Convicted of murder in the first degree, robbery, and confining or putting in fear for the purpose of stealing, the three defendants appeal pursuant to G. L. c. 278, §§ 33A-33G. In twenty-four days of trial they claimed 254 exceptions, and they assigned 217 errors but argued only ten. We treat the assignments of error not argued as waived. S.J.C. Rule 1:13, as amended,
The crimes were committed December 3, 1972. The indictments were returned January 21, 1974. Pretrial motions were heard April 5, 1974, and trial began April 16, *3 1974, ending in a mistrial on May 11, 1974. Further pretrial motions were heard October 8, 1974, and verdicts of guilty were returned on November 12, 1974.
We summarize the evidence. The victim, Norman Welch, a florist, died between 7 and 10 p.m. on December 3, 1972, from multiple blows to his head and neck. A neighbor identified the defendant Witham as one of the two men she saw walking down Welch’s street about 5:45 p.m. that еvening. An attendant at a local gasoline station saw the defendants Hicks and Marshall and another man in Hicks’s car about 6:30 p.m. Another neighbor saw three men leave a car and stand by Welch’s greenhouse about 6:30 or 7 p.m.
The two principal Commonwealth witnessеs were Jean Eaton and Bert Abrahams. Eaton testified that Hicks, Marshall and another man came to her house about 6:30 or 7 p.m., and that Hicks asked her to telephone the victim to get him out of his house. She declined. Abrahams testified that the three defendants camе to his house at 7:20 p.m., and that Hicks invited him to join them in robbing the victim. He declined. At 9:45 p.m. Hicks and Witham returned to Abrahams’s home; Hicks said they got $15,000, and Witham asked Abrahams to call the police because "the man is tied up and he is hurt pretty bad.” The next morning Marshall told Abrahams that the viсtim came out of his house and that they tried to knock him out, pulled him inside, and tied him up. Hicks later told Eaton he never went inside.
There was evidence that Hicks and Marshall had heard that the victim kept money in his house, and old silver certificates were found there after thе murder. Hicks later deposited or exchanged similar certificates; Witham had a large amount of old bills and told a witness the money came from a robbery in Massachusetts; Marshall engaged in large cash transactions soon after the murder. In a search of Marshаll’s house trailer in November, 1973, police found a piece of paper with the victim’s handwriting on it.
*4 The defendants testified in their own behalf and called witnesses to corroborate their alibis. Hicks testified he had gone with Abrahams and another man to rob the victim but backed out when he realized they could not get the victim out of his house. Hicks and Witham said they got the money from Abrahams; Marshall testified to money borrowed by him in August, 1972, and January, 1973, track winnings, and the sale of cars.
We indicate which defendants argue each of the ten issues.
1.
Motions to sever
(Marshall, Witham). Both before and at trial Marshall and Witham moved for separаte trials, relying principally on
Bruton
v.
United States,
The
Bruton
case held that it was a denial of the defendant’s constitutional right of confrontation to admit a codefendant’s confession inculpating him, when the codefendant did not takе the stand and expose himself to cross-examination, despite clear instructions to the jury to consider the inculpatory evidence only against the
*5
codefendant. We have left open the possibility that the inculpatory connection need not reside in the terms of the statement itself, but may be supplied by the content of the statement taken in connection with other evidence in the case.
Commonwealth
v.
LeBlanc,
2. Motion to suppress (Hicks, Marshall). Marshall assigns as error the denial of his motion to suppress the piece of paper, bearing the victim’s handwriting, seized in his trailer in New Hampshire. Hicks concedes that he has no standing to challenge the search, but argues that, if the evidence is suppressed on Marshall’s motion, it is inadmissible against him, since it was admitted only on a theory of common enterprise. Marshall’s contentions are that the search and seizure violated N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 595-A.5 (1976) in three respects: (1) the inventory of items seized was not made in his presence, although he was available; (2) he was not given a receipt for the items seized; and (3) the return on the warrant lacked the signature of the justicе of the peace before whom the return was made.
There was no error. Violation of the statute is not a ground for exclusion of evidence under New Hampshire law.
State
v.
Gilson,
3. Examination of prospective jurors (Marshall, Witham). The judge asked each prospective juror whether he had heard of the case or knew anything about it. The eleventh juror called referred to "the scuttlebutt upstairs,” and on further inquiry said that the scuttlebutt was that the case was being heard for the second time and was a murder case. The judge denied the defendants’ motion to dischargе the venire, and continued to ask the same series of question of some 220 prospective jurors, following up with additional questions where appropriate. Ten said they had heard about the case "upstairs,” "downstairs,” "from people talking,” or "around the grаpevine.” Three of the ten had heard there was a mistrial. Eight of the ten were excused; two were chosen and sworn before the defendants had exhausted their peremptory challenges.
There was no error. Exposure of prospective jurors to disсussion or comment about a case is not a ground for dismissal of the venire.
Commonwealth
v.
Horton,
4.
Denial of voir dire
(Witham). During the trial Witham moved for a voir dire on his identification by the
*7
witness Webber. The judge noted that such a voir dire had been held at the first trial, and that there was no representation that there was new evidence. He denied the motion as untimely under Rule 61 of the Superior Court (1974), but allowed the transcript of the previous voir dire and the findings made at the first trial to be made an exhibit. There was no error. See
Commonwealth
v.
Lewis,
5.
Distinctive photograph
(Witham). On direct examination the witness Webber identified Witham as one of the two men she had seen on the victim’s strеet the evening of the crime. Cross-examination on behalf of the defendant Witham brought out testimony that the police had shown her five photographs and she had selected one. On redirect examination, over the defendant Witham’s exception, the Commonwealth was permitted to put in evidence the five photographs, including the photograph of Witham the witness had selected. Witham now argues that his photograph was the only one of the five showing the dark hair and dark complexion the witness had described to thе police. After the voir dire at the first trial, the judge found that these photographs "were of people of about the same size and general description. There was no impermissible indication or hint as to which one was Witham.” Those findings were supported by the evidence, and we do not disturb them.
Commonwealth
v.
Murphy,
6. Restriction of cross-examination (Hicks, Witham). The witness Eaton testified on cross-examination that the other principal witness for the Commonwealth, Abrahams, was the uncle of her former husband, that she had dated Abrahams after her husband and she broke up, and that Abrahams had spent the night at her house more than once seven or eight years before the trial. The judge excluded questions inquiring into the circumstances of her divorce, whether she had "relations” with *8 Abrahams, whether Abrahams had ever given her “grass,” and whether she had ever modeled fоr photographs. Hicks and Witham now argue that they were prevented from exposing the character of the continuing relationship between the two witnesses, and that such exposure was of paramount importance because Eaton provided the only corroboration of Abrahams’s testimony.
Reasonable cross-examination of a witness to show bias or prejudice has long been matter of right.
Commonwealth
v.
Russ, 232
Mass. 58, 79 (1919).
Commonwealth
v.
Graziano,
7.
Instructions on circumstantial evidence
(Hicks, Marshall, Witham). In his charge the judge discussed direct and circumstantial evidence and said that if, after drawing inferences and conclusions that struck them as logical and reasonable beyond their reasonable doubt, they still had a reasonable doubt of the guilt of a defendant, their verdict should be not guilty of that crime. He later instructed them that the burden was on the Commonwealth to satisfy them beyond their reasonable dоubt that the defendant or defendants committed the essential elements of the crime. He then said, “The Commonwealth is not obliged to prove beyond your reasonable doubt the truth as to every single issue that comes up in a trial, because inevitably in a trial of this kind therе are many collateral issues that arise going perhaps to the credibility of witnesses, disputes as to where a given witness may have been at a time, and
that sort of thing”
(emphasis supplied). He then elaborated on the meaning of reasonable doubt. The defendants cоntend that the quoted sentence, particularly the emphasized portion,
*9
diluted the standard of persuasion with respect to circumstantial evidence. As to such evidence, they say, "the several circumstances upon which the conclusion depends must bе fully established by proof... as if each one were itself the main fact in issue,” quoting
Commonwealth
v. Webster,
The quoted portion of the charge is accurate as far as it goes. We do not think the judge was required to give the
Webster
charge on circumstantial evidence. That charge also inсluded a statement that failure of proof of a particular fact, not essential to the conclusion, "does not destroy the chain of evidence; it only fails to give it that particular corroboration, which the fact, if proved, might afford.”
Id.
at 313. See
Commonwealth
v.
Medeiros,
8. Instructions on hypothetical cases (Marshall, Witham). In defining participation in crime, the judge used as an example a lynching in which a hundred people participated but only three could be identified. He told the jury that on incontrovertible evidence against the three, they must be convicted even though the other ninety-seven go free. Later, in discussing a common plan to commit larceny, he used the case of a robbery in which two men went inside a house while a third stayed outside as a lookout. Marshall and Witham contend that thеse hypothetical cases propounded the Commonwealth’s theory of the case, to their prejudice.
Throughout the charge, the judge took pains to avoid alluding to the evidence. He told the jury that they were
*10
to find the facts, disregarding any factual stаtement he might make. Taken as a whole, the charge did not unfairly emphasize the Commonwealth’s view of the facts.
Commonwealth
v.
Therrien,
9.
Felony murder
(Hicks). Hicks attacks the constitutionality of the felony-murder rule. We recently considered and rejected the same arguments.
Commonwealth
v.
Watkins,
10. Section 33E. In accordance with our duty under G. L. c. 278, § 33E, we have reviewed the entire record, including the transcripts and exhibits, and we find no reason to change the ultimate outcome.
Judgments affirmed.
