THE jury method of trial has long been a popular subject of legal and lay controversy. Ever increasing congestion of court calendars, observed instances of allegedly unjust jury verdicts, ambulance chasing and other unsavory products of negligence litigation have led to increasing protest against this historic method of trial. It has been attacked as unduly expensive, inefficient, unjust, archaic, and unsuited to the needs of our present civilization. On the other hand, the jury system has been defended as intrinsically sound and highly desirable; the ills have been attributed to abuses and causes not inevitably associated with it and curable by appropriate remedies. Many changes have been suggested and some adopted: abolition or restrict...