(concurring). I concur in the result reached —that is-, that the judgment below should be affirmed, but am not in accord with the views expressed in the opinion that the statute of 1921, which provides: “In all cases where the plaintiff in error shall elect to take up- the entire record with the writ of error, as provided in the act to- which this is a supplement, he may assign as error that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence, whether any exception ha? been taken or not, or whether any motion to acquit has been made or not, and if it shall appear from a consideration of the entire evidence, that such verdict was against the weight of the evidence1 the appellate co-urt- shall remedy such wrong by reversing such verdict and awarding a new trial,” is constitutional.
In my judgment, the act is clearly unconstitutional, in that it attempts to invest this court with’ the function to reverse the verdict of a jury on a question of fact, a function wholly foreign to, and incongruous with, the judicial powers conferred by the constitution. More amply stated, it is a legislative attempt to convert a writ of error in a criminal case, into a rule to show cause, and to allow an appeal where a rule *471to show causo lias been denied or discharged, the plain effect of all this is to alter the institutional character of this court as established by the constitution—that- is, a court to correct errors of law in judgments brought before it for review, by writ of error, and not to pass upon questions of fact which were in the province ol: a jury to decide.
It cannot he veiy well gainsaid that the legislature has power to confer additional jurisdiction upon courts of its own creation, within constitutional limitation, or upon courts which have their basic origin in and their jurisdictional functions prescribed by the constitution, so long as the institutional character of such courts is not altered, or no constitutional provision encroached upon. And in the light of this declaration the constitutionality of the statute under consideration must he tested.
The constitutional provisions, the consideration of which are involved in properly deciding this important question, are, first, article 3, which provides that the powers of the government shall be divided into three distinct departments—the legislative, executive and judicial; and expressly forbids those persons belonging to, or constituting one of these departments from exercising any of the powers properly belonging to either of the others, except as herein expressly provided.
In this connection it suffices to say that it needs no citation of authorities toi establish that a legislature may not lawfully do indirectly what it is forbidden to do by the constitution in express terms. This clause of the constitution is a limitation upon the powers of the legislature as well as upon the executive and judiciary.
The legislature may not, therefore, in the guise of conferring additional jurisdiction upon a constitutional court whose judicial functions are prescribed by the constitution in express and unequivocal terms, alter, add to or detract from a fundamental judicial function belonging to the court, without first having obtained, constitutional authorization.
The statute, here, in express terms dictates to this court how and in what manner it shall exercise the judicial function confided to it by the constitution, and which legislation, by *472the way, is no. less than an usurpation by the legislature, of the exercise of a judicial power belonging to tire court, and. hence, in that respect the act is in contravention of article 3 of the constitution. In that regard the present situation is clearly distinguishable from that which existed in Harris v. Vanderveer's Executor, 21 N. J. Eq. 424, where a statute was held constitutional which gave the right of appeal to a defeated litigant from an order or decree of the Prerogative Court to this court, no such appeal having been provided for in express terms by tire constitution. That case is made the mainspring of the majority opinion, and will be referred to more frilly later on in its proper relation to the subject-matter under discussion.
2. The next clause of the constitution which the statute encroaches upon is article 6, section 1, placitum 1, which declares “the judicial power shall be vested in a Court of Errors and Appeals' in the last resort in all causes as heretofore.”
In plain terms the constitution expressly limits the judicial power of the Court of Errors and Appeals, as exercised by it before the adoption of the constitution of liSM- In this conjunction must he read the last clause of section 1 of article 10, which declares: "The several courts of law and equity, except as herein otherwise provided, shall continue with the like powers and jurisdiction as if this constitution had not been adopted.”
These constitutional discretions give rise to the essential inquiry, What was the extent of the judicial power exercised by this court before the adoption of the constitution of 1844 ? This inquiry finds its answer in the history of the legislation of this state prior to 1844. Briefly stated, the judicial power of this court granted and emanating from such legislation was to review final judgments of any Circuit or Supreme Court, by writ of error, and to review any order, or decree made by the Court of Chancery, by appeal. And it is made clear by the examination of the legislation referred to and the decisions of our courts that 'in a case at law brought for review to this court, by writ of error, this court was confined to a strict review of errors of law only, and on appeals from *473tlie Court of Chancery it was empowered to review both the law and the facts. The term “court of errors” designates clearly that the court was instituted for the correction of errors at law, and the term “appeals,” with equal clarity, to review the law and the facts on appeal from the Court of Chancery. This view is fortified by the declaration of article 6, section 5, placitum 2 of the constitution: “Final judgments in any Circuit Court may be brought by writ of error into the Supreme Court or directly in the Court of Errors and Appeals.” This constitutional provision was declaratory of the common law. At common law final judgments only could be removed by writ of error to the appellate court, and the review thereof was strictly confined to errors at law.
This court, in Flanigan v. Guggenheim Smelting Co., 63 N. J. L. 647, in construing a statute similar in purport to the one in question, in that it provided that “it shall be lawful for a plaintiff in error to assign for error that the- Verdict is against the clear weight of the evidence,” held the statute to be unconstitutional. Judge Adams, speaking for the court (at p. 650), says: “It is evident to< any mind acquainted with legal procedure that this act declares a novel purpose, and seeks to secure it through the novel use of an old instrumentality.” The purpose is novel, for, in such a case, the review has hitherto been of matter of law, and never of matter of fact. The use is novel, for the instrumentality is a writ of error, “whose sole ability,” in the words of Chief Justice Beasley, “always has been and is to bring 'before the higher court for review in matter of law, the judgments of inferior jurisdictions.” Falkner v. Dorland, 54 Id. 409, 410. It is evident also if this act be valid, its necessary effect will be to deprive the judgments of such inferior jurisdictions of the attribute of finality as to fact. This attribute has characterized such judgments since the earliest age of the common law. It is now proposed that they shall henceforth lie final as to neither. And, speaking at page 651 (63 Id.) on the force and effect of section. 1 of article 7 of the constitution, the learned judge continues: “It will be admitted that these provisions guarantee the integrity of the constitutional courts, of *474which the Supreme Court is one. Whatever powers that court hacl, whatever jurisdiction that court exercised, at the date of the adoption of the constitution, were by such adoption incorporated into the fundamental law and ensured against destruction or abridgement except through a change in the fundamental law itself. To abolish the court, to alter its organic character, to impair its jurisdiction, to diminish its authority, are beyond legislative power, because that character, jurisdiction! and authority form part of a body of law which, upon wise grounds, has been made immutable by any mere legislative act.”
Keeping in mind the law as declared by this court in the case just quoted from and which should he controlling here, unless the doctrine therein enunciated is to be overruled, it is quite obvious that the statute under review has all the infirmities that affected the statute condemned in that case as unconstitutional. 1. The statute, in effect, attempts to alter the organic character of the court, in that, on a writ of error, this tribunal must hear and determine a question of fact, namely, whether or not a verdict is against the weight of the evidence. 2. The statute detracts from the prerogative of the Supreme Court. In the event that a trial of an indictment at bar is had in that court resulting in a conviction and judgment, and a new trial is refused, the plaintiff in error may by force of the statute have the finding of the Supreme Court reviewed upon the facts. “Judgments of constitutional courts at common law are inherently not reviewable as to the facts.” Flanigan v. Guggenheim Smelting Co., 63 N. J. L. 654.
The reasoning of the majority opinion finds no support in Harris v. Vanderveer’s Executor, supra, on which case it vainly relies to support the constitutionality of the present statute, for a fair reading of the opinion in the case delivered by that distinguished jurist, Chief Justice Beasley, makes it quite manifest that he recognized the marked difference between a statute which was in harmony with the constitutional design to allow appeals from a constitutional court, dealing with matters coming within the realm of equitable cognizance, a court of which the Chancellor was the Ordinary, and a stat*475ute which by its very terms attempts to change the organic character of a constitutional court.
On page 436 of the case cited the learned Chief Justice, in speaking of the Prerogative Court, used this significant language : “Is there anything, then, in, the nature or history of such a. tribunal as this which should make its decrees final? I do not mean whether it is proper or politic that they should be so; but is such an incident necessarity inherent in the constitution itself? If we regard it as of ecclesiastical origin, its decisions have no claim to1 conelusiveness. In the English system the decrees of the Prerogative Court are subject to review in the Court of Delegates. This has been the case since the time of Henry VUI. A Prerogative Court, then, is not, and never has been, from its constitution, a court of the last resort. What, then, has so modified its nature to bestow upon it such a character in this state? If I could perceive that from its organization, or the character of its jurisdiction, the decree of the court must be unappealable. I should feel constrained to say that the legislature could not alter tlieir nature and make them appealable. Under such circumstances, a modification of the efficaciousness of the decrees of such a court would be to alter in an essential manner the court itself. It ivould amount to an organic change in a constitutional tribunal."
Now, can it be fairfy denied that the attempt by statute to' impose upon the Court of Errors and Appeals, in a criminal ease brought before it for review, by writ of error, the duty to decide as to the weight of the evidence is not an “organic change, in a constitutional tribunal?” It destroys the. finality of a judgment by the Supreme Court on questions of fact hitherto unappealable and unreviewable and thereby clearly abridges the prerogative of that tribunal. Furthermore, it effects an organic change in the Court of Errors and Appeals from that of a tiibunal designed by the constitution to review errors of law only, to an appellate tribunal for the review of both errors of law and errors of fact.
In the State of New York, by article 6, section 9 of its constitution, express power is conferred upon the legislature *476of that state to restrict the jurisdiction, of its Court of Appeals, and the right to appeal thereto, &c., therefore, section 528 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, regulating appeals in cases where the judgment'is of death, and which provides that the court may grant a new trial if it is satisfied that the verdict is against the weight of the evidence, has constitutional authorization.
But enough has been said to make it clear that without a constitutional amendment authorizing 'the legislature to change the organic character of the constitutional appellate courts, it cannot, in the aspect of enlarging their jurisdiction, change their elemental nature. No one would have the temerity to contend that the constitutional provisions referred to forbid this court to take cognizance of new cases, which in the march of business and industry have sprung up since the adoption of the constitution, and will continue to spring up in the indefinite future. Tci adopt any such theory would tend to arrest all progress in the development of the law. It is one thing to make every case appealable' whether or not it was known to- the common law before the adoption of the constitution, and it is quite another thing to change the function of a constitutional court so as to render it practically a trial court. It is the latter feature of the statute which makes it invalid. The case of State v. Kohl, 59 N. J. L. 195, 445, relied on by counsel- of defendant which was before this court, bn writ of error, under a similar statute to the one now drawn into question but which former statute was repealed, has no bearing upon the present case, for the constitutionality of that act was not raised or discussed.
/ Another glaring unconstitutional feature of the act is that rtMuolates article 1, paragraph 7 of the constitution which declares “the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate.”
Tt may be safely asserted that all will agree that it secured this right as it existed in this state at the time of the adoption of the constitution.
/ That the state is entitled to the benefit of this guaranty cannot be successfully disputed.
*4771 Bish. Cr. Pro. 892, under title “Trial by Jury,” in a note says: “And in the same state the constitution further providing,” that in all criminal cases, except in petit misdemeanor, &c., the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate; “this was held to be a right available to the state, as well as to the accused party.” Therefore, if, without a jury, the prisoner be tried by the court and acquitted; the state having objected to this proceeding may have the result reversed and try him again. State v. Mead, 4. Blackf. 309.
The state, composed of all the people, is interested in a verdict and its finalitjq as well as the defendant. This is especially so in a criminal case, as the criminal laws are administered for the protection of society.
The state cannot waive this provision. Any statute it may enact to evade the force of the constitutional declaration must prove abortive.
At the time of the adoption of the constitution only errors appearing on the record were reviewable by writ of error. Kew trials were made and heard before the judge who tried the cause. Verdicts in criminal cases were not subject to be set aside even then upon the ground of being against the weight of the evidence but only where there was error on the record. Since the adoption of the constitution of 1844, the uniform practice has been to make motions for new trials before the judge who tried the cause, and I have been unable to find a reported case in this state except State v. Kohl, which ■was upon a statute, now repealed, where a verdict was set aside because against the weight of the evidence. State v. Hart, 90 N. J. L. 261; State v. Comstock, 95 Id. 321; 96 Id. 299.
Where a trial court has set a verdict aside it will be found that the action of the court was rested, upon the basis that there was no proof sufficient to go to the jury of the commission of the crime by the accused. For any one familiar with the trial of criminal cases must be cognizant of the fact, that as criminals choose secret methods in committing crimes, it often happens that the state must rely on a single witness to prove the offence, whilst a defendant may resort to alibis and *478other defences, and in nine cases out of ten his- witnesses outnumber those of the state. Of course, the number of witnesses does not carry with it the weight of the evidence, but it does involve tire elemental right of a jury to determine the credibility of the witnesses.
And, therefore, we must start with the postulate that it is unconstitutional to alter in any of its essential features the institution of trial 'by jury.
In State v. Fowler, 58 N. J. L. 423, the contention was that a struck jury was illegal because of the constitutional provision that the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate, and the Supreme Court, per Chief Justice Beaslej', said that the obvious answer to the objection wasi that trial by struck jury was part of the system of legal procedure derived from the English law confirmed by legislation in 1797, forty-seven years before the constitution of 1844, and that the constitutional mandate, therefore, ratified and perpetuated the right of trial by jury as in substance it then existed.
In Brown v. State, 62 N. J. L. 666, it was held by the Court of Errors and Appeals that the constitutional provision that the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate, lheans that an act diminishing the number of a jury, -or ottering my of its essential features, would be unconstitutional. Illustrations given are of dispensing with unanimity or depriving a party of challenges for cause; but the universality of the terms used, namely, “any of its.essential features,” shows that the court did not wish to be understood as restricting the matter to unanimity or challenges, but intended that it should apply to any attribute of the trial by jury which was an essential feature. It would seem that the attribute of finality of a verdict falls within this description.
Now, cannot it not bo said with good reason that since by the common law, in a criminal trial on the question as to whether a verdict should be set aside and a new trial granted, was confided to the judge who presided at the trial, and which was the law of this state at the time of the adoption of the constitution of 1844, the finality of the judgment in a criminal case in favor of the state—subject only to the setting aside *479of the itnderiving verdict and the granting of a new trial by th.e judge who presided was an attribute protected by the constitutional provision that the right to trial by jury shall remain inviolate, for that right is certainly not alone the defendant’s but as well the state’s.
In Haines v. Levin, 51 Pa. St. 412, 414, a civil case, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania observed:
“The great purpose of the constitution in providing that Trial by jury shall be as heretofore, and the rights thereof remain inviolate,’ was not to contract the power to furnish modes of civil procedure in courts of justice, but to secure the right of trial by jury in its accustomed form before rights of persons or property shall be finally decided.”
In Plimpton v. Somersel, 33 Vt. 283, also a civil case, the Supreme Court of Vermont held:
“Any law which destroys or materially impairs the right of trial by jury, according to the course of the common law, in cases proper for the cognizance of a jury, is contrary to the twelfth article of the hill of rights and the thirty-first section of the constitution of Vermont.”
In every suit or action at Jaw there are two parties—the plaintiff and defendant. In criminal cases the state is plaintiff. If the defendant be convicted by a. jury the state is thus awarded the verdict, and that verdict, and the judgment founded thereon, can only be set aside by the exercise of the power in that behalf that existed at the time our constitution was adopted, which provides that the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolado, which, as we have seen, lias been interpreted to mean that none of its essential features may he impaired, and that must include in its very nature the attribute of finalitv residing in a verdict, To substitute for the judge who tried the case a bench of appellate judges who were not present at the trial, and who never saw' or heard the witnesses, and whose opinion on the evidence comes from a different view or review' of it, is a violation to some extent, and an appreciable one, of the right of trial by jury, because it subjects their finding to a review' unknown to the common law.
*480The learned Chief Justice, in the majority opinion, lays great stress on the case of Edwards v. State, 45 N. J. L. 419, as supporting the theory that the state ma3r, b3r statutory authority, waive its right to enforce the constitutional mandate that a trial by jury shall remain inviolate; but a careful reading of that case discloses that it merely decides that a defendant may, if the state consents, waive personal rights guaranteed by the constitution. Nowhere in the opinion there delivered b31' Mr. Justice Depue does that eminent jurist hint even that a constitutional provision for the protection of the entire people of the state may be lawfully waived by a representative of the state through legislative authorization.
To have held any such view would have been destructive of our constitutional mandates, and, in effect, would have rendered the constitution a, useless instrument.
‘The constitutional mandate that the right of trial h3r jury shall remain inviolate is an express restraint upon the state and its legislative agencies, to interfere with or change the fundamental characteristics and efficacy of trials b3r a common law jury. And it is intermeddling with the inviolability of jury trials that the statute, under consideration plainly does. Por it is apparent that in case of a conviction, the verdict of a jury upon the facts carries with it no finality, until it has gone through the appellate courts, who are required practically to retry the case, on the printed evidence, and without having had the benefit of seeing f;he witnesses that the jury had, and if the appellate court deems the verdict to* be against the weight of the evidence to set it aside and to send it to the court of first instance for retrial. Thus, the state policy that there should be prompt administration of the criminal law for the protection of the people against law breakers is defeated. All these considerations must have been present in the minds of the framers of our constitution which resulted in the mandate that the right of trial b3r jury shall remain inviolate.
The Chancellor and: Justice Black authorize me ten say that they concur in the views herein expressed.
*481For affirmance — Tub Chancellor. Chief Justice, Swayze, Trenchard, Parker, Minturn, Kalisch, Black, White, Herpenheiaier, Wieltaaik, Gardner, Ackerson, Wan Buskirk, JJ. 14.
For reversal—Tí one.