Plaintiffs-appellees filed the instant complaint in district court claiming that their *556 properties, in an urban renewal area, had been “taken” without just compensation. Named defendants were the City of Dear-born, its mayor and city council, its plan commission and planner, its building and safety division and its superintendent, its community development department and its director, its licenses, weights and measures department and its director, its sanitation department and its director, its housing department and its director, and the city school board. 1 By pretrial memorandum opinion and order, the district court certified plaintiffs as representing six subclasses. After more than nineteen trial days which produced more than 2,600 pages in transcript, the district court found jurisdiction through 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1343(3) (1970), reaffirmed its class action order, found that certain defendants’ activities combined to “take” certain plaintiffs’ properties without due process, 2 and, choosing to exercise its pendent jurisdiction, found that the City had violated the state relocation assistance for displaced persons act, M.S.A. § 8.215(61) et seq., and the state rehabilitation of blighted areas act, M.S.A. § 5.3501 et seq., as incorporated in a city ordinance. By the same opinion and a later judgment, the district court granted far-reaching relief against certain city officials, the city council, and the city plan commission, and their successors, collectively referred to in the opinion and judgment as “the City.” The judgment required, inter alia, the City to divest itself of properties it had acquired 3 and to pay those plaintiffs who had sold their properties “the difference between the price paid by the City and the price later determined to be the fair market value of the property at the time of the taking of the property.”
On this appeal, the district court’s finding of jurisdiction is challenged as are its findings of an unconstitutional “taking” and of state law violations, and its remedy. We find it necessary to discuss only the challenge to jurisdiction.
For jurisdictional purposes, there are two classes of defendants, (1) the “City defendants” consisting of the City, its council, its plan commission, its building and safety division, and four of its departments, 4 and (2) the “individual defendants” consisting of the mayor, the city planner, the building and safety superintendent, and directors of four city departments. Similarly, plaintiffs invoked, and the district court found, two jurisdictional bases, the general federal question jurisdictional statute 28 U.S.C § 1331, and the civil rights jurisdictional statute 28 U.S.C § 1343(3).
*557 I. Jurisdiction As To The Parties
Service of Process.
Axiomatically, due process requires proper service of process in order to obtain
in personam
jurisdiction over either the “City defendants” or the “individual defendants.” See, e. g.,
Jaynes v. Jaynes,
Fed.R.Civ.P. 4(d) governs the service of process, providing, in part, that service may be made,
“(1) Upon an individual ... by delivering a copy of the summons and of the complaint to him personally or by leaving copies thereof at his dwelling house or usual place of abode with some person of suitable age and discretion then residing therein or by delivering a copy of the summons and of the complaint to an agent authorized by appointment or by law to receive service of process.
“(6) Upon a state or municipal corporation or other governmental organization thereof subject to suit, by delivering a copy of the summons and of the complaint to the chief executive officer thereof or by serving the summons and complaint in the manner prescribed by law of that state for the service of summons or other like process upon any such defendant.
“(7) Upon a defendant of any class referred to in paragraph (1) . . . , it is also sufficient if the summons and complaint are served in the manner prescribed by any statute of the United States or in the manner prescribed by the law of the state in which the district court is held for the service of summons or other like process upon any such defendant in an action brought in the courts of general jurisdiction of that state.”
Thus, Rules 4(d)(1) and 4(d)(7) govern the service on the “individual defendants,” Rule 4(d)(6) the service on the “City defendants.”
Rather than reflecting service on the “individual defendants” in compliance with either 4(d)(1) or 4(d)(7) by personal service, “residence” service, agent service, or service in compliance with Michigan law, the marshall’s return reflects only that the summons and complaint were served on the secretary to the city clerk and on the city director of elections. Though the amended complaint fails to reflect whether the individuals were sued in their official or their individual capacities, even if they were sued in their official capacities, proper service of process would still be necessary to obtain personal jurisdiction over those officials.
Gozdanovic v. Civil Serv. Comm’n,
The district court also could have acquired jurisdiction over the individual defendants had they voluntarily appeared, but the record, rather than reflecting such a voluntary appearance, reflects that the attorneys for the City, in their answers to plaintiffs’ complaint and amended complaint, carefully limited their answer to “defendant City of Dearborn, only.” 5
*558
Service of process was, however, sufficient to permit the judgment to run against the City and the city council. Admittedly, no “chief executive offieer[s]” of those organizations were served. Fed.R. Civ.P. 4(d)(6). Compare
Mathias v. City of Milwaukee Dep’t of City Development,
“[sjervice of process on public, municipal, quasi-municipal, or governmental corporations, unincorporated boards, or public bodies, may be made by leaving a summons and a copy of the complaint with
“(2) the mayor, city clerk, or city attorney, in the case of cities; .
“(8) the president, chairman, secretary, manager or clerk, in the case of any other public body organized or existing under the constitution or any law of this state, when by statute no other method of service is specially provided.
“The service of process may be made on any officer having substantially the same duties as those named or described irrespective of their titles. In any case, service may be made by leaving a summons and a copy of the complaint with a person in charge of the office of any of the above-described officers upon whom service may be made . . . .”
Service on the clerk’s office 6 surely was sufficient service on the City through Mich. Comp.Laws Ann. § 600.1925(2), as supplemented by the provision that “service may be made by leaving a summons . with a person in charge of the office of any of the above-described officers upon whom service may be made.” 7 Though section 600.1925(2) refers to service “in the case of cities,” and though none of the few reported Michigan cases construing section 600.-1925 have considered the applicability of 600.1925(2) to city councils or city plan commissions, we consider the service also sufficient on the city council, as such, as the City’s legislative body.
Despite federal and Michigan courts’ demand for compliance with Fed.R.Civ.P. 4(d)(6) and with Mich.Comp.Laws Ann. § 600.1925, see
Mendoza, supra, United States Steel, supra, Brooke v. Brooke,
II. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
Introduction. In addition to acquiring in personam jurisdiction over the parties, federal courts, being courts of limited jurisdiction, must have subject matter jurisdiction.
Civil Rights jurisdiction over “city defendants.”
The district court properly found that the defendant city could not be sued through section 1983, 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1970), and its jurisdictional statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1343(3).
City of Kenosha v. Bruno,
Federal question jurisdiction over “city defendants.”
Though municipalities, their councils and their planning commissions cannot be sued through section 1983, it is well established that municipalities, councils and commissions may be sued directly for fourteenth amendment violations through the general federal question jurisdictional statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1331.
Kenosha, supra,
Unlike section 1343(3), section 1331 requires that
each
class member asserting “separate and distinct claims” must satisfy the jurisdictional amount requirement.
Zahn v. International Paper Co.,
Plaintiffs claim that the
Zahn
rule against aggregation, however, applies only to Rule 23(b)(3) classes, as in
Zahn, supra,
Of course, “aggregation” is permissible where class members “unite to enforce a single title or right in which they have a common and undivided interest.”
Gallagher v. Continental Ins. Co.,
Consequently, whether plaintiffs asserted “separate and distinct” claims or “common and undivided interests” becomes all-important. Plaintiffs’ amended complaint contains averments of “unlawful taking[s] of their properties],” which are more similar to the averments of damage to individual property interests in
Zahn, supra,
pay raises in
National Treasury Employees Union v. Nixon,
Plaintiffs’ claim of a “right” to continue to live in their “unique,” Arab Moslem
*560
majority, neighborhood, even if a “common and undivided interest,” cannot aid them in meeting the jurisdictional amount required. Such right, clearly “incapable of monetary valuation,” cannot support section 1331 jurisdiction. See
Goldsmith v. Sutherland,
Even had plaintiffs alleged in good faith that each plaintiff class member had more than $10,000 in controversy,
9
the city’s answer “denie[d] that any of the plaintiffs are able to satisfy the jurisdictional requirements of 28 U.S.C. § 1331.” By denying the jurisdictional amount allegation, the city “put the [plaintiffs] to their proof as to the amount in controversy.”
United Farmworkers, supra,
Yet, in finding jurisdiction under section 1331, the district court apparently overlooked the City’s answer, stating that,
“The only challenge to jurisdiction by the defendants was made by the City in its Answer to the First Amended Complaint in which it said, ‘Plaintiffs have failed to show that defendant, or its agents have acted under color of law.’ . [W]e reject the only objection voiced by the defendants to this court’s jurisdiction.”363 F.Supp. at 1270 .
Plaintiffs’ appellate brief claims that “[t]he district court found that Plaintiffs had made a good faith claim that the matter in controversy exceeded $10,000 for each plaintiff.” Plaintiffs’ Brief at 18. Plaintiffs’ counsel, however, seriously misreads the district court’s opinion, which merely recites that
“plaintiffs hav[e] alleged that they have been damaged individually in an amount in excess of $10,000 and that their constitutional rights have been violated.”363 F.Supp. at 1270 .
The district court merely, and probably incorrectly,
10
found that plaintiffs had alleged individual damages in excess of $10,000; the district court did not find that plaintiffs had “made good faith claims” in excess of $10,000 for each plaintiff. Had the district court found that more than $10,000 was “in controversy” between each plaintiff, or even certain plaintiffs, and the City, and had substantial evidence supported the finding, then the district court would have had jurisdiction over those plaintiffs’ claims. But a conclusionary finding that plaintiffs each had more than $10,000 “in controversy” would have been insufficient since defendants denied the jurisdictional allegation and the record indicates that at least some plaintiff class members had less than $10,000 in controversy with the City. We follow
Patrician Towers Owners, Inc. v. Fairchild,
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.
Notes
. The district court found that the school district, “an entity entirely separate and distinct from the City of Dearborn,” “ha[d] not violated any of the plaintiffs’ rights,” and dismissed the school board. Plaintiffs have not appealed that dismissal, and consequently the school board is not a party on appeal.
. “Although none of the activities of the City standing alone may have constituted a taking of plaintiffs’ property, this court finds that the combination of the City’s announcement and attendant publicity of the clearance projects, the City’s refusal to issue certain repair and building permits coupled with its efforts to discourage repairs, the lack of care of City-owned property, the posting of signs on vacant buildings which invited vandalism, the posting of large signs in the area offering to buy property, the solicitation of sales to the City, the City’s lack of initiative to control pollution in the South End, and the gradual acquisition of properties in both areas resulted in the taking of property in these areas for which homeowners are entitled to just compensation.”
. The judgment specifies that improved lots were to be offered for sale at the City’s acquisition cost “lowered or raised in proportion to the deterioration or improvement to the property since acquisition . . . [and] may be adjusted upward at the rate of Five (5%) Percent per year since acquisition,” vacant lots at $500 per 30-foot-wide lot or “the median price paid by the City for vacant lots in the affected area in the last five (5) years.” For each six months the properties remain unsold, the judgment specifies that the price should be reduced twenty percent (20%), unless “at the end of any six (6) month period . . . sold to the highest bidder at public auction.”
. No relief was granted against the building and safety division and the four departments, as such, and they have not appealed. Consequently, except for footnote 8, infra, they will not be referred to hereinafter.
. Even the district court “note[d] that the individual defendants, including the mayor, have never answered the Complaint in this matter and are technically in default. Answers have been filed on behalf of the School Board and the City alone. Nonetheless, the City Attorney for Dearborn has proceeded as though he represented all individual defendants and we will treat them as such even though he has never filed an appearance in this matter.”
. Nor could the city building and safety division or the city departments be sued through section 1983. See, e. g.,
Monell v. Department of Social Serv.,
. The attempted service on the elections director, he being neither “the mayor, city clerk, [n]or city attorney,” was ineffectual. See
Brooke v. Brooke,
. Even if service on the city were insufficient, the city, by answering without raising the insufficiency of service of process, waived that defense. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(h)(1).
. The actual allegation, however, falls short of alleging that
each
class member had more than $10,000 in controversy. Rather, plaintiffs summarily alleged, “the amount in controversy, exclusive of interest and costs, is greater than Ten Thousand ($10,000.00) Dollars.” See
Beckerman v. Sands,
. See footnote 9, supra.
