OPINION
Plaintiffs filed this lawsuit in state court, and defendants removed it to federal court on diversity grounds. Contending that the claims did not satisfy the $75,000 amount-in-controversy requirement, plaintiffs moved to remand the case to state court. The district court denied the remand motion.
After the court rejected plaintiffs’ claims on the merits, plaintiffs appealed, insisting that the district court never had jurisdiction over the case. We agree. Each individual claim falls below the $75,000 amount-in-controversy requirement. And Dobson Cellular may not overcome this defect by aggregating plaintiffs’ disgorgement claims (because they do not have a common and undivided interest in them) or by aggregating their punitive-damages claims (because they do not have a common and undivided interest in them either). And even if Dobson Cellular may consider the total cost to it of complying with the injunction claim, a point we need *821 not decide, it has not shown that this amount would satisfy the $75,000 requirement.
I.
On November 3, 2000, four plaintiffs from Ohio and Michigan — Tom Everett, Lutricia Bradley, John T. Lunsford and Gregory L. Baker — -filed this class action against their respective cellular telephone service providers in the Erie County (Ohio) Court of Common Pleas. None of the defendants — Dobson Cellular Systems, Inc., Verizon Wireless, Inc., Vodafone Air-touch, P.L.C., Airtouch Communications, Inc. or New Par — is based in, or maintains its principal place of business in, either of the two States.
The gist of plaintiffs’ claims is that the providers falsely represented to them that they would not charge for unanswered phone calls or those that generated a busy signal. Alleging breach of contract, unjust enrichment and deceptive sales practices, plaintiffs sought an unspecified amount of compensatory damages, injunctive relief, restitution, disgorgement and “[s]uch other and further relief as may be appropriate.” JA 66.
On December 11, 2000, invoking the diversity-jurisdiction statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1332, defendants removed the case to the Northern District of Ohio. Plaintiffs moved to remand, arguing that the amount in controversy did not exceed $75,000. The district court denied the motion, holding that the size of the disgorgement claim met this threshold.
Litigation on the merits of the claims proceeded in spurts. The district court dismissed several of the plaintiffs’ claims under Michigan law, then stayed the case pending resolution of a similar class action in California that potentially overlapped with the class claims in this case. After the California case settled, plaintiffs dismissed with prejudice their claims against all of the defendants save Dobson Cellular Systems, Inc.
On March 15, 2004, the district court granted Dobson Cellular’s motion for summary judgment on the remaining claims. As two of the named plaintiffs were customers only of the voluntarily dismissed providers (John Lunsford and Gregory Baker) and as one of the named plaintiffs filed a petition for bankruptcy (Lutricia Bradley), only one plaintiff and purported class representative (Thomas Everett) remains. On appeal, Everett challenges the district court’s resolution of the remand motion, though not its resolution of the merits.
II.
“The district courts of the United States ... are courts of limited jurisdiction. They possess only that power authorized by Constitution and statute.”
Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Allapattah Servs.,
In addition to giving federal district courts original jurisdiction over cases arising under federal law,
see
18 U.S.C. § 1331, Congress “has granted district courts original jurisdiction in civil actions between citizens of different States, between U.S. citizens and foreign citizens, or by foreign states against U.S. citizens,” “to provide a neutral forum for what have come to be known as diversity cases,”
Exxon Mobil,
To satisfy the amount-in-controversy requirement at least one plaintiffs claim must independently meet the amount-in-controversy specification.
See id.
at 2620. While a
single
plaintiff may aggregate the value of her claims against a defendant to meet the amount-in-controversy requirement, even when those claims share nothing in common besides the identity of the parties,
see Snyder v. Harris,
A defendant wishing to remove a case bears the burden of satisfying the amount-in-controversy requirement.
Gaf-ford v. Gen. Elec. Co.,
No one argues that any individual plaintiffs claims in this case exceed $75,000, which is not surprising given the improbability of individual phone users running up large bills for unanswered or busy-signal calls. And in debating this jurisdictional question, no one invokes the Class Action Fairness Act, which Congress enacted after plaintiffs filed this lawsuit and which amended § 1332 to provide federal-court jurisdiction in class actions “in which the matter in controversy exceeds the sum or value of $5,000,000, exclusive of interests and cost.” Class Action Fairness Act, Pub.L. No. 109-2, 119 Stat. 4, 9 (Feb. 18, 2005) (codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1332(d)(2));
see Exxon Mobil,
A.
In contending that the federal courts never had jurisdiction over this dispute, Everett argues that the district court erred in aggregating plaintiffs’ disgorgement claims. As a remedy for their unjust enrichment claim, plaintiffs asked the *823 court to require the defendants “to disgorge all amounts received as a result of charging for calls that were not answered or were busy.” JA 66. In assuming jurisdiction over the case, the district court concluded that the value of each of these claims could be aggregated because they “derive[d] from a common and undivided interest.” D. Ct. Op. at 4.
From the first Congress to the present, there has been an amount-in-controversy requirement for diversity cases, one that started at $500, see Judiciary Act of 1789, 1 Stat. 73, 78 (diversity jurisdiction exists “where the matter in dispute exceeds, exclusive of costs, the sum or value of five hundred dollars”), and one that presently rests at $75,000, see 28 U.S.C. § 1332 (diversity jurisdiction exists “where the matter in controversy exceeds the sum or value of $75,000, exclusive of interest and costs”); Federal Courts Improvement Act of 1996, Pub.L. No. 104-317, 110 Stat. 3847, 3850.
The Supreme Court has matched Congress’s commitment to this jurisdictional limitation by consistently interpreting it to prevent multiple plaintiffs from combining their damages claims to meet that requirement save when they share a common and undivided interest in them. In
Oliver v. Alexander,
Oliver v. Alexander
“is representative of the unbroken line of decisions of th[e] Court” holding that “plaintiffs with separate and distinct claims could not aggregate their respective ‘matters in dispute’ ” to establish federal jurisdiction.
Zahn,
Dobson Cellular does not dispute that it must show plaintiffs have “unite[d] to enforce a single title or right in which they have a common and undivided interest” in order to aggregate their claims,
*824
Snyder,
A common interest in a litigation recovery thus represents a necessary, but by itself insufficient, ground to qualify claims for aggregation.
See Sturgeon,
While each plaintiff in this instance asserts a similar claim against his or her telephone carrier — that the carrier impermissibly charged for unanswered or busy-signal calls — nothing about the similarity of these claims shows that the plaintiffs hold a joint interest in enforcing a single title or right. Like the seamen’s claims for wages in
Oliver,
each putative class member’s claim for overcharges may stem from a similarly worded contract but they nonetheless remain legally distinct rights. Each customer had the option, had he or she wished, to sue the provider individually for the amount the provider wrongly charged — a legal reality that precludes jurisdiction today no less than it did 100 years ago.
See Gibson v. Shufeldt,
Nor does it make a difference that Dobson Cellular seeks to aggregate equitable unjust enrichment claims, as opposed to legal contract claims. “The fact that the breach of contract claim ... is alternatively characterized as one for unjust enrichment does not change the result of the aggregation analysis.”
Morrison,
Attempting to alter this conclusion, Dob-son Cellular maintains that there is a “collective action exception to the non-aggregation principle.” Dobson Cellular Br. at 17. “[T]he class as a whole obtains an undivided interest in the potential disgorgement” claim, the company submits, because the class members brought this claim “in addition to” their compensatory damages claims.
Id.
Whatever exceptions there may be to the non-aggregation principle, it is hard to understand why there should be a “collective action” exception in view of the non-aggregation principle’s steadfast application to class actions.
See Snyder,
First, to the extent the company means to argue that plaintiffs sought relief under their unjust enrichment claims in addition to the relief available under their contractual claims, no such relief is available under Ohio law.
See, e.g., All Occasion Limousine v. HMP Events,
No.2003-L-140,
*826
Second, to the extent the company means to argue that plaintiffs sought disgorgement not only of their direct damages, but also of some additional money— say, the providers’ reinvested proceeds,
see, e.g., Pruett v. Flavell,
No. 14-01-14,
And third, and perhaps most fundamentally, the company has not shown why the nature of the disgorgement remedy alters the underlying source of the rights plaintiffs seek to vindicate — why in other words plaintiffs with separate and distinct claims for overcharges would have a single and undivided right to disgorgement by “Defendants” of “payments” that they “received .., from the Plaintiffs and the Class Members for charges for calls that were not answered or were busy.” Id.
For similar reasons,
In re Microsoft Corp. Antitrust Litigation,
The claims in
Microsoft
differ from today’s claim in two material ways. One, as explained, Ohio law allows plaintiffs to bring their unjust enrichment claims as an alternative, not in addition, to their compensatory damages contract claim. Two, plaintiffs here sought “disgorge[ment of] all amounts
received
as a result of charging for calls that were not answered or were busy,” JA 66 (emphasis added), not “unlawfully obtained
profits,” In re Microsoft Corp. Antitrust Litig.,
In re Cardizem CD Antitrust Litigation,
The company fares no better when it invokes the observation in
Sellers v. O’Connell,
But even if a class member dropped out and even if that increased the remaining plaintiffs’ recoveries, the argument that disgorgement “would produce a common fund in which all class members would have a common and undivided interest” “proceeds from the wrong point: the disgorgement of the payments to create the ‘fund.’ Such a ‘fund’ is created to facilitate the litigation process in virtually every class action, and has nothing necessarily to do with whether the plaintiffs shared a pre-existing (pre-litigation) interest in the subject of the litigation.”
Gilman,
B.
Dobson Cellular offers an alternative ground for removing the case to federal court, one that the district court did not reach, namely that the punitive damages may be aggregated to satisfy the amount-in-controversy requirement. While an individual’s request for punitive damages of course may satisfy the amount-in-controversy requirement,
Klepper v. First Am. Bank,
While our circuit has not resolved this issue, several other circuits have done so-all in the same way. The total amount of punitive damages sought in a multi-claim-
*828
ant case, they have concluded, may not be aggregated because plaintiffs generally have an individual right, not a collective entitlement, to them unless the underlying claim (unlike here) involves a joint or common interest.
See Crawford v. F. Hoffman-La Roche Ltd.,
We can think of no good reason for charting a different path. When juries (or courts) award punitive damages, “the resulting fund [is] not ... a piece of property to which the plaintiffs [have] undivided rights.”
In re Brand Name Prescription Drugs Antitrust Litig.,
Unlike a dispute over a single piece of property, moreover, punitive damages are not invariably a one-shot deal; in many settings, defendants may be subjected to multiple liability for punitive damages in successive claims by different plaintiffs. “One feature of ‘common and undivided’ interests in a single title or indivisible res is that the rights to such interests cannot be determined without implicating the rights of every other person claiming a similar entitlement. Manifestly, punitive damages do not work that way” because “punitive damage claims entail the potential for multiple liability.”
Gilman,
C.
Dobson Cellular offers one more theory for removing this case to federal court, one that the district court also did not reach, namely that the monetary cost of complying with plaintiffs’ request for injunctive relief satisfies the amount-in-controversy requirement. Plaintiffs’ complaint requested “equitable and injunctive relief enjoining the Defendants from misrepresent *829 ing that they do not charge for calls that are not answered or are busy.” JA 66. As the phone company sees it, this relief would require the defendants to “change their advertisements, their contracts, and their other written materials and their billing practices on a nationwide basis,” and Dobson Cellular contends that “[a]ltering their billing practices alone would have required a complete overhaul of Defendants’ computer billing systems” and that they would “have been required to amend and reprint ‘millions’ of contracts,” which “[e]ven at a minimal cost, ... would have cost Defendants well in excess of $75,000.” Dobson Br. at 29.
In one sense, Dobson Cellular is right. The costs of complying with an injunction, whether sought by one plaintiff or many plaintiffs, may establish the amount in controversy.
See Hunt v. Wash. State Apple Adver. Comm’n,
As in
Olden,
we need not resolve the question today. Even if we were to apply the “either viewpoint” approach, the more generous of the two from the defendant’s perspective, Dobson Cellular has not satisfied a precondition for invoking the theory here. “A defendant desiring to remove a case' has the burden of proving the diversity jurisdiction requirements” by a preponderance of the evidence,
Gafford,
Dobson Cellular points to no place in the record estimating the costs of compliance. It suggests that the defendants would have had to change their advertisements, but it does not detail why or how. It offers no evidence of advertisements by the defendants that they did not charge for no-answer or busy-signal calls. And it does not explain why removing a misrepresentation or adding a disclaimer in an advertisement would cost a great amount. It provides no details about the defendants’ billing practices, and thus has not shown why a “complete overhaul” of them would be needed and what it would entail. And it has not proved the necessity of reprinting millions of contracts and why it could not include this information on the materials it already prints and mails (or e-mails) to customers each month. While Dobson Cellular need not show “to a legal certainty that the amount in controversy met the federal requirement,” it must do more “than show[] a mere possibility that the jurisdictional amount is satisfied.”
Id.
(footnote omitted);
see also In re Brand Name Prescription Drugs Antitrust Litig.,
III.
For these reasons, we reverse the district court’s denial of the plaintiffs’ motion to remand the case to state court, vacate *830 its subsequent orders for lack of jurisdiction and remand the case with instructions to grant the remand motion.
