OPINION
This case raises a thorny double jeopardy issue: whether a district court may, in *898 the absence of a motion for new trial by the defendant, order a new trial for a defendant who was tried before the judge but never properly waived his constitutional right to a jury trial.
Defendant-Appellant Gabriel Alvarez-Moreno was indicted in December 2008 on two counts of transporting an illegal alien for profit, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1324(a)(l)(A)(ii) and 1324(a)(1)(B)®. Less than two weeks before Alvarez-Moreno’s case was to be tried before a jury, Alvarez-Moreno and the Government agreed to a bench trial instead. When the parties notified the district court of that agreement, the court entered an order vacating the jury trial and setting a bench trial. In the same order, the district court directed Alvarez-Moreno to file a waiver of jury trial, as required by Rule 23(a)(1) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure.
The two-day bench trial concluded on October 15, 2009. Alvarez-Moreno was found guilty. No one noticed at that point that Alvarez-Moreno had not filed the waiver of his right to a jury trial.
A few weeks later, Alvarez-Moreno’s attorney filed a “Motion to Set Aside Verdict by Trial Court.” The motion argued that the results of the bench trial were invalid, not only because the waiver was never filed, but also because the district court had not personally examined Alvarez-Moreno to ensure that he was voluntarily, knowingly, and intelligently waiving his right to be tried by a jury. The only remedy Alvarez-Moreno requested was that the verdict be set aside. In response, the government asked the court to treat Alvarez-Moreno’s motion as an untimely motion for a new trial or, in the alternative, to declare a mistrial sua sponte because of the error.
The district court held a hearing on the motion about a month later. At the hearing, Alvarez-Moreno’s attorney expressed uncertainty about the precise relief he was seeking, but did say explicitly that he was
not
asking for a new trial. The district court observed correctly that its failure to ascertain whether Alvarez-Moreno’s waiver was knowing, voluntary, and intelligent was structural error and inevitably would result in the reversal of the verdict were there an appeal.
See United States v. Bailon-Santana,
Not satisfied, Alvarez-Moreno moved to vacate the new trial order, arguing that a new trial can be granted under Rule 33 only upon the defendant’s motion. Alvarez-Moreno also moved to dismiss the indictment, arguing that retrying him would violate the Constitution’s Double Jeopardy Clause. The Government agreed that the order granting a new trial was in error and renewed its suggestion that, instead, the district court sua sponte order a mistrial. At a subsequent hearing, the district court disagreed with the parties about whether it could order a new trial under Rule 33 absent a defendant’s motion, but also (1) modified its prior order by adding an alternative basis for ordering a new trial, relying on Rule 26.3 and finding a manifest necessity for declaring a mistrial; and (2) denied Alvarez-Moreno’s motion to vacate its order granting a new trial.
Before the second trial occurred, Alvarez-Moreno filed this appeal. Ordi
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narily, we do not have jurisdiction to consider such an appeal, as our jurisdiction is limited to “final decisions of the district courts,” 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and a final decision is “a decision by the District Court that ‘ends the litigation on the merits and leaves nothing for the court to do but execute the judgment.’ ”
Midland Asphalt Corp. v. United States,
There is, however, “a narrow exception” to the final judgment rule, the “collateral order doctrine.” Id.
This exception considers as “final judgments,” even though they do not “end the litigation on the merits,” decisions “which finally determine claims of right separate from, and collateral to, rights asserted in the action, too important to be denied review and too independent of the cause itself to require that appellate jurisdiction be deferred until the whole case is adjudicated.”
Id.
(quoting
Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp.,
I.
The question we must answer is whether retrying Alvarez-Moreno in the present circumstance would constitute double jeopardy. His first trial was a bench trial, and so “jeopardy attache[d] when the court beg[an] to hear evidence.”
Serfass v. United States,
A.
Once jeopardy has attached, there are generally three ways that a criminal defendant in federal court can be retried for the same offense. The first — not directly at issue here, although its underpinnings are informative to our inquiry — is when the defendant is retried after a successful appeal or collateral attack of a conviction.
1
“There is no doubt,” in that situ
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ation, “that jeopardy attached when [the defendant] was first tried.”
United States v. Stapleton,
B.
The second situation in which a federal defendant can be retried after jeopardy attaches is if the district court validly terminates the initial proceeding by declaring a mistrial under Rule 26.3 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure.
2
If that occurs, the defendant can be retried as long as (1) the mistrial was justified by “manifest necessity” or was consented to by the defendant, and (2) there was no judicial or prosecutorial overreaching aimed at triggering the mistrial.
See, e.g., Oregon v. Kennedy,
Rule 26.3 does not state explicitly that a mistrial can be declared only
before
a verdict is rendered or a judgment entered, but that limitation is clearly the implicit assumption. Justice Story’s seminal opinion in
United States v. Perez,
22. U.S. (9 Wheat.) 579,
Moreover, the requirement that a mistrial be declared only if there is “manifest necessity” necessarily assumes that such a declaration.may come only before the conviction. Permitting the court to declare a mistrial after the conviction has been determined would violate traditional waiver principles and circumvent the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure.
Instead of coming within the authority to grant a mistrial, as explained below, the district court’s authority to or *901 der a new trial after a verdict has been entered is governed by Rule 33. Insofar as the district court’s order for a new trial of Alvarez-Moreno was premised on the post-verdict declaration of a mistrial, therefore, it was error.
C.
Third and finally, a federal defendant can be retried after jeopardy attaches if, after the verdict has been rendered or the judgment has been entered, the district court grants his motion under Rule 33 for a new trial. Rule 33 provides: “Upon the defendant’s motion, the court may vacate any judgment and grant a new trial if the interest of justice so requires.” Fed.R.Crim.P. 33(a) (emphasis added). The Advisory Committee’s notes to the 1966 amendments to Rule 33, which added the phrase “Upon the defendant’s motion” to the Rule, explain the justification for insisting that any motion for a new trial be made by the defendant himself:
[T]he first two sentences [of subsection (a) ] make it clear that a judge has no power to order a new trial on his own motion, that he can only act in response to a motion timely made by the defendant. Problems of double jeopardy arise when the court acts on its own motion.
Fed.R.Crim.P. 33 advisory committee’s notes (1966 amendments).
In support of the proposition that “[pjroblems of double jeopardy arise when the court acts on its own motion,” the Advisory Committee’s notes cite
United States v. Smith,
[I]t would be a strange rule which deprived a judge of power to do what was asked when request was made by the person most concerned, and yet allowed him to act without petition. If a condition of the power is that request for its exercise be not made, serious constitutional issues would be raised. For it is such request which obviates any later objection the defendant might make on the ground of double jeopardy.
Id.
at 474,
Emphasizing this principle— that a Rule 33 motion can be made only by a defendant
Navarro Viayra
held that a district court may not convert a defendant’s motion under Rule 29 for judgment of acquittal into a Rule 33 motion for a new trial.
See
II.
We are sympathetic to the situation the district court found itself in. A
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clear legal error had occurred. If and when Alvarez-Moreno appealed, the conviction would have been overturned and the case remanded for a new trial. Under such circumstances, it undoubtedly seemed preferable to cut to the chase and simply order a new trial. But once jeopardy has attached, “the defendant retainfs] primary control over the course to be followed in the event of ... error.”
United States v. Dinitz,
We therefore vacate the district court’s December 11, 2009 order that set aside the conviction and ordered a new trial under Rule 33, as well as its January 26, 2010 order that also justified the new trial by declaring the first proceeding a mistrial under Rule 26.3. We remand with instructions to deny Alvarez-Moreno’s “Motion to Set Aside Verdict by Trial Court,” which cites no rule or authority and was procedurally improper. If Alvarez-Moreno wants to correct the legal error, he can make a proper motion under Rule 33 for a new trial, or he can appeal the final judgment after he is sentenced; in either event, under the principles discussed earlier, he would have consented to retrial. Alternatively, Alvarez-Moreno may view those two routes as merely prolonging the inevitable, and so may decide that he does not want to undergo the stress of another trial. If so, he is, of course, entirely free to forego any Rule 33 motion or appeal and accept the sentence meted out on the basis of the conviction after it is reinstated upon remand. That sentence would “not [be] void, but voidable, and if the sentence [is] complied with he could not [be] punished again for the same offense.”
Murphy,
REMANDED.
Notes
. The Double Jeopardy Clause does not allow retrial, however, if the conviction is over
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turned because of a failure of proof at trial.
See Burks v. United States,
. Rule 26.3 provides: "Before ordering a mistrial, the court must give each defendant and the government an opportunity to comment on the propriety of the order, to state whether that party consents or objects, and to suggest alternatives." Fed.R.Crim.P. 26.3. We review de novo a district court’s interpretation and application of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure.
United States v. Navarro Viayra,
. Considering a counterfactual demonstrates the danger in sanctioning the district court's grant of a new trial in these circumstances: If Alvarez-Moreno had not taken an interlocutory appeal, and was retried and convicted at the second trial ordered by the district court. Alvarez-Moreno would no doubt appeal and have a strong argument that because he never consented, his second trial violated double jeopardy.
See, e.g., United States v. Patterson,
