This is one of a series of cases in which the defendant’s counsel, representing a number of clients, has sought to test the constitutionality of the Commonwealth’s “two-tier” or “trial de nova” system, 1 a procedure by which those accused of certain offenses may be *139 tried first in a District Court without a jury, and, if convicted there, may secure a fresh trial, to a jury, at the next higher court level. See G. L. c. 278, § 18.
We need to refer here to one of the prior proceedings. In
Whitmarsh
v.
Commonwealth,
In holding that the “interlocutory appeal” was not available, we indicated how a final decision might be obtained that would be subject to regular appellate review. We said, “If his motion were denied [i.e., Whit-marsh’s motion in the Superior Court to dismiss], and if *140 he were thereafter tried in the Superior Court and found guilty . . . [Whitmarsh] would have available to him an opportunity for appellate review of the ruling on his motion as a matter of right by saving and perfecting exceptions thereto.” (Id. at 216.) Counsel followed that line in the present case. Here the defendant Ludwig, charged in the District Court of Northern Norfolk with driving to endanger (G. L. c. 90, § 24 [2] [a]), moved for a jury trial, which the judge denied; the defendant was then found guilty. In the de nova proceeding in the District Court of Northern Norfolk, Six Man Jury Session (similar for present purposes to a de nova proceeding in the Superior Court, see G. L. c. 278, § 18), the defendant moved to dismiss, claiming among other things that the court lacked “jurisdiction” because of the improper refusal of a jury at first instance. The motion was denied over due exception, and the defendant was fined $20. Imposition of sentence was stayed, and the case is before this court on a bill of exceptions, as amended, which in effect raises again the constitutional claims.
The case is properly here for review. The attack on “jurisdiction” is but a flourish, and adds nothing to the constitutional points above mentioned which the defendant’s counsel has been pressing with repetitious insistence. We have suffered no change of mind on the constitutional issues since the Whitmarsh decision.
Exceptions overruled.
Notes
See the listing of such cases in
Whitmarsh
v.
Commonwealth,
