concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I respectfully dissent. The issue before us is not a difficult one, despite the lengthy and technical opinion which follows. This case involves the application of straightforward principles of statutory construction to an ordinary statutory-construction problem. Under these principles, when specific and general provisions in a statute are irreconcilable, the specific language prevails over the general. In addition, a statute must not be construed to render one provision a nullity. The majority has attempted to apply Supreme Court cases in which these principles are not applicable, to this case in which they are. The result is a masterpiece of illogic, which unfortunately requires a detailed and complex response.
I agree with the majority that Clark’s claim based on the incident occurring while he was in pretrial detention is a challenge to a condition of confinement in light of McCarthy v. Bronson, — U.S. —, 111 S.Ct. 1737, 114 L.Ed.2d 194 (1991). In my judgment, however, the claim based on the *1369booking incident does not fall within the statutory language of section 636(b)(1)(B) as construed in McCarthy, and referral of that claim is therefore not authorized by that section. Finally, I cannot agree that referral of this prisoner’s civil rights claim is authorized by section 636(b)(3), or that an unauthorized referral is a nonjurisdictional defect subject to waiver. Because a prisoner’s suit for pre-confinement violations of his civil rights is the same as any other plaintiff’s civil action, the logical extension of the majority’s reading of section 636(b)(3) would permit a district court to refer to a magistrate the entire civil trial of any plaintiff, without consent, so long as the district court retained de novo review as specified by section 636(b)(1)(C). Congress did not intend such a result. I therefore respectfully dissent.
I.
The booking incident occurred during Clark’s arrest by his parole officer at the county parole office, before he was confined at the county jail. Clark contends that when he objected to being photographed without an attorney, the parole officer pushed him against the wall and lifted his handcuffed arms over his head, aggravating a prior back injury. I find no support in McCarthy for concluding that this claim challenges a condition of confinement.
The Court in McCarthy rested its decision on two policy grounds: the benefits of referring a broad range of cases, and the difficulty of distinguishing between isolated incidents and ongoing practices with respect to whether a claim involves a condition of confinement. 111 S.Ct. at 1742. The focus for assessing those policy considerations was whether an isolated episode of unconstitutional conduct by prison administrators during incarceration constituted a condition of confinement. In this case, we consider a claim of excessive force incident to arrest and prior to incarceration; the plaintiff simply happened to be in prison at the time he filed suit. Although under McCarthy isolated incidents are now considered conditions of confinement, the absence of confinement is the dispositive factor here. The policy concern arising from the difficulty in distinguishing between isolated incidents and ongoing practices in prison is thus not at issue.
Moreover, to construe “confinement” so broadly as to include the facts at issue here would render that term virtually meaningless. See Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. v. United States Envtl. Protection Agency, 822 F.2d 104, 113 (D.C.Cir.1987) (“It would be illegitimate for the judiciary, in pursuit of some overriding Congressional goal ..., to tear asunder a specific provision which Congress saw fit to enact.”). The district court’s referral of this claim to the magistrate was not authorized under section 636(b)(1)(B).
II.
I cannot agree with the majority that referral of this claim was nonetheless proper under section 636(b)(3). In my view, this conclusion is not compelled by Peretz v. United States, — U.S. —, 111 S.Ct. 2661, 115 L.Ed.2d 808 (1991). To the contrary, I believe Peretz is distinguishable in critical respects. Allowing section 636(b)(3) to override the specific limitations set out in sections 636(b)(1)(B) and 636(c)(1) under the circumstances here renders those provisions a nullity. In so doing, the majority violates controlling rules of statutory construction recognized and applied by the Supreme Court in ascertaining whether a referral is authorized by section 636(b)(3).
The Court in Peretz resolved an issue left open in Gomez v. United States, 490 U.S. 858, 109 S.Ct. 2237, 104 L.Ed.2d 923 (1989). In Gomez, the Court addressed the propriety of designating a magistrate to select a jury in a criminal case over the defendant’s objection. The issue there was whether this referral was authorized under Section 636(b)(3), which provides that a “magistrate may be assigned such additional duties as are not inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the United States.” The Court concluded that presiding over jury selection in a felony case without the defendant’s consent is not *1370among those additional duties. 490 U.S. at 871-76, 109 S.Ct. at 2245-48.
In Peretz, the Court considered whether the defendant’s express consent warrants a different result, and broke the inquiry down into three questions:
“1. Does 28 U.S.C. § 636 permit a magistrate to conduct the voir dire in a felony trial if the defendant consents?
“2. If 28 U.S.C. § 636 permits a magistrate to conduct a felony trial voir dire provided that the defendant consents, is the statute consistent with Article III?
“3. If the magistrate’s supervision of the voir dire in petitioner’s trial was error, did the conduct of petitioner and his attorney constitute a waiver of the right to raise this error on appeal?”
111 S.Ct. at 2664 (quoting the grant of petition for certiorari, — U.S. —, 111 S.Ct. 781, 112 L.Ed.2d 844 (1991)). The Court held that “the Act’s ‘additional duties’ clause permits a magistrate to supervise jury selection in a felony trial provided the parties consent.” Id., 111 S.Ct. at 2667. The Court then moved to the second question set out above and concluded that such a delegation was not constitutionally infirm. Id. at 2669. Finally, the Court observed that its resolution of the statutory and constitutional questions made discussion of the waiver question unnecessary.
In view of the critical distinction between the referral at issue in Peretz and the one in this case, I am persuaded that the analysis of the section 636(b)(3) authorization in Peretz does not affect the analysis of this issue here. As I discuss below, the Act carefully delineates precisely what types of civil matters may be conducted by a magistrate, and under what conditions. Clark’s civil action is governed by these sections of the Act. In contrast, neither the text of the statute nor its legislative history mentions a magistrate’s conduct of jury voir dire in a felony case. Peretz, 111 S.Ct. at 2666-67. Consequently, the Court in Gomez and Peretz was required to determine whether referral with and without consent was authorized by section 636(b)(3) under the principle that “[w]hen a statute creates an office to which it assigns specific duties, those duties outline the attributes of the office. Any additional duties performed pursuant to a general authorization in the statute reasonably should bear some relation to the specified duties.” Id. at 2666 & n. 7 (quoting Gomez, 490 U.S. at 864, 109 S.Ct. at 2241). The Court had to determine the conditions for referral of felony voir dire by analogizing that function to other functions specified by the Act.
Under this principle, the Court in Gomez concluded that magistrate voir dire without consent was not an additional duty authorized by section 636(b)(3). The Court pointed out that the Act expressly grants magistrates the authority to conduct jury trials of civil and criminal misdemeanor cases only with consent. 490 U.S. at 870-71, 109 S.Ct. at 2244-45. Seating a jury without consent was held impermissible because it did not bear a sufficient relation to the specified duties of conducting civil and misdemeanor trials upon consent. In Per-etz, the Court reached a contrary conclusion with respect to magistrate jury selection with consent, holding that this function was analogous to specified trial functions performed with consent. In both cases, because jury voir dire was not mentioned in the Act or the legislative history, the Court had to look to comparable specified duties; consent was the critical element in those duties. “[Tjhose specified duties that were comparable to jury selection in a felony trial could be performed only with the consent of the litigants.” Peretz, 111 S.Ct. at 2666.
The Court has indicated that a different analysis is applicable when, as here, a referral under the “additional duties” clause would defeat a specific limitation otherwise imposed by the Act.
“The district court retains the power to assign to magistrates unspecified ‘additional duties,’ subject only to conditions or review that the court may choose to impose. By a literal reading this additional duties clause would permit magistrates to conduct felony trials. But the carefully defined grant of authority to conduct trials of civil matters and of minor criminal cases should be con*1371strued as an implicit withholding of the authority to preside at a felony trial.”
Gomez, 490 U.S. at 871-72, 109 S.Ct. at 2245 (emphasis added). Under this principle, a “carefully defined grant of authority” in the Act cannot be overridden by invoking section 636(b)(3) to validate the referral of an otherwise unauthorized matter.
The statutory scheme for referring civil trials, or portions thereof, to a magistrate is carefully defined in the Act. Under section 636(b)(1)(A), a judge may designate a magistrate to hear and determine all pretrial matters except those dispositive motions specifically listed in that section. Pretrial dispositions under this section are appealable to the district judge, who reviews the magistrate’s order to determine whether it is clearly erroneous or contrary to law.1 In other words, as to section 636(b)(1)(A) determinations by the magistrate, the district court conducts a limited review similar to an appellate court.
Under section 636(b)(1)(B), a magistrate may be designated to conduct evidentiary hearings and submit reports and recommendations on listed dispositive motions, prisoner habeas petitions, and prisoner petitions challenging conditions of confinement.2 Section 636(b)(1)(C) provides that the district court must “make a de novo determination of those portions of the report or specified findings or recommendations to which objection is made.” (Emphasis added). Referrals under either section 636(b)(1)(A) or (b)(1)(B) may be made without consent. Clearly, dispositive pretrial motions and the prisoner petitions described in section 636(b)(1)(B) could not be referred to a magistrate under the “additional duties” provision of section 636(b)(3) with the purpose of subjecting them to the more limited district court review specified for pretrial motions in section 636(b)(1)(A).
An analogous point was examined in Taberer v. Armstrong World Indus., Inc., 954 F.2d 888 (3d Cir.1992), where the court described the significant difference between an initial finding of contempt by the district court as opposed to review de novo under section 636(b)(1)(C) of a magistrate’s finding of contempt.
“Whereas section 636(b)(1)(C) requires the district judge to make a de novo determination, section 636(e) requires the district judge to conduct a de novo hearing. In United States v. Raddatz, 447 U.S. 667, 100 S.Ct. 2406, 65 L.Ed.2d 424 (1980), the Supreme Court distinguished a de novo determination from a de novo hearing. A de novo determination requires the district judge to ‘consider the record which has been developed before the magistrate and make his own determination on the basis of that record, without being bound to adopt the findings and conclusions of the magistrate.’ H.R.Rep. No. 94-1609, 94th Cong.2d Sess. 3 in 1976 U.S. Code Cong. & Admin.News 6163 (quoted in Raddatz, 447 U.S. at 675, 100 S.Ct. at 2412). In contrast, a de novo hearing entails a new proceeding at which the decision is based solely on the evidence freshly presented at the new proceeding. See Raddatz, 447 U.S. at 673-76, 100 S.Ct. at 2411-*137212.... In other words, when making a de novo determination, the district court reviews the record before the magistrate judge, but owes no deference to the magistrate judge’s findings and conclusions. When holding a de novo hearing, however, the district court acts as a trial court.”
Id. at 904. Similarly, when a matter is referred to a magistrate under section 636(b)(3), the initial trial is held before the magistrate, who assesses the credibility of the witnesses and makes findings of facts. Although the district court in the instant case made “a de novo determination,” as the court in Taberer recognizes, such a determination falls short of an actual hearing before the district court where that court would have made its own credibility assessment.
Finally, section 636(c)(1) provides that a magistrate “[u]pon consent of the parties ... may conduct any or all proceedings in a jury or nonjury civil matter and order the entry of judgment in the case, when specially designated to exercise such jurisdiction by the district court or courts he serves.” 28 U.S.C. § 636(c)(1) (emphasis added). Section 636(c)(2) sets out specific requirements for obtaining consent:
“If a magistrate is designated to exercise civil jurisdiction under paragraph (1) of this subsection, the clerk of court shall, at the time the action is filed, notify the parties of their right to consent to the exercise of such jurisdiction. The decision of the parties shall be communicated to the clerk of the court. Thereafter, neither the district judge nor the magistrate shall attempt to persuade or induce any party to consent to reference of any civil matter to a magistrate. Rules of court for the reference of civil matters to magistrates shall include procedures to protect the voluntariness of the parties’ consent.”
28 U.S.C. § 636(c)(2) (emphasis added). Referral without such express consent is unauthorized. In light of section 636(c)(1), it is readily apparent that the “additional duties” provision of section 636(b)(3) does not authorizes a district court to refer an entire civil trial to a magistrate, without the parties’ consent, for final disposition.
As I have outlined above, the power to refer a section 1983 action to a magistrate is specifically circumscribed by two provisions of the Act. Only those actions which constitute prisoner petitions challenging conditions of confinement are referable without consent under section 636(b)(1)(B). Prisoner section 1983 actions that do not challenge conditions of confinement are equivalent to all other civil petitions under the Act, and are only referable under section 636(c) with the express consent of the parties. Under the canon of construction the Court has indicated is applicable here, see Gomez, 490 U.S. at 871-72, 109 S.Ct. at 2245-46, “ ‘legislative affirmative description’ implies denial of the non-described powers.”3 Continental Casualty Co. v. United States, 314 U.S. 527, 533, 62 S.Ct. 393, 396, 86 L.Ed. 426 (1942); see also United States Marshals Serv. v. Means, 741 F.2d 1053, 1056 (8th Cir.1984) (en banc); Marshall v. Gibson’s Prods., Inc., 584 F.2d 668, 675 (5th Cir.1978); 2A N. Singer, Sutherland Statutory Construction § 47.23 (Sands 4th ed. 1984 rev.).
The articulation of specific duties must be construed as implicitly withholding other duties not so specified, particularly when, as here, the contrary construction would in effect render the specific limitations a nullity. As the court in Olympia Hotels Corp. v. Johnson Wax Dev. Corp., 908 F.2d 1363, 1368 (7th Cir.1990), pointed out, there would not “be much point to the *1373elaborate provisions in section 636(c) for the conduct of civil trials ... by a magistrate with the consent of both parties if a district judge could compel the parties, against their wishes, to submit to a magistrate’s conducting vital stages in the trial.” See also Roberts v. Manson, 876 F.2d 670, 672 (8th Cir.1989) (section 636(b)(3) “limited by the accompanying provisions and the overall structure of section 636(b)”); cf. Natural Resources Defense Council, 822 F.2d at 113 (“To read out of a statutory provision a clause setting forth a specific condition or trigger to the provision’s applicability is, we should have thought, an entirely unacceptable method of construing statutes.”). Consequently, section 636(b)(3) cannot be construed as authority for referring to a magistrate a section 1983 action that does not challenge a condition of confinement, absent the plaintiff’s express consent.
I find significant support for this conclusion in Taberer, 954 F.2d at 901-08. In that case, which was decided after Peretz, the court declined to rely on section 636(b)(3) to uphold a referral otherwise contrary to the Act. In so doing, the court implicitly recognized the critical distinction between a referral under section 636(b)(3) that would defeat express limitations otherwise imposed by the Act, and a referral that would not. See id. at 908 n. 29. This distinction is one that the majority has wholly failed to address. See op. at 1366 n. 6.
Congress has made the specific judgment that a magistrate is not authorized to conduct civil trials without the plaintiff’s express consent. Congress has also limited the magistrate’s conduct of evidentiary hearings without consent to prisoner condition-of-confinement and habeas cases. A prisoner’s civil rights suit for pre-confinement conduct is the same as any other citizens civil rights action. I see no principled distinction between permitting section 636(b)(3) to override the specific limitations on the reference of a prisoner’s civil rights action, and permitting that section to override the limitations imposed on the reference in any other civil action for final judgment on dispositive motions, for the conduct of an entire civil trial without consent, or for the reference of felony trials. I simply do not believe Congress intended such a result. See Taberer, 954 F.2d at 908; Fowler v. Jones, 899 F.2d 1088, 1092 (11th Cir.1990) (express consent required for magistrate jury trial of prisoner’s free exercise challenge under section 1983); accord Olympia Hotels Corp., 908 F.2d at 1368-69; Roberts, 876 F.2d at 673. Accordingly, I would hold that the referral of Clark’s booking incident claim was not authorized under any section of the Act.
III.
The Court in Peretz concluded that the referral at issue there was authorized under the Act and created no Article III constitutional problems. Therefore, the Court found it “unnecessary to discuss the third question that we asked the parties to brief and argue;” 111 S.Ct. at 2671, namely whether “the conduct of petitioner and his attorney [in expressly consenting to the reference] constitute a waiver of the right to raise this [issue] on appeal,” id. at 2664. After stating that it need not discuss the waiver issue, the Court made the following somewhat opaque observations:
“We note, however, that the Solicitor General conceded that it was error to make the reference to the Magistrate in this case and relied entirely on the argument that the error was waived. Although that concession deprived us of the benefit of an adversary presentation, it of course does not prevent us from adopting the legal analysis of those Courts of Appeals that share our interpretation of the statute as construed in Gomez.”
Id. at 2671. In other words, while the Solicitor General’s concession that the reference was error deprived the Court of an adversarial presentation on the issues it had decided, i.e., the construction of the Act and the constitutionality of that construction, the Court could nonetheless reject that concession and decide these issues by adopting the legal analysis of courts whose views were contrary to the Solicitor *1374General’s. The Court then specifically-stated its agreement
“with the view of the majority of Circuit Judges who have considered this issue, both before and after our decision in Gomez, that permitting a magistrate to conduct the voir dire in a felony trial when the defendant raises no objection is entirely faithful to the congressional purpose in enacting and amending the Federal Magistrates Act.”
Id. The quote simply cannot logically be read, as the majority reads it, as dicta on the issue the Court specifically stated it was not deciding: i.e., whether an unauthorized referral is a matter subject to waiver. See op. at 1367 & n. 8. When read in conjunction with the Court's immediately prior comments on the lack of an adversary presentation of the issues it did reach and its reference to legislative purposes, the Court’s statement that legislative intent is not undermined by permitting magistrate voir dire when the defendant “raises no objection” does no more than bolster its resolution of the issues of statutory construction and constitutionality it had actually decided. Indeed, the Court’s statement plainly implies that legislative intent would be undermined by relying on lack of objection when the legislature has expressed its intent to require explicit consent.
Moreover, in light of the significant difference between the reference at issue here and that in Gomez and Peretz, which I have set out in Part II of my dissent, I do not find the cases upon which the majority relies persuasive on the issue of waiver. See op. at 1367-1368. With the exception of the Fifth Circuit cases of Mylett v. Jeane, 879 F.2d 1272 (5th Cir.1989) (per curiam), and Archie v. Christian, 808 F.2d 1132 (5th Cir.1987) (en banc), these cases all address referring jury voir dire in a criminal case. Such a reference is not addressed in either the Magistrates Act or its legislative history. In those cases, the issue of consent and/or failure to object is relevant to the propriety of referring criminal jury voir dire because it is critical to whether such referral is authorized under section 636(b)(3) and to whether it is constitutional, not because it is an express requirement of such a reference.
Here, to the contrary, the Act specifically addresses the referral of prisoner petitions, authorizing under section 636(b)(1)(B) the reference without consent of only those petitions challenging conditions of confinement. All other references of this nature require express consent under section 636(c)(1). The claim referred here is not based on a condition of confinement authorized by section 636(b)(1)(B), cannot be viewed as an additional duty authorized by section 636(b)(3), and lacks the express consent required by section 636(c)(1). The issue is thus whether the statutorily required express consent necessary to bring this reference within the ambit of the Act, as I construe it, is a nonwaivable jurisdictional prerequisite.
The majority of circuits which considered the issue prior the Gomez and Peretz decisions concluded that an improper reference is a matter of jurisdiction and therefore not subject to waiver or harmless-error analysis. In Houghton v. Osborne, 834 F.2d 745 (9th Cir.1987), for example, the Ninth Circuit considered facts closely analogous to those before us. There, the district court had referred a prisoner’s civil rights action to a magistrate who held an evidentiary hearing on the merits of the claim and filed proposed findings and recommendations that were adopted by the district court. On appeal, the court held sua sponte that the prisoner’s claim did not challenge a condition of confinement, and that the district court therefore “ ‘lacked the jurisdiction to refer this matter to the magistrate to conduct an evidentiary hearing on the merits of Houghton’s 1983 action.’ ” Id. at 750. Similarly, in Hall v. Sharpe, 812 F.2d 644 (11th Cir.1987), the district court purported to refer a prisoner’s civil rights suit to a magistrate under sections 636(b)(1) and (b)(3) for a trial before an advisory jury. The magistrate issued a report recommending acceptance of the jury verdict, which the district court adopted in entering final judgment against the plaintiff. On appeal, the Eleventh Circuit concluded that “the district court’s referral of this case was not authorized by any provision of the Magis*1375trate’s Act, 28 U.S.C. § 636, and thus the magistrate was without jurisdiction to conduct the trial.” Id. at 646; see also Fowler v. Jones, 899 F.2d at 1092 (following Hall); Jaliwala v. United States, 945 F.2d 221, 223-24 (7th Cir.1991) (explicit consent required for magistrate to have jurisdiction to enter final judgment under section 636(c)); In re San Vicente Medical Partners Ltd., 865 F.2d 1128 (9th Cir.1989) (same); Lovelace v. Dall, 820 F.2d 223 (7th Cir.1987) (per curiam) (same); Frank v. Arnold (In re Morrissey), 717 F.2d 100 (3d Cir.1983) (magistrate had no jurisdiction to hear appeal from bankruptcy court order notwithstanding parties’ express consent); Taylor v. Oxford, 575 F.2d 152 (7th Cir.1978) (magistrate had no jurisdiction over motion to dismiss for failure to state claim referred under section 636(b)(3) for final disposition pursuant to parties’ stipulation and local rule); but see Archie, 808 F.2d at 1134-35 (improper reference under sections 636(b)(1)(B) and (b)(3) matter of procedure rather than jurisdiction).
In holding that an unauthorized referral is not a jurisdictional defect, the majority relies on several cases decided after Gomez that concern the failure to object to criminal jury voir dire before a magistrate. The majority thus persists in failing to recognize the dispositive distinction between invoking section 636(b)(3) to authorize a referral not otherwise addressed in the Act, and relying on that section to legitimate a referral that defeats otherwise expressly applicable limitations. Because the opinions which the majority cites do not address the issue before us, i.e., whether violations of express statutory restrictions create nonwaivable jurisdictional defects, those cases do not support the majority’s position. To the contrary, the only cases I have discovered decided after Gomez and Peretz that deal with the issue of the waiver of express conditions have refused to find such limitations waivable. See Taberer, 954 F.2d at 907-08 & n. 29; Jaliwala, 945 F.2d at 223-24.
Taberer makes the very distinction that has eluded the majority here by expressly distinguishing that court’s opinion in Government of the Virgin Islands v. Williams, 892 F.2d 305 (3d Cir.1989), cert. denied, 495 U.S. 949, 110 S.Ct. 2211, 109 L.Ed.2d 537 (1990), a case upon which the majority mistakenly relies. The facts in Taberer are analogous to those here. The provision of the Magistrate’s Act at issue was section 636(e), which addresses the procedures dealing with possibly contemptuous acts in a proceeding before a magistrate. The magistrate is authorized to certify the facts to the district court and issue an order requiring the party to appear before that court. The power to take evidence and determine punishment, however, is committed only to the district court.
In Taberer, the magistrate held an evi-dentiary hearing, found contempt, and then referred the matter to the district court, which treated the magistrate’s decision as a proposed finding and recommendation pursuant to section 636(b)(1)(B). The court of appeals held that this procedure was not authorized by section 636(e), nor was it otherwise authorized by 18 U.S.C. § 3401(b), which provides that magistrates may conduct misdemeanor trials only with the defendant’s specific, written consent. In so doing, the court refused to find a waiver of the consent requirement arising from the defendant’s appearance without objection at the evidentiary hearing before the magistrate.
“Although failure to raise an objection in the first instance ordinarily waives the right to raise the matter on appeal, Congress has specified that criminal defendants must give their express, written consent to trial before a magistrate judge. Therefore, cases inferring waiver of rights from a criminal defendant’s failure to object do not apply here. To hold that a criminal defendant may waive the Act’s consent requirement implicitly is to ignore Congress’s insistence upon explicit, written consent.”
Taberer, 954 F.2d at 908 (emphasis added). Accordingly the court held that in proceeding without the defendant’s consent, “the magistrate judge exceeded his authority under the Federal Magistrates Act,” id., and cited In re Morrissey, 717 F.2d 100, 103 (3d Cir.1983) as authority for “treating *1376improper reference to [a] magistrate judge as a jurisdictional defect to be noticed by [the] court on its own motion,” Taberer, 954 F.2d at 908 n. 29. Similarly, the court in Jaliwala, 945 F.2d 221, rather than following its opinion in United States v. Wey, 895 F.2d 429 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, — U.S. —, 110 S.Ct. 3283, 111 L.Ed.2d 792 (1990), upon which the majority also mistakenly relies, refused to infer consent to proceed before a magistrate under section 636(c)(1) from the conduct of the parties. “ ‘We see no virtue in “permitting] our jurisdiction to depend on inferences where both the statute and common sense call for precision.” ’ ” Jaliwala, 945 F.2d at 224 (quoting Silberstein v. Silberstein, 859 F.2d 40, 42 (7th Cir.1988)).
Contrary to the above cases, the majority fails to perceive that while the limitations in the Magistrates Act do restrict a magistrate’s authority to act in a case properly before the district court, the Act also restricts the district court’s power to refer a matter to a magistrate. Congressionally imposed limits on the exercise of judicial power other than the delineation of subject matter jurisdiction are nonetheless jurisdictional. See Lauf v. E. G. Shinner & Co., 303 U.S. 323, 330, 58 S.Ct. 578, 581, 82 L.Ed. 872 (1938); 13 C. Wright, A. Miller & E. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3526 at 227-28 (2d ed. 1984).
“[T]he jurisdiction of a magistrate to decide a case is not based solely on the consent of the parties, but derives from a proper designation by the district court. Because district court jurisdiction is statutory, its ability to make a proper designation of, and thereby to confer jurisdiction on, a magistrate is also a creature of statute.”
In re Morrissey, 717 F.2d at 102. I simply cannot accept an analysis under which parties by their conduct may extend the jurisdiction of both the magistrate and the district court beyond that established by Congress.
Accordingly, I dissent.
. This subsection provides in full:
"A judge may designate a magistrate to hear and determine any pretrial matter pending before the court, except a motion for injunc-tive relief, for judgment on the pleadings, for summary judgment, to dismiss or quash an indictment or information made by the defendant, to suppress evidence in a criminal case, to dismiss or to permit maintenance of a class action, to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, and to involuntarily dismiss an action. A Judge of the court may reconsider any pretrial matter under this subparagraph (A) where it has been shown that the magistrate's order is clearly erroneous or contrary to law.”
28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(A).
. This subsection provides in full:
"A judge may also designate a magistrate to conduct hearings, including evidentiary hearings, and to submit to a judge of the court proposed findings of fact and recommendations for the disposition, by a judge of the court, of any motion excepted in subpara-graph (A), of applications for posttrial relief made by individuals convicted of criminal offenses and of prisoner petitions challenging conditions of confinement.”
28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(B).
. I note the view of Justice Scalia that
"Gomez was driven not primarily by the constitutional problems associated with forcing a litigant to adjudicate his federal claim before a magistrate, but by ordinary principles of statutory interpretation. By specifically authorizing magistrates to perform duties in civil and misdemeanor trials, and specifying the manner in which parties were to express their consent in those situations, the statute suggested absence of authority to preside over felony trials through some (unspecified) mode of consent. The canon of ejusdem generis keeps the ‘additional duties’ clause from swallowing up the rest of the statute.”
Peretz v. United States, 111 S.Ct. 2661, 2679 (Scalia, J., dissenting).