OPINION
Appellant, James Corkan, was indicted on charges of murder, voluntary and involuntary manslaughter. A jury returned a verdict of murder of the first degree and fixed appellant’s sentence as life imprisonment. It is undisputed that appellant shot and killed his wife, Mary Emma Corkan. Appellant raises two contentions on appeal: 1) that it was error for the lower court to fail to charge the jury that psychiatric evidence could be considered for the purpose of negating the presence of specific intent to kill, an element of the crime of murder of the first degree; and 2) that the lower court erred in its charge to the jury cohcerning murder of the second degree.
Appellant, however, did not object or take a specific exception to either charge, although he was expressly offered the opportunity to do so by the lower court. Instead, appellant attempted to rely on a general exception to the charge after the jury retired to begin its deliberations. We have repeatedly held that a general exception to a charge is not sufficient to preserve an issue for appeal.
Commonwealth v. Carr,
Judgment of sentence affirmed.
