Coventry Sewage v. Dworkin Realty ( 1995 )


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    December 7, 1995
    United States Court of Appeals United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit For the First Circuit
    ____________________

    No. 95-1410

    COVENTRY SEWAGE ASSOCIATES, ET AL.,

    Plaintiffs, Appellants,

    v.

    DWORKIN REALTY CO., ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND


    [Hon. Mary J. Lisi, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Chief Judge, ___________
    Stahl and Lynch, Circuit Judges. ______________

    ____________________

    ERRATA SHEET ERRATA SHEET

    Please make the following changes to the opinion issued on
    November 22, 1995:

    Cover sheet - delete "Incorporation" and insert
    "Incorporated" for name of appellants' law firm

    Page 2, line 18 - change "appellants" to "appellees"


























    United States Court of Appeals United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit For the First Circuit
    ____________________

    No. 95-1410

    COVENTRY SEWAGE ASSOCIATES, ET AL.,

    Plaintiffs, Appellants,

    v.

    DWORKIN REALTY CO., ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND


    [Hon. Mary J. Lisi, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Chief Judge, ___________
    Stahl and Lynch, Circuit Judges. ______________

    ____________________

    David A. Wollin with whom Adler, Pollock & Sheehan Incorporated ________________ _______________________________________
    was on brief for appellants.
    Steven M. Richard with whom Tillinghast, Collins & Graham was on _________________ ______________________________
    brief for appellees.


    ____________________

    November 22, 1995
    ____________________



















    STAHL, Circuit Judge. Appellants, Coventry Sewage STAHL, Circuit Judge. _____________

    Associates ("Coventry") and Woodland Manor Improvement

    Association ("Woodland") brought a diversity action against

    appellees, Dworkin Realty Co. ("Dworkin") and The Stop & Shop

    Supermarket Company ("Stop & Shop"). The United States

    District Court for the District of Rhode Island found that

    the amount-in-controversy requirement of 28 U.S.C. 1332(a)

    was not met and dismissed the case, pursuant to appellees'

    motion under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(1), for lack of subject

    matter jurisdiction. For the reasons stated below, and

    because of the unusual facts of this case, we reverse.

    I. I. __

    FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PRIOR PROCEEDINGS FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PRIOR PROCEEDINGS ________________________________________

    Coventry and Woodland own and operate a private

    sewer line and sewage pumping station servicing, among

    others, a supermarket run by Stop & Shop, located on property

    owned by Dworkin, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Stop & Shop

    (hereinafter appellees will be referred to collectively as

    "Stop & Shop").1 In June 1992, Coventry and Woodland

    (hereinafter, collectively "Coventry") entered into a "Sewer

    Connection Agreement" with Stop & Shop, whereby Stop & Shop

    agreed to pay a service fee for sewer-main usage. The

    service fee was based, in part, upon the number of cubic feet

    of water consumed on the property. To determine the amount

    ____________________

    1. The existence of diversity of citizenship is undisputed.

    -2- 2













    of water consumed, the parties' contract relied on invoices

    from the Kent County Water Authority ("KCWA"). The KCWA sent

    these invoices to Stop & Shop, and Stop & Shop in turn

    forwarded them to Coventry.

    Because of a dispute over the reasonableness of an

    increase in the service fee -- an increase Coventry claimed

    was permitted by the contract -- Stop & Shop refused to pay

    Coventry's bills which accumulated beginning in early 1994.

    In October 1994, Coventry filed this action seeking recovery

    of $74,953.00, the amount it claimed to be due based upon

    water-usage numbers obtained from the KCWA invoices and what

    Coventry claimed was the correct new service fee rate.

    Coventry also sought contractual attorneys' fees. It is

    undisputed that, at the time Coventry commenced the action,

    it alleged the amount in controversy in the belief that it

    exceeded the jurisdictional minimum, and not as a ruse to

    invoke federal jurisdiction.

    Shortly after the complaint was filed, but before

    Stop & Shop filed its answer, Stop & Shop contacted the KCWA

    about the invoices underlying Coventry's fee calculations.

    The KCWA then sent an employee to the property who discovered

    that there had been a misreading of Stop & Shop's water

    meters, essentially caused by the adding of an extra zero to

    the number of cubic meters actually consumed. By letter

    dated November 18, 1994, the KCWA notified Stop & Shop that



    -3- 3













    it was correcting the billing error by changing the amounts

    of the invoices.

    Based upon the KCWA's corrected invoices, Coventry

    reduced the sum of its bills to Shop & Stop to only

    $18,667.88, an amount that included the disputed fee

    increase. Subsequently, Stop & Shop paid the undisputed

    portion of the fee, $10,182.48, initially withholding the

    disputed balance of $8,485.40. Stop & Shop ultimately paid

    this remaining sum as well, reserving the right to recoup the

    amount should it prevail in its challenge to the

    reasonableness of the service fee. Stop & Shop, presumably

    doubting the existence of diversity jurisdiction, asked

    Coventry to voluntarily dismiss the federal action; Coventry

    refused, however, apparently because of its intention to

    pursue in federal court its claim for contractual attorneys'

    fees.2








    ____________________

    2. We note that although attorneys' fees usually will not
    constitute a portion of the amount in controversy, there is
    an exception where, as here, the fees are contractual.
    Department of Recreation v. World Boxing Ass'n, 942 F.2d 84, ________________________ __________________
    89 (1st Cir. 1991). In this case, Coventry cannot avail
    itself of this exception as a basis for federal jurisdiction
    because, not only are there no specifics in the record as to
    the amount of such fees, Coventry informed this court at oral
    argument that its estimation of attorneys' fees was only
    $10,000.

    -4- 4













    Stop & Shop moved to dismiss the action under Fed.

    R. Civ. P. 12(b)(1) for lack of subject matter

    jurisdiction.3 The district court granted the motion,

    finding that, "to a legal certainty," the amount in

    controversy did not exceed $50,000 as required by 28 U.S.C.

    1332(a). Notwithstanding the small amount actually in

    controversy, Coventry appeals the dismissal of the action.

    At oral argument before this court, counsel for Coventry

    stated that the reason for the insistence upon federal

    jurisdiction was that the case would get to an earlier trial

    in federal court (including the appeal proceedings) than if

    the case were pursued in state court.

    II. II. ___

    DISCUSSION DISCUSSION __________

    A. Standard of Review ______________________

    We review de novo the district court's dismissal __ ____

    for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under Fed. R. Civ. P.

    12(b)(1). Murphy v. United States, 45 F.3d 520, 522 (1st ______ ______________

    Cir.), cert. denied, 115 S. Ct. 2581 (1995). Although the _____ ______

    facts pertinent to this appeal are undisputed, we are

    nonetheless "mindful that the party invoking the jurisdiction

    of a federal court carries the burden of proving its

    ____________________

    3. Although the KCWA notified Stop & Shop of the error in
    November 1994, Stop & Shop raised only a general, boilerplate
    amount-in-controversy defense in its December 1994 answer,
    and did not formally move to dismiss on the jurisdictional
    basis until February 1995.

    -5- 5













    existence." Taber Partners, I v. Merit Builders, Inc., 987 __________________ _____________________

    F.2d 57, 60 (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 114 S. Ct. 82 (1993). _____ ______

    B. Analysis ____________

    Coventry argues that at the time it filed the

    action, it claimed, in good faith, damages in excess of

    $50,000; thus, the subsequent reduction of the amount in

    controversy did not divest the district court of

    jurisdiction. Coventry contends that the KCWA's post-filing

    discovery of the billing error and changing of the invoice

    amounts was a "subsequent event" that neither undermined its

    good faith in filing, nor disturbed the court's jurisdiction

    once it attached. Shop & Stop argues that the billing error

    was a mere "subsequent revelation" that proved, to a legal

    certainty, that the amount in controversy had always been

    below the jurisdictional minimum and thus the court properly

    dismissed the case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

    This case illustrates the competing policies that

    operate when a court makes an amount-in-controversy

    determination. On the one hand, a federal court should

    rigorously enforce the jurisdictional limits that Congress

    chooses to set in diversity cases. See Pratt Central Park ___ __________________

    Ltd. v. Dames & Moore, Inc., 60 F.3d 350, 352 (7th Cir. ____ _____________________

    1995). On the other hand, preliminary jurisdictional

    determinations should neither unduly delay, nor unfairly

    deprive a party from, determination of the controversy on the



    -6- 6













    merits. See id. at 351-52 (noting the undesirable cost of a ___ ___

    prolonged jurisdictional inquiry that only serves to

    determine which court will hear the case); 14A Wright &

    Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure 3701 at 12-13 (1985) ______________________________

    (noting competing policies). As a policy matter, the "which

    court" determination ought to be made with relative dispatch

    so that the parties may proceed to resolution of the

    dispute'smerits. See Pratt Central ParkLtd., 60 F.3d at 352. ___ ______________________

    For the purpose of establishing diversity

    jurisdiction, the amount in controversy is determined by

    looking to the circumstances at the time the complaint is

    filed. Thesleff v. Harvard Trust Co., 154 F.2d 732, 732 n.1 ________ _________________

    (1st Cir. 1946) (noting that "federal jurisdiction depends

    upon the facts at the time suit is commenced, and subsequent

    changes . . . in the amount in controversy [will not] devest

    [sic] it"); 14A Charles A. Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal _______

    Practice and Procedure 3702 at 28-29 n.31 (1985); Watson v. ______________________ ______

    Blankinship, 20 F.3d 383, 387 (10th Cir. 1994); Klepper v. ___________ _______

    First American Bank, 916 F.2d 337, 340 (6th Cir. 1990); see ___________________ ___

    Newman-Green, Inc. v. Alfonzo-Larrain, 490 U.S. 826, 830 ___________________ _______________

    (1989) (noting that for determining diversity of citizenship,

    "[t]he existence of federal jurisdiction ordinarily depends

    on the facts as they exist when the complaint is filed").

    Moreover, it has long been the rule that a court decides the

    amount in controversy from the face of the complaint, "unless



    -7- 7













    it appears or is in some way shown that the amount stated in

    the complaint is not claimed `in good faith.'" Horton, 367 ______

    U.S. at 353 (quoting St. Paul Mercury Indem. Co. v. Red Cab ___________________________ _______

    Co., 303 U.S. 283, 288 (1938)). When a plaintiff initiates ___

    an action in federal court, the plaintiff knows or should

    know whether the claim surpasses the jurisdictional minimum.

    St. Paul, 303 U.S. at 290. ________

    [The plaintiff's] good faith in choosing
    the federal forum is open to challenge
    not only by resort to the face of the
    complaint, but by the facts disclosed at
    trial, and if from either source it is
    clear that his claim never could have
    amounted to the sum necessary to give
    jurisdiction, there is no injustice in
    dismissing the suit.

    Id. ___

    Coventry and Stop & Shop both cite passages from

    the seminal case of St. Paul, 303 U.S. 283 (1938), without _________

    discussing its facts. We pause to do so here. In St. Paul, ________

    the plaintiff-employer initiated a state-court action against

    the defendant-insurer for payment of workers' compensation

    benefits. Id. at 284-85. The plaintiff alleged an amount of ___

    damages sufficient to permit the defendant to remove the case

    to federal court. Id. at 285. Once in federal court, the ___

    plaintiff filed two amended complaints. Attached to the

    second amended complaint, which alleged the same amount of

    damages as originally claimed, was an exhibit detailing the

    damages; the exhibit revealed that the total sum of damages



    -8- 8













    was no more than $1,380.89, an amount below the

    jurisdictional minimum (then $3,000). Id. The court of ___

    appeals, sua sponte, took notice of the exhibit and directed ___ ______

    a remand of the case, reasoning that the amount in

    controversy was less than the jurisdictional minimum and that

    "[t]he court cannot close its eyes to the obvious, nor go

    ahead with the trial of a cause of which it has no

    jurisdiction." 90 F.2d 229, 230 (7th Cir. 1936).

    The Supreme Court reversed, noting that there was

    no evidence that, at the time the action was commenced, the

    plaintiff could have ascertained the actual sum of the

    damages, and that the later exhibit setting forth this sum

    did not undermine plaintiff's initial good faith. 303 U.S.

    at 295-96 (also observing that the sum claimed was comprised

    of "numerous" items that, in turn, were each the total of

    several other items).4 Accordingly, the Court reasoned that

    ____________________

    4. The Court also noted that the removal posture of the case
    additionally bolstered the finding of good faith in claiming
    damages. St. Paul, 303 U.S. at 290-91. Because the _________
    plaintiff initially filed in state court, it was unlikely
    that the amount claimed was meant to somehow confer federal
    jurisdiction. Id. ___
    The Court reasoned that a defendant's right to remove was not
    to be "subject to the plaintiff's caprice" by subsequent
    events -- whether or not such events are under plaintiff's
    control. Id. at 293-94; see also Pro Medica, Inc. v. ___ ___ ____ _________________
    Theradyne Corp., 331 F. Supp. 231, 232 (D.P.R. 1971) ________________
    (refusing to allow plaintiff's amended complaint, that
    reduced amount of damages claimed to less than jurisdictional
    minimum, to divest federal court of jurisdiction). Thus,
    events occurring subsequent to removal, such as a
    stipulation, an affidavit, or an amendment that reduces the
    claim below the jurisdictional minimum, would not deprive the

    -9- 9













    the case fell comfortably within the rule that "subsequent

    reduction of the amount claimed cannot oust the district

    court's jurisdiction." Id. at 295. ___

    In a portion of St. Paul crucial to the instant ________

    case, and from which the parties before us parse their

    favorite phrases, the Court wrote:

    The intent of Congress drastically
    to restrict federal jurisdiction in
    controversies between citizens of
    different states has always been
    rigorously enforced by the courts. The
    rule governing dismissal for want of
    jurisdiction in cases brought in the
    federal court is that, unless the law
    gives a different rule, the sum claimed
    by the plaintiff controls if the claim is
    apparently made in good faith. It must
    appear to a legal certainty that the
    claim is really for less than the
    jurisdictional amount to justify
    dismissal. The inability of plaintiff to
    recover an amount adequate to give the
    court jurisdiction does not show his bad
    faith or oust the jurisdiction. Nor does
    the fact that the complaint discloses the
    existence of a valid defense to the
    claim. But if, from the face of the
    pleadings, it is apparent, to a legal
    certainty, that the plaintiff cannot
    recover the amount claimed or if, from
    the proofs, the court is satisfied to a
    like certainty that the plaintiff never

    ____________________

    court of jurisdiction once it has attached. St. Paul, 303 ________
    U.S. at 292-93.
    Despite the added weight the removal posture
    contributed to the good faith finding, the Court noted that
    dismissal of the case would not have been warranted had
    plaintiff originally brought the case in federal court. Id. ___
    at 290. Therefore, we find the reasoning of St. Paul no less ________
    applicable to the instant case, where Coventry originally
    filed in federal court, and where there is no dispute as to
    its good faith in its claimed amount in controversy.

    -10- 10













    was entitled to recover that amount, and
    that his claim was therefore colorable
    for the purpose of conferring
    jurisdiction, the suit will be dismissed.
    Events occurring subsequent to the
    institution of suit which reduce the
    amount recoverable below the statutory
    limit do not oust jurisdiction.

    Id. at 288-89 (footnotes and citations omitted). ___

    The rules gleaned from the foregoing passage may be

    summarized as follows. First, federal courts must diligently

    enforce the rules establishing and limiting diversity

    jurisdiction. Second, unless the law provides otherwise, the

    plaintiff's damages claim will control the amount in

    controversy for jurisdictional purposes if it is made "in

    good faith." If the face of the complaint reveals, to a

    legal certainty, that the controversy cannot involve the

    requisite amount, jurisdiction will not attach. Id. at 289, ___

    291. Moreover, if later evidence shows, to a legal

    certainty, that the damages never could have exceeded the

    jurisdictional minimum such that the claim was essentially ____ ____

    feigned (colorable) in order to confer jurisdiction, the

    action must be dismissed. See also id. at 290 (noting that ___ ____ ___

    plaintiff's good faith in choosing a federal forum may be

    challenged by trial facts which establish that the "claim

    never could have amounted to the sum necessary to give

    jurisdiction"). Finally, if events subsequent to

    commencement of the action reduce the amount in controversy




    -11- 11













    below the statutory minimum, the federal court is not

    divested of jurisdiction.

    A careful review of St. Paul evinces its primary ________

    concern for the plaintiff's "good faith" in alleging the

    amount in controversy. When discerning a plaintiff's good

    faith, a court may look to whether it "appear[s] to a legal

    certainty that the claim is really for less than the

    jurisdictional amount." St. Paul, 303 U.S. at 289; see also ________ ___ ____

    Horton, 367 U.S. at 353; Jones v. Landry, 387 F.2d 102, 104 ______ _____ ______

    (5th Cir. 1967) ("Thus, there is but one test; good faith and

    legal certainty are equivalents rather than two separate

    tests."). But see Local Div. No. 714, Amalgamated Transit ___ ___ _________________________________________

    Union v. Greater Portland Transit Dist., 589 F.2d 1, 9 (1st _____ _______________________________

    Cir. 1978) (apparently finding alternative tests, noting that

    where there is no evidence that the amount claimed was not in

    good faith, it must appear "to a legal certainty" that the

    amount in controversy does not exceed the jurisdictional

    minimum), overruled on other grounds by Local Div. 589, ________________________________ ________________

    Amalgamated Transit Union v. Massachusetts, 666 F.2d 618 (1st _________________________ _____________

    Cir.), cert. denied, 457 U.S. 1117 (1981). _____ ______

    The parties in the instant case spill much ink over

    the meaning of "good faith": whether it includes an objective

    as well as subjective component, and if so, whether

    "objective" good faith includes "objective facts" as opposed

    to "actual facts," etc. Stop & Shop argues that the



    -12- 12













    "objective facts" were always the same: that it consumed much

    less water than originally shown on KCWA's invoices, and that

    although the claimed amount in controversy was over $50,000

    at the time of filing, the "actual" amount in controversy is,

    indisputably, less than the jurisdictional minimum. Coventry

    counters that not only did it file with subjective good

    faith, but, because a wholly independent third party's

    actions were relied upon (indeed, it was Stop & Shop that

    forwarded KCWA's invoices to Coventry), there is no reason

    that Coventry "should have known" about the "actual" amount

    in controversy and thus, it claimed the damages in

    "objective" good faith as well.

    This court has found that "good faith" in the

    amount-in-controversy context includes an element of

    "objective" good faith. In Jimenez Puig v. Avis Rent-A-Car _____________ _______________

    Sys., 574 F.2d 37, 40 (1st Cir. 1978), we found that, ____

    although the plaintiff had not acted "in deliberate bad

    faith" in filing his damages claim for mental anguish, "[t]he

    question, however, is whether to anyone familiar with the

    applicable law this claim could objectively have been viewed

    as worth [the jurisdictional minimum]." Id. (viewing ___

    evidence in light most favorable to plaintiff, and finding

    that, from the outset, plaintiff had no chance of recovering

    statutory minimum); cf. Pratt Central Park Ltd. v. Dames & ___ ________________________ _______

    Moore, 60 F.3d 350, 353 (7th Cir. 1995) (upholding _____



    -13- 13













    contractual liability cap of $5,000, then dismissing for

    failure to meet amount-in-controversy requirement). We find

    that here, there is no dispute as to good faith, subjective

    or objective.5 It is undisputed that Coventry alleged the

    amount in controversy believing its accuracy at the time.

    Furthermore, there is no evidence, and Stop & Shop does not

    argue otherwise, that Coventry had any reason to believe, at

    the time of filing, that KCWA's invoices, upon which the

    service fee was calculated, were factually incorrect. We

    find that, objectively viewed, at the time of its filing,

    Coventry's claim was worth more than the jurisdictional

    minimum.

    This case fits well within the rule that once

    jurisdiction attaches, it is not ousted by a subsequent

    change of events. See St. Paul, 303 U.S. at 295; Klepper, ___ _________ _______

    916 F.2d at 340 (holding that summary judgment on one claim,

    that reduced amount in controversy below statutory minimum,

    did not divest court of jurisdiction); 14A Wright & Miller,

    supra, 3702 at 35 (noting same). In Thesleff v. Harvard _____ ________ _______

    Trust Co., 154 F.2d 732, 732 n.1 (1st Cir. 1946), we noted __________

    that although plaintiff filed remittiturs that reduced the

    amount in controversy below the jurisdictional minimum, the

    facts at the time the action was commenced conferred

    ____________________

    5. We decline, at this time, to make any sort of legal
    distinction between "objective facts" and "actual facts" for
    purposes of determining amount in controversy.

    -14- 14













    jurisdiction which subsequent events could not divest. See ___

    also Ford, Bacon & Davis, Inc. v. Volentine, 64 F.2d 800, 801 ____ _________________________ _________

    (5th Cir. 1933) (refusing remand where an amended complaint,

    removing co-plaintiff who had died after action was filed,

    "merely discloses a fact which arose after the suit and

    recognizes its legal consequences, without impugning the

    original propriety of the jurisdiction"). As in the

    amount-in-controversy context, the rule that jurisdiction is

    not divested by subsequent events has also been applied to

    the diversity-of-citizenship requirement. See Smith v. ___ _____

    Sperling, 354 U.S. 91, 93 n.1 (1957); Mollen v. Torrance, 22 ________ ______ ________

    U.S. 537, 539 (1824).

    In the instant case, Coventry filed the complaint

    because Stop & Shop refused to pay its bills totalling

    $74,953.00. The amount in controversy, at the time of

    filing, exceeded the statutory minimum regardless of the

    then-unknown "actual facts" of Stop & Shop's water

    consumption. It was not until Coventry filed the action that

    Stop & Shop inquired about KCWA's invoices and KCWA

    subsequently changed them to reflect accurately the amount of

    water usage. Presumably, had the billing error never been

    detected, the action would have proceeded on Coventry's

    damages claim of $74,953.00. The fact that an independent

    third party's error initially inflated the amount in

    controversy above the jurisdictional minimum does not lead to



    -15- 15













    the inevitable result that the third party's correction,

    subsequent to the filing of the complaint, affects the

    propriety of the jurisdiction once it attached.

    Stop & Shop insists that, in this case, we should

    draw a distinction between "subsequent events" and

    "subsequent revelations." Stop & Shop argues that the

    subsequent revelation that the actual amount of damages never

    met the jurisdictional minimum -- as opposed to a subsequent

    event that reduces that amount -- divests the court of

    jurisdiction, regardless of what the parties knew or should

    have known at the time of filing. At oral argument before

    this court, counsel for Stop & Shop acknowledged that the

    logical extension of this argument is that the court would

    have been without jurisdiction over the case even if KCWA's

    error had not been discovered until trial.

    To support this argument, Stop & Shop cites three

    cases that are factually distinguishable from the instant

    one, and that, in any event, are not controlling upon this

    court. First, in American Mutual Liab. Ins. Co. v. Campbell ______________________________ ________

    Lumber Mfg. Corp., 329 F. Supp. 1283, 1284 (N.D. Ga. 1971), _________________

    the plaintiff filed an action for amounts due on insurance

    contracts. The plaintiff was forced to estimate its damages

    claim because certain of defendant's records were not

    available to it. Id. at 1285. During post-filing discovery, ___

    the plaintiff learned that the actual amount in controversy



    -16- 16













    was below the statutory minimum. Id. The court found that ___

    the maximum amount recoverable on the plaintiff's theory

    never varied, and noted that the correct amount in

    controversy was ascertainable at the time the action was

    filed. Id. at 1286. Thus, in dismissing the action, the ___

    court reasoned that the plaintiff's realization that its

    earlier estimation of damages was erroneous was not an

    "event," under St. Paul, that reduced the amount recoverable. ________

    Id. at 1286. ___

    Second, in Jones v. Knox Exploration Corp., 2 F.3d _____ ______________________

    181, 182 (6th Cir. 1993), the plaintiffs revealed in their

    appellate brief that "it was not discovered until this appeal

    that the amount in controversy is actually less than

    $50,000." The court acknowledged that subsequent events that

    reduce the amount in controversy, such as an amendment to the

    complaint or an application of a post-discovery legal

    defense, would not oust federal jurisdiction. Id. at 183. ___

    The court reasoned that "[a] distinction must be made,

    however, between subsequent events that change the amount in

    controversy and subsequent revelations that, in fact, the

    required amount was or was not in controversy at the

    commencement of the action." Id. at 183. The court found ___

    that there was no subsequent event that occurred to reduce

    the amount; instead, there was only a subsequent revelation

    that, in fact, the required amount was not in controversy at



    -17- 17













    the time the action was filed. Id. Thus, the court ordered ___

    dismissal based on lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Id. ___

    Third, in Tongkook America, Inc. v. Shipton ________________________ _______

    Sportswear Co., 14 F.3d 781, 782-83 (2d Cir. 1994), the _______________

    parties realized during pre-trial discovery that, one year

    prior to filing suit, the plaintiff had drawn a certain

    amount upon a letter of credit that was erroneously added to

    the damages claim. The court rejected plaintiff's argument

    that the discovery of the failure to credit the amount

    withdrawn was an "event subsequent to the institution of the

    suit." Id. at 784-85. The court deemed the plaintiff's ___

    previous withdrawal upon the letter of credit an "event which

    preceded the commencement of the suit [that] objectively

    altered the amount of [plaintiff's] claim." Id. at 786. ___

    Thus, the sum certain in controversy was lower than the

    jurisdictional minimum and the court ordered the case

    dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

    In the instant case, Coventry did not base its

    damages claim on a faulty estimation that required

    recalculation during discovery, as in American Mutual; ________________

    rather, it alleged the amount in controversy based upon a

    third-party's information that neither party had any reason

    to know was erroneous. Unlike the "mere revelation" in Jones _____

    that there was never the requisite amount in controversy, the

    reduction in the amount in controversy here occurred only



    -18- 18













    after KCWA's affirmative acts of checking the water meters

    and changing the invoice amounts. Finally, although portions

    of the Tongkook court's reasoning are not entirely consistent ________

    with our decision here, we distinguish that case narrowly on

    the facts; in Tongkook, the parties themselves made the error ________

    affecting the amount in controversy approximately one year

    prior to commencement of the suit. 14 F.3d at 782-83. Thus,

    it appears that the plaintiff in that case should have known

    that its claim did not exceed the jurisdictional minimum.

    See St. Paul, 303 U.S. at 290 (stating that a plaintiff ___ _________

    should know whether the claim meets the amount in controversy

    requirement). In the instant case, an independent third

    party with otherwise no connection to the case made an

    apparently non-obvious error so that the amount-in-

    controversy at the time of filing, in fact, exceeded the

    jurisdictional minimum. Coventry had no reason to know that

    its claimed amount of damages was in error. Moreover, the

    reduction of the amount in controversy resulted from acts

    occurring wholly after the action commenced. We hold that,

    under these extraordinary circumstances, the district court's

    jurisdiction was not disturbed by the subsequent reduction of

    the amount in controversy.6

    ____________________

    6. We note here a paradox. Under 28 U.S.C. 1332(b), a
    plaintiff who files a claim in federal court based on
    diversity jurisdiction is subject to the court's imposition
    of costs if the plaintiff "is finally adjudged to be entitled
    to recover less than the sum or value of $50,000." 28 U.S.C.

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    III. III. ____

    CONCLUSION CONCLUSION __________

    For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the judgment

    of the district court, and remand for further proceedings

    consistent with this opinion. Each party shall bear its own

    costs.



























    ____________________

    1332(b). Assuming that Coventry will persist in pursuing the
    case in federal court, it seems odd that while it has
    technically met the requirements of 1332(a), it may not
    avoid potential liability under 1332(b)'s cost sanction.
    Cf. Horton, 367 U.S. at 362 (noting the "strange result that ___ ______
    while respondent has met the requirements of 1332(a), . . .
    under 1332(b) it will be liable for costs for failing to
    meet the same requirements) (Clark, J. dissenting). The
    determination of whether or not to impose such cost sanctions
    is, of course, within the sound discretion of the district
    court.

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