(a) When a Demand Is Made.
When jury trial has been demanded under Rule 38, the action must be
designated on the docket as a jury action. The trial
on all issues so demanded must be by jury unless:
(1) the parties or their attorneys file a stipulation to
a nonjury trial or so stipulate on the record; or
(2) the court, on motion or on its own, finds that on
some or all of those issues there is no federal
right to a jury trial.
(b) When No Demand Is Made.
Issues on which a
jury trial is not properly demanded are to be tried by
the court. But the court may, on motion, order a jury
trial on any issue for which a jury might have been
demanded.
(c)
Advisory Jury; Jury Trial by Consent.
In an
action not triable of right by a jury, the court, on
motion or on its own:
(1) may try any issue with an advisory jury; or
(2) may, with the parties' consent, try any issue by a
jury whose verdict has the same effect as if a
jury trial had been a matter of right, unless the
action is against the United States and a federal
statute provides for a nonjury trial.