In
Commonwealth
v.
Hennessey,
With the assistance of fresh counsel, 2 Hennessey pressed his motion for a new trial on two grounds: (1) newly discovered *385 evidence, and (2) deprivation of the right to testify at trial in his own behalf. As to the latter ground, Hennessey asserts that his desire to take the stand was overborne by his lawyer and that the trial judge, on his own initiative, should have inquired of the defendant whether his failure to testify was voluntary. The motion for a new trial was denied after hearing, 3 setting the stage for this appeal.
1.
Newly discovered evidence.
Hennessey’s conviction arose out of the fatal stabbing of Michael Lumenti on October 3, 1981. The circumstances of that tragedy are recounted in
Commonwealth v. Hennessey,
In a memorandum of decision accompanying his denial of Hennessey’s motion for a new trial, the trial judge questioned whether Dorsey’s proffered evidence was newly discovered in the sense of not having been previously known. See
Commonwealth
v.
Brown,
Appropriately, the judge invoked his position to assess the probable impact of the proffered evidence on the jury together with the other evidence presented.
Commonwealth
v.
Bernier,
A motion for a new trial, in the absence of constitutional error, is addressed to the sound discretion of the trial judge.
Commonwealth v. Grace,
2.
Defendant’s right to testify and the need for a colloquy on that subject.
Although discussions of testimonial privilege more often concern themselves with the right
not
to testify, the right to testify in one’s own behalf is equally fundamental.
Harris v. New York,
With those principles in mind, we are unpersuaded by Hen-nessey’s argument that he was deprived of the right to testify in his own behalf. We think his decision not to testify was knowing and intelligent. Hennessey’s full appeal, which resulted in
Hennessey I,
was briefed and argued by counsel other than the experienced lawyer who had tried the case. That appeal, therefore, was unencumbered by a need of counsel to justify a position previously taken or by a strained relationship (if there was one) between the defendant and trial counsel. Yet the appeal did not breathe a word hinting frustration of Hennessey’s right to testify. The trial judge, when he had the motion for a new trial before him, could have been forgiven for smelling an after-the-fact invention. See
Commonwealth
v.
Wooldridge,
At his trial, Hennessey gave the judge no indication of conflict with his lawyer about a desire to testify. Hennessey’s counsel, after consultation with the codefendant’s counsel, asked for, and received, a jury instruction that the jurors were not to draw an adverse inference from his failure to take the stand. See
Commonwealth
v.
Buiel,
*388 During the hearing on the motion for a new trial, the “right to testify” point was lightly pressed compared to the “new evidence” issue. For example, an affidavit had been obtained from trial counsel about what significance he attributed to Dorsey’s proffered testimony. The affidavit is silent on the question of any disagreement with the defendant about his testifying. The judge in his memorandum of decision on the new trial motion confined himself to discussion of the purported newly discovered evidence and did not refer to the defendant’s claim that he had been prevented from testifying. We would have welcomed the judge’s finding on the latter issue, but his denial of the motion is an implicit statement that he did not credit the defendant’s affidavit that he had wanted to testify.
Relying on
People
v.
Curtis,
The idea expressed in Colorado’s
Curtis
case, that the trial judge should discuss with the defendant his right to testify, has found partial acceptance in
Culberson
v.
State,
In
United States
v.
Systems Architects, Inc.,
Unlike the broad strategic decision of waiving the right to trial by jury, which is made before trial begins, or pleading guilty, which is generally made before trial but, in all events, brings trial to an end, the decision whether the defendant shall take the stand is a tactical one. 5 It is often reserved to await developments in the trial. Those developments may be such that taking the stand would be the lesser evil. Conversely, the trial’s course may be such that the wiser maneuver is not to expose the defendant to cross-examination before a jury or to a recital of his prior convictions. When then ought the colloquy between judge and defendant occur? The judge cannot know that the defendant has not testified until the defense has rested. That is surely an awkward time to engage in a discussion with the defendant which might lead to a rupture with defense counsel (such might be the case should counsel be convinced the story his client wanted to tell was false) 6 or might undo a trial strategy based on the defendant’s not testifying.
Unlike the right to a jury trial and the right to plead not guilty, the right to testify has a mirror image which is constitutionally protected, viz., the right not to testify, to remain silent. When a trial judge intercedes with a colloquy regarding jury trial or the right to plead not guilty, the judge’s intentions are
*390
clear. He is informing the defendant of constitutionally provided protections. The right to testify is more complex. There is a risk that in explicating the right to testify the judge will cast in unflattering light the right not to testify. To claim the privilege not to testify, the defendant merely remains silent. He does not have to
claim
anything.
United States
v.
Ives,
For reasons such as these, courts have shied from insinuating judges into the resolution of tactical questions which are properly those of counsel. See
Estelle
v.
Williams,
We decline to require an on-the-record waiver of the defendant’s right to testify or that the judge engage in a colloquy with the defendant about the subject.
Order denying motion for a new trial affirmed.
Notes
Convictions of larceny and cruelty to animals were also affirmed.
Counsel appointed to press the new trial motion was the fourth lawyer appointed to represent Hennessey.
We do not detain the reader with an account of the trial court and appellate proceedings which occurred prior to the time the trial judge held a hearing on the motion for a new trial.
We are unconvinced by the defendant’s argument that a motion in limine about prior convictions is virtually routine and that no inferences should be drawn from the making of such a motion. Relatively routine they may be
(Commonwealth
v.
Rossi,
As to the requirement of a colloquy in connection with a plea of guilty, see Mass.R.Crim.P. 12(c) (3),
See S.J.C. Rule 3:07, DR 7-102A(4), as appearing in
Commonwealth
v.
Siciliano,
