concurring.
Having had more difficulty than did my brethren in reaching their result, I deem it necessary to state more at length than does the Court’s opinion the reasons that outweigh my doubts, which have not been wholly dissipated.
This case affords a striking illustration of the task cast upon courts when legislation is more ambiguous than the limits of reasonable foresight in draftsmanship justify. It also proves that when the legislative will is clouded, *753what is called judicial construction has an inevitable element of judicial creation. Construction must make a choice between two meanings, equally sustainable as a matter of rational analysis, on considerations not derived from a mere reading of the text.
For the first hundred years of the establishment of this Government one guilty of murder in the first degree, under federal law, was sentenced to death. Since 1897 a jury, after it found an accused “guilty of the crime of murder in the first degree . . . may qualify their verdict by adding thereto 'without capital punishment;’ and whenever the jury shall return a verdict qualified as aforesaid, the person convicted shall be sentenced to imprisonment for life.” Act of January 15, 1897, 29 Stat. 487, as amended, 35 Stat. 1151,1152, § 330 Criminal Code, 18 U. S. C. § 567.
The statute reflects the movement, active during the nineteenth century, against the death sentence. The movement was impelled both by ethical and humanitarian arguments against capital punishment, as well as by the practical consideration that jurors were reluctant to bring in verdicts which inevitably called for its infliction. Almost every State passed mitigating legislation.1 Only five States met the doubts and disquietudes about capital punishment by its abolition. Most of the other States placed in the jury’s hands some power to relieve from a death sentence. But the scope of a jury’s power to save one found guilty of murder in the first degree from a death sentence is bound to give rise to a problem of statutory construction when the legislation does not define the power with explicitness.
A legislature which seeks to retain capital punishment as a policy but does not make its imposition after a find*754ing of guilty imperative has these main choices that leave little room for construction:
(1) Legislation may leave with the jury the duty of finding an accused guilty of murder in the first degree but give them the right of remission of the death sentence, provided there is unanimous agreement on such remission. Any juror, of course, has it in his power to deadlock a jury out of sheer wilfulness or unreasonable obstinacy. But under such a statute the duty laid upon his conscience is to find guilt if there is guilt. The jury can save an accused from death only if they can reach a unanimous agreement to relieve from the doom.
(2) The legislature may not require unanimous agreement on remission of the death sentence, but may make such remission effective by a majority vote of the jury, or, as in the case of the Mississippi statute, it may expressly provide that
“Every person who shall be convicted of murder shall suffer death, unless the jury rendering the verdict shall fix the punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for the life of the convict; or unless the jury shall certify its disagreement as to the punishment ... in which case the court shall fix the punishment at imprisonment for life.” (Miss. Code Ann. §2217(1942).)
(3) The legislature may require the jury to specify the punishment in their verdict. Under such legislation it is necessary for the jury’s verdict not only to pronounce guilt but also to prescribe the sentence.
(4) The jury may be authorized to qualify the traditional verdict of guilty so as to enable the court to impose a sentence other than death. This may be accomplished by giving such discretionary power to the court simpliciter, or upon recommendation of mercy by the jury.
*755None of these types of legislation would leave any reasonable doubt as to the power and duty of a jury. Unfortunately, the alleviating federal legislation of 1897, to which the Court must now give authoritative meaning, was not cast in any one of the foregoing forms. Congress expressed itself as follows:
“In all cases where the accused is found guilty of the crime of murder in the first degree, or rape, the jury may qualify their verdict by adding thereto 'without capital punishment;’ and whenever the jury shall return a verdict qualified as aforesaid, the person convicted shall be sentenced to imprisonment for life.” (29 Stat. 487, as amended, 35 Stat. 1151, 1152, § 330 Criminal Code, 18 U. S. C. § 567.)
The fair spontaneous reading of this provision, in connection with § 275 of the Criminal Code — “Every person guilty of murder in the first degree shall suffer death.” (35 Stat. 1143, 18 U. S. C. § 454) — would be that Congress has continued capital punishment as its policy; that one found guilty of murder in the first degree must suffer death if the jury reaches such a verdict but that “the jury may qualify their verdict by adding thereto 'without capital punishment;’ ” that, since federal jury action requires unanimity, when unanimity is not attained by the jury in order to “qualify their verdict” by “adding” the phrase of alleviation, the verdict of murder in the first degree already reached must stand. Certainly, if construction called for no more than reading the legislation of Congress as written by Congress, to interpret it as just indicated would not be blindly literal reading of legislation in defiance of the injunction that the letter killeth. On the contrary, it would heed the dominant policy of Congress that “every person guilty of murder in the first degree shall suffer death” unless the jury “qualify their verdict by adding thereto” the terms of remission.
*756But in a matter of this sort judges do not read what Congress wrote as though it were merely a literary composition. Such legislation is an agency of criminal justice and not a mere document. While the proper construction of the power of qualification entrusted to the jury by the Act of 1897 is before us for the first time upon full consideration, the issue was adjudicated more than seventeen years ago by one of the Circuit Courts of Appeals. It rejected the construction for which the Government now contends. Smith v. United States, 47 F. 2d 518. While a failure of the Government to seek a review of that decision by this Court has no legal significance, acquiescence by the Government in an important ruling in the administration of the criminal law, particularly one affecting the crime of murder, carries intrinsic importance where the construction in which the Government acquiesced is not one that obviously is repelled by the policy which presumably Congress commanded.
Moreover, we are dealing with a field much closer to the experience of the State courts, as the guardians of those deep interests of society which are reflected in legislation dealing with the punishment for murder and which are predominantly the concern of the States.2 If the *757strongest current of opinion in State courts dealing with legislation substantially as ambiguous as that before us has resolved the ambiguity in the way in which the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit resolved it in the Smith case, the momentum of such a current should properly carry us to the same conclusion. History and experience outweigh claims of virgin analysis of a statute which has such wide scope throughout the country and the incidence of which is far greater in the State courts than in the federal courts. This was the approach of the Court in Winston v. United States, 172 U. S. 303, where we held, after reviewing the State legislation and adjudication, that the statute did not limit the jury’s discretion to cases where there were palliating or mitigating circumstances.
And so we turn to State law.
A. In only four States is death the inevitable penalty for murder in the first degree: Connecticut, Massachusetts, North Carolina, and Vermont. Such has been, until the other day, the law of England despite persistent and impressive efforts to modify it. See, e. g., Minutes of Evidence and Report of the Select Committee on Capital Punishment (1930). It is worthy of note that this effort has just prevailed by the passage, on a free vote, of a provision abolishing the death penalty for an experimental period of five years. See 449 H. C. Deb. (Han-sard) els. 981 et seq. (April 14, 1948), and statement of the Home Secretary that death sentences will be suspended on the basis of this vote, even before the measure *758gets on the Statute Books. Id., els. 1307 et seq. (April 16,1948).
B. In five States the death sentence has been abolished for murder in the first degree: Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin.
C. Most of the States — 39 of them — leave scope for withholding the death sentence. The State enactments greatly vary as to the extent of this power of alleviation and in the manner of its exercise, as between court and jury.
I. In three States a jury's recommendation of life imprisonment is not binding on the trial court: Delaware, New Mexico, and Utah.
II. In fifteen States the jury’s verdict must specify whether the sentence is to be death or life imprisonment: Arkansas, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia.
III. In eight other States the same result is reached, although the legislation is phrased that one found guilty of murder in the first degree suffers death or life imprisonment “at the discretion of the jury”: Alabama, Arizona, California, Georgia, Idaho, Montana, Nebraska, and Nevada.
IV. In two States the punishment is life imprisonment unless the jury specifies the death penalty: New Hampshire and Washington.
V. Nine States have statutes more or less like the federal provision here under consideration: Louisiana, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oregon, South Carolina, West Virginia, and Wyoming.
VI. Two States frankly recognize that differences of opinion are likely to occur when the jury has power to mitigate the death sentence and provide for life imprisonment even when the jury is not unanimous: Florida and Mississippi.
*759An examination of State law shows that all but four States have abandoned the death sentence as a necessary-consequence of the finding of guilt of murder in the first degree; that most of the States which have retained the death sentence have entrusted the jury with remission of the death sentence, although sentencing is traditionally the court’s function, and this is true even in those States where the legislature has not in so many words put this power in the jury’s keeping; that even where the jury is not required to designate the punishment but merely has the power of recommending or “adding” to the verdict the lighter punishment, the most thoroughly canvassed judicial consideration of such power has concluded that the death sentence does not, as a matter of jury duty, automatically follow a finding by them of guilt of murder in the first degree, when the jury cannot unanimously agree that life imprisonment should be imposed.
Of the nine States that have enacted legislation more or less like the federal provision under consideration, the statutes of four — Louisiana, Maryland, West Virginia, and Wyoming — are virtually in the identical form. While the highest courts of these States have not passed upon the precise question before us, they have all construed their respective statutes as giving the jury a free choice as to which of the two alternative punishments are to be imposed, although it can fairly be said that such construction runs counter to the obvious reading that the sentence is death unless all of the jurors are agreed as to adding “without capital punishment.”3 Three of the nine *760States — Ohio, Oregon, and South Carolina — have statutes providing that the penalty is death unless the jury recommends “mercy” or “life imprisonment” in which case the punishment shall be life imprisonment. These have all been construed as providing for alternative punishment in the discretion of the jury.4 While a similar New Jersey statute has been given the literal construction here *761espoused by the Government, the history of that State’s legislation only serves to underscore the force of the decisions in the other States.5 The ninth State, New York, in 1937, amended its legislation, which had made the death penalty mandatory upon all convictions for first-degree murder, by providing that in felony murder cases the jury “may, as a part of its verdict, recommend that the defendant be imprisoned for the term of his natural life. Upon such recommendation, the court may sentence the defendant to imprisonment for the term of his natural life.” N. Y. Crim. Code and Pen. Law § 1045-a. In People v. Hicks, 287 N. Y. 165, the Court of Appeals found the following instruction erroneous:
“There cannot be any recommendation unless the twelve of you agree. But if you have all agreed that the defendant is guilty, it is nevertheless your duty to report that verdict to the Court. Is that clear? Even though you cannot agree on the recommendation. In other words, you cannot use the *762recommendation as bait, in determining the guilt or innocence of the defendant. ... if you are all unanimous that there should be a recommendation, it is your duty to bring in the recommendation; but if you are not unanimous on that proposition it is nevertheless your duty to bring in the verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree, even though you cannot agree on the other. Is that plain?” (287 N. Y. at 167-68.)
The Court of Appeals held that the statute expressly empowered the jury to make a life-imprisonment recommendation a part of their verdict; that it did not expressly, or by implication, require the jury to render a verdict of guilty without the recommendation where they were not all agreed upon so doing; that, until the jury reached agreement on every part of their verdict, they had not agreed upon the verdict; that in such cases the legislature required the jury to determine
“First, whether the accused is guilty of the crime charged; second, whether the sentence shall be death or whether the trial judge may pronounce a sentence of life imprisonment. Both questions must be determined by the jury, and the jury’s answer to both questions must be embodied in its verdict. A juror considering the question of whether .an accused is guilty of the crime charged can no longer be influenced consciously or unconsciously by knowledge that the finding of guilt of the crime charged will entail a mandatory penalty which in his opinion is not justified by the degree of moral guilt of the accused. Each juror should now know that the finding of guilt does not carry that mandatory penalty unless the jury fails to make a recommendation of life imprisonment a part of the verdict and each juror should know that he is one of the twelve judges who shall decide what the verdict shall be in all its parts. *763Until the twelve judges have agreed on every part of the verdict they have not agreed on any verdict.” (Id. at 171.)
And so we reach the real question of this case. Should a federal jury report as their verdict that part of their deliberations which resulted in the finding of guilt of first degree murder if they cannot agree on the alleviating qualification, or should they be advised that their disagreement on the question of appropriate punishment may conscientiously be adhered to so that, if there be no likelihood of an agreement after making such an effort as is due from a conscientious jury, there would be no escape from reporting disagreement. After considerable doubt, as I have indicated, I find that the weight of considerations lies with giving the jury the wider power which the Court’s construction affords.
“The decisions in the highest courts of the several States under similar statutes are not entirely harmonious, but the general current of opinion appears to be in accord with our conclusion.” Winston v. United States, supra, at p. 313. The fair significance to be drawn from State legislation and the practical construction given to it is that it places into the jury’s hands the determination whether the sentence is to be death or life imprisonment,6 and, since that is the jury’s responsibility, it is for them to decide whether death should or should not be the consequence of their finding that the accused is guilty of murder in the first degree. Since the determination of the sentence is thus, in effect, a part of their verdict, there must be accord by the entire jury in reaching the full content of the verdict.
*764The Government contends that because of its “clear terms” little weight should be accorded the failure of Congress to repudiate the interpretation placed upon § 330 of the Criminal Code by the Smith case in 1931. That decision and acquiescence in it answer the claim that the section precludes a reading of it opposed to that which the Government offers. Moreover, it is significant that the proposed revision of the Criminal Code7 leaves the form of this provision unchanged. This revision doubtless had the expert scrutiny of the Department of Justice,8 and that Department must have had knowledge of the judicial gloss put upon the retained provision by the Smith case.9
*765The care that trial judges should exercise in making clear to juries their power and responsibility in trials for murder is emphasized by the uncertainties regarding the construction appropriate to the jury’s power to affect the punishment on a finding of guilt of murder in the first degree, now resolved by this decision. It fell upon the trial judge here to instruct the jury as to this power. Was his charge in accord with the statute as construed by us? The court below held that it was; the Government concedes that it was not. The charge and the instructions given were such as to permit reasonable minds to differ on this issue, and therein lies the error.10 Charging a jury is not a matter of abracadabra. No part of the conduct of a criminal trial lays a heavier task upon the presiding judge. The charge is that part of the whole trial which probably exercises the weightiest influence upon jurors. It should guide their understanding after *766jurors have been subjected to confusion and deflection from the relevant by the stiff partisanship of counsel.
To avoid reversal on appeal, trial judges err, as they should, on the side of caution. But caution often seeks shelter in meaningless abstractions devoid of guiding concreteness. Clarity certainly does not require a broad hint to a juror that he can hang the jury if he cannot have his way in regard to the power given to him by Congress in determining the sentence of one guilty of first-degree murder. On the other hand, conscientious jurors are not likely to derive clear guidance if told that "on both guilt and punishment [they] must be unanimous before any verdict can be found.” They should be told in simple, colloquial English that they are under duty to come to an agreement if at all possible within conscience, for a verdict must be unanimous; that a verdict involves a determination not only of guilt but also of the punishment that is to follow upon a finding of guilt; that the verdict as to both guilt and punishment is single and indivisible; that if they cannot reach agreement regarding the sentence that should follow a finding of guilt, they cannot render a verdict; and this means that they must be unanimous in determining whether the sentence should be death, which would follow as a matter of course if they bring in a verdict that “the accused is found guilty of the crime of murder in the first degree,” and they must be equally unanimous if they do not wish a finding of guilt to be followed by a death sentence, which they must express by a finding of guilt “without capital punishment.”
Mr. Justice Burton concurs in this opinion.*767APPENDIX.
State legislation concerning the punishment for first degree murder *
A. Death penalty mandatory:
(1) Conn. Gen. Stat. § 6044 (1930).
(2) Mass. Gen. Laws c. 265, § 2 (1932).
(3) N.C. Code Ann. §4200 (1939).
(4) Vt. Pub. Laws § 8376 (1933).
B. Death penalty abolished:
(5) Me. Rev. Stat. c. 117, § 1 (1944).
(6) Mich. Stat. Ann. § 28.548 (1938).
(7) Minn. Stat. § 619.07 (1945).
(8) R. I. Gen. Laws c. 606, § 2 (1938) (penalty for murder in first degree is life imprisonment unless person is under life imprisonment sentence at time of conviction).
(9) Wis. Stat. § 340.02 (1945).
C. Death penalty not mandatory:
I. States where jury recommendation of life imprisonment is not binding on trial court:
(10) Del. Rev. Code § 5330 (1935).
(11) N. M. Stat. Ann. § 105-2226 (1929).
(12) Utah Rev. Stat. Ann. § 103-28-4 (1933).
*768C. Death penalty not mandatory — Continued.
II. States where jury’s verdict must specify whether the sentence is to be death or life imprisonment:
(13) Ark. Dig. Stat. § 4042 (1937) (as interpreted by the courts).
(14) Colo. Stat. Ann. c. 48, § 32 (1936).
(15) Ill. Ann. Stat. c. 38, § 360 (1935).
(16) Ind. Ann. Stat. §§ 10-3401 and 9-1819 (Burns 1942).
(17) Iowa Code § 12911 (1939).
(18) Kan. Gen. Stat. Ann. § 21-403 (1935).
(19) Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. §§ 435.010 and 431.130.
(20) Mo. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 4378 (1939) (as interpreted by the courts).
(21) N. D. Comp. Laws Ann. § 9477 (1913).
(22) Okla. Stat. Ann. tit. 21, § 707 (1937).
(23) Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 18, § 4701 (1945).
(24) S. D. Sess. Laws 1939, c. 30, amending S. D. Code § 13.2012 (1939) (but even if jury specifies death sentence, court “may nevertheless pronounce judgment of life imprisonment”).
(25) Tenn. Code Ann. § 10772 (Williams 1934).
(26) Tex. Pen. Code Ann. art. 1257 (1936). (“The punishment for murder shall be death or confinement in the penitentiary for life or for any term of years not less than two.” — Courts have interpreted statute as requiring jury to specify penalty.)
(27) Va. Code Ann. § 4394 (1936) (as interpreted by the courts).
*769C. Death penalty not mandatory — Continued.
III.States where sentence of death or life imprisonment is at the discretion of the jury:
(28) Ala. Code Ann. tit. 14, § 318 (1940).
(29) Ariz. Code Ann. § 43-2903 (1939).
(30) Cal. Pen. Code § 190 (1941).
(31) Ga. Code Ann. § 26-1005 (1936).
(32) Idaho Code Ann. § 17-1104 (1932).
(33) Mont. Rev. Code Ann. § 10957 (1935).
(34) Neb. Rev. Stat. § 28-401 (1943).
(35) Nev. Comp. Laws Ann. § 10068 (1929).
IV.States where the punishment is life imprisonment unless the jury specifies the death penalty:
(36) N. H. Rev. Laws c. 455, § 4 (1942).
(37) Wash. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 2392 (1932).
V.States that have statutes more or less like the federal provision under consideration:
(38) La. Code Crim. Law & Proc. Ann. art. 409 (1943).
(39) Md. Ann. Code Gen. Laws art. 27, §481 (1939).
(40) N. J. Stat. Ann. § 2:138-4 (1939).
(41) N. Y. Crim. Code and Pen. Law § 1045-a.
(42) Ohio Gen. Code Ann. § 12400 (1939).
(43) Ore. Comp. Laws Ann. § 23-411 (1940).
(44) S. C. Code Ann. § 1102 (1942).
(45) W. Va. Code Ann. § 6204 (1943).
(46) Wyo. Comp. Stat. Ann. § 9-201 (1945).
*770C. Death penalty not mandatory — Continued.
VI. States that give effect to jury recommendation for life imprisonment even when jury is not unanimous in making that recommendation:
(47) Fla. Stat. Ann. § 919.23 (1944). (“Whoever is convicted of a capital offense and recommended to the mercy of the court by a majority of the jury in their verdict, shall be sentenced to imprisonment for life.”)
(48) Miss. Code Ann. § 2217(1942). (“Every person who shall be convicted of murder shall suffer death, unless the jury rendering the verdict shall fix the punishment at imprisonment in the penitentiary for the life of the convict; or unless the jury shall certify its disagreement as to the punishment . . . in which case the court shall fix the punishment at imprisonment for life.”)
For references to the State legislation see Appendix, pp. 767-770.
There were only twenty-three convictions of first-degree murder in the federal district courts in continental United States, the territories, and the possessions, exclusive of the District of Columbia, during the six-year period beginning July 1, 1941, and ending June 30, 1947. Eight of the defendants convicted were sentenced to death, and fifteen were given life imprisonment. Of the eight sentenced to death, three were executed (see Arwood v. United States, 134 F. 2d 1007; Ruhl v. United States, 148 F. 2d 173; United States v. Austin Nelson, District Court for the Territory of Alaska, First Division, April 18, 1947 (unreported)); the sentence of one was commuted to life imprisonment (see Paddy v. United States, 143 F. 2d 847); and the sentences of four (including the petitioner here) have been stayed pending their appeals (see United States v. Sam *757Richard Shockley and United States v. Miran Edgar Thompson, District Court for the Northern District of California, Dec. 21, 1946 (unreported); United States v. Carlos Romero Ochoa, District Court for the Southern District of California, May 19, 1947 (unreported) ).
I am indebted for these statistics to the Administrative Office of the United States Courts.
The Supreme Court of Louisiana noted that “in capital cases, it is entirely left to the jury to determine the extent of the punishment in the event of conviction. The jurors, in such cases, are entirely free to choose between a qualified and an unqualified verdict, because the law gives them the unquestioned discretion to return either one or the other.” State v. Henry, 196 La. 217, 233. The Court of Appeals of Maryland held that “In our opinion, it was the *760purpose of the act to empower juries to unite in a choice of punishments ; that is, a choice between limiting punishment to life imprisonment and leaving the court unrestricted in fixing the punishment; and it was intended that all jurors should exercise a discretion in making that choice.” Price v. State, 159 Md. 491, 494. The Supreme Court of West Virginia has held that under that State’s statute the jury fixes the sentence and that, therefore, it was reversible error for the trial court to fail to “instruct the jury that it was its duty to find, in the event of a verdict of guilty of murder in the first degree, whether the accused should be hanged or sentenced to the penitentiary for life.” State v. Goins, 120 W. Va. 605, 609. And the Supreme Court of Wyoming in a case where the defendant had entered a plea of guilty of murder in the first degree, held that “A defendant has the right to have a jury not only to try the issue of guilt or innocence, but also to decide what the punishment shall be. The right to a trial on the issue of guilt or innocence may be waived by a plea of guilty, which leaves only the question of punishment to be decided by the jury.” State v. Best, 44 Wyo. 383, 389-90; see also State v. Brown, 60 Wyo. 379, 403 (where an instruction to the jury that “a person who is found guilty of murder in the first degree shall suffer death or be imprisoned in the penitentiary at hard labor for life, in the discretion of the jury trying the case” was upheld).
While the judges of the Supreme Court of Ohio differed in their views as to whether the jury in making the recommendation were restricted to considerations based upon the evidence, they were in agreement that the statute gave the jury full and exclusive discretion as to whether or not to make the recommendation. Howell v. State, 102 Ohio St. 411. In Oregon and South Carolina it is sufficient to charge the jury that they may bring in either verdict. State v. Hecker, 109 Ore. 520, 559-60; State v. McLaughlin, 208 S. C. 462, 468.
Prior to 1916 the death penalty was mandatory in New Jersey. In that year the State legislature amended the law by the enactment of the jury recommendation form of statute. In 1919 the New Jersey Court of Errors and Appeals construed the statute to give the jury absolute discretion to bring in either verdict, and, by a close decision, held that the jury was not confined to the evidence in determining whether or not to make the recommendation. State v. Martin, 92 N. J. L. 436. That same year the legislature enacted into law the views of the dissenting judges requiring that the jury must make the recommendation “by its verdict, and as a part thereof, upon and after the consideration of all the evidence.” N. J. Stat. Ann. §2:138-4 (1939). In State v. Molnar, 133 N. J. L. 327, 335, the court construed the amended statute to mean that “. . . the penalty is death, determined not by the jury, but by the statute, and pronounced by the court. It is not correct to say that the jury imposes the sentence of death where it does not choose to make the recommendation for life imprisonment.”
Indeed, we said in the Winston case that Congress by the Act of 1897 established the “simple and flexible rule of conferring upon the jury, in every case of murder, the right of deciding whether it shall be punished by death or by imprisonment.” 172 U. S. at 312.
H. R. 3190, 80th Cong., 1st Sess., § 1111 (b), as passed by the House on May 12, 1947, 93 Cong. Rec. 5049.
See id. at 5048; Hearings before Subcommittee No. 1 of the House Committee on the Judiciary on H. R. 1600 and H. R. 2055, 80th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 33-35. It is interesting to note that the proposed revision itself contains most of the different forms by which legislatures have retained capital punishment as a penalty for the commission of certain crimes but have not made its imposition mandatory upon a finding of guilty. E. g., § 2113 (e) (murder in commission of bank robbery- — “not less than ten years, or punished by death if the verdict of the jury shall so direct”); § 1992 (wrecking train which results in death of any person — “death penalty or to imprisonment for life, if the jury shall in its discretion so direct”); § 1201 (a) (kidnapping — “(1) by death if the kidnaped person has not been liberated unharmed, and if the verdict of the jury shall so recommend, or (2) by imprisonment for any term of years or for life, if the death penalty is not imposed”); § 2031 (rape — “death, or imprisonment for any term of years or for life”). There is nothing in either the committee’s report or the reviser’s notes on these sections to indicate whether these are differences in form or in substance. See H. R. Rep. No. 304, 80th Cong., 1st Sess.
The various Governmental agencies are apt to see decisions adverse to them from the point of view of their limited preoccupation and too often are eager to seek review from adverse decisions which should stop with the lower courts. The Solicitor General, *765however, must take a comprehensive view in determining when cer-tiorari should be sought. He is therefore under special responsibility, as occupants of the Solicitor General’s office have recognized, to resist importunities for review by the agencies, when for divers reasons unrelated to the merits of a decision, review ought not to be sought. The circumstances of the Smith case present a special situation, and the intention to carry the implication of “acquiescence” beyond such special circumstances is emphatically disavowed.
The jury was instructed that “before you may return a qualified verdict of murder in the first degree without capital punishment that your decision to do so must be unanimous.” By and of itself this instruction was consonant with either construction of the statute. If the jury had also been instructed either that “before you may return a verdict of murder in the first degree your decision not to add the qualification ‘without capital punishment’ must be unanimous” or that “if you are all agreed that the defendant is guilty but you are not all agreed to add ‘without capital punishment’ you must return a verdict of murder in the first degree without the qualification,” they would have known which construction of the statute the trial judge adopted, and so would we.
It is appropriate to give warning that the meaning attributed to some of the statutes by this classification does not have the benefit of guiding State adjudication. The ascertainment of the proper construction of a State statute when there is not a clear ruling by the highest court of that State is treacherous business. Nor can one be wholly confident that he has found the latest form of State legislation.