment or decree against a defendant, who pleads no counterclaim or set-off, and asks no affirmative relief, is brought by him to this court by writ of error or appeal, the amount in *39 dispute on which, the jurisdiction depends is the amount of the judgment or decree which is sought to be reversed,” and that “ neither co-defendants nor co-plaintiffs can unite their separate and distinct interests for the purpose of making up the amount necessary to give this court, jurisdiction upon writ of error or appeal.”
The true line of distinction, as applied to cases like that now before us, is sharply brought out by the recent decisions of
Stewart
v.
Dunham,
The case at bar is exactly like Stewart v. Dunham. The suit is by the general creditors, only bne of whose debts amounts to $5000; the trustee and the preferred creditor; appear as defendants only, file no cross bill and ask no affirmative relief; and the decree sets aside the fraudulent conveyance so far only as it affects the plaintiffs’ rights. The sole matter in dispute, therefore, is between the defendants and each plaintiff as to the' amount which the latter shall recover; and the motion to dismiss the appeal of the defendants as to all the plaintiffs except the one whose debt exceeds $5000 must be granted.
This result, as we have seen, is in accordance with a long series of decisions of this court, extending over more than half a century: During that period Congress has often legislated *40 on the subject of our appellate jurisdiction, without changing the phraseology which had received judicial construction. The court should not now unsettle a rule so long established and recognized.
Motion granted.
