after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
It will be observed that this case is like the
Board of Trade of the City of Chicago
v.
Christie Grain & Stock Company,
On the issue presented by the plea the burden of proof was upon the appellant, and he was required to establish by a preponderance of the, evidence that the amount involved was less than the jurisdictional amount.
Sheppard
v.
Graves,
14 How, 504;
Wetmore
v.
Rymer,
A witness on the part of the Exchange testified that he was employed by ,the Board of Trade as expert to investigate persons who pretended to be brokers, “but who'were in'fact bucket shops,” and was in that position for séveral years, gathered statistics, made estimates of the. .volume of business during 1901 and 1902, and has kept pretty well informed ever since as to the number of bucket shops in the United States. And he further testified that trades are carried on' in such shops in all commodities that are traded in on the New York Cotton Exchange, New York Stock Exchange and the Chicago Board of Trade. Of the value of the right of the New York Cotton Exchange to control the distribution of its quotations he said: “One can only estimate or approximate the value of the right, for the reason that the volume of Speculative business in the' country changes, and that changes the value of the right. If there is a large volume of ¡speculative business *335 in cotton the value to the New York Cotton Exchange would, probably amount to a million dollars, while with a depressed market it would not amount to more than $200,000 or-$300,000.” And this is the amount per year.
A superintendent of the Exchange testified to his familiarity in a general way with what is .called the independent trader, or independent trade, as distinguished from the trade or traders • who carry their transactions to the cotton exchanges of the country, and in. a measure with the volume of business done by such persons in an approximate way.
He further testified that the amount of business thus diverted from the Exchange made a- difference to the Exchange of fully one million dollars a year, and that the value of the right to control the distribution of the- quotations in the - manner set out in the bill would very much exceed $2,000.
The witness was unable to state the -relative amount of business done on the Exchange in the years 1903, 1904 and 1905, because there was no record of the transactions kept, but he reached the conclusion in regard to the value of the business, diverted from the "Exchange partly from the évidence given by appelleé and partly as to the business done-by the bucket shops. And he put the value, “in dollars and cents,” of.the contract between the Exchange and the Telegraph Company, independent of the amount of business diverted, at the amount the Exchange received from. the Telegraph Company. • The fallowing colloquy took place between the witness and counsel for appellant:
“Q. Now, Mr. King, what time, up- to this good moment and .hour, has that exchange failed to receive the amount of that contract, that is, for giving the Western Union Telegraph Company the right to furnish this information gathered on the, floor of the New York .Cotton Exchange?'
“A. It has not.
“ Q, Then in short this here is nothing except'fear and appre-. hension that unless these defendants'-are 'restrained that is' likely to happen, and affect the value of the contfact?
*336 “A. And the business upon the Exchange.”
It is manifest that the injury to the Exchange is not the rate paid by the appellant to the Telegraph Company. The purpose of the suit is to enjoin the appellant from receiving, using or selling, directly or indirectly, the Exchange’s quotations or permitting or maintaining any wire to his office over which the quotations are passing, or distributing the quotations, until he shall have acquired the right' to receive them either by contract of purchase from the Exchange, or with its consent and approval, from one of the Telegraph Companies authorized to distribute them. In other words, the object’ of the suit is to keep the control of the quotations by the Exchange and its protection from the competition of bucket shops or the identity of its business with that of bucket shops. And the right to the quotations was declared, as we said in
Board of Trade
v.
Christie Grain & Stock Company,
to be property, and the Exchangé may keep them to itself or communicate them to others. The object of this suit is to protect that right. The right, therefore, is the matter in dispute, and its value to the Exchange determines the jurisdiction, not the rate paid by appellant to the Telegraph Company. The value of the right was testified to be much greater than $2,000. In
Mississippi & Missouri Railroad Company
v.
Ward,
Counsel for appellant do not deny that jurisdiction is determinable by the object sought to be accomplished by the bill, *337 but they assert that the Value .of that was speculative and changed with the volume of business. Counsel lay great stress-on the testimony of the superintendent of the Exchange, to the effect that the value of the contract between the Exchange and the Telegraph Company, independent of the business diverted from the Exchange,- is, in dollars and cents, the amount it receives from the Telegraph Company. Upon this testimony counsel assert the right claimed by the Exchange to be the narrow one of preventing the appellant from receiving the continuous quotations from the Telegraph- Company, which he pays for, pending a' litigation in the' state courts, and this distinguishes the case from the Board of Trade v. Christie Grain & Stock Company, and contend that the jurisdictional amount has not been established, as the Telegraph Company is- fulfilling its contract with the Exchange. Of the latter contention we have sufficiently indicated our view, and it is^ only necessary to add that because the value of the quotations to the Exchange varies with the volume of business does not impair the effect of the testimony that the value of its right to control them is “much greater than $2,000.” We cannot concur in the conclusion urged by appellant that this case is distinguishable in principle from Board of Trade v. Christie Grain & Stock Company, either in the right asserted or in the defense against it. Even if the cases were distinguishable, it might still be contended, that would be óf no consequence in determining the jurisdictional amount of the matter in dispute. But we will consider the difference claimed to exist between the cases. In the Christie case, it is contended, the right asserted was “to prevent getting.at the knowledge of a trade secret or the quotations of the market surreptitiously, and using the knowledge so obtained,” and that,\ it is insisted, was the matter in controversy. THere,” it is said,- “there is no. violation of a duty or trust. The market quotations- are not received surreptitiously. The appellant is not depriving the appellee of the protection of the law:” In the Christie case the quotations were gotten and published, “in some way not *338 disclosed,” but, it was said, as the defendants did not get them from the Telegraph -Companies authorized to distribute them, had declined to sign contracts satisfactory to the plaintiff (Board of Trade) and denied the plaintiff’s rights altogether, it was a reasonable conclusion that they got, and intended to get, their knowledge in a way which was wrongful. This, however, was not said to limit the plaintiff’s right but to express a violation of it. The right was clearly defined to be, the right of the Board of Trade to keep the quotations to itself or communicate them to others. And this is also the right of the Exchange in the case at bar. It can be violated not only by getting the quotations surreptitiously or “in some way not disclosed,” or by getting them from a person forbidden to communicate them.
The next contention of appellant is that-the court had no jurisdiction to grant the injunction and pronounce the decree appealed from. The only question involved in this branch of the case, appellant says, is “whether it comes within the provision of the Revised Statutes, § 720, which is to the effect that ño writ of injunction shall be granted by a court of the United States to stay proceedings of any court except in matters of bankruptcy.”
And, appellant insists, that this suit necessarily offends that section, because under its decree he “cannot have the benefit of the judgment of the state court without being in contempt of the Federal court,” and that he is restrained by the Circuit Court from receiving from the Telegraph Company what the company is forbidden to refuse him by the state court. To sustain his contention appellant cites
United States
v.
Parkhurst Davis Mercantile Company,
The Circuit Court had jurisdiction, and its decree is'
Affirmed.
