Katharine V. Sipp, the plaintiff, brought this suit, as beneficiary, against the Home Life Insurance Company, the defendant, to recover $3,000, together with interest and costs, on a policy insuring the life of her mother. The defendant pleaded to the merits and (informally, yet certainly) interposed a counterclaim for money loaned on the policy, which, being unpaid, it claimed is deductible from any sum that might be found due. At the trial the defendant made a motion to dismiss the suit for want of jurisdiction, based on section 24 of the Judicial Code (Comp. St. § 991) which confers on district courts jurisdiction “where the matter in controversy exceeds, exclusive of interest and costs, the sum or value of $3,-000,” and on section 37 of the Judicial Code (Comp. St. § 1019), which directs that, “if in any suit commenced in a District Court * * * it shall appear * * * at any time after such suit has been brought * * * that such suit does not really and substantially involve a dispute or controversy properly within the jurisdiction of said District Court, * * * the said District Court shall proceed no further therein, but shall dismiss the suit.” On denying the motion the learned trial court first-thought the plaintiff’s claim in the even amount of $3,000 came within the jurisdictional limitation but later took the position, and so charged the jury, that inasmuch as the death of the insured occurred in March, 1919, and suit was brought in October of that year, interest on the principal sum which had accrued between those dates should be treated as principal and be added to the amount named in the policy, and that, together, they exceed the sum of $3,000. Being, not entirely satisfied with this ruling in her favor, the plaintiff filed an amendment to her statement, raising her claim to $3,159 by adding to the amount of insurance the unearned premium from the date of the death of the insured to the end of the year for which the premium had been paid. On jurisdiction thus found, the court submitted the case and the plaintiff had a verdict. To the judgment which followed, this writ of error is directed.. Passing by many assignments of error, we come directly to the basic one raising the question whether on the pleadings and evidence the plaintiff brought her ease within the jurisdiction of the District Court.
Construing literally the provision of the statute which gives jurisdiction to district courts “where the matter in controversy
exceeds, exclusive
of interest and costs, the sum or value of $3,000,” we hold, of course, that the sum of $3,000 can never be in excess of itself, and that as the jurisdictional amount is reckoned exclusive of interest, an item of interest growing due after the due date of the principal cannot be added to swell the claim and bring it within the statute. Kaufman v. Rheinstrom (C. C.)
Finally, the plaintiff maintains that her case is within the jurisdictional amount because of two ways in which the law regards a counterclaim: First, that a defendant who pleads a counterclaim is estopped to deny the jurisdiction of the court on the ground that the amount in dispute is insufficient; and next, that the amount of the counterclaim may be added to the amount of the principal claim and that, when together they exceed the sum of $3,000, the statute is satisfied. In support of the first proposition the plaintiff relies on O. J. Lewis Mercantile Co. v. Klepner,
On the second proposition courts have said that “when the jurisdictional amount is in question, the tendering of a counterclaim in an amount which in itself, or added to the amount claimed in the petition, makes up a sum equal to the amount necessary to the jurisdiction of this court, jurisdiction is established, whatever may be the state of the plaintiff’s complaint.” American Sheet & Tin Plate Co. v. Winzeler (D. C.)
The counterclaim in this case — $423—is not in itself equal to the jurisdictional amount; nor when added to the amount of the plaintiff’s demand does it raise the total to the amount the statute requires, for the reason that the counterclaim was pleaded not to recover anything from the plaintiff but merely to be deducted from any amount that might be found due the plaintiff, and particularly to be deducted from an amount which .the defendant admits it owes. Joining the figures of the two claims does not make “the matter in controversy” exceed the amount named in the statute because if the counterclaim were ignored by the jury the plaintiff could at most recover the $3,000 sued for (exclusive of interest and costs), which would be just short of the amount necessary for the jurisdiction of the court. At no time and under no arrangement of the figures has the amount in controversy exceeded $3,000. That amount is either precisely $3,000 or something less. Thus it appears the interposition of the counterclaim as a credit claim and as an item to be deducted from the sum that might be found due the plaintiff did not augment the amount in controversy.
As that amount is less than what the statute requires to confer jurisdiction on the District Court, Banking Association v. Insurance Association,
