Plaintiff-appellant Mendes Junior International Company (Mendes) appeals an adverse judgment of the United States Magistrate Judge finding its claims time-barred and awarding damages in favor of appellee Atlanta Maritime Agency (AMC) on its counterclaims.
Facts and Proceedings Below
This dispute arises out of a contract to ship supplies from South America to Iraq in the early 1980s. Mendes had a contract to build a railroad in Iraq. Mendes consulted Agenave Maritime Agency (Agenave) regarding shipments of supplies to Iraq, and Agenave, as agent for time-charterers, undertook to engage appropriate vessels for Mendes.
Agenave booked several ships with AMC, a time-charterer in Houston. One of these ships, the M/V Sokai Maru, left Brazil in December 1980 to sail for the Middle East. The Sokai Maru apparently sailed to the Port of Aqaba, Jordan, but because of congestion, simply registered there instead of discharging its cargo. 1 The Sokai Maru proceeded to Jeddah, Saudi Arabia to unload other cargo. At Jeddah, the Sokai Maru was detained for over a month because the Saudis claimed that the ship was on the Arab blacklist. The Sokai Maru then returned to Aqaba, but was only able to unload a small part of Mendes’s cargo. She then proceeded to Kuwait and discharged the remainder of Mendes’s cargo.
Thereafter, Mendes sued the Sokai Maru, in rem, her owners, her time-chartered owners, and her charterers (AMC) for damages arising out of the cargo’s delay. The district court dismissed the action against the owners and time-charterers for lack of personal jurisdiction. AMC counterclaimed against Mendes for amounts due from this and other voyages.
The case was tried before District Judge Sterling in June 1985. Judge Sterling took the case under advisement, but died before handing down a decision. On April 25, 1988, Magistrate Judge Karen Brown entered a “Minute Entry” stating that a telephone conference had been held with counsel for both parties and ordering the parties to file a joint consent form within thirty days if the parties consented to “proceeding before the undersigned judge.” In June 1988, the parties filed a document entitled “Consent to Proceed Before United States Magistrate Karen K. Brown — Civil Case.” The body of the form states that the parties “consent to have United States Magistrate Karen K. Brown conduct any and all further proceedings in the case, including ... order the entry of judgment.” The bottom portion of this document is an “Order of Reference” signed by District Judge John Singleton assigning “the above-captioned matter to United States Magistrate Karen K. Brown for conducting all further proceedings in the case, including *922 ... the entry of final judgment in accordance with 28 U.S.C. § 636(c) and the above consent of the parties.” 2 Before Magistrate Judge Brown was able to enter judgment, however, she was elevated to the bankruptcy bench. A docket sheet entry dated April 17, 1990 states that “This case has been transferred to the docket of Magistrate Frances H. Stacy, fs.” The record, however, does not include a Consent to Proceed before Magistrate Judge Stacy or an Order of Reference transferring the case to (or specially designating) Magistrate Judge Stacy under section 636(c)(1). The record does include a letter from Mendes to Magistrate Judge Stacy agreeing to resetting the date of closing arguments.
Magistrate Judge Stacy reheard final arguments from counsel on November 28, 1990. None of the parties objected to Magistrate Judge Stacy’s hearing closing arguments. In April 1991, she entered final judgment against Mendes on the grounds that its claim was barred by the statute of limitations. Magistrate Judge Stacy also rendered judgment in favor of AMC on its counterclaims. No claim was made below that Magistrate Judge Stacy lacked authority to enter judgment. Mendes now appeals.
Discussion
In addition to challenging the judgment below on its merits, Mendes contends for the first time on appeal that Magistrate Judge Stacy lacked jurisdiction to enter judgment because the parties never consented to have her try the case and enter final judgment, Because we agree that Magistrate Judge Stacy totally lacked authority to enter judgment, we do not reach the merits.
28 U.S.C. section 636(c)(1) provides that “[u]pon the consent of the parties, a full-time United States magistrate ... may conduct any or all proceedings in a jury or nonjury civil matter and order the entry of judgment in the case, when specially designated to exercise such jurisdiction by the district court or courts he serves.” 28 U.S.C. § 636(c)(1). Mendes and AMC filed such a consent in June 1988 to Magistrate Judge Brown’s trying the case, and District Judge John Singleton specially designated Magistrate Judge Karen Brown to try the case and enter judgment. However, the parties never formally consented to Magistrate Judge Stacy’s trying the case and no order of reference was ever filed transferring the case to Magistrate Judge Stacy or otherwise specially designating her under section 636(c)(1). Because there is no Consent to Proceed before Magistrate Judge Stacy, Mendes argues that jurisdiction is lacking.
Mendes relies on our decision in
Caprera v. Jacobs,
In contrast, AMC relies on our subsequent decisions in
Mylett v. Jeane,
AMC relies on Mylett for the proposition that any defect in the transfer of this case to Magistrate Judge Stacy was procedural and thus was waived because Mendes did not object until appeal. Mylett, however, is inapposite. Mylett’s contention on appeal was that “in order to consent to trial before a part-time magistrate under the statute, parties must file a specific written request form in addition to the consent form.” Id. (emphasis added). While the case does not detail the exact terms of what Mylett consented to, it appears that the parties simply consented to trial by “a magistrate.” As such, the case did not present a jurisdictional issue, but instead only a procedural issue of whether a specific request in addition to the consent was necessary. Mylett never argued (as Mendes does here) that he only consented to trial by a specific (e.g., full-time) magistrate and thus his consent was ineffective if trial was by a different (e.g., part-time) magistrate. Moreover, Mylett apparently did not present a situation, such as that here, where the record reflected no district court order referring the case to or specially designating the magistrate as per section 636(c)(1).
Neither do we find
Archie
to be controlling. In
Archie,
the case was tried before a jury with a magistrate presiding. The defendants objected to the magistrate and demanded an Article III judge before trial; after the jury awarded the plaintiff no damages, however, the defendants no longer objected. The magistrate filed a report with the district court recommending that the findings of the jury be adopted. The district court adopted the report and entered judgment for defendants on the verdict. The plaintiff appealed, raising only substantive issues. A panel of our Court determined
sua sponte
that the magistrate was without jurisdiction to conduct the proceedings and vacated the trial court’s judgment.
See Archie v. Christian,
When the district court enters judgment, lack of consent and defects in the order of reference are procedural issues that can be waived if not timely raised.
See McLeod, Alexander, Powel & Apffel, P.C. & Quarles,
In the instant case, nothing in the record indicates that the district court referred the case to Magistrate Judge Stacy or otherwise specially designated her under section 636(e)(1). There is no formal order of reference and no docket entry or notation besides the handwritten “This case has been transferred to the docket of Magistrate Frances H. Stacy” followed by the initials “fs” (presumably those of Frances Stacy) found in the docket sheet. We hold that because there is no section 636(c)(1) order referring this case to (or otherwise specially designating) Magistrate Judge Stacy, and the only written consent and the only order of reference (or special designation) are expressly for Magistrate Judge Karen Brown,- Magistrate Judge Stacy lacked all authority to enter judgment in this case.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment below is vacated and the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent herewith.
VACATED and REMANDED.
Notes
. At this time, Iraq and Iran were at war. Because of that, ships could no longer call at Basrah, Iraq, and Aqaba had become the Iraqi-designated port-of-call for Iraq-bound cargos. Aqaba was very congested, with an alleged seven to ten week delay between the time a vessel registered at the port and the time the vessel was able to berth.
. This order of reference follows that-set out in Form 34 to the Appendix of Forms following the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The Form 34 order is case specific and contemplates designation of a named magistrate.
.
But see Parker v. Mississippi State Dep’t of Public Welfare,
