After a non-jury trial the three appellants, brothers, were found guilty of third-degree battery and sentenced to fines of $750 and to a year in jail, with nine months suspended. The defendants were represented by trial attorneys in the court below, but the record does not show that the defendants personally waived a jury trial either in writing or in open court, as contemplated by A.R.Cr.P. Rules 31.1 and 31.2. There is no assertion that the defendants did not in fact waive a jury, but it is argued by appellate counsel that the omission in the record entitles them to a new trial. The case was transferred to us by the Court of Appeals under Rule 29 (1) (c).
There is a constitutional right to a jury trial in felony cases, but the manner of waiver is not specified by the constitution, any more than the manner of entering a plea of guilty is so specified. See Smith v. State,
Affirmed.
