Wе dismiss these appeals for lack of appellate jurisdiction and direct the magistrate to withdraw his remand order and fee awаrd because the parties did not manifest consent in the manner required by 28 U.S.C. § 636(c) and Fed.R.Civ.P. 73(b). We conclude that general orders from a district court that allow the court to infer consent from a failure to object are insufficient to manifest consent.
This ease began as a divorce proceeding in California Superior Court. It found its way to federal court after Peter Nasca, one of the divorcing sрouses, joined his pension plan, Peoplesoft, in the action. Peoplesoft, citing the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), removed the action to federal court. Having arrived in the District Court for the Northern District of California, the case was assignеd to a magistrate judge. Responding to a motion by the Nascas, the magistrate judge ultimately remanded the action to state court аnd granted the Nascas’ request for attorneys’ fees. On appeal, Peo-
Noting the lack of express consent in the record to the magistrate’s authority, we raised sua sponte the question of our jurisdiction. This court’s jurisdiction to review the orders of a magistrate judge in civil cases depends upon the consent of the parties to the magistrate’s authority. See 28 U.S.C. § 636(c)(3); Aldrich v. Bowen,
Until we raised the issue of consent, it aрpears that none of the parties had questioned the magistrate’s authority. Admitting that the record contains no clear and unambiguous expression of consent,
We hold that this “consent by failure to object” is insufficient to cl'othe the magistrate with § 636(c) powers. Our insistence that consent be explicit, clear and unambiguous is not an exercise in mere formalism. But for the consent requirement, § 636(c)’s grant of judicial power to magistrates would infringe on the constitutional rights guarantеed to litigants by Article III. See Pacemaker Diagnostic Clinic of America, Inc. v. Instromedix, Inc.,
In the absence of a clear statement by the parties, the voluntariness of consent cannot be protected and we could be faced in any case with a retroactive attempt to expand or contract the magistrate’s authority. We will not permit our jurisdiction to depend on inferences when both the statute and common sense call for precision.
For these reasons, we hold that consent may not be inferred from the conduct of the parties, even where that conduct (or lack оf conduct) may have been invited by a general order of the district court. Cf. Jaliwala v. United States,
Our holding tоday is not only supported by the considerations discussed above, but is compelled by our prior precedent. Aldrich presented a circumstance identical to the one at bar. The parties in that case, having appealed from a final judgment entered by a mаgistrate in the District of Idaho, relied on that court’s general order establishing a “consent by failure to object” procedure. Notwithstanding this general order, we held that “[t]he magistrate judge had no jurisdiction to hear the case because the record contains no writtеn consent of the parties as required by 28 U.S.C. § 636(c)(1) and Fed. R.Civ.P. 73(b).” Aldrich v. Bowen,
We conclude where we began. The consent required by § 636(c) must be explicit, clеar, unambiguous, and cannot be inferred from the conduct of the parties, general orders by the district court to the contrary notwithstanding. Bеcause the requisite consent is lacking here, the magistrate judge acted without jurisdiction and is directed to withdraw his remand order and feе award.
DISMISSED. No party shall recover costs in this court.
Notes
. Counsel for Mr. Nasca suggests that the oral acknowledgment below by counsel that the matter was "submitted” should satisfy the consent requirеment. Even if the pro forma utterance of "submitted” could somehow be interpreted as an expression of consent, a proposition we doubt, it falls well short of a "clear and unambiguous" ■expression of such consent communicated as required by statute and rule.
. Accordingly, we must rеject the request of the parties that we give our holding only prospective effect. We are sensitive to the hardship that this ruling will inflict оn the Nascas, who, through no fault of their own, have had their divorce proceeding held hostage in federal court. It is clear in our сircuit, however, that the failure of consent goes to the question of jurisdiction, and thus we have no equitable discretion to soften the blow to the parties. See San Vincente Med. Partners Ltd.,
. The district court’s "Notice of Assignment to United Slates Magistrate Judge for Trial” referred the case under 28 U.S.C. § 636(c) for complete resolution of all matters. Without con
