delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question for decision is whether the record shows an essential requisite of the jurisdiction of the District Court, namely, that the “matter in controversy exceeds, exclusive of interest and costs, the sum or value of $3,000.” Judicial Code, § 24 (1), 28 U. S. C. § 41 (1). There were other questions which, in the view we take of the case, need not be stated.
Respondents, forty-one conductors and brakemen employed by the Chicago & Northwestern Railway Company,
The railroad’s answer stated that the plaintiffs had only such seniority rights as were derived from agreements between the railroad and the Order of Railroad Conductors and the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen; that the agreements could be abrogated or modified by the railroad and the unions without the consent of the plaintiffs; that the track between Omaha and Blair, located on the Omaha-
Upon the defendants’ motion to dismiss the cause for want of jurisdiction, the District Court held that the pleadings and supporting affidavits established that “the amount in controversy as to any one plaintiff does not amount to as much as $3,000,” and that the nature of the suit was not such as to permit aggregation of the claims of all the plaintiffs. Accordingly, the action was dismissed. The first conclusion of the District Court was not challenged either in the Circuit Court of Appeals or before us. The plaintiffs contended that their claims should be aggregated because “the rights of the plaintiffs are so interlocked and interwoven that the rights of one cannot be determined without the others being parties thereto.” The Circuit Court of Appeals reversed the dismissal, holding that the plaintiffs’ claims could be aggregated for purposes of determining the value of the matter in controversy. The Court stated that, although it found the com
The policy of the statute conferring diversity jurisdiction upon the district courts calls for its strict construction.
Healy
v.
Ratta,
Since the record does not contain the various agreements upon which the plaintiffs’ action is founded, there is no basis for determining whether this is a suit “in which several plaintiffs, having a common undivided interest, unite to enforce a single title or right, and in which it is enough that their interests collectively equal the jurisdictional amount,”
Lion Bonding Co.
v.
Karatz,
The record contains no showing of the requisite jurisdictional amount, and the District Court was therefore without jurisdiction. The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded to the District Court without prejudice to an application for leave to amend the bill of complaint.
Reversed.
