The question presented in this case is whether an accused can effectively agree to trial by less than a 12-person jury where the trial court does not conduct a personal inquiry of the accused to determine that his decision was made knowingly and intelligently.
I.
Earl Michael Kenney was charged by indictment with, inter alia, kidnapping, false imprisonment, battery, and transporting a handgun as the result of an alleged attack on Angela Yvonne Tillman, his former girlfriend. On May 30, 1990, his jury trial commenced in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County. The jury retired to deliberate at 5:28 p.m. on Friday, June 1,1990. At 7:00 p.m. that evening the court informed the members of the jury that they would recess at that time and be excused until Monday morning when they would return to resume their deliberations. The foreman of the jury then advised the court that one member *356 of the jury had surgery scheduled for Monday morning and could not return for further deliberations. At the bench the juror advised the court that she was scheduled for breast surgery which could not be postponed. The following colloquy ensued:
“THE COURT: Okay. Wait a minute. We have a choice. He [the defendant] can either go with 11, or I am not going to ask this lady to come back on Monday under the circumstances. We can either declare a mistrial, stay tonight or go with 11.
“[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I would assume it would have to be stay tonight or go with the 11. I would have to ask my client if he would go with the 11, if that’s the alternative.
“THE COURT: Why dоn’t you go down there and we will wait right now.
“(The juror went back to the jury box.)
“([Defense counsel] returned to the bench and the following ensued:)
“[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Your Honor, could I ask the State’s Attorney if their intentions are to prosecute the case if it’s a mistrial? My client has advised me—
“THE COURT: You know they aré going to prosecute him.
“[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: My client has advised me that he does not want to interfere with this person’s surgery, and he will go with the 11.
“THE COURT: He will go with the 11? Okay.”
The jurоr was excused and, on the following Monday, the eleven remaining members of the jury reached unanimous verdicts on the charges, finding Kenney guilty of battery and unlawfully transporting a handgun. Kenney was found not guilty of false imprisonment and kidnapping.
The Court of Special Appeals reversed Kenney’s convictions, and remanded the сase for a new trial, holding that a personal inquiry of the accused is necessary for there to be a valid waiver of a 12-person jury.
Kenney v. State,
88
*357
McLApp. 289,
II.
The State argues that the intermediate appellate court erred in holding that a personal inquiry of the accused is necessary for there to be a valid waiver of a 12-person jury. This conclusion, the State submits, is supported by our cases interpreting our Declaration of Rights and the common law, the Maryland Rules of Procedure, and out-of-state authority. We agree and explain.
In granting the State’s petitiоn for certiorari, we reformulated the question presented to explicitly require an examination of
State v. McKay,
The fundamental constitutional right at stake in
McKay
is not comparable to the right at issue in the case
sub judice
because there is a well-recognized distinction between the waiver of jury unanimity and the waiver of a 12-person jury.
See United States v. Smedes,
The Supreme Court has held that the constitutional guarantee of a “trial by jury” does not require a trial by a panel of 12 in a state court.
Williams v. Florida,
“To read the Sixth Amendment as forever codifying a feature so incidental to the real purpose of the Amendment is to ascribе a blind formalism to the Framers which would require considerably more evidence than we have been able to discover in the history and language of the Constitution or in the reasoning of our past decisions____ Our holding does no more than leave these considerations to Congress and the States, unrestrained by an interpre *359 tation of the Sixth Amendment that would forever dictate the precise number that can constitute a jury.”
Id.
at 102-03,
The
Williams
Court held that a six-person jury satisfied the Sixth Amendment requirement
2
because such a jury has the “essential feature of a jury,” that is “the interposition between the accused and his accuser of the common sense judgment of a group of laymen, and in the community participation and shared responsibility that results from that group’s determination of guilt or innocence.”
Id.
at 100,
Nor is there any imperative requirement of a 12-person jury which cannot be waived based on Article 5 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights which provides in pertinent part: “That the Inhabitants of Maryland are entitled to the Common Law of England, and the trial by Jury, according to the coursе of that Law ...” In McKay, supra, we examined the development of the common law right to a jury trial in Maryland:
“Despite the provision in Article 5 entitling inhabitants of Maryland ‘to the Common Law of England, and the trial by Jury, according to the course of that Law,’ Article *360 21 embraces the Maryland colonial experience. Waiver of the right to trial by jury wаs recorded as early as 1642, only eight years after settlement of St. Mary’s, IV Archives of Maryland 165 (1642), and juries of 10 and 11 men were summoned on at least a few occasions in civil suits. LXX Archives xv. 72, 160 (1681-82). Early proceedings of the General Assembly are also illuminating. An act of 1642 stated:
‘... the Defendt. in any cause civill or Criminall may put himself for tryall upon the judge or Court or, upon his Country or may wage his Law in cases allowable by the law of England[.] if both parties joyn in the tryall it Shall be tryed according to their agreemt.’ I Archives of Maryland 151, 186 (1642).
Thus, by 1776, Maryland had long since departed from the English common law, by judicial decision or legislative enactment, in permitting waiver of not only trial by jury, but also at least one of its [traditional] elements, the 12-man jury.
Cf. Singer v. United States,
380 U.S. [24,] 27-31 [
‘... [Article 5] has no reference to adjudications in Englаnd anterior to the colonization, or to judicial adoptions here, of any part of the common law, during the continuance of the colonial government, but to the common law in mass, as it existed here, either potentially or practically, and as it prevailed in England at the time, except such portiоns of it as are inconsistent with the spirit of that instrument [the Declaration of Rights], and the nature of our new political institutions____’ State v. Buchanan, 5 H. & J. 317, 358 (1821).”
*361
McKay,
Maryland Rule 4-311 governs the right to a trial by jury in criminal cases in the circuit courts. In pertinent part, it provides:
“(b) Number of Jurors.—A jury shall consist of 12 persons unless the parties stipulate at any time in writing or on the record that the jury shall consist of any number less than 12.”
By its terms, the rule states that the “parties” may stipulate. This contrasts with Md. Rule 4-246(b), governing the procedure for acceрtance of defendant’s waiver of jury trial, which requires the court to examine “the defendant on the record in open court” and to find that the waiver is “made knowingly and voluntarily” before accepting a waiver of a jury trial, (emphasis added).
Maryland case law also bears out this conclusion. In
Howell v. State,
In the instant case, the record discloses that after the trial judge determined at a bench conference that a juror would be unable to continue to deliberate due to a scheduled surgical operation, the court informed defense counsel that there were three optiоns available: declare a mistrial; have the jury continue deliberations that night; or proceed with 11 jurors on Monday, the next scheduled court date. Defense counsel stated that he would ask Kenney what he preferred and then conferred with him. Counsel returned to the bench and, after confirming that a mistrial would result in a new triаl, stated: “My client has advised me that he does not want to interfere with this person’s surgery, and he will go with the 11.” (emphasis added).
Under these circumstances, this situation is no different from the myriad of situations that occur during the
*363
course of a trial in which the court properly accepts counsel’s representations as to what the defendant prefers.
See, e.g., Henry v. State,
In the absence of any requirement that a 12-person jury may only be waived by the accused personally, the courts of our sister states who have considered the question of waiver of a full jury in criminal prosecutions have upheld the validity of such waivers by counsel without the defendant being examined to assure that his counsel's stipulation accurately represents his knowing and intelligent waiver.
See State v.
Machia,
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS REVERSED AND CASE REMANDED TO THAT COURT FOR DETERMINATION OF THOSE ISSUES NOT YET RESOLVED BY THAT COURT; COSTS IN THIS COURT TO BE PAID BY RESPONDENT.
Notes
. Article 21 of the Declaration of Rights provides in relevant part:
"That in all criminal prosecutions, every man hath a right ... to a speedy trial by an impartial jury, without whose unanimous consent he ought not to be found guilty.”
. The Sixth Amendment guarantee of jury trial in criminal prosecutions is applicable to state trials through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Duncan
v.
Louisiana,
