The Majority Direction
There will be 12 jurors at the start of any criminal trial (and possibly additional reserve jurors in longer trials) but sometimes jurors are discharged during the trial due to illness or for some other good reason. The minimum number of jurors permitted to return a verdict is 9, so any less would require the trial to be aborted.
When it is decided to give a majority direction, the jury will be called back into court and asked by the clerk if they have reached a verdict on which they are all agreed.
If the answer is no, they will be given a majority direction which consists of being informed by the judge that when they retire again they should continue to try to reach a unanimous verdict, but the time has arrived at which a verdict of Guilty or Not Guilty by a majority can be accepted.
They will be told what the permissible majority is and this will depend on the number of jurors left on the jury:
- 12 jurors - the majority verdict can be 11-1 or 10-2.
- 11 jurors - the majority verdict can only be 10-1.
- 10 jurors - the majority verdict can only be 9-1.
- 9 jurors - no majority verdict is permitted (so a majority direction could not be given to a jury of 9, or the jury would be instructed that a majority verdict would no longer be permitted once their number reduced to 9).