96 F. 865 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri | 1899
This is a bill to restrain the city of St. Louis and ihe president of the board of public improvements of the city from making an assessment and levying the same against the property abutting on Whittier street, between Washington avenue and Finney avenue, to pay the cost and expense of paving that part of Whittier street. It is alleged that the defendants are proceeding to improve that part of the street under and pursuant to the provisions of the (‘barter of the city, an ordinance passed by the municipal assembly of the city, and a contract made between the city and the defendant the Gilsonite Roofing & Paving Company, whereby assessments are contemplated and intended to be made against abutting property, not according to the benefits which the property receives as a result of the improvements, but in the arbitrary proportion which ihe linear feet of each lot fronting or bordering on the improvement bear to the total number of Miniar feet so bordering thereon; that under the provisions of the charter, ordinance, .and contract, the complainants’ property bordering on the street is made subject to a, lax or charge without due process of law, and in violation of the fourteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States. There are several complainants in this case, each owning separate lots abutting the street, but none of them liable to be assessed for an amount equal to $2,000, the minimum jurisdictional amount of this court in such cases. The amounts which the property of all the complainants are liable to be assessed, according to the averments of the bill, aggregated together, largely exceed $2,000. There is no showing by 1he bill that any of the complainants own or are interested in any of the other lots, except that which it is averred he himself
“If several persons fee joined in a suit in equity, * * * and have a common and undivided interest, though separable as between themselves, the amount of their joint claim or liability will be the test of jurisdiction. But where their interests are distinct, and they are joined for the sake of convenience only, and because they form a class of parties whose rights or liabilities arise out of the same transaction, ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ such distinct demands or liabilities cannot be aggregated together for the purpose of giving this court jurisdiction. * * *” Clay v. Field, 138 U. S. 464, 11 Sup. Ct. 419, and cases there cited.
Gases in which parties may aggregate their demands for jurisdictional purposes are illustrated by Shields v. Thomas, 17 How. 3, and other cases referred to in the leading case of Gibson v. Shufeldt, 122 U. S. 27, 7 Sup. Ct. 1066. The other class of cases in which complainants are not allowed to aggregate their demands for jurisdictional purposes are illustrated by Ex parte Baltimore & O. R. Co., 106 U. S. 5, 1 Sup. Ct. 35, and a large number of cases therein referred to, and also by cases cited and commented upon in Gibson v. Shu-feldt, supra. It does not seem necessary to discuss or distinguish between these many cases. It will be found that they enforce the distinction already pointed out. The question, therefore, now before the court for determination is, to which class does the case now under consideration belong? In my opinion, it clearly belongs to the class last mentioned. It is a case in which many parties may be proper, but not necessary. The whole relief to which all claim to be entitled could as well be secured at the suit of any one of them. In other words, the controversy is several in its nature, in its object, and in its result. The right to be protected is several and individual. The wrong to be redressed is personal, and not collective in any sense. The matter in controversy between complainant Wheless and the city of St. Louis is one which concerns Wheless alone, and the right of the city of St. Louis to take his property, and the right to the tax which it might impose, is in no manner dependent upon whether the city proceeds against any one or more of the complainants in this case. It may be, and undoubtedly is, true that some of the facts available to Wheless may also be available to complainant Barnhart, — in other words, that their rights or liabilities arise out of the same transaction, or the same alleged unlawful action threatened to be taken by the defendants, and that their rights may be affected by the same facts, — but these circumstances do not entitle them to aggregate their demands for jurisdictional purposes. Clay v. Field, supra.
In reaching a conclusion with regard to the correct principles to be applied in this case, I have been very materially aided by the fact that the supreme court of the United States has, in the case of Ex
In the case of Hawley v. Fairbanks, 108 U. S. 513, 2 Sup. Ct. 846, several persons, who were owners of bonds of the town of Amboy, III., united as relators in an application to the circuit court of the Fnited States for a mandamus requiring the county clerk to compute' and assess upon all the taxable property in the town a sufficient sum to pay (he judgments obtained by the relators. One of the re-lators had a demand in excess of the jurisdictional amount. None of the others had a demand equal to the required jurisdictional amount. The trial court awarded a writ of mandamus, directed to the county clerk, commanding him to extend upon the tax collector’s hook of the town a sufficient sum to pay each of the several judgments held by the relators. To reverse that judgment a writ of error was taken to the supreme court of the United States. The court sav:
“We are met at the outset with a motion of the defendants in error to dismiss the writ in this ease on the ground that the several judgments proceeded upon below cannot tie united to give jurisdiction.” t
The court sustained the motion as to all except one, who had an amount which was sufficient, and remarked as follows:
“1⅞ the present case distinct causes of áction in favor of distinct parties were united, for convenience and to save expense in one suit, and distinct orders were made in favor of each one of the several judgment creditors.”
In the case of Russell v. Stansell, 105 U. S. 303, the controversy arose over the action of Stansell in securing from the levee board of Mississippi district No. 1 an assessment of taxes for the collection of a judgment before that time obtained by Stansell against the levee board. It was claimed that the proceedings resulting in the assessment were illegal and unjust, and certain individuals who were assessed in small amounts, underneath the jurisdiction of the court, brought a bill to enjoin the further proceedings on the part of the board for the collection of the tax. It appeared in that case, as in this, that no single individual among all the parties complainant could in any event be made liable for an amount equal to the jurisdictional amount required for an appeal. On the presentation of the petition the court granted a preliminary injunction, but on final hearing tire injunction was dissolved and the petition dismissed. Prom the last order an appeal was taken to the supreme court of the United States. The appellee, Stansell, moved to dismiss because the amount in dispute between him and any one of the several persons charged with the payment of the assessment was less than $5,000, the jurisdictional amount of the supreme court of the United States. The court in its opinion in that case say:
“While the appellants and those whom they have 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 upon them as a body. The proceeding on his [Stansell’s] part was to require each of the several landowners of the levee district to pay his separate share of the debt that had been established against the district. The recovery was against each owner separately. While the appellants were permitted, for convenience 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 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. Bigelows, 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 for the purpose of making up the amount necessary to give us jurisdiction on appeal.”
It is clear — and seems to bave been so conceded by counsel on the argument of this case — that the principles governing the right "of an appeal to the supreme court of the United States, in so far as the
II was suggested in argument that a different rule is applicable to a (‘ase where no assessment has been in fact made, from that which is applicable to a case where an assessment has already bren made, lite the Russell Case. I am not able to appreciate the force of this distinction. In either of such eases the purpose sought to be accomplished is to declare the proceedings about to be taken, or which have been taken, to enforce a payment of certain taxes, illegal and unwarranted in the law; and, in my opinion, it makes no difference in the applicatory principle's whether the defendants have i alcen one of the initial stops towards consumiría ting the alleged illegal act of subjecting complainants' property to an unlawful charge, or whether they have taken none of them, but are threatening and intending so to do.
Counsel for complainants rely specially upon the cases of Davies v. Corbin, 112 U. S. 36, 5 Sup. Ct. 4, and Brown v. Trousdale, 138 U. S. 389, 11 Sup. Ct. 308. Concerning the first of these cases, it appears ihat the chief justice, who wrote the opinion, in reaching a conclusion found and held that all the relators claim under one and the same title, namely, the levy of taxes already made expressly for their lame tit, and therefore that ¡hey, and each* and all of the re-lators, hare a common interest in the tax; and, inasmuch as it was immaterial to the colled or whether he paid it to one or another of the complainants, the chief justice properly classifies this case with those of Shields v. Thomas, supra, and other cases in which aggregation of claims may be made for jurisdictional purposes. In the other of the cases so relied upon the chief justice, in delivering the opinion of the court, properly stated that the main .question at issue was the validity of the bonds, and that involved the levy and collection of taxes for a series of years to pay the interest thereon, and finally the jwincipsd thereof, and not the mere restraining of a tax for a single year, and for this reason held that the rule applicable to complainants each claiming under a separate and distinct right in respect to a separate and distinct liability contested by the adverse party was not applicable to that case.
As a result of all the cases, and especially by the authority of the cases of Hawley v. Fairbanks, supra, and Russell v. Stansell, supra,