In 1956 appellants filed suit in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia against appellee seeking damages of $200,000. Appellee answered and counterclaimed for $203,500. In 1958 the District Court ordered the case certified to the Municipal Court because the pre-trial judge was of the opinion that the action would not justify a judgment in excess of $3,000.1
After that action had been certified to the Municipal Court appellee filed a new action in the District Court, alleging a settlement and compromise of the damage suit then pending in the Municipal Court, and sought an injunction against appellants from further prosecuting such action. The District Court granted a preliminary injunction and bond was set and posted. When that case reached the “Calendar Call” the District Court entered the following order:
“It appearing to the satisfaction of the Court at the Calendar Call hereof that this action will not justify a judgment in excess of Three Thousand Dollars ($3,000.00), it is by the Court this 28th day of May, 1958,
“Ordered, that said action be and the same hereby is certified to the Municipal Court for the District of Columbia for trial.”
The injunction suit was thereupon transferred to the Municipal Court. Trial was *348had and resulted in the grant of a permanent injunction, from which this appeal was taken. When the appeal was argued here we sua sponte raised the question of the jurisdiction of the Municipal Court to entertain the action. Supplemental briefs on the jurisdictional question were requested and filed.
The only authority for the District Court to certify a case to the Municipal Court is found in Code 1951, § ll-756(a), Supp. VII, which provides:
“If in any action, other than an action for equitable relief, pending on the effective date of this section or thereafter commenced in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, it shall appear to the satisfaction of the court at any time prior to trial thereof that the action will not justify a judgment in excess of $3,000, the court may certify such action to the municipal court for the District of Columbia for trial. * * * and the case shall be called for trial in that court promptly thereafter; and shall thereafter be treated as though it had been filed originally in the said Municipal Court, except that the jurisdiction of that court shall extend to the amount claimed in such action, even though it exceed the sum of $3,000.”
The instant case sought purely equitable relief, i. e., an injunction, and made no claim for damages or other legal relief. Our question is whether, in view of the language of the Code Section above quoted, the District Court had authority to certify this case to the Municipal Court. If it did not, it follows that the Municipal Court had no authority to entertain it.
We are not here concerned with the questionable right of the Municipal Court to entertain an action whose primary purpose is to obtain equitable relief by way of injunction,2 but our concern is with the authority of the District Court to certify to the Municipal Court an action brought solely for the purpose of obtaining an injunction.
It seems to us quite clear that the statute-authorizing certification by the District Court when “it shall appear to the satisfaction of the court * * * that the action will not justify a judgment in excess of $3,000,” must of necessity refer only to actions in which a money judgment is sought, and to that type of case over which the Municipal Court has jurisdiction, i. e., a claim for personal property, debt or damages.3 For example, prior to enactment of the statute transferring jurisdiction of domestic relations cases from the District Court to the Municipal Court, it was never suggested that the District Court could certify to the Municipal Court an action seeking custody of a child by the mere statement that such action would not justify a. judgment in excess of $3,000. Such an action, of course, would have sought no money judgment in any amount, and neither does the present action.
Any possible doubt on the question would seem to be clearly removed by the language of the statute that “any action, other than an action for equitable relief,” may be certified to the Municipal Court. If those words have any meaning, it is simply that the authority of the District Court to certify cases to the Municipal Court does not extend to actions for equitable relief, and we know of no action more typical of one for equitable relief than one which seeks an injunction.
With due deference to the District Court, we must hold that it lacked authority to-certify the present action to the Municipal Court and consequently that the Municipal Court lacked jurisdiction to hear it.
Judgment reversed with instructions to-refuse to entertain the action for lack of jurisdiction.