Luis Jaquez v. United States ( 2022 )


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  •                               In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 21-1491
    LUIS H. JAQUEZ,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Indiana, South Bend Division.
    No. 3:16-MJ-50-MGG — Michael G. Gotsch, Sr., Magistrate Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED MAY 16, 2022 — DECIDED JUNE 6, 2022
    ____________________
    Before EASTERBROOK, BRENNAN, and ST. EVE, Circuit Judges.
    EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge. During 2016 federal officials
    obtained three judicial orders to facilitate investigation of Luis
    Jaquez, suspected of distributing illegal drugs. One order au-
    thorized a wiretap on Jaquez’s cell phone; the other two au-
    thorized a pen register. The wiretap gave federal officials ac-
    cess to conversations over the intercepted line; the pen regis-
    ter revealed only the numbers that Jaquez called or that called
    him. Federal officials disclosed some of this information to
    2                                                  No. 21-1491
    state officials, who used it to prosecute and convict Jaquez for
    several offenses. He is serving a 36-year sentence. See Jaquez
    v. State, 
    2020 Ind. App. Unpub. LEXIS 34
     (Jan. 17, 2020). He has
    not been prosecuted in federal court.
    Seeking evidence that he might use to wage a collateral at-
    tack on his convictions, Jaquez filed in federal court a motion
    for copies of the applications, affidavits, and orders authoriz-
    ing the pen register, plus equivalent documents for the wire-
    tap. He asked the district court to “Unseal and Produce the
    Entire Case.” The clerk of court referred this request to Mag-
    istrate Judge Gotsch, who issued the pen-register orders but
    not the wiretap warrant. Magistrate Judge Gotsch ordered
    some of the pen-register papers unsealed—apparently for
    Jaquez’s eyes only—but denied the request to the extent that
    it sought additional information. Jaquez did not ask a district
    judge to review the magistrate judge’s decision but did file a
    notice of appeal to this court, after waiting almost 60 days.
    The parties disagree about whether we have jurisdiction
    to review this decision. Jaquez, now represented by counsel,
    says that the answer is no because the decision is not final for
    the purpose of 
    28 U.S.C. §1291
    , having been entered by a mag-
    istrate judge without review by a district judge. The United
    States contends that the answer is yes precisely because the
    time to seek review by a district judge expired long ago. The
    parties also have had some back-and-forth about whether
    Jaquez had to appeal within 14 days, the maximum allowed
    in criminal litigation. Jaquez has declined to dismiss his ap-
    peal under Fed. R. App. P. 42(b), because the parties have not
    agreed on costs—and, perhaps more important, because he
    wants us to direct the district court to reopen the time within
    which to seek a district judge’s review of the magistrate
    No. 21-1491                                                     3
    judge’s decision. We therefore reject the proposal by the
    United States to treat Jaquez’s brief as if it were a motion to
    dismiss. We need to decide on our own whether the appeal is
    properly here.
    The first question is whether the appeal is timely, which
    depends in part on why the district court had subject-maher
    jurisdiction. If the motion for disclosure is a step in a criminal
    prosecution, perhaps resting on Fed. R. Crim. P. 16 or some-
    thing similar, then 
    18 U.S.C. §3231
     would have supplied juris-
    diction to the district court—and Fed. R. App. P. 4(b)(1)(A)
    would have set a 14-day limit for appeal. But because Jaquez
    has not been prosecuted under federal criminal law, §3231
    cannot furnish jurisdiction, and the 14-day limit for appeals
    in criminal cases does not govern. Jurisdiction must come
    from 
    28 U.S.C. §1331
     (federal question) or §1346(b) (civil suits
    in which the United States is a defendant). The time limit for
    appeal thus is 60 days. Fed. R. App. P. 4(a)(1)(B)(i). Jaquez’s
    appeal was filed within 60 days of Magistrate Judge Gotsch’s
    order—but if that order is not a final decision of the district
    court, a vital condition for appeal under §1291 is missing.
    Section 636 of Title 28 permits district courts to assign
    many procedural mahers to magistrate judges. The reference
    here, if proper at all, rests on §636(b)(3), which permits the
    assignment of “such additional duties as are not inconsistent
    with the Constitution and laws of the United States.” See
    Gomez v. United States, 
    490 U.S. 858
     (1989) (discussing mahers
    assignable under §636(b)(3)). Other subsections do not fit. The
    various subsections of §636(a) are irrelevant (for example, this
    is not the trial of a pehy offense). Section 636(b)(1) covers as-
    signments of pretrial mahers, and Jaquez’s request is not pre-
    liminary to a trial. Nor is it a poshrial maher within the scope
    4                                                   No. 21-1491
    of §636(b)(2). The reference covers the whole suit, which
    sought the disclosure of information that had been gathered
    years earlier.
    Reliance on §636(b)(3) creates an immediate snag, because
    it is not clear that the Northern District of Indiana has adopted
    a rule permihing the reference to magistrate judges of mahers
    related to wiretaps. The clerk who sent Jaquez’s request to
    Magistrate Judge Gotsch may have assumed that only the
    pen-register papers were at issue. Magistrate Judge Gotsch
    did not order disclosure of any wiretap information, but nei-
    ther did he discuss his authority (if any) to rule at all on such
    a request.
    Whether or not a magistrate judge can hear requests to un-
    seal documents related to wiretaps, the norm for all mahers
    referred to a magistrate judge under §636(b) is that a district
    judge must give the subject independent consideration before
    the decision becomes final. See, e.g., United States v. Radda@,
    
    447 U.S. 667
     (1980); Mathews v. Weber, 
    423 U.S. 261
     (1976).
    There are exceptions for pretrial discovery (which this is not)
    and situations in which the litigants have consented to the en-
    try of final decision by a magistrate judge. 
    28 U.S.C. §636
    (c)(3).
    If all parties have so consented, then an appeal may be taken
    from a magistrate judge to the court of appeals; otherwise a
    final decision by a district judge is essential. See also Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 73(a).
    Section 636(c)(3) does not authorize this appeal, for two
    reasons. First, it applies only when the district court as an in-
    stitution has decided that a particular variety of case may be
    resolved by magistrate judges. 
    28 U.S.C. §636
    (c)(1). As we’ve
    mentioned, the Northern District of Indiana has not made
    such a decision for wiretap-related mahers. Second, neither
    No. 21-1491                                                     5
    Jaquez nor the United States consented under §636(c)(3) to the
    entry of final decision by a magistrate judge. It follows that
    Magistrate Judge Gotsch’s decision is not appealable to the
    Seventh Circuit.
    Not so fast!, the United States responds. True, there was
    not a proper reference under §636(c)(1). True, the parties did
    not consent under §636(c)(3). But still, the United States in-
    sists, this proceeding is over in the district court, so the deci-
    sion must be “final” and appealable under §1291.
    If that were so, then §636(c) would be effectively oblite-
    rated. Anyone dissatisfied by a magistrate judge’s decision
    could appeal to the court of appeals simply by waiting until it
    was too late to ask the district judge for review, then filing an
    appeal. That can’t work. The direct-appeal procedure requires
    consent by the district court (§636(c)(1)) and by all parties
    (§636(c)(3)), not just by one party who wants to bypass a dis-
    trict judge. We have dismissed appeals when even a single lit-
    igant has failed to consent. See, e.g., Coleman v. Labor and In-
    dustry Review Commission, 
    860 F.3d 461
     (7th Cir. 2017); Mark I,
    Inc. v. Gruber, 
    38 F.3d 369
     (7th Cir. 1994). See also Roell v.
    Withrow, 
    538 U.S. 580
     (2003) (discussing the requirements for
    a direct appeal from a magistrate judge’s decision). If the po-
    sition the United States takes in this case is right, then all of
    those decisions must be wrong.
    The United States relies exclusively on United States v.
    Meux, 
    597 F.3d 835
     (7th Cir. 2010). Meux deals with 
    28 U.S.C. §3008
    , part of the Federal Debt Collection Procedures Act.
    Section 3008 reads: “A district court of the United States may
    assign its duties in proceedings under this chapter to a United
    States magistrate judge to the extent not inconsistent with the
    Constitution and laws of the United States.” Meux holds that
    6                                                   No. 21-1491
    a magistrate judge’s final decision under this section is ap-
    pealable under §1291 because the district court’s whole power
    has been delegated. The parties need not consent, and a dis-
    trict judge will never review the magistrate judge’s decision.
    We recognize that §3008 and §636 have some language in
    common, but their structure is fundamentally different. The
    norm under §636, as Radda@ and Weber explain, is review by
    a district judge—and skipping past the district judge in favor
    of appellate review requires compliance with §636(c). We
    could not treat §636 as if it were a clone of §3008 without toss-
    ing out the many distinctive features of §636.
    Jaquez’s appeal must be dismissed because the order was
    not entered by a district judge, and neither the district court
    nor the parties used the direct-appeal procedure allowed by
    §636(c). Because we lack appellate jurisdiction, we also lack
    authority to remand this proceeding to the district court or
    direct it to proceed in any particular way. All we can do, and
    all we do do, is dismiss this appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
    The appeal is dismissed.