Case Information
*1 Before TJOFLAT, BIRCH and MARCUS*, Circuit Judges.
*Hоnorable Stanley Marcus was a U.S. District Judge of the Southern District of Florida sitting by designation as a member of this panel when this appeal was argued and taken under submission. On November 24, 1997 he took the oath of office as a United States Circuit Judge of the Eleventh Circuit.
MARCUS, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff-Appellant Albert Thomas filed this lawsuit seeking damages and injunctive relief for alleged civil rights violations and other allegedly unlawful acts by the Defendant-Appellees. After the completion of discovery, the case was set for jury trial before the presiding district court judge. Over Thomas's objection, a United States Magistrate Judge supervised the jury selection process and selected a panel of jurors to hear the case. That jury eventually returned a verdict in favor of the Defendants. In this appeal, Thomas argues that a magistrate judge cannot preside over the jury selection process in a civil action where one of the parties has indicated his objection to this practice and unequivocally stated his desire to have thе entire lawsuit tried before a district judge. Thomas also suggests that, under these circumstances, a new trial must be provided, since his inability to pinpoint any tangible prejudice flowing from the magistrate judge's supervision of voir dire does not make the error harmless. For the reasons stated below, we agree that a new trial is warranted.
I.
Thomas is a prisoner in a Georgia state penitentiary. On June 29, 1992, he filed a 38-page pro se complaint against Appellees
Whitworth, Newsome and Thomas, officials in the Georgiа prison system, seeking relief under 42 U.S.C. §1983 and other provisions for a series of alleged civil rights violations relating to his confinement. Appellee Ault was subsequently added as an additional Defendant. When the case was trial-ready, the district court, on January 26, 1996, directed Thomas to indicate, no later than February 5, 1996, whether he consented to trying the case before a magistrate judge. On February 2, 1996, Thomas advised the district *3 court that he did not consent to a magistrate judge trial. Nevertheless, on February 22, 1996, the case was called for jury selection by the appointed magistrate judge, in accordance with the district judge's wishes. [1] Before the selection process got underway, Thomas reiterated his objection during a sidebar colloquy with the magistrate judge:
MAGISTRATE: You know you've got a right to have your case heard by a District Court Judge, and have a District Court Judge try your case?
THOMAS: Yes, sir.
MAGISTRATE: You've also got a right to have a District Court Judge preside over jury selection in your case. . . . Now, you've got a right to have him preside over everything, including jury selectiоn . . . [I]f you have any objection to me presiding over the jury selection, then we will not select the jury on this case today, and Judge Moore will have to schedule the trial at a later time when he can come and have a jury selected and try the case then.
THOMAS: I'd like for Judge Moore to handle the whole proceeding.
MAGISTRATE: You want him to handle the whole proceeding?
THOMAS: Yes, sir.
MAGISTRATE: So you do not agree for me to preside over the jury selection?
THOMAS: No, sir. At the conclusion of this sidebar conversation, the magistrate judge supervised the jury selection process in several other lawsuits. Disregarding Thomas's objection, he then proceeded with jury selection in the case at bar. The magistrate judge approved *4 a panel of jurors to hear the case, and sent the panel home, advising them to contact the Clerk of Court concerning their duty to report for jury service on March 19, 1996, the anticipated date of trial.
On March 6, 1996, Thomas filed with the district court an application entitled "Plaintiff's Objections to Magistrate Judge Selection of Jury on February 22, 1996." Thomas did not suggest that the magistrate judge conducted the selection process improperly; nor did he interpose an objection to the composition of the panel. Rather, he argued that he did not consent to the magistrate judge's supervision of the voir dire, and therefore a "new jury should be [s]elected by a judge." The district judge denied this motion in an order dated March 6th, stating that he was "satisfied that the jury selection was properly designated to and conducted by [the] Magistrate." The trial commenced on March 19, 1996. At the start of trial, Thomas orally renewed his objection to the magistrate judge's supervision of the jury selection process. Thomas also requested that the jury be dismissed and the case be tried to the court, although the district judge denied this application based on the Appellees' unwillingness to consent to a non-jury trial. The jury was sworn, the trial began and a verdict in favor of the Appellees was returned two days later. The verdict was reduced to judgment on March 21, 1996. Thomas moved for a new trial on March 29, 1996, restating his objection to the district court's use of a magistrate judge to supervise jury selection. The motion was denied in an order dated April 5, 1996. Thomas filed a notice of appeal on April 17, 1996. He has been supplied with counsel for the sole purpose of addressing the propriety of the magistrate judge's handling of the jury selection process.
II.
This appeal raises questions of law that must be examined de
novo. The first issue for review requires us to ask if a
magistrate judge may preside over jury selection in a сivil case
despite the properly preserved objection of one of the parties.
Magistrate judges do not share the privileges or exercise the
authority of judges appointed under Article III of the United
States Constitution; rather, magistrate judges draw their authority
entirely from an exercise of Congressional power under Article I of
the Constitution. Consequently, magistrate judges may not act
contrary to the limitations prescribed by the national legislature.
See, e.g., NLRB v. A-Plus Roofing, Inc. ,
The statute does not afford magistrate judges the right to
preside over trials (except for the trial of misdemeanor criminal
offenses in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §3401). Section 636(c) does
permit a district judge to designate a magistrate judge to "conduct
any or all proceedings in a jury or nonjury civil matter," but only
*6
"[u]pon the consent of the parties." See Hall v. Sharpe, 812 F.2d
644, 646-47 (11th Cir. 1987) (observing that section 636(c)
authorizes a magistrate judge to conduct civil jury trials, but
stressing that "[e]xplicit, voluntary consent is crucial to this
procedure" in order to obviate concerns about constitutionality and
protect against the wholesale delegation of certain classes of
cases and litigants); see also Fowler v. Jones,
(11th Cir. 1990) (adding that "'valid consent is the linchpin of 28 U.S.C. §636(c)'") (citation omitted). The plain language of the statute establishes that if one of the parties in a civil lawsuit pending before a district court states his unwillingness to consent to a trial before a magistrate judge, the district court cannot designate a magistrate judge to preside over the trial.
The question becomes, therefore, whether the jury selection
process can be parsed from other aspects of a trial, bringing the
process of selecting a jury within the "additional duties" clause
of section 636(b)(3). In Gomez v. United States,
Relying on Gomez, two of our sister Circuits have held, we think correctly, that a magistrate judge is not empowered to conduct the voir dire in a civil jury trial over the objection of one or more of the parties. The Seventh Circuit, in Olympia Hotels Corp. v. Johnson Wax Development Corp., 908 F.2d 1363 (7th Cir. 1990), observed that section 636 does not expressly authorize magistrate judges to try cases (civil or criminal), and added that reading the "additional duties" clause to encompass some or all of a jury trial would render meaningless other language in the statute. Id. at 1368 (stating that there "would [not] be much point to the elaborate provisions in section 636(c) for the conduct of civil trials (including jury trials) by a magistrate with the consent of both parties if a district judge could сompel the *8 parties, against their wishes, to submit to a magistrate's conducting vital stages in the trial, such as voir dire of the jury"). Moreover, remarked the court, it is unsound to suggest that voir dire is no more essential, and no less an opportunity for delegation, than pre-trial discovery, which section 636 authorizes magistrates to supervise without the parties' consent:
We are doubtful whether these are symmetrical exercises of judicial power. Pretrial discovery is conducted largely by the parties on their own, and of сourse out of court; judicial supervision is minimal. The voir dire, in contrast, is a vital stage of every jury trial. It is the jurors' first encounter with the court; and the presence of the judge who will preside at trial helps impress on the jurors the gravity of their mission. It is also the judge's best opportunity to "size up" the jury, because it will probably be the only occasion on which any of the juror's speak in the judge's presence. Sizing up the jury is important to the judge's rulings on evidentiary questions, on motions for mistrials and new trials, and on other matters requiring an assеssment of the particular juror's ability and attentiveness; on these questions we defer broadly to the trial judge's judgment, in part because of his superior opportunity to evaluate the jurors. The trial is diminished when different judicial officers preside at the voir dire and at the presentation of evidence; the pretrial, much less so.
Id. at 1369 (citation omitted). Subsequently, in Stockler v. Garratt, 974 F.2d 730 (6th Cir. 1992), the Sixth Circuit agreed with the reasoning in Olympia Hotel, finding that under the statute "jury selection in a civil trial is not one of the additional supervisory duties which can be delegated to a magistrate . . . without the consent of the parties." Id. at 732. Thus, "in the present case, it was error for the district court to allow a magistrate to conduct voir dire over the objection of [the plaintiff]." Id. These opinions reinforce what the statute should make plain: Section 636 does not permit magistrate judges, under *9 the guise of the "additional duties" clause, to conduct the jury selection portion of a civil trial unless the parties have given their consent.
III.
Since there can be no quarrel with Thomas's claim that he
refused to give his express, voluntary consent in this case, we
turn to the issue of harmless error. Although the test for
harmless error varies somewhat with the context, generally it
connotes error that has little or no impact on the affected party's
substantive rights. See , e.g., Chapman v. California,
This language appears to be culled directly from the Eleventh
Circuit's decision in United States v. Rodriguez-Suarez, 856 F.2d
135 (11th Cir. 1988), cert. denied,
Among those basic fair trial rights that "'can never be treated as harmless'" is a defendant's "right to an impartial adjudicator, be it judge or jury." Equally basic is a defendant's right to have all critical stages of a criminal trial conducted by a person with jurisdiction to preside. Thus harmless-error analysis doеs not apply in a felony case in which, despite the defendant's objection and without any meaningful review by a district judge, an officer exceeds his jurisdiction by selecting a jury.
It could be suggested that the harmless error analysis in Rodriguez-Suarez remains sound, even if the holding itself is no longer good law with respect to felony cases. [2] But Gomez, while arising in the criminal as opposed to civil context, clearly signals that a magistrate's supervision of the voir dire process, in the face of an objection from one оf the parties, is not the stuff of harmless error. Arguably the criminal context differs somewhat, since the constitutional rights granted criminal defendants are more expansive than those ordinarily accorded civil litigants. The underlying point is the same, though: it can never be genuinely "harmless" for a litigant, over his objection, to be compelled to try some or all his case before a non-Article III judicial officer not entitled to exercise the power of an Article III judge.
*12
Rodriguez-Suarez was issued before the Sixth and Seventh
Circuits, drawing largely on Gomez, applied the reasoning of that
opinion to civil lawsuits. In Olympia Hotel, the Seventh Circuit
rejected a harmless error argument in the context of a civil
lawsuit, stating that although the affected party made no effort to
show how it was harmed by the magistrate judge's actual handling of
the voir dire, "issues of entitlement to a particular kind of
tribunal are in general not subject to the harmless error rule."
The Appellees' theory of harmless error raises many
troublesome mechanical questions. To begin with, their reasoning
conceivably could be used to justify a magistrate judge's decision
to preside over not just jury selection, but an entire civil trial.
The jury selection process cannot be deemed merely an ancillary or
preliminary phase of a trial; it is every bit as much a part of the
trial as the opening statement, the examination of witnesses and
the charging of the jury. See Gomez,
Ct. at 2247 (stating that "[f]ar from an administrative empanelment
process, voir dire represents jurors' first introduction to the
substantive factual and legal issues in a case"); Olympia Hotel ,
In any event, as the Seventh Circuit suggests, there may well
be a real measure of harm to the entire trial process when a
*14
district judge absents himself from the voir dire stage, at least
where the parties have not expressly and voluntarily indicated
their consent. The credibility evaluation required in response to
the argument that preemptory challenges have been exercised for
unlawful discriminatory reasons, see, e.g., United States v.
Tokars,
A useful analogy can be drawn by examining the Appellees' harmless error argument in the context of the statutory limits on federal subject matter jurisdictiоn under Article III. Suppose a district court found, despite a defendant's objection, that it could exercise diversity jurisdiction over a civil lawsuit even though it recognized that the amount in controversy fell below the statutory minimum set by 28 U.S.C. §1332. There is no case law in this, or any other, Circuit suggesting that the district court's jurisdictional ruling could be overlooked as "harmless" on appeal simply upon a showing that, in all other respects, the district court's resolution of the case was thoroughly error-free. The essence of the harm in this situation is the fact that the lawsuit was entertained by a tribunal that, according to Congress, had no power to entertain the dispute. The same reasoning applies here; the harm to Appellant Thomas flows not from the adequacy or inadequacy of the magistrate judge's handling of the jury selection process, but rather from the fact that Congress did not afford magistrate judges the power to preside over any aspect of the trial *16 of a civil lawsuit without the express consent of the parties (and certainly not in the face of repeated and unequivocal objection from a plaintiff). The statute expressly permits litigants like Thomas to insist on having an entire trial take place before a United States District Judge; adopting the Appellees' harmless error argument saps this statutory language of meaning, and significantly undermines the right of a federal court litigant to have his case tried before a judge who has been appointed by the President and is afforded the constitutional protection of Article III. [3] Consequently, the concept of harmless error cannot be used to sustain the underlying judgment, since that judgment was rendered by a jury whose selection was supervised by a magistrate judge who lacked the statutory authority to undertake the task assigned to him by the district court.
For all of the foregoing reasons, the district court's denial of the Appellant's new trial motion must be and is REVERSED. The judgment is VACATED, and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
[1] It appears from the record that the magistrate judge was in the coursе of presiding over jury selection in several pro se prisoner cases.
[2] It is unclear from the text of Rodriguez-Suarez whether the defendant in that case agreed to the magistrate's supervision of the jury selection process. To the extent the defendant gave his consent, of course, the opinion lends even less weight to the Appellees' position here. See , e.g., Peretz.
[3] Having concluded that the magistrate judge exceeded his statutorily-created authority by conducting jury selection in this case without the consent of the parties, we need not and do not address any constitutional implications of this practice.
