OPINION
By the Court,
Eisentrager, respondent herein, was charged by an information filed in Clark County, Nevada, with the *439 crime of murder and with being a habitual criminal. Respondent pleaded not guilty to the charges and, after a jury trial lasting about four weeks, the issue of respondent’s guilt as to the murder charge was submitted to the jury for its consideration on December 29,1959. Some 42 hours after the jury had received the case, the jury was brought into court on December 31, 1959 and, not having reached a verdict, was discharged by the court. Subsequently, respondent moved for an order dismissing the information, basing the motion upon the ground that Eisentrager had been once in jeopardy. The motion to dismiss was heard and granted by a trial judge other than the judge who had presided at the trial. This appeal by the state is from the order dismissing the information.
In its written opinion the trial court relied upon a decision of this court in Ex Parte Maxwell (1876),
The transcript of proceedings' in the appeal before us shows that the trial court, on at least two occasions prior to discharging the jury, had inquired of the foreman how the vote stood, and the foreman’s answers showed in effect that the vote had fluctuated between eight to four and ten to two, with no change in the ten to two vote in the 12-hour period preceding the final session of the court at which the jury was discharged and with only a change of one juror during the jury’s deliberations throughout the preceding court day. The minutes of the court recite that the court discharged the jury because it was unable to come to a conclusion, and the remarks of the judge in discharging the jury include his reference to the fact that the jury had been unable to come to a conclusion and that it was not unusual to have a “hung jury.” All the foregoing appears in the record and takes the instant case out of the rule so strictly pronounced by Earll, J., 2 in the Maxwell case, where the record was confined to the statement that “the jury retired * * * and subsequently returned into court and by their foreman stated that they were unable to agree upon a verdict. Whereupon the court discharged the jury from further consideration of the case.” The court stated: “The record is silent as to the length of time the jury were out * *
There were sufficient facts before the trial court upon which to exercise its discretion in discharging the jury, and there is no showing of any abuse of that discretion.
The order appealed from is hereby reversed.
Notes
“The court may have been satisfied that the jury were unable to agree upon a verdict, and that there was no reasonable probability of their doing so upon further consultation and deliberation. But these were essential facts, the existence of which ought to be determined by the court and established by the record.”
Beatty, J., while concurring in the court’s order remanding the prisoner to the custody of the sheriff, expressly withheld “any expression of opinion as to the effect of the discharge of that jury.”
