RULING ON MOTION TO DISMISS
Plaintiff has alleged that defendant held himself out to plaintiff as qualified to advise and assist plaintiff in the preparation and presentation to the Patent Office of plaintiff’s application for a patent on his invention, a magnetic sash lock. Plaintiff further alleges that he paid a total of $960 to defendant for his services, and that defendant, while holding himself out as qualified to perform the services rendered to plaintiff, had in fact been disbarred and excluded from practice before the Patent Office prior to his dealings with plaintiff. While plaintiff does not claim that his application for a patent was prejudiced by defendant’s alleged misrepresentations as to his qualifications, plaintiff does claim that he personally has suffered $1,000 in damages, a figure apparently based on his payments to defendant.
Plaintiff asserts that the above allegations give rise to three causes of action against defendant, and brings suit on each cause of action on behalf of a class of persons similarly situated, i. e., the class of persons who have engaged defendant’s services in reliance on his representations as to his being qualified to assist in the preparation of patents. Plaintiff seeks injunctive relief and also “demands judgment and damages against defendant in the amount of $10,000.00 for himself and for each member of the class hereinafter determined, which amount shall include compensatory and exemplary damages, together with costs, disbursements, attorneys’ fees as set forth in 35 U.S.C. § 285, and interest, all as permitted by law.”
What plaintiff terms three different causes of action are actually three different remedies for a single cause of action — the course of allegedly wrongful conduct set forth above. Plaintiff’s first “cause of action” pursues a quasi-statutory remedy, to wit, the civil remedy which plaintiff contends is implied in a federal penal statute forbidding persons not authorized to practice before the Patent Office from representing themselves as qualified to prepare patent applications. 35 U.S.C. § 33. Plaintiff’s second “cause of action” seeks recovery under the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a). In addition to the money damages noted above, plaintiff seeks by his first two “causes of action” to have defendant enjoined from further violations of 35 U.S.C. § 33 and 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a). Plaintiff’s final “cause of action” seeks damages only, and states a common-law tort claim of fraudulent misrepresentation. Defendant has moved for dismissal of plaintiff’s entire complaint, contending that this Court lacks jurisdiction over any of plaintiff’s asserted “causes of action.”
Plaintiff Lacks Standing Under Lanham Act
Plaintiff’s second “cause of action,” the Lanham Act claim, may be disposed of easily. Plaintiff has conceded that Colligan v. Activities Club of New York,
Diversity Claim, Challenged Re Jurisdictional Amount
More troublesome is plaintiff’s third “cause of action.” Plaintiff has alleged that this Court has diversity jurisdiction over this tort claim under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a). 1 While the requisite diversity of citizenship is not disputed, the parties have argued vigorously whether plaintiff’s prayer for damages suffices to place in controversy the jurisdictional amount. It is undisputed that these damages must be determined according to Connecticut law.
Plaintiff has claimed only $1,000 in general damages and has conceded that the jurisdictional amount cannot be obtained by an aggregation of the claims of the class he purports to represent. Snyder v. Harris,
Defendant does not dispute the established rule that “Where both actual and punitive damages are recoverable under a complaint each must be considered to the extent claimed in determining the jurisdictional amount. Therefore even though the petitioner is limited to actual damages of $1,000 . . . the question remains whether it is apparent to a legal certainty from the complaint that he could not recover, in addition, sufficient punitive damages to make up the requisite [jurisdictional amount].” Bell v. Preferred Life Society,
Legal Certainty Argument
Without expressly questioning plaintiff’s good faith, defendant has attempted to win dismissal under the “legal certainty” standard. Defendant relies on Connecticut law limiting exemplary damages in tort actions to “the amount of the expenses of litigation in the suit, less taxable costs.” Collens v. New Canaan Water Co.,
The flaw in defendant’s argument is that the Connecticut rule of *306 punitive damages relates to actual and not necessarily reasonable costs of litigation, and thus does not necessarily disallow a judgment of punitive damages many times the amount of actual damages caused by a tort, if the plaintiff can show that he has really expended such an amount in seeking vindication of his legal rights. Thus defendant’s argument as to the “legal certainty” of plaintiff not recovering $9,000 in punitive damages amounts only to speculation, however reasonable, as to how much the action will cost plaintiff, and how much plaintiff is willing to spend. Yet the general rule laid down in St. Paul Mercury Indemnity Co. v. Red Cab Co., supra, clearly affords the plaintiff, not the defendant, the initiative in speculating as to the amount the plaintiff may be entitled to recover. In order successfully to controvert the plaintiff’s claim of the jurisdictional amount, the defendant must either demonstrate the legal impossibility of the plaintiff’s recovering the jurisdictional amount, or show that the plaintiff’s initial speculation as to his possible recovery was made in bad faith. By claiming in the instant case that plaintiff’s prayer is unreasonably speculative, defendant is really challenging plaintiff’s good faith rather than establishing with any legal certainty a ceiling to plaintiff’s possible recovery of punitive damages.
Speculativeness of Claim as Basis for Inference of Bad Faith
It is an unresolved question to what extent bad faith may be inferred from the extreme speculativeness of a claim for unliquidated damages or, as here, exemplary damages. The Supreme Court appeared to dispose of this issue in 1961 by treating good faith and legal certainty as but two sides to a single coin. The Court thereby seemed to state that bad faith could be found only when a prayer was made for damages which could be shown to a legal certainty to be unrecoverable. “The general federal rule has long been to decide what the amount in controversy is from the complaint itself, unless it appears or is in some way shown that the amount stated in the complaint is not claimed ‘in good faith.’ In deciding this question of good faith we have said that it ‘must appear to a legal certainty that the claim is really for less than the jurisdictional amount to justify dismissal.’ ” Horton v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
The, Courts of Appeals have been loath to follow literally the Supreme Court’s equation of the bad faith and legal certainty tests, at least where there is
objective
evidence of bad faith to supplement the inference of bad faith subjectively drawn from an exorbitant and speculative claim of damages. Thus a prayer for an amount of damages which while speculative is legally possible of recovery is treated as creating a rebuttable but not a conclusive presumption of good faith. The Second Circuit has recognized that “flagrant cases may arise in which, even though the complaint demands unliquidated damages in excess of $10,000, dismissal is proper because the district court can justifiably conclude that the amount demanded was inflated solely in order to gain access to the federal courts.” Deutsch v. Hewes Street Realty Corp.,
Absent some objective evidence of bad faith, cases passing on the jurisdictional sufficiency of claims relying on exemplary damages to reach the jurisdictional amount have consistently held that dismissal is warranted only where the applicable law does not permit the award of
any
punitive damages. Wood v. Stark Tri-County Bldg. Trades Council,
Plaintiff’s Claim Insufficient On Its Face
In the instant case the applicable law does not disallow the recovery of exemplary damages, but does liquidate such damages in the amount of litigation expenses actually incurred. Thus while it is not legally certain that plaintiff cannot recover the jurisdictional amount, such an award is nevertheless extremely unlikely. Fortunately, I need not decide at this time whether such a recovery is so unlikely as to render plaintiff’s prayer “patently frivolous,” Zunamon v. Brown,
supra,
Plaintiff is, of course, entitled to leave to amend his complaint. But when an initial prayer proves defective at conferring jurisdiction, and the complaint is amended so as to raise the prayer above the jurisdictional amount, the plaintiff may find that he has provided the court with the objective evidence of a colorable claim necessary to dismiss an action seeking highly speculative damages despite the jurisdietionally liberal presumption in favor of the plaintiff’s good faith. Absent some showing of “[a] change of circumstances or developing injuries to explain the inflation of the claim which alone [gives] color of federal jurisdiction,”
*308
Arnold v. Truccoli,
Plaintiff’s third “cause of action” is dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.
Plaintiff Contends Civil Remedy Implied In Penal Patent Statute
Plaintiff’s first “cause of action” is based on 35 U.S.C. § 33, which provides: “Whoever, not being recognized to practice before the Patent Office, holds himself out or permits himself to be held out as so recognized, or as being qualified to prepare or prosecute applications for patent, shall be fined not more than $1,000 for each offense.” The statute has been held in this Circuit to apply to persons not registered as patent practitioners who, while not holding themselves out as recognized to practice before the Patent Office, nevertheless represent themselves as “possessing particular skill or ‘know-how’ ” in the preparation of patents. United States v. Blasius,
General Rule Supports Plaintiff
There is ample support for the general proposition that penal statutes create implied civil rights of recovery in the class the statutes were meant to protect. “A disregard of the command of [a penal] statute is a wrongful act, and where it results in damage to one of the class for whose especial benefit the statute was enacted, the right to recover the damages from the party in default is implied, according to a doctrine of the common law expressed in . the maxim,
Ubi jus ibi remedium.”
Texas & Pacif. Ry. Co. v. Rigsby,
“In those cases we concluded that criminal liability was inadequate to ensure the full effectiveness of the statute which Congress had intended. Because the interest of the plaintiffs in those eases fell within the class that the statute was intended to protect, and because the harm that had occurred was of the type that the statute was intended to forestall, we held that civil actions were proper. That conclusion was in accordance with a general rule of the law of torts. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 286.” Wyandotte Co. v. United States, 389 *309 U.S. 191, 202,88 S.Ct. 379 , 386,19 L. Ed.2d 407 (1967).
Precedent Supports Plaintiff
United States v. Blasius,
supra,
reviewed the legislative history of 35 U. S.C. § 33 and found that it represented “a continuing effort on the part of Congress for the protection of the public to restrict to those who have met the standards of professional skill and ethics set up by the Patent Office, the rendering of advice and assistance in the presentation and prosecution of applications for patents.”
Defendant’s Argument Against Following Arnesen
Defendant has urged this Court not to follow
Arnesen,
relying principally on Judge Friendly’s able opinion in T.B. Harms Co. v. Eliscu,
“The relevant statutes create no explicit right of action to enforce or rescind assignments of copyrights, nor does any copyright statute specify a cause of action to fix the locus of ownership. To be sure, not every federal cause of action springs from an express mandate of Congress; federal civil claims have been ‘inferred’ from federal statutes making behavior criminal or otherwise regulating it. [Citing Reitmeister and other authority.] Such statutes invariably impose a federal duty and usually create some express remedy as well, while the relevant copyright provision merely authorizes an assignment by written instrument, 17 U.S.C. § 28. It is true that although this difference carries the present case outside the classic doctrine of implied remedies, see Restatement, Torts § 286 (1934), expansion may not be foreclosed where appropriate, cf. Wheeldin v. Wheeler,373 U.S. 647 , 661-663,83 S.Ct. 1441 ,10 L.Ed.2d 605 (1963) (Brennan, J., dissenting) 5 . . . . ” Emphasis added.)339 F.2d at 827 .
Defendant’s argument for the application of
Harms
stresses that plaintiff may bring a common law action under state law for defendant’s alleged misrepresentation of his professional qualifications, and concludes that 35 U.S. C. § 33 “simply provides a criminal sanction for violation of a duty which pre-existed at common law.” In so arguing defendant has overlooked the fact that the licensing of patent practitioners has become, by Congressional
*310
pre-emption, a matter of exclusively federal concern. Sperry v. Florida, 373 U. 5. 379,
Plaintiff Not Permitted to Bring Class Action
Plaintiff’s claim that defendant obtained fees from plaintiff as consideration for defendant’s services in preparing plaintiff’s application for a patent for presentation to the Patent Office; when defendant was not licensed to provide such services, calls for inquiry into the facts of this particular case. This is not a case where defendant was rendering a service to a large number of inventors in connection with the same patent application. There is nothing to show that there is any relationship whatever to any claim of any other person. Whether defendant has engaged in such conduct with any other inventors in pursuit of a patent could be determined only by scrutiny of facts peculiar to his relationship with each such inventor. Accordingly, I hold that this suit may not be maintained as a class action. Fed.R.Civ.P. 23.
Cf.
Zahn v. International Paper Co.,
So ordered.
Notes
. Section 1332 provides in pertinent part:
“(a) The district courts shall have original jurisdiction of all civil actions where the matter in controversy exceeds the sum or value of $10,000, exclusive of interest and costs, and is between — •
(1) citizens of different States . . . . ”
. Defendant also asserts that plaintiff cannot escape the nonaggregation rule by claiming the costs of litigating for an entire class as punitive damages to which he is individually entitled.
. Insofar as plaintiff’s prayer might be construed as seeking $10,000 in actual and punitive damages plus an additional amount in costs, disbursements, attorneys’ fees, and interest, it is clear from the statute that costs and interest may not be included in the calculation of the jurisdictional amount. Moreover, disbursements and attorneys’ fees are necessarily included, under Connecticut law, in the punitive damages claimed as part of the $10,000 figure.
. Section 1338(a) provides:
“The district courts shall have original jurisdiction of any civil action arising under any Act of Congress relating to patents, copyrights and trade-marks. Such jurisdiction shall be exclusive of the courts of the states in patent and copyright cases.”
.
Compare
Justice Brennan’s opinion for the Court in Bivens v. Six Unknown Fed. Narcotics Agents,
. United States v. Blasius,
supra,
