48 F. 621 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of South Dakota | 1892
The bill in this cause is filed by complainant, tbe Sioux Falls National Bank, in its own behalf, and also in behalf of its stockholders, for the purpose of restraining the collection of certain taxes assessed for the year 1890 against said bank and its shareholders for state, county, and city purposes, the defendants being the county treasurer of Minnehaha county, S. D., the county of Minnehaha, and the city of Bioux Falls. It is averred iu the bill that, in addition to the assessment made against the several shareholders of said complainant bank, there was also assessed against said bank, upon its capital stock, the sum of $28,500, the same being in form an assessment made in the name of C. E. McKinney, the president of the bank, which said assessment was afterwards increased 75 per cent, by the state board of equalization; and it is charged that this assessment, and the taxes levied thereon, are illegal and void, because, in effect, the, same is a double assessment. In the answer filed herein it is admitted that the assessment and the taxes based thereon are void, and it is averred that the board of county commissioners of Minnehaha county on the 31st day of January, 1891, adopted a resolution declaring the assessment and the taxes levied thereon null and void.
There is some question as to the power of the board to thus annul taxes payable to the state and city, and therefore the complainant seeks an injunction restraining the enforcement of the taxes admitted 1o be illegally assessed. Touching the assessment made against the several shareholders in the bank, it is averred in. the bill that the assessor, in the first
Objection is taken, in the first instance, to the jurisdiction of the court, on the double ground that the controversy is not within federal jurisdiction, and, further, that, if it is, the remedy at law is adequate, and therefore this proceeding in equity cannot be sustained. Under the provisions of section 4 of the act of August 13, 1888, (25 St. at Large, 436,) for jurisdictional purposes national banks are deemed to be citizens of the state wherein they are located. The complainant and defendants are therefore citizens of the same state, and, if jurisdiction exists, it must be because the controversy arises under the laws of the United States. The contention of complainant, which we hold to be well founded, is that the matter in dispute arises under the laws of the United States, for the reason that the controversy is whether the method of assessment pursued was or was not a violation of the provisions of section 5219 of the Eevised Statutes of the United States.
But under the statute now in force, to-wit, the act of August 13,1888, the circuit court of the United States has not jurisdiction of-cases arising under the constitution or laws of the United States, unless the amount involved, exclusive of interest and costs, exceeds §2,000. According to the averments of the bill, the assessment against the bank, made in the name-of its president, was finally placed at §35,625, upon which sum was levied in the aggregate, for state, county, and city purposes, taxes to the amount of 34 mills on the dollar. The amount thus levied was less than §2,000. The highest assessment against any single stockholder is that against C. E. 'McKinney for the sum of §39,501, and
Can these be aggregated together in order to reach the jurisdictional amount? In determining the jurisdiction of the supreme court upon appeal or writ of error, that court has been repeatedly called upon to determine “when the matter in dispute” — which is the phrase used in sections 09.1 and 692 of the Revised Statutes, regulating appeals and writs of error to the supreme court, as well as in section 1 of the act of August 13, 1888, prescribing the jurisdiction of the circuit courts — exceeds the limit named in the statute, and these decisions are therefore pertinent to the question now under consideration. In Seuver v. Bigelow, 5 Wall. 208, in which several creditors having judgments, no one of which exceeded §2,000, united in a creditors’ bill to reach a fund in excess of that sum, it was held that an appeal did not lie, it being said:
“It is true, tlie litigation involves a common fund, which exceeds the sum of $2,000, but neither of the judgment creditors has any interest in it exceeding the amount of his judgment. Hence, to sustain an appeal in this class*624 of cases, where separate anil distinct interests are in dispute of an amount less than the statute requires, and whore the joinder of parties is permitted by the mere indulgence Of the court, for'its convenience and to save expense, would be giving a privilege to the parties not common to other litigants, and which is forbidden by law. ”
In Paving Co. v. Mulford, 100 U. S. 147, which was a suit in equity, it was held that—
“It is well settled that neither co-defendants nor co-complainants can unite their separate and distinct interests for the purpose of making up the amount necessary to give us jurisdiction on an appeal.”
In Russell v. Stansell, 105 U. S. 303, an injunction was sought by three parties, suing for themselves and a number of others, for the purpose of restraining the collection of an alleged illegal assessment made on their property to meet a decree rendered against a levee board in Mississippi. The circuit court dismissed the bill, and an appeal was taken to the supreme court, which in turn dismissed the appeal for want of jurisdiction, on the ground that it did not appear that the tax assessed against any one of the property owners exceeded $2,000 in amount. In passing upon the question the court held:
“ While the appellants, and those whom they have been chosen to represent, are all interested in the question on which their liability to the appellee depends, they are separately charged with the several amounts assessed against them. There is no joint responsibility resting on them as a body. The proceeding on his part was to require each of the several land-owners in the levee district to pay his separate share of the debt that had been established against the district. The recovery was against each separately. While the appellants were permitted, for convenience’ sake and to save expense, to unite in a petition setting forth the grievances of which complaint was made, their object was to relieve each separate owner from the amount for which he personally, or his property, was found to be accountable. An injunction, if granted, would necessarily be to prevent the appellee from collecting from each owner the amount for which he was separately liable. It is clear that, under the rulings in Paving Co. v. Mulford, 100 U. S. 147; Seaver v. Bigelow, 5 Wall. 208; Rich v. Lambert, 12 How. 347; Stratton v. Jarvis, 8 Pet. 4; and Oliver v. Alexander, 6 Pet. 143, — such distinct and separate interests cannot be united tor.the purpose of making up the amount necessary to give us jurisdiction on appeal.”
In Hawley v. Fairbanks, 108 U. S. 543, 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 846, several parties, having separate judgments against the town of Amboy, united, in a petition for a writ of mandamus to compel a county clerk to levy a tax' sufficient to pay the judgments in question. The trial court granted the writ, commanding the clerk to extend upon the tax collector’s book a sum sufficient to pay each of the several judgments held by the relators. To reverse this judgment a writ of error was sued out, and in the supreme court a motion to dismiss was made on1 the ground that the amounts of the several judgments could not bo added together to make out- the amount requisite to confer jurisdiction on the supreme court. The court held that the proceeding embraced distinct causes of action in favor of different parties,.and that the amounts due the several relators could, not be added together, but that the jurisdiction depended
The rule dcducible from these authorities is, that jurisdiction is not conferred because a number of persons are interested in a given question, and the aggregate of the several claims may exceed the amount requisite for jurisdiction. The “matter in dispute,” within the moaning of the statute, is not the principle or rule of decision which is involved in the controversy, and which may be common to the interests of all the parties to the litigation, but it is the money value which is at stake; and the claims of the several parties cannot be added together to form the matter in dispute, unless each party has an undivided interest in a claim to the property that is the subject of the litigation.
In the case now before the court the bank and its shareholders are all interested in the questions involved in tho legal proposition touching the validity or invalidity of the mode of assessment pursued, but the money interest they have in the litigation is separate and distinct. The tax assessed against the bank is separate and distinct from that assessed against the shareholders, and the tax assessed against one shareholder cannot be collected from another. If the tax collector should undertake to enforce the payment of the taxes complained of, he would proceed against the property of each shareholder separately for the lax due from him alone. The bank and each one of the shareholders could have commenced a separate action to restrain the collection of the tax assessed against each one, and in such case neither of the complainants would have had any money interest in the cases brought on behalf of the other shareholders. As the case now stands, the bank and its shareholders are interested alike in the legal propositions arising on the record, but there is no common or undivided interest in any property, nor in any fund, nor in a tax assessed in a lump against property owned in common. The assessment and tax is against each one separately, and tho money interest each one has in the litigation is measured by tho amount of tho tax assessed against him individually. That is tho extent of the money interest each one has in the suit, and the case, therefore, is one wherein for convenience’ sake, and to save cost and expense, one suit may be brought to settle the rights of all; but the money claims involved are separate and distinct, and the amount thereof cannot he added together for the purpose of conferring jurisdiction upon this court. It is clear from the record that, had separate suits been brought by each shareholder for the purpose of canceling the assessment complained of, none of them could have been maintained in this court, because none would have involved a sum exceeding $2,000; and under the authorities cited it is equally clear
Edgerton, J., concurs.