Final answer:
The limit to waiving consequential damages per B101 addresses the mutual waiver between the owner and architect in a standard AIA agreement to not seek secondary economic harm that arises from a breach.
Step-by-step explanation:
The limit to waiving consequential damages as per B101, which is a standard form of agreement between owner and architect provided by the American Institute of Architects (AIA), typically relates to the mutual waiver of claims for consequential damages between the owner and the architect. This means that the agreement limits the ability of the parties to seek incidental or secondary economic harm that arises from a breach, beyond the direct damages. However, the question as stated does not seem to correlate with our provided reference, which discusses federal courts' jurisdiction over certain types of cases. Such cases are heard when they involve "interstate" matters or "diversity of citizenship", specifically when parties are from different states or between a U.S. citizen and a foreign citizen, with a damage claim threshold of at least $75,000.