Edna Goldstein brought a diversity action in the district court against Dr. Robert Kel-leher and the Rockdale Medical Corporation (“Rockdale”). She claimed medical malpractice and lack of informed consent stemming from a breast reduction operation performed by Dr. Kelleher in February 1978. At the trial, it was shown that Dr. Kelleher had repeatedly sliced through a previously undetected tumor in plaintiff’s left breast and had completed the operation on both breasts notwithstanding his discovery.
After the surgery, plaintiff refused to undergo conventional medical treatment for cancer, allegedly because the mishap had induced a fear of the medical community. Instead she travelled to Mexico for alternative treatment, including laetrile. In 1981 plaintiff agreed to conventional treatment, but in the intervening three years the cancer had spread throughout her upper body.
Mrs. Goldstein’s jury trial was conducted in the District of Massachusetts before a United States magistrate, with the express consent of the parties, as provided for in section 636(c)(3) of the Federal Magistrates Act. 28 U.S.C. § 636(c)(3). The jury rendered a verdict in the form of yes-no responses to certain written questions. These responses indicated findings that Dr. Kel-leher was negligent in his treatment of the plaintiff but that his negligence did not cause her injuries or damage. The magistrate (who earlier had directed a verdict on plaintiff’s informed consent claim) entered judgment for the defendant. Plaintiff appeals from both the adverse judgment and the denial of her motion for a new trial.
I.
In her reply brief, plaintiff contended for the first time that the consensual trial before the United States magistrate was unconstitutional and therefore a nullity. She urges us to adopt the view of a panel of the Ninth Circuit that section 636(c)(3)’s delegation of power to magistrates to conduct consensual jury and non-jury trials and enter judgments, without de novo review by a district judge, offends Article III of the federal Constitution.
Pacemaker Diagnostic Clinic, Inc. v. Instromedix, Inc.,
We agree with the en banc decision of the Ninth Circuit and with an earlier decision of the Third Circuit that section 636(c)(3) is not unconstitutional.
Wharton-Thomas v. United States,
Magistrates — unlike the bankruptcy judges whose expanded jurisdiction was struck down in
Northern Pipeline Construction Co. v. Marathon Pipe Line Co.,
There is, nonetheless, one major difference between the authority conferred upon the magistrate here and that conferred in past cases where the Supreme Court has approved the delegation. In past cases the ultimate decisionmaking power remained with the district judge.
United States v. Raddatz,
But insofar as Article III protects individual litigants, those protections can be waived.
Cf. Patton v. United States,
Raddatz,
to the contrary, involved a non-consensual reference to a magistrate.
The importance of the consensual aspect of the arrangement is emphasized by early Supreme Court decisions upholding consensual grants of authority to masters and referees.
Kimberly v. Arms,
In
Kimberly v. Arms,
In
DeCosta v. Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.,
From a constitutional viewpoint, we can see no significant difference between arbitration and consensual reference for decision to magistrates. In both situations the parties have freely and knowingly agreed to waive their access to an Article III judge in the first instance .... If it be queried whether the dignity of Article III is being compromised by entering judgments on awards made by non-Article III personnel, the sufficient rejoinder is that judgments are entered on arbitrators’ awards.
Believing that the Article III interests of both the litigants and the judiciary are adequately protected under section 636(c)(3), we uphold the magistrate’s jurisdiction in the present instance. The litigants’ interests are safeguarded by the consensual nature of the reference; the institutional interests of the judiciary are secured by the district court’s control over both the references and appointments, and by the availability of appeal to an Article III court.
See Wharton-Thomas v. United States,
II.
On the merits of the appeal, plaintiff argues the magistrate erred in granting the defendants twice as many peremptory challenges as plaintiff. The two defendants in the case are Dr. Kelleher and a professional association to which he belonged, Rockdale Medical Corporation. They were represented by a single attorney, and defendants stipulated that a verdict against Kelleher would apply against Rock-dale. The interests of the two were indistinguishable.
The relevant statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1870 provides,
In civil cases, each party shall be entitled to three peremptory challenges. Several defendants or several plaintiffs may be considered as a single party for the purpose of making challenges, or the court may allow additional peremptory chal *37 lenges and permit them to be exercised separately or jointly.
While the magistrate urged counsel for the defendants to limit himself voluntarily to three peremptory challenges, 2 upon defendants’ insistence, the magistrate, who may have mistakenly thought the statute gave each defendant an absolute right in the matter, allowed three peremptories to each of the two defendants, for a total of six. Plaintiff was limited to three. 3 Thereafter, nine jurors were excused on the basis of peremptory challenges — by whom exercised does not appear.
Plaintiff argues that the magistrate abused his discretion by rejecting her request that the two defendants be considered as a single party and be allowed but three challenges between them. Plaintiff also points out that she asked the magistrate, in the alternative, for six challenges, to match defendants’ six.
Section 1870 gave the magistrate discretion to follow either path proposed by plaintiff. We believe he should have done so given the fact that the two defendants, represented by one attorney and parties to the verdict stipulation, clearly had identical interests at the trial. If each defendant had had even colorably different interests from the other,
e.g., Nehring v. Empresa Lineas Maritimas Argentinas,
It is true the statute states flatly that each party
“shall
be entitled to three peremptory challenges.” (Emphasis supplied.) Multiple parties “may” be considered as one, but there is no absolute requirement. However, while the trial court’s discretion under the statute is considerable, it is not unlimited.
John Long Trucking, Inc.
v.
Greear,
While, however, the challenges were wrongly allocated, plaintiff has not made a minimal showing of any prejudice. We start with the absence in the record of a showing that plaintiff exercised her four peremptories. Since only nine jurors were excused on the basis of peremptories, it is conjectural whether she did. It is well established in the case law that one who does not exercise all his peremptory challenges cannot assign as error the court’s refusal to allow a greater number.
Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Hillmon,
Plaintiff’s attorney represents in his brief that he did, in fact, exercise all four peremptories. Counsel’s representation is not an adequate substitute for a record showing.
United States v. Gazda,
Knowing the facts, [she] cannot sit idly by, make no objection, and then after a verdict [against her] is returned, challenge it upon the ground that the jury was not legally constituted and was not a valid jury.
Zito v. United States,
Are there any further questions from either counsel with reference to this chosen jury for the trial of this case?
Plaintiff’s counsel responded, “No questions, Your Honor,” and, to the question whether the parties were content, answered, “Yes.”
Not only was the issue of the sex of the jurors not raised, but the record does not indicate which party challenged the three women who were disqualified. Such information would be relevant to this appeal, because if plaintiff challenged those women she could not now be heard to complain that the jury was predominantly male.
See Frazier v. United States,
III.
Plaintiff next argues that the magistrate should have granted a new trial because the jury’s verdict of no damages was against the weight of the evidence. In reviewing a denial of such a motion, “the trial court will be found to have abused its discretion only if it refused to grant a new trial when the verdict was against the clear weight of the evidence.”
Johnson
v.
A/S Ivarans Rederi,
Damages are an element of plaintiff’s case and must not be merely speculative.
Newton v. Rockwood & Co.,
IV.
Finally, plaintiff attacks the directed verdict rendered by the magistrate in favor of defendants on the informed consent claim. Plaintiff claimed that she was disappointed with the cosmetic results of the surgery. She further averred that had she been informed of the risk of a bad cosmetic result and the possible need for reconstructive surgery, she would have declined the operation. The magistrate correctly concluded that under Massachusetts law a plaintiff attempting to establish an informed consent claim must show “that had the proper information been provided neither he nor a reasonable person in similar circumstances would have undergone the procedure.”
Harnish v. Children’s Hospital Medical Center,
In order to uphold a grant of a directed verdict, we must find that, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, reasonable jurors could come to but one conclusion.
deMars v. Equitable Life Assurance Society,
Plaintiff did attempt to introduce some evidence on this point at trial. Her
*40
psychiatric expert was asked if he could form an opinion, with reasonable medical certainty, as to whether plaintiff would have consented to the operation had she been informed of the risks. A “form and foundation” objection was sustained. The expert did not know plaintiff until July 1981, three years after the surgery; nor had the expert questioned plaintiff on the issue of her prior consent. The magistrate could properly rule that an inadequate foundation had been laid to permit the expert to answer the question. We conclude that the magistrate did not abuse his broad discretion to make such relevance determinations.
United States v. Mehtala,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Under 28 U.S.C. § 636(c)(3) the decision of a magistrate can be appealed directly to the court of appeals “in the same manner as an appeal from any other judgment of a district court,” while 28 U.S.C. § 636(c)(4) provides for consensual appeal to the district court.
. The final number of challenges was actually four instead of three per party based on allowance of an extra peremptory challenge for the alternate jurors. Fed.R.Civ.P. 47(b). Without objection, the magistrate allowed these extra challenges to be exercised against any prospective juror, not just against alternates.
. The defendants actually were allotted a total of eight challenges, while plaintiff was allotted four. See note 2, supra.
. Plaintiff also complains of the youth of the jury, but there is nothing in the record to show the age of its members.
