delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case comes here on appeal from a decree of the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, affirming a decree of the District Court for New Hampshire, which enjoined appellant, the chief of police for the City of Manchester, from enforcing the “ Hawkers and Peddlers Act,” c. 102, New Hampshire Laws of 1931, as an infringement of the Fourteenth Amendment. An appeal taken directly to this Court from the district court, three judges sitting, was dismissed for want of jurisdiction here since, in the lower court, appellee had waived his prayer for temporary relief.
The bill of complaint alleges that until the effective date of the Act, appellee, a resident of Massachusetts, was engаged in Manchester and elsewhere in New Hampshire in the distribution of vacuum cleaners through their sale and delivery to purchasers by traveling salesmen; that the business was conducted in such a manner as to subject the salesmen to the tax, which they were unwilling or unable to pаy; and that their arrest and prosecution, which appellant threatens if they continue to sell without paying the tax, would destroy appellee’s business. The value of his business and his loss on account of the enforcement of the Act are each alleged to be more than $3,000.00. Appellant’s answer and motion to dismiss the cause, as not within the jurisdiction of the district court, admit the facts stated in the complaint, so far as now material, except that they deny the allegation that the matter in controversy exceeds $3,000, the jurisdictionаl amount.
On this issue a trial was had, in the course of which evidence was given to show the extent of appellee’s busi
It is appellee’s contention that the matter in controversy is either the tax which he would be required to pay annually in order to continue his business in New Hampshire, or his right to conduct the business there without payment of the tax, and that the value of each exceeds $3,000. He argues upon the evidence that the expenditure for payment of the tax which hе would be obliged to bear in order to continue his business in Manchester is at least $350.00 per annum, and that the capitalized value of this expenditure would exceed $3,000.00.
The District Court concluded that as the tax which would be imposed for the conduct of appelleе’s business in Manchester would amount to at least $300.00 per annum, its capitalized value, which would exceed $3,000, satisfies the jurisdictional requirement. The Court of Appeals thought that the matter in controversy was appellee’s right to do business throughout the state, which is valued at more than $3,000.00
It is conceded that the authority of appellant, as chief of police, to make arrests for violation of the statute is
If the threatened action of appellant is not restrained, the consequence will be either the payment of the tax by appellee, or the suppression of his business in Manchester because of his failure to pay it. Hence we disregard evidence of injury to аppellee’s business outside the city and of the cost of licenses for doing it, and confine ourselves to the inquiry whether his right to do the business in Manchester or the tax which must be paid for doing the business there is the matter in controversy, and whether the record shows that its value doеs not exceed $3,000.00.
That the issue between the parties is the right of the state to collect the tax cannot be gainsaid. There is no question of the authority of a state to suppress the conduct of a business for the non-payment of an exaction lawfully imposed upon it, or of the appellant’s authority
It has been said that it is the value of the “ object of the suit ” which determines the jurisdictional amount in the-federal courts,
Mississippi
&
Missouri R. Co.
v.
Ward,
Not only does the language of the statute point to this conclusion, but the policy clearly indicated by the successive acts of Congress regulating the jurisdiction of federal courts supports it. Compare
Davis
v.
Mills,
The сontested license fees must be paid annually as a condition precedent to doing the business. But it does not follow that capitalization of the tax is the method of determining the value of the matter in controversy. The bill of complaint does not allege, nor can it be assumed, that the appellant will act to compel compliance with the statute by appellee in future years for which no tax is yet payable, or that the appellee will seek to continue his business in Manchester indefinitely in the future, or that
A different question is presented where the mattеr in controversy is the validity of a permanent exemption by contract from an annual property tax,
Berryman
v.
Whitman College,
Reversed.
Notes
These and other authorities are discussed in 34 Col. L. Rev. 311.
The amount originally fixed by § 11 of the Judiciary Act of 1789 at $500, exclusive of costs, 1 Stat. 78, was increased to $2,000, exclusive of interest and costs by Act of March 3, 1887, 24 Stat. 552, and to $3,000, exclusive of interest and costs, by the Act of March 3, 1911, 36 Stat. 1091; see U.S.C.A. § 41 (1).
