State v. Wells

Bukch, J.

(concurring specially) : I concur in the decision, but the foregoing opinion does not meet the *795appellant’s.contention. He claims that the jury trial preserved inviolate by the constitution is a trial by a common-law jury of twelve ; that the constitution itself makes no distinction between the trial of felonies and the trial of misdemeanors, and that the language of section 10 of the bill of rights, expressly providing that in all prosecutions the accused shall be allowed a speedy trial by an impartial jury, indicates that any such distinction is unwarranted. If this be true, the legislature may not override the fundamental law and authorize a trial by a jury of any other number in any case.

The authorities cited in the majority opinion are inconclusive. The case of State v. Ebert, 40 Mo. 186, did not relate to trials by jury but to the right to prosecute by information instead of indictment. The case of State of Missouri v. Larger, 45 Mo. 510, discussed nothing but the question of whether the waiver of a trial by jury must be express or whether a mere failure to object to a trial by the court will conclude the defendant.

The case of State v. Mansfield, 41 Mo. 470, was a felony, and not a misdemeanor case. The statements in the opinion relating to the waiver of a jury of twelve in misdemeanor cases were dicta, and the syllabus limited the right of waiver to cases in which the penalty is a fine only. In the case of Darst et al. v. The People, 51 Ill. 286, 288, 2 Am. Rep. 301, the discusión of the question was completely contained in the following statement: “It is' urged that the jury could not be waived, but we know no reason why it may not be in trials for misdemeanors.” In Murphy v. The State, 97 Ind. 579, 585, the court did nothing more than proclaim : “It will not do to say, we think, that this right to a trial by jury is a right which the defendant may not *796waive, if he choose to do so, and if the law provide for such waiver;” and then, to clinch- this argument, it was remarked that if a defendant could not waive a trial by a jury of twelve he could not take a change of venue in face of the constitutional provision giving him the right to a trial in the county in which the offense was committed. In Warwick v. State, 47 Ark. 568, 2 S. W. 335, the statute authorizing a waiver was-consonant with an express provision of the constitution of the state of Arkansas authoi’izing the waiver-of a jury in all cases. Manifestly there is here vouchsafed no reason whatever for making a distinction between the trial of felonies and the tidal of misdemeanors, whether by statute or otherwise, and this-court decided in The State v. Simons, 61 Kan. 752, 60 Pac. 1052, that a trial by a jury of twelve cannot be waived in a felony case.

The right to a trial by jury in all prosecutions is interpreted by the courts to mean the right as it ex isted in all common-law prosecutions. At common law many misdemeanors, including the offense of liquor-selling, wei'e triable without a juxy, and this fact may afford a sufficient basis for the distinction made in methods of trial by the statutes of this state.

In my opinion, however, a better position may be assumed. The provisions of the constitution safeguarding the right of trial by jury are measures of protection and not of coercion, so far as individuals charged with crime are concerned. If their interests were the sole, consideration they might waive the right, although they could not be compelled to do so. In felony cases, however, the consequences of a conviction are of so great importance to society that the state has an especial interest in the procedure by which it may be 'accomplished. A convicted felon *797loses all Ms civil rights; he is civilly dead, and in certain cases may be condemned to death. Therefore, as was declared in The State v. Simons, supra, the state insists upon a trial by a jury of twelve, not because of a demand for it by the accused, but because, from motives of public policy, it is to the interest of the state to accord it. In misdemeanor cases the reaction of the state is much less violent and the consequences of a conviction are much less serious. The interest of society is relaxed, and the will of the accused may be allowed to prevail. When high motives of public interest no longer require that a waiver be absolutely inhibited, the legislature may define the policy of the state respecting the manner of trials. It has done this by authorizing a trial by a jury Of six, if the defendant consent, in misdemeanor cases prosecuted before a justice of the peace, and by providing for a waiver of a jury altogether in all cases except felonies, if the accused, the prosecuting attorney and the court consent. Being allowed to waive a jury entirely, the defendant may waive the cooperation of one or more members of that body, and submit his cause to the others.