This is an appeal under G. L. c. 278, §§ 33A-33G, from a conviction for the sale of marijuana. The defendant was given a suspended sentence to the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Concord and *500 placed on probation for two years. The Commonwealth’s evidence of the sale was given by a police officer who testified that on April 20,1968, at about 1:00 or 1:30 p.m. he met the defendant and bought the marijuana from him. The sale had been prearranged. The officer had previously met the defendant after a conversation with “a fellow at a diner in Saugus,” who was subsequently referred to as “Joe.” At that first meeting with the defendant, he had told the officer that he did not then have any marijuana left, and that the officer “was to be notified when he would have some for sale.” On cross-examination the officer testified that Joe had been present at the sale. Defense counsel then asked the officer for Joe’s last name. This was excluded “at this time” after defense counsel indicated that the nature of the defense would disclose the need for Joe’s identity.
When the defendant took the stand he denied that the sale had occurred. He testified that on the day in question he had arrived home with his father about 4:30 to 5:00 a.m. from Norwich University, where they had visited the defendant’s brother. He had arisen at about ten minutes to one and gone with a friend, Richards, to Nahant Beach and then to a concert in Boston. Richards and the defendant’s father corroborated this testimony. Richards testified that he had picked up the defendant at his house about 1:00 p.m.
Thereafter, defense counsel called the officer who had previously testified and asked the name and address of the person who had been with him at the sale. The prosecuting attorney objected, and the court said: “The Officer has said that he has met this defendant at a certain place with a witness. The defendant denies this. I suggest that we have that witness.” The noon recess was then declared. At the beginning of the afternoon session, the question as to the name and address of the witness to the alleged sale was read, and the court sustained the prosecution’s objection, made on the basis that the witness was an informer; the defendant excepted. The court then foreclosed any further inquiry into the identity of the informer, declaring that the defendant had protected his rights by proper exceptions. The defendant thereupon rested. We agree with the defend *501 ant’s contention that he was entitled to disclosure of the name and address of the informer.
The privilege of the state to withhold the identification of an informer is well-established. It was originally justified as a means of encouraging “every citizen” in his “duty ... to communicate to his government any information which he has of the commission of an offence against its laws.”
Worthington
v.
Scribner,
The Supreme Judicial Court has apparently never had occasion to deal with the exception to the privilege, also well-established, that “the
trial court may compel disclosure
if it appears necessary in order to avoid the risk of false testimony or in order to secure useful testimony. For example, disclosure will be compelled if the informer is a material witness on the issue of guilt.” Wigmore, Evidence (McNaughton rev.) § 2374, p. 768. See cases collected in the annotation in 76 A. L. R. 2d 262. In
Rouiaro
v.
United States,
We need not decide what, if any, differences there are among these formulations since the defendant had a right in the circumstances of this case to elicit the identity of the informer, whichever formulation is applied. The issue was clear — whether the police officer who testified to the sale was telling the truth or whether the defendant and his witnesses who testified to an alibi were telling the truth. The testimony of the informer, whom the police officer placed at the sale, was obviously crucial. Indeed, the trial court recognized the materiality of the informer’s evidence and ordered that he be produced by the Commonwealth. The court’s subsequent ruling that he need not be produced because he was an informer and the refusal (on the Commonwealth’s objection made for that reason) to permit the defendant to elicit his identity failed to recognize the exception to the informer privilege and was error.
The Commonwealth points to the rule that the identity of an informer need not be divulged where the issue is the suppression of illegally obtained evidence. In that case it rests “entirely with the judge who hears the motion to suppress to decide whether he needs such disclosure as to the informant in order to decide whether the officer is a believable witness.”
State
v.
Burnett,
42 N. J. 377, 388
*503
(1964), quoted in
McCray
v.
Illinois,
Nor can we accept the distinction urged by the Commonwealth between an informer who participates in the crime and one who is merely a witness. In either event his involvement ris such that the disclosure of his identity is important to a fair determination of the case. Here, the police officer testified that the informer was the only other person present at the sale and, what is more, arranged the meeting at which it occurred. On these facts disclosure was required.
1
State
v.
Godwin,
*504
The Commonwealth finally urges that the refusal by the trial court to permit the disclosure of the informer was not prejudicial. But we cannot tell what the effect of such disclosure might have been. We do not know what contradictions and inconsistencies defense counsel might have elicited on interrogating the informer, even if, as defense counsel apparently believed, the informer would not have exculpated the defendant.
Chambers
v.
Mississippi,
Since the judgment must be reversed, we need not *505 consider the other assignments of error. The matters raised in them are not likely to recur at a new trial.
Judgment reversed and verdict set aside.
Notes
We do not, of course, undertake to decide on what other facts a defendant may be entitled to the disclosure of the identity of an informer.
Indeed, the refusal to disclose the identity of the informer perforce denied the defendant the right to interview him, to have compulsory process for his presence if necessary (G. L. c. 277, § 66;
Washington v. Texas,
