(after stating the facts as above).
There is possibly át stake in this controversy nothing more than the plaintiff’s loss by Poliak’s continued occupation for 25 months, because after that time the “moratorium,” so to speak, expires and all
To this the plaintiff answers that it is the value of the right which it seeks to protect which controls, under such cases as Berryman v. Whitman College,
As to the proposed trespass of Swann there are two answers: First, it does not appear that Swann has threatened six prosecutions, or indeed anything more than a single one. Second, in any event the proposed prosecution is confessedly only to prevent the plaintiff from disturbing Pollalc and in protection of Poliak’s wrongful holding over. The plaintiff’s right to be protected remains as before nothing but th.e possession which he must leave in Poliak’s hands for 25 months. Therefore, in any aspect the amount in controversy is not $3,000, and. this court is without jurisdiction if that allegation is necessary.
In the Virginia Coupon Cases,
In Holt v. Indiana Mfg. Co.,
In Truax v. Raich,
Hammer v. Dagenhart,
So far as concerns the defendant Poliak, we cannot see how there can be any question. The plaintiffs’ rights do not depend upon any law of the United States, and if subdivision 14 covers, it is by virtue of the fact that they are “rights, privileges and immunities” “secured” by the Constitution. Article 4, § 2, had always secured to each citizen of each state the privileges and immunities of the citizens of the several states, and the second clause of the Fourteenth Amendment gave federal protection to the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States. Just what those were the Supreme Court has been chary of saying. The right to pass freely over the whole country is apparently one. Crandall v. Nevada,
As regards the defendant Swann, the same result follows. Viewed merely as prospective prosecutions we should have no jurisdiction. It is only as such prosecutions prevent the plaintiff from asserting his property right that they are relevant here. They constitute the effective sanction of the supposedly void statute, the force which coerces the plaintiff to obedience. But the sanction must be measured by the command, obedience to which will avoid it, and the command is only only to allow Poliak to stay in possession. Hence the subject of the controversy remains as to Swann what it is as to Poliak, the value of that possession.
In no aspect does it seem to us, therefore, that the cause is within our jurisdiction, and the motion to dismiss must be granted. As there can be no amendment which will cure the defect, the dismissal will be without any right to plead over.
