Pаge, the holder of a doctoral degree in parasitology and a former university biology professor, appeals his criminal convictions of mail fraud and of having made false claims and false statеments to agencies of the United States. His sole point for
All right, now we have taken this up in Chambers. Am I to understand, I suppose I should have it on the record, is it true that the defendants [sic] wish to waive the Jury in this matter?
Defense counsel, but not Page, responded, “Yes, sir, that’s the position.” The government also agreed to the waiver of thе jury trial. The court then stated that it approved the waiver of the jury and accepted the case as a non-jury matter. Page voiced no objection, and the court did not directly question him on the subjeсt. We note as well the absence of record testimony by Page’s trial lawyers 2 disputing the indicated representations made to the trial court, though a hearing was held on the government’s Rule 10(e) motion at which such evidence could have been offered.
Rule 10(e)
The record circumstances related, and Page’s contentions based upon them, present narrow but somewhat novel questions. The first is his claim that Rule 10(e) does not authorize such a record supplementation as was made here. We do not agree. That rule provides:
(e) Correction or Modification of the Record.
If any difference arises as to whether the record truly discloses what occurred in the district court, the difference shall be submitted to and settled by that court and the record made to conform to the truth. If anything material to either party is omitted from the record by error or accident or is misstated thеrein, the parties by stipulation, or the district court either before or after the record is transmitted to the court of appeals, or the court of appeals, on proper suggestion or of its own initiative, may direct that the omission or misstatement be corrected, and if necessary that a supplemental record be certified and transmitted. All other questions as to the form and content of the record shall be presented to the court of appeals.
In the terms of the quoted rule, something material to a party- — the United States — was omitted from the record as filed. This was an account of the pre-trial conference, a conference that had in fact “occurred in the district court” and which was necessary to “truly disclose” what went on there. As soon as a “difference” arose over what оccurred at that conference, a matter which became apparent with the
We see no merit in Page’s objections to this procedure. The predecessor of Rule 10(e), in virtually identical language, was applied by the Third Circuit to admit the trial court’s statement of an important portion of the actual trial that had not been recorded by the court reporter.
Marron v. Atlantic Refining Co.,
As authority for his position, Page advances two of our holdings. The earlier of these,
United States v. Smith,
Waiver and Invited Error
Recapitulating briefly, then, the recоrd properly before us shows Page’s trial counsel, at a conference held on the brink of trial and with the venire sitting outside in the courtroom, assuring the court that he and Page have thought the matter over with care and deliberately decided to waive the jury and try his case to the court. Government counsel at first objects but agrees after consulting higher authority. All parties having advised that they agree on waiver and a bench triаl, the court observes that it will state this fact on the record in open court. It does so in the presence of Page, a highly educated and articulate man, who in no manner exhibits objection or surprise as his counsel waives jury trial on the record and the venire is dismissed. The trial proceeds, Page is convicted and he comes to us via new counsel complaining that he gave no effective, personаl waiver, written or oral, of his constitutional right to be tried by a jury.
We commence our inquiry with the observations that it would have been better to do as the rule directs and that much could be said for enforcing it strictly as to suсh an entire waiver of jury trial. The right involved is a precious one; and a mechanical application of the express, bright-line provision of Rule 23(a) safeguarding it would not be wholly amiss: no written waiver signed by the dеfendant, no bench trial.
4
We need
We are entitled, as was the trial court, to accept the chambers representations of trial counsel that he and Page had conferred at length and deliberately made a considered, tactical decision that a benсh trial would be to Page’s advantage and that he therefore wished the jury discharged and the case tried by the court alone.
5
The truth of these representations is further borne out by Page’s own conduct — observеd by the trial court and noted in its minute entry — that of a learned, articulate man suffering neither language nor perceptive difficulty. The court granted his request and did as he wished. Neither Page nor his counsel ever objected at trial or requested a new trial, waiting instead until now to urge correction of this oversight. It follows ineluctably that Page cannot complain to us of the manner in which the trial court carried out his wishes. “A defendant cannot complain on appeal of alleged errors invited or induced by himself, particularly where, as here, it is not clear that the defendant was prejudiced thereby.”
United States v. Lewis,
AFFIRMED
Notes
. U.S.Const. art. 3, § 2, cl. 3, provides: “The Trial of all crimes . . . shall be by Jury . . . . ” The sixth amendment states: “In all criminal prosecutiоns, the accused shall enjoy the right to . .. trial, by an impartial jury . . . . ”
. Page is represented by other counsel on appeal.
. The United States plausibly suggests that a court reporter had not been present there since no one other than defense counsel anticipated that a motion to waive jury trial would be made.
. We recognize and do not question our authorities upholding oral waiver, under Rule 23(b), of a full jury of twelve,
e. g., United States v. Smith,
.
E. g., Castilleja v. Southern Pacific Co.,
