OPINION OF THE COURT
Appellant, Vargas Paniagua, appeals from an order of June 19,1990, denying his motion to dismiss the information in this case on the ground of double jeopardy. The appeal is predicated principally on the circumstance that his first trial was terminated when Magistrate Barnard rather than a district judge declared a mistrial. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 as the order is final under the сollateral order doctrine.
United States v. Ciancaglini,
The facts as germane to this appeal are as follows. A five count information was filed in the District Court of the Virgin Islands by the United States Attorney charging Paniagua with mayhem, three counts of assault, and possession of a deadly weapon during the commission of a crime of violence. See V.I.Code Ann. tit. 14, §§ 1341(a)(2), 295(3), 297(2), 297(4), and 2251(a)(2) (1964 & Supp.1989). On April 17, 1990, Magistrate Barnard, with the express consent of the parties, presided over jury selection.
The receipt of evidence was started and completed on May 9, 1989, with a district judge presiding. After the completion of the testimony, the district judge instructed thе jury and, during the course of the afternoon, answered a question from it. Later the district judge told the attorneys that: “The Magistrate has' graciously agreed to take the verdict if it goes on. Any objection for the Government?” The assistant United States attorney responded “No” and the assistant federal public defender, representing Paniagua, then said “I don’t think it will be very long.” While that rеsponse did not directly address the judge’s question, it was taken by the parties as an agreement to his request and Paniagua does not suggest otherwise on this appeal.
The jury was unable to reach a verdict on May 9, 1989, and thus Magistrate Barnard, at the jury’s request, and with no objection from the parties, recessed the deliberations until the following day. On May 10, 1989, the jury sent the magistrate a note reciting that it could not reach a unanimous verdict. The assistant United States attorney then *180 requested that the magistrate give a modified Allen charge but the assistant federal public defender said:
Your Honor, I would first comment that the note from the jury is somewhat ambiguous. It didn’t say verdict in total, that when the Court brings them in, you can inquire whether they can reach a verdict as to any of the counts, and depending on their answer, of course, ask them if they think there is any possibility, and if not, we wоuld object to giving them an Allen charge and have you declare a mistrial, if they so say, if they are unable to reach a verdict, and enter the judgment on the count if they so say.
App. at 67.
The magistrate then said that he would ask the foreperson if an additional opportunity to deliberate was necessary and if “they feel there is no benefit of that, I will discharge it. If they feel therе would be some benefit to that, I would give the Allen charge. I will put them in the box and depending on what they are advised, I will advise you.” The public defender then said that “just so the record is clear, our objection to modified Allen.”
The jury was then brought into the box and the foreperson said it had reached a verdict on only one count. The magistrate, however, did not take the verdict on that count but .instead gave the jury a modified Allen charge. See Devitt and Blackmar, Federal Jury Practice and Instructions § 18.15 (1977). Several hours later, after the jury advised the magistrate it was still unable to reach a verdict, he declared a mistrial. The following then ensued:
THE COURT: Well, this case will be considered a mistrial. What we will do, Mr. Mabe [the assistant United States attorney]? Do you intend to retry this case?
ATTORNEY MABE: Yes, Your Honor.
THE COURT: We have a new jury panel coming in beginning with the May 22 trial calendar. What we will do, we will put this case on that calendar and we will make a decision at that time as to when we will try it. I am not sure it will be retried in the May 22 calendar. I don’t want to lose track of it in any event.
At that time of the calendar call, your office should have some position on whether, indeed, you intend to retry it and whеn you propose to do that. Mr. Zolezzi [the assistant federal public defender], you will probably have something to say about that.
ATTORNEY ZOLEZZI: Yes, Your Hon- or, in fact, because of some of the things that have developed in the trial, we may still be asking for a continuance. We now have apparently some leads on some of the missing witnesses we feel will be beneficial, but they are not here. They are State-side.
THE COURT: We will put it on that calendar. We will keep Paniagua on the same release pending retrial.
ATTORNEY MABE: We will anticipate that, as Mr. Zolezzi has mentioned, the need for some additional time to attempt to locate some of the witnesses and also the victim in case was going back into the hospital for treatment,, and I аm not sure what his condition is going to be between now—
THE COURT: The reason why I am putting it on here is to keep track.
ATTORNEY MABE: I understand.
THE COURT: You understand we had another retrial that resulted in speedy trial difficulty because it wasn’t properly restored to the trial calendar? I don’t want this to happen in this case. Unless there is anything else, we will adjourn.
App. at 71-73.
On June 27, 1989, Paniagua filed a motion “to bar the pending prosеcution and dismiss the Information herein on double jeopardy grounds.” In his motion he relied on
Gomez v. United States,
In its answering brief the government contended that Paniagua never objected to the magistrate’s actions in the sense that he did not claim that the magistrate did not have the authority to act on the matters in dispute. It further cоntended that even if there had been a Gomez violation, Paniag-ua’s remedy was a new trial and that was what he was getting.
The district court ruled on the motion in a memorandum of decision dated June 19, 1990. It concluded that
Gomez
had precluded a magistrate from presiding over jury selection for three reasons. First, the Federal Magistrates Act only authorized magistrates to conduct civil mаtters and minor criminal trials and thus should be construed as implicitly withholding the authority to preside at a felony trial.
Gomez,
The district court distinguished Gomez as it concluded that
accepting .a communication from the jury, restating the substance of the court’s charge, and declaring a mistrial *182 are within the range of duties that Congress permits magistrates to perform. They do not involve the delicate observation of demeanor, credibility, attitudе, and physical characteristics that jury selection and voir dire require and that the Gomez Court found incapable of meaningful review_ By scrutinizing transcripts either during jury deliberations or on post-trial motions, a trial judge can meaningfully review a magistrates’s action on jury notes and questions, a magistrate’s jury instructions, and a magistrate’s declaration of mistrial. Such meaningful review can also be performed at the appellate level.
App. at 18-19 (omitting citations).
The court also indicated that “the magistrate apparently maintained communications with the district judge throughout jury deliberations.”
2
It also pointed out that Paniagua had not been “forced to accede to the magistrate’s participation in the latter stages of the proceeding” and that, in рarticular, he did not object to the dismissal of the jury and the declaration of the mistrial. Thus, it found that Paniag-ua’s constitutional rights had not been violated. The court noted, citing Judge Mans-mann’s concurring opinion in
Government of Virgin Islands v. Williams,
It is essential to consider what is and what is not before the court on this appeal. Paniagua indicates that the issues are whether the Federal Magistrates Act permits a district court to delegate to a magistrate “substantivе trial duties, including receiving from and responding to a jury note, supplemental charging of the jury, hearing and ruling on counsels’ arguments therein, and exercising discretion by declaring a mistrial” and “[wjhether the Double Jeopardy Clause bars [his] reprosecution ... if the Federal Magistrates Act does prohibit the delegation of the above described duties to a magistrate.” Thus, he does not suggest that if the magistrate had the authority to declare a mistrial he abused his discretion in doing so.
But the issues are not nearly as broad as Paniagua suggests. He was, after all, not convicted at his first trial and there is therefore no appeal pending from any order or disposition at that trial. Rather, the appeal is from the order of June 19, 1990, denying his motion to dismiss the informаtion and refusing to bar the second trial. Accordingly, the proceedings at the first trial are germane to this appeal only insofar as they relate to the claim that the second trial is barred by the Double jeopardy Clause. Of course, it was the termination of the first trial without a final judgment which has given rise to the double jeopardy claim as that claim is predicatеd on Paniagua’s “valued right to have his trial completed ...” at the first proceeding.
See Arizona v. Washington,
On the merits we are constrained to express the most serious reservations regarding the authority of a magistrate under the Fedеral Magistrates Act to declare a mistrial in a felony case. It seems to us that a substantial argument can be made that there can be no more core exercise of Article III judicial power than a determination to declare a mistrial in a felony case, at least if the basis for the mistrial is a determination that a jury is unable to reach a verdict. While we agree with the district court that “[b]y scrutinizing transcripts either during jury deliberations or on post-trial motions, a trial judge can meaningfully review a magistrate’s action on jury notes and questions, a magistrate’s jury instructions, and a magistrate’s declaration of mistrial,” we do not see the significance of that statement in the context of this case with respect to the mistrial order. Obviously, thе only review of a mistrial order could be after a trial and that review could not result in appropriate relief if the district court concluded that a mistrial had been incorrectly ordered, for it could not be seriously suggested that the original jury could be reassembled to continue its deliberations.
See Government of Virgin Islands v. Smith,
Ultimately, though, we decide this case on very narrow grounds and accordingly we do not address a magistrate’s authority to grant a mistrial over a defendant’s objections or silence. In
Government of the Virgin Islands v. Williams,
In
Williams,
of course, the issue was whether a conviction in a proceeding at which the magistrate purportedly exceeded his authority could be affirmed. Here, however, we are concerned with the distinctly different question of whether the termination of a proceeding by reason of the exercise of authority by a magistrate which Paniagua expressly requested that he use should preclude his retrial. We think not. We have consistently held that judicial estoppel precludes a party from assuming a position in a legal proceeding inconsistent with one previously asserted.
See Delgrosso v. Spang and Co.,
The order of June 19, 1990, will be affirmed.
Notes
. Paniagua’s memorandum filed in the district court includes an essentially incomprehensible explanation of his call for a mistrial in the district court. It indicates, with respect to the jury's note that it was unable to reach a verdict, as follows:
Defendant Paniagua pauses here to reiterate that while he did not object to the magistrate receiving thе verdict, he did object to the giving of the supplemental instructions. Pan-iagua also voiced concern over the ambiguity of the jury’s note. There were five counts in the information and, as the colloquy between the magistrate and the jurors subsequently revealed, they declared that they had reached a verdict on one count and that the rest ‘were undecided.’ (Tr. 6). Thеrefore, Paniagua’s earlier (and conditional) request for the magistrate to declare a mistrial was obviously rendered inapplicable when the foreperson announced that the jury had in fact reached a verdict as to one of the counts.
App. at 45.
In an accompanying footnote in Paniagua’s memorandum he wrote:
Counsel does not agree thаt he said ‘we would object to giving them an Allen charge and have you declare a mistrial’ (Tr. 6).
Counsel called the court reporter after filing the Motion in this cause and had him read his notes to counsel. Counsel contemporaneously made his own notes as the court reporter read the trial notes as follows: ‘we would object to Allen charge and direct a mistrial.’ Counsel’s recollection was that he was objecting to the declaring of a mistrial as to any counts in which a verdict has not been reached.
App. at 45 (emphasis supplied).
If counsel was objecting to a mistrial in any count in which a verdict had not been reached but he had made, as he puts it, an "earlier (and conditional) request for the magistrate to declare a mistrial” then it must be that Pаniagua intended for the magistrate to believe that he wanted a mistrial on the count in which a verdict had been reached. We do not, however, dwell on the point as Paniagua has not made a motion to correct or modify the record as provided in Fed.R.App.P. 10(e). Thus, we are accepting as accurate the transcript of the district court prоceedings which shows that Paniagua asked unambiguously for a mistrial. We also note that in his brief on this appeal Paniagua does not urge that he objected to a mistrial at any time in the district court. See Brief at 3.
. We are not certain as to why the court believed that as we are unable to find support for the assertion in the record. The district judge who rendered the decision on the motion to dismiss the information was a visiting judge in the District of the Virgin Islands. He pointed out that the trial judge had his duty station on St. Croix whereas this trial was held on St. Thomas and that at the time of the trial there was a vacancy for the district judgeship in St. Thomas. Thus, the judge went back and forth between the two islands, leaving ministerial functions to magistrates. This case demonstrates the difficulties inherent in that situation. This vаcancy problem has been greatly exacerbated by the untimely death of the trial judge, Honorable David V. O'Brien, so that there are now vacancies for both authorized judgeships on the Virgin Islands. At this time the situation requires the assignment of judges from other districts to the Virgin Islands, inconveniencing the judges and depriving their own districts of their presence. Furthermore, while the judges have performed outstanding service in the Virgin Islands, inevitably the coming and going of judges has led to significant problems.
. We do, however, point out that Paniagua’s objection to the supplemental instructions in the district court was not based on the alleged lack of authority of the magistrate to give the instruction. Rather, Paniagua argued that it was not appropriate to give the instructions in the circumstances then extant.
