The defendant has been found guilty by a jury and sentenced on an indictment which charges that he did go away after knowingly colliding with and causing injury to a person without stopping and making known his name, residence, and the number of his motor vehicle. See G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 90, § 24, as amended. There was evidence for the Commonwealth that on January 10, 1950, at about 12:30 a.m. on Hanover Street in Lynn the automobile of the defendant “ran over” the body of a person lying near *752 the center of the street. The automobile “stopped some distance down the street . . . [and] the defendant got out of the driver’s side.” He and a companion came back to the body. A group of people from another automobile were standing near by, and the defendant said in their hearing, “I am Christopher Joyce . . . My God, what am I going to do; I am Councillor Joyce.” He requested one of the group not to tell the police that his' (Joyce’s) automobile ran over the body, and to get the other people to say that when they first saw his automobile it was parked on Chase Street. After the automobile passed over the body, blood . was seen by members of this group of people around the body where it had not been seen before. Police officers arrived on the scene within a short- time and in putting the body into the police ambulance one of the officers “detected breathing and pulse.” The officers knew the defendant by name and that he was a city councillor from ward six, and two of them had a general idea as to where he lived. He testified that “no question was raised at the scene by the police as to his identity or his residence; that there was never any question in his mind but that he was fully identified to the police; that his automobile was parked near to where he had been talking to the police officers”; and “that his automobile was fully observed by them.” There' was no evidence that the defendant, either orally or in writing, made known his residence or the register number of his automobile to anyone on behalf of the victim or to any police officer. The defendant excepted to the denial by the trial judge of a motion for a directed verdict of not guilty and subsequent motions for a new trial and a setting aside of the verdict. The exceptions to the denial of these latter motions have not been argued and are treated as waived. .
. There was no error in submitting the case to the jury. There was evidence for their consideration that the defendant was the operator of an automobile which collided with the person lying in the street, that injury was caused to that person/ and-that the defendant was aware of the collision. '•It could have been found that he failed to give the informa
*753
tian required by the statute because he believed that one or more of the police officers knew his name, his residence and the register number of his automobile. Such belief does not excuse his failure to give this information. See
Commonwealth
v.
Horsfall,
The defendant, however, contends that the statute under which he was convicted violates the provision of the Massachusetts Constitution against self incrimination. Article 12 of the Declaration of Rights of the Constitution provides in part that. “No subject shall ... be compelled to accuse, or. furnish evidence against himself.”
This point has not been raised in any of the cases in which we have had occasion to consider that part of the statute, G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 90, § 24, which describes the offence.in question. See
Commonwealth
v.
Horsfall,
The purpose of the statute is to enable one injured by the operation of an automobile upon a public way or a way to which the public has access to obtain forthwith accurate information as to the person in charge of the automobile.
Commonwealth
v.
Horsfall,
The cases in other jurisdictions to which reference herein has been made appear' to have been decided mainly on the ground that acceptance of the privilege to operate an automobile on the highway constituted , a waiver of the constitutional right against compulsory self incrimination. We prefer to rest our decision on the ground that the tendency-of the required information to incriminate the défendant is too remote to form the basis for a claim of privilege. The present case is not one where a charge of criminality in relation to the accident itself has been made against the defendant or where any investigation as to any criminality on his part is being pursued. There is no real or substantial danger that the evidence supplied will lead to a charge of crime or to the securing of evidence to support such a charge. See
Commonwealth
v.
Prince,
There is nothing- in the history of the common law rule,
*757
which is restated substantially in the Constitution of this Commonwealth, to indicate that the rule was intended to cover a situation such as the one we are now considering. See Wigmore, Evidence (3d ed.) §§ 2251, 2259d;
Opinion of the Justices,
Exceptions overruled.
