dissenting: Tbe Constitution, Art. I, sec. 13, provides: “No person shall be convicted of any crime but by tbe unanimous verdict of a jury of good and lawful men in open court.” Section 19 of tbe same article provides: “In all controversies at law respecting property tbe ancient mode of trial by jury is one of tbe best securities of tbe rights of tbe people, and ought to remain sacred and inviolable.” Tbe right to trial by jury is beyond controversy, both in civil and criminal cases.
*661Tliere can be no controversy either that the jury here referred to means “twelve men,” not because there is any reference to trial by jury in Magna Carta, or that it would have any authority if there was, but because our Constitution, made by pur people for our own government, provides for a jury, and the word “jury” must be given the signification which it had when the Constitution was adopted, which was a jury of “twelve men.” In some States a jury now may consist of less than twelve, and in several a unanimous verdict is not required. The Supreme Court of the United States in j>assing upon this matter has held, in several cases, that the number that should compose a jury, and whether unanimity should be required or not, is entirely a matter for the people of each State, and that the Fourteenth amendment does not impose any restrictions upon the States in this regard. The requirement in the Fifth and Sixth amendments to the Federal Constitution of a jury trial is held also to apply only to the Federal courts. This matter has been fully discussed and has been settled in Hurtado v. California, 110 U. S., 516; Caldwell v. Texas, 137 U. S., 692; Leeper v. Texas, 139 U. S., 462; Brown v. New Jersey, 175 U. S., 172, and many other cases.
In Maxwell v. Dow, 176 U. S., 581, in sustaining a conviction by a jury of eight, as provided by the Constitution of Utah, Mr. Justice Beckham, reviews the authorities to the above effect, approves them, and says, among other things: “It is emphatically the case of the people by their organic law providing for their own affairs, and we are of opinion they are much better judges of what they ought to have in these respects than any one else can be. The reasons given in the learned and most able opinion of Mr. Justice Mathews in the Hurtado case for the judgment therein rendered, apply with equal force in regard to a trial by a jury of less than twelve jurors. The right to be proceeded against only by indictment and the right to a trial by twelve jurors are of the same nature and are subject to the same judgment' and the people, in the several States have the same right to provide by their organic law. for the change of both or either.” See, also, Cooley Const. Lim. (7 Ed.), 455 et seep
*662Neither the Federal Constitution nor Magna Carta has any bearing upon the subject- There have been law writers and judges who have stated that Magna Carta, ch. 39, guaranteed the right of .tidal by jury; but this view originated at a time when historical statements were received with less investigation than at present. Magna Carta was but one of several agreements made between King John (and later by his son .Henry III) on the one side and the insurgent barons on the other. Magna Carta was sealed (not signed) on Eriday, 19 June, 1215, in the meadow of Runnymede (then a little island) on'the river Thames, 3 miles below Windsor Castle, and in sight from its' towers. It was an agreement between the King on the one hand and the great barons on the other. The words therein, "judi-cium suorum parium/’ had no reference to a trial by jury. Mc-Kechnie Magna Carta, 158, 456, 457; 1 Pollock and Maitland Hist. Eng. Law, 392, 581. About 50 years before, at the Assizes of Clarendon, 1166, Henry II instituted the germ of the grand jury, which at first consisted of twelve men (1 Pollock and Maitland, 131), but thorough investigation has shown that the petty jury was not known in England till nearly 150 years after Magna Carta. At first the verdict was rendered by a majority; that is, seven.was a valid verdict. Britton I, 31. There had been, further back, in remoter times, instances in which the witnesses were called upon to aid the judicial officer in passing upon a criminal offense. But that cannot be mistaken for the jury which when gradually instituted soon became of the fixed number of twelve, and from which witnesses are excluded. Magna Carta could not refer to the “jury,” which was then unknown. ■
Besides, the word "judicium” does not mean “jury,” but “judgment.” McKeehnie Magna Carta, 407. What the barons meant in Magna Carta was not that every one should have the right to an impartial trial by jury, for at that time juries were unknown, and the common people had indeed less consideration from the mail-clad barons than from the King. What the barons did stipulate for was a “special privilege” for themselves. The King, when in need of money, had been in the habit of sen ding, his officials and judges-to try charges, most *663often trumped up, against wealthy barons and extorting’ large 'supplies out of them. Therefore this stipulation in Magna Carta granted them the special privilege that when the King had any charge against one of their order he should not seiid his judges against them, but the charge should be tried by men of their-own order, i. e., by barons. They were to be convicted and sentenced, not by the King’s judges, as the common people were, but they were subject only' to "judicium suorum parium" i. to the “judgment of their equals.” The common people might be tried by the judges, who were all appointed by the King and removable at his pleasure. But the barons and bishops made him agree that when he had any charge against them they should he tried and judged “by their peers,” that is, by men of their own order. The judges were commoners, and not the peers or equals of the barons, who would have scorned the idea of being tried by them. 1 Pollock and Maitland Hist. Eng. Law, 152, 539, 581. The judges were the equals of other freemen, and could try them. As to the vast masses of the people, the majority of whom were not even freemen, they were guaranteed no trial except in the barons’ courts, .who were practically their owners. The barons, therefore, in stipulating for a trial of “every freeman” by their peers, were .stipulating for a special privilege exempting them from the jurisdiction of the King’s courts. This privilege under the circumstances may have been very necessary for their protection, for the judges were the King’s agents. But the provision cannot be lauded'as guaranteeing to us “trial by jury,” which was then an unheard of institution, and to which the barons would under no circumstances have submitted. In McKechnie on Magna Carta the original sources of information are marshaled and interestingly discussed.
King John possessed no power he could confer upon or withhold from the people of this State. No agreements made between him and'his barons, which were constantly broken, can restrict or bind us. Magna Carta and other similar contracts between them are of interest as historical documents of a stage far below ours in the development of human rights. They confer no rights upon us, still less do they restrict our right to *664self-government. ¥e base our right to this, not upon a grant from any king, but upon the inherent power to govern ourselves,' restricted only by the Constitution and laws which we ourselves have'made. These old documents are useful only to explain the meaning of words which we have used.
It is universally held that in civil cases trial by jury is simply a'right or privilege, and can be waived, unless there is some statute forbidding it. 24 Cyc., 149; 17 A. and E. (2 Ed.), 1097, and numerous cases cited by both. Embraced in these decisions is also, as a corollary, the proposition that in civil eases, by consent, less than twelve may find a verdict.
In criminal cases there is a wide diversity in the courts. In some States.it is held that a jury can be waived in all criminal cases, as in civil cases, and in others it is held that a jury cannot be waived except in misdemeanors, and in still others it has been "held that a jury cannot be waived in any criminal, case. There is nearly the same diversity as to the right in criminal cases of the defendant to agree that the verdict may be rendered by less than twelve men or dispensing with unanimity, except that there are two or three States which, while holding that a jury cannot be waived, yet hold that by consent of the defendant the jury may consist of less than twelve men, as in this case, otherwise there would be a mistrial. The authorities on these propositions may be found, 24 Cyc., 150, 153; 17 A. and E. (2 Ed.), 1098, in numerous cases there cited. For centuries in criminal cases a defendant retained his right to the ancient mode of “trial by battel,” and could not be tried by a jury except by his consent. Hence the formula we still retain, “How will you be tried?” and the reply, “By God and my country,” i. e., by a jury. 1 Legal Hist. Essays, 657.
As the right to a trial by jury is guaranteed equally by the Constitution in civil and in criminal cases alike, it is difficult to understand why if it is a requirement and not merely a privilege, it can be waived in one class of cases and not in the other. This distinction is not based upon the constitutional phraseology, but upon the view which has happened to be taken by the incumbents of the bench in each State. Among the States which hold that a jury trial can be waived in criminal *665eases are Arkansas, Connecticut, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Nevada, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, Minnesota, Pennsylvania. Among the eases on the point whose reasoning is most worthy of consideration are S. v. Kaufman, 51 Iowa, 579; Com. v. Dailey, 66 Mass. (12 Cush.), 80; Murphy v. Com., 58 Ky. (Met.), 365; S. v. Sackett, 39 Minn., 69; Com. v. Sweet, 4 Pa. Dist., 136; S. v. White, 33 La. Ann., 1219; and there are others.
In this State it has been held that while in civil cases a jury trial can be waived, -this cannot be done in criminal cases. S. v. Stewart, 89 N. C., 564; S. v. Holt, 90 N. C., 573. S. v. Scruggs, 115 N. C., 805, holds, as in S. v. Holt, that a jury trial cannot be waived, but it does not directly pass on the point whether by consent a verdict may not be rendered by a lesser number, though that is a reasonable inference.
There can be no reason shown upon the face of the Constitution why a jury trial should be held to be a privilege in civil cases, but an iron-clad requirement in criminal.. We, however, have, as just said, no case in which it has been expressly held that the trial, at the request of the defendant, cannot proceed with eleven jurors. It would seem that it could, as the Constitution also guarantees the defendant a right to a “speedy trial.” Among able opinions to this effect are Shaw, C. J., in Com. v. Dailey, 66 Mass. (12 Cush.), 80; S. v. Sackett, 39 Minn., 69; Simpson, C. J., in Murphy v. Com., 58 Ky. (1 Met.), 365. To similar purport, S. v. Borowsky, 11 Nev., 119; Connally v. State, 60 Ala., 89; S. v. Kaufman, 51 Iowa, 578. The following cases also hold valid the waiver of any jury in criminal cases. S. v. Worden, 46 Conn., 349; Dillingham v. State, 5 Ohio State, 280; Edwards v. State, 45 N. J. L., 419; Ward v. People, 30 Mich., 116; S. v. Mansfield, 41 Mo., 470; S. v. Cox, 8 Ark. (3 Eng.), 436; and there are others.
It was at the instance and by the request of the defendants in this case that, one of the jurors becoming incapacitated, no mistrial was entered, and it was agreed that the case should proceed with eleven jurors and that no entry should be made. .The judge finds as facts that “the solicitor moved'for a. con*666.tinuance on ground of the absence of two witnesses to the shooting, one being ill and in bed and the other in South Carolina. The defendants resisted the continuance, and insisted on a trial at- that term, and the court denied the motion for continuance. The defendants- did not exhaust their peremptory challenges. The jury was impaneled and an officer sworn, Wednesday. The next morning, before any evidence had been offered, the solicitor asked for the withdrawal of a juror because since the adjournment he and the counsel for the defendants had ascertained that one of the jurors was subject to fits, and that counsel did not think he was mentally, competent to sit on the jury; that the State was willing to call in another juror or to make a mistrial or to get an entirely new panel. Counsel for defendants insisted oh proceeding with eleven men, and thereupon it was agreed in open court, the defendants speaking in open court, through their counsel, and the solicitor for the State, that the case would proceed with eleven jurors, and that the clerk should make no record of the fact that one of the jury had been excused by consent; the defendants.waived their right to have a full panel, and stated that 'no point should ever be raised that only eleven men were in the jury box; and thereupon the court excused said juror and directed the trial to proceed; the two defendants are men of more than ordinary intelligence, McCracken being 27 or 28 years of age and the defendant Rogers about 40 years of age, and their families are prominent and wealthy; both these defendants are possessed of sufficient mental capacity to understand and did understand that both they and their counsel were entering into said agreement and electing to .proceed with eleven jurors by their assent, and that the court consented to this course. These defendants were represented by four able and experienced counsel, one of whom has filled the office of solicitor for two terms.” The trial occupied four days. No objection was made as to the juror being excused until two days after the verdict. The defendants did not ask to discharge their counsel nor did coun-. sel ask to withdraw, and the same counsel who made the agreement made the motion in arrest of judgment upon, the ground that it was invalid.
*667Tbe prisoners have bad every right and privilege wbicb is guaranteed them by the Constitution. They thought it was to their benefit to proceed with eleven jurors, and asked that it should be done. The courts may well scrutinize closely all offers to waive a jury trial in criminal cases, because the defendants may act unadvisedly in some cases, and the consequences may be serious. But this should not cause the Constitution to be construed differently as to the trial by jury in civil cases and in criminal cases.
In the present case the court finds as facts that the prisoners were men of intelligence and means and were represented by several able counsel, one of whom was formerly solicitor for that district for eight years. The prisoners do not show that they suffered any detriment in the course of the trial. They have had a fair trial and they have been deprived of no constitutional right. •
A defendant has a constitutional right to -a speedy trial by jury. Yet he waives this provision by obtaining a continuance. A plea of guilty dispenses with a jury trial altogether. Why, therefore, cannot a defendant agree .to accept a verdict by eleven jurors when he has competent counsel and is himself intelligent, and both his counsel and himself think it for his interest to do so? Especially when this is done with the consent of the court and the solicitor representing the State. There is nothing to indicate that the prisoners suffered any prejudice from the absence of the other juror, and they ought not to obtain any benefit by their breach of good faith.