The defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree for the killing of his wife. He challenges the judge’s refusal to charge the jury on manslaughter and the admission of certain inculpatory statements. He also asks us to exercise our authority under G. L. . c. 278, § 33E, to order the reduction of his degree of guilt to manslaughter. There was no error of law, and we see no occasion to exercise our power under § 33E in favor of the defendant.
1. The defendant argues that voluntary manslaughter was a permissible verdict on the evidence and that the judge should have charged the jury to that effect.
The defendant, who did not testify during the trial, urges that the facts disclosed in his admissions to the police on the day of the shooting would have warranted the jury in finding sufficient provocation to support the lesser charge of voluntary manslaughter. The defendant told the police that he had been separated from his wife for approximately three weeks; he went to see her; while there he went upstairs to see their baby; when he came downstairs, he told his wife that the baby needed his diaper changed; and, using an obscenity, she told him, “I don’t need you around here, I have got another man.” He asked her again to go upstairs to see the baby. Once more using *440 an obscenity, she told him to get out. He pulled out a gun and shot her.
Apparently, the victim did not state who the other man was. His identity may have been revealed in the course of an argument heard by two witnesses. The evidence would have warranted an inference that one of these witnesses was the other man and that he had asked the defendant to go to the victim’s home to prove to the defendant that he (the witness) was living with the defendant’s wife.
Voluntary manslaughter was not a permissible verdict because the evidence would not warrant a finding that sufficient provocation existed. The hostile and obscene character of the victim’s statements clearly was not sufficient provocation. The well established rule in this Commonwealth is that “ [i] nsults or quarreling alone cannot provide a reasonable provocation.”
Commonwealth
v.
Zukoski, ante,
23, 28 (1976).
Commonwealth
v.
Vanderpool,
The existence of sufficient provocation is not foreclosed absolutely because a defendant learns of a fact from oral statements rather than from personal observation. Although recently we made the broad statement that “words alone do not constitute adequate provocation”
(Commonwealth
v.
Vanderpool, supra
at 746), this rule has generally been applied in cases where any provocation arose exclusively from the statements themselves rather than from the information conveyed in those statements.
Commonwealth
v.
Vanderpool, supra
(victim called defendant
*441
a liar).
Commonwealth
v.
Hartford,
Nevertheless, this is not such a case. Past adultery lacks the peculiarly immediate and intense offense to a spouse’s sensitivities which has led courts to recognize present adultery as adequate provocation, and many courts have refused to recognize discovery of past adultery as sufficient provocation.
Palmore
v.
State,
2. The defendant argues next that his motion to suppress certain statements made to the police should have been allowed. The judge made detailed findings concerning the circumstances in which the defendant made certain admissions to the police. These findings, which are amply supported by the evidence, indicate that the defendant was fully informed of his constitutional rights and of his right to use a telephone and that he made a knowing and intelligent waiver of those rights. It appears that the de *443 fendant said, on more than one occasion, that he understood his rights. There was no error in the denial of the motion to suppress.
3. Finally, the defendant urges us to exercise our power and duty under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, to reduce the verdict to manslaughter. Although this case involves a tragic circumstance, an apparently isolated event in the life of one who had no previous criminal record and who served with distinction in the Korean war, after a review of the entire record we see no justification for reducing the degree of guilt to manslaughter or otherwise exercising our authority under § 33E.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
This is the prevailing view elsewhere. See, e.g.,
People
v.
Thompson,
In
Commonwealth
v.
Leate,
Under § 210.3 (1) (b) of the Model Penal Code manslaughter would include any “homicide which would otherwise be murder ... committed under the influence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance for which there is reasonable explanation or excuse.” (Proposed Official Draft 1962). One reason given for this broad formulation was that “the formulation sweeps away the rigid rules that have developed with respect to the sufficiency of particular types of provocation, such as the rule that words alone can never be enough. Given evidence of extreme mental or emotional disturbance, the question whether it is based on ‘reasonable explanation or excuse’ may be confronted, as we think it should be, in the light of all the circumstances in the case.” Comment at 46-47 (Tent. Draft No. 9,1959).
But see
Campbell
v.
State,
