Appellant, Bryan Wilson Taylor, was tried to a jury on a twenty-seven count indictment for violations of Title 18, U.S.C., Sec. 1341, the mail fraud statute. Sixteen counts were submitted to the jury. After deliberations began, but before a verdiсt was returned in open court, one juror suffered a heart attack and died shortly thereafter. The district judge satisfied herself that all twelve jurors had reached agreement on counts 7, 9 and 11 prior to thе illness of the twelfth juror, and thereupon accepted a verdict of guilty on these counts over appellant’s objection and entered a judgment of conviction. She declared a mistrial аs to the remaining thirteen counts.
Appellant was fined $1,000 and sentenced to five years imprisonment under counts 7 and 11, to run concurrently, and received a suspended sentence, five years probation and a fine of $1,000 under count 11. We conclude that acceptance of a guilty verdict under such circumstances denied appellant his right to trial by a jury composed of twelve jurors. Accordingly, we reverse.
In greater detail, the facts were as follows. The case was submitted to the jury at 2:25 P.M. on February 13, 1974. At 11:45 A.M. the following day, during the lunch recess, juror Misenhimer had a heart attack. He was immediately removed to a hospital and pronounced dead on arrival. No verdict had then been signed in the jury room or returned in open court.
The district judge assembled the remaining jurors in the courtroom at 1:45 P.M. and inquired of thе foreman whether all twelve had agreed upon a verdict on any counts prior to the time Mr. Mi-senhimer was stricken. On being informed that they had, the court instructed the foreman to retire with the jury and take a рoll to determine whether the vote taken earlier was still the vote of the remaining eleven. If this proved to be so, he was to sign the verdict and return it to the court.
Appellant’s attorney objected at this stage in the proceedings, asserting that any verdict, even a favorable one, would deny Taylor his right to a twelve member jury. The objection was overruled.
The jurors returned into court five minutes later with a verdict of guilty under counts 7, 9, and 11. The court directed that a poll be taken in the courtroom. This procedure revealed that each of the eleven remaining jurors concurred in the verdict. The court inquired of the foreman whether the deceased juror had voted in accordance with the verdict of guilty and, upon being assured that he had, accepted the verdict as rendered.
While the distriсt judge recognized that appellant was entitled to a jury of twelve, she evidently believed that this requirement was satisfied as to those counts on which agreement had been reached in the jury room prior to juror Misenhimer’s death. We disagree.
A criminal defendant in the federal courts is entitled, under the command of F.R.Crim.P. 23(b), to a trial by a twelve member jury.
1
See the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice Harlan in Baldwin v. New York, 1970,
The question involved on this appeal is at what point this right, when not waived, has been satisfiеd. We hold that a jury has not reached a valid verdict until deliberations are over, the result is announced in open court, and no dissent by a juror is registered. 2 If a juror falls ill and cannot continue before this has occurred, the verdict announced in court may not be accepted as a verdict of twelve; and a criminal defendant is entitled to a new trial.
Surprisingly, we have discovered no cases dirеctly on point.
3
Only one, Hum-phries v. District of Columbia, 1899,
We look to the rubric that vоtes taken in the jury room prior to being returned in court are preliminary. See Posey v. United States, 5 Cir. 1969,
The government, in urging that the verdict was properly received by the district court, relies upon the Supreme Court decision in Humphries, supra, involving a collateral attack on a judgment entered in a civil damage suit. The jury in that case had been instructed by the lower court to return a sealed verdict, signed by each juror. After the *169 jury concluded its deliberations, the verdict was signed and sealed, as directed. The foreman, however, beсame ill and was not present in court the following day when the sealed verdict was returned. In his stead, he sent his personal physician, to whom he had delivered the sealed verdict. The eleven jurors who wеre present testified that they had signed the verdict and each had witnessed the foreman’s signature. The trial court accepted the verdict. The Supreme Court upheld the district court’s refusal to vaсate the judgment.
Humphries
contains distinguishing factors not present in the case before us. First and foremost,
Humphries
involved collateral attack upon the judgment rather than a direct appeal. Dictum in the opinion indicates that, had the case arisen on direct appeal, a different result would likely have been obtained.
4
Second,
Humphries
was a civil and not a criminal action. Third, deliberations in the jury room had concludеd. The verdict had been signed by all twelve, sealed, and delivered to the foreman. The vote of the eleven jurors present in the courtroom did not change, as a poll revealed. The vote of the absent foreman remained unchanged, as evidenced by his delivery of the sealed verdict to his physician to be forwarded to the court. See
The absence of all of these factors in the case before us impels us to a different result. Appellant Taylor prosecutеs a direct criminal appeal. Since deliberations on all counts had not been completed no verdict had been signed by anyone when the juror Misenhimer was stricken. Finally, death unalterably remоved the missing juror from the court’s reach. The district judge had no available means to determine how the juror would have stood when the verdict was actually announced.
Our decision is based on the denial оf appellant’s right guaranteed by F.R.Crim.P. Rule 23(b) to a twelve member jury, not on denial of the right to ask for a poll, which cannot be exercised until a verdict has been announced. See United States v. Marr, 7 Cir. 1970,
What result would obtain if a juror dies after a verdict has been announced in open court but before a poll has been conducted, a situation which troubled the Supreme Court in Humphries, is not before us.
We hold then that no verdict was returned to the lower court рrior to the death of the juror, Misenhimer. It was error to allow the remaining eleven to return a verdict in accordance with the preliminary vote of all twelve taken pri- or to that death. The right of trial by a jury of twelve should not have been dispensed with despite a good faith belief by the court that the absent juror, if present, would have acquiesced in the verdict as it was returned in open court by the rеmaining eleven jurors.
Reversed.
Notes
. F.R.Crim.P. 23(b) reads as follows:
(b) Jury of Less Than Twelve. Juries shall be of 12 but at any time before verdict the parties may stipulate in writing with the approval of the court that the jury shall consist of any number less than 12. (emphasis added)
Whether a federal criminal defendant is
constitutionally
entitled to a jury of twelve is subject to serious question by reason of the Supreme Court’s decision that a
state
criminal defendant has no such constitutional right, Williams v. Florida, 1970,
. Even at this point, where the verdict is announced to the court and no dissent is voiced, the verdict may not be accepted by the court if a poll taken before the verdict is recorded indicates lack of unanimity. See United States v. Sexton, 5 Cir. 1972,
. In United States v. Ricks, 1973, 155 U.S. App.D.C. 57,
. The Supreme Court noted that, if the lower court had committed error by accepting the verdict, it wаs a type of error which could be corrected only on direct appeal.
