On an indictment charging the defendant with murder in the first degree, the Commonwealth moved for trial on so much of it as chárgéd murder in the second *345 degree. Convicted of murder in the second degree, the defendant appealed. G. L. c. 278, §§ 33A-33G.
We shall state only so much of the evidence as will furnish a background for the questions presented. On the evening of March 30,1968, there was a dance in the recreation hall of St. Hugh’s Church in Roxbury. Attending the dance, among others, were Florette Johnson, Stephen Myers, and the victim of the homicide, Stephen Dunning. Around 10:30 p.m., after dancing with the defendant, Miss Johnson saw him go up to a table where Dunning was sitting, and she followed. When she approached the table she heard the defendant say that Dunning had done something to him a long time ago, and he was going to kill him. Dunning told the defendant to leave him alone. Myers thereupon took a switchblade knife “from . . . [his] side” and flipped it open. At this point Dunning had got up and started moving backwards in an effort to get away. The defendant then, according to Miss Johnson, stabbed Dunning twice in the chest. Immediately before the stabbing, Miss Johnson called out to the defendant, “Don’t, Stephen.”
Someone then pulled the defendant away from Dunning, saying, “The police are out front, let’s go out the back,” and Myers then walked toward the rear exit with the person who had made the remark. As the defendant was leaving the hall he passed a group of boys who were discussing the incident and he overheard one of them ask who had done the stabbing, and he replied, “I got some sucker.”
After the stabbing, Dunning was seen walking backwards toward the stairs leading to the street. He was next seen coming out the front door. After telling an acquaintance that he had been stabbed, he fell to the ground. Dunning was taken to a hospital, where, two weeks later, he died. The cause of death was total destruction of the brain due to lack of oxygen, which was the result of the bleeding, caused by the stab wounds, in the area of the heart.
On May 18, 1968, Myers was arrested by two police officers. At first he denied he was Stephen Myers and gave a false name. Shortly thereafter he revealed Ms true name *346 and said, “I know I am wanted for murder, but I didn’t do it.” He was thereupon arrested.
1. Florette Johnson, the principal eyewitness to the stabbing, was permitted to testify that in the probable cause hearing in the District Court she had testified that she did not know anything about the stabbing; and that she so testified because she had been threatened by one Sissy Richardson, the defendant’s girl friend.
This testimony, which is the subject of assignment of error No. 1, is challenged on the ground that this was prejudicial because there was no evidence tending to prove that the defendant had procured or was responsible for the alleged threats. See
Commonwealth
v.
Min Sing,
This evidence was introduced without objection or exception. In a case tried subject to G. L. c. 278, §§ 33A-33G, an assignment of error not based on an exception brings nothing to this court for review.
Commonwealth
v.
McDonald,
2. With respect to Miss Johnson’s testimony, discussed above, the judge in his charge said, “It is also not disputed that the witness Florette Johnson ... at the proceedings in the Roxbury Municipal Court . . . testified that she had been threatened; and that later at the hearing in . . . [that court] she gave the same testimony that she gave before you in the present trial." The defendant objected to this portion of the charge, asserting that he had never agreed that Miss Johnson had changed her testimony in the District *348 Court. The judge refused to alter the charge. The defendant excepted, an„d this exception is the subject of his seventh assignment of error.
The testimony of Miss Johnson as to what occurred in the District Court is somewhat confused. In substance it amounted to this. She testified twice in the District Court. At some stage she testified that she had been threatened. She also stated that she changed her testimony at the District Court hearings. When she first testified there, she said that she “didn’t know anything.” When she testified the second time she “told them the truth.” At the close of Miss Johnson’s testimony on this subject in the Superior Court, it was unclear whether her denial of knowledge was made the first or second time she testified. At this point the following occurred. Counsel for the defendant directed Miss Johnson’s attention to the following question put to her by the prosecuting officer in the District Court: “Do you remember telling me down at headquarters that you saw him stab him with a knife twice, with his hand?” A. “I said, I didn’t know.” Q. “And that was the second time you took the stand, is that it?” A. “The first.” The Cowet: “Well, do you agree it was the first time, Mr. Wier?” Counsel foe the defendant: “I think she is correct on that, Your Honor. That was the first time.” The Couet: “It is agreed that this was the first time.” Counsel foe the defendant: “This was the first time, Your Honor.” The Couet: “All right.” Counsel for the defence then started on another line of questioning.
The colloquy just recited permits the inference that the defendant’s counsel agreed that Miss Johnson had changed her story. And since he did not pursue her answer, “I told . . . the truth,” the inference is permissible that he conceded that her testimony was in substance the same as in the Superior Court. Thus the judge could have concluded that his statement of what had occurred at the probable cause hearing was in effect agreed to by defence counsel.
But assuming that these were disputed facts, it does not appear that they were material. The only issue on which *349 they were relevant at all was Miss Johnson’s credibility. Contrary to the defendant's contention, we do not interpret the judge’s remarks as an indorsement of Miss Johnson’s credibility. Immediately following the challenged portion of the charge the judge told the jury, “At this trial the truth of the testimony of Florette Johnson is for you to determine; and it is entirely for you.” We are of opinion that there was no violation of G. L. c. 231, § 81, which forbids courts to charge “with respect to matters of fact.”
3. As stated above, shortly after the stabbing the defendant was asked by one of the bystanders in the dance hall who had done the stabbing and he replied, “I got some sucker.” The judge charged the jury that it was for them to “determine whether such a reply, if . . . [theyj found it was given, was a confession by Myers, a direct acknowledgement of his guilt.” No objection or exception was taken to this portion of the charge, which is the subject of his sixth assignment of error. For reasons set forth in part 1 of this opinion the point is not before us. We might add that even if this question were properly before us there is nothing in it. The defendant’s remark was plainly voluntary and was not the result of any custodial interrogation. Thus there was no need, contrary to the defendant's contention, for the judge to make a preliminary finding that the statement was voluntary and to submit the ultimate question of its voluntariness to the jury under the principles set forth in
Commonwealth
v.
Marshall,
4. The judge instructed the jury that there were only two possible verdicts: (1) guilty of murder in the second degree or (2) not guilty. The defendant requested an instruction that the jury could find him guilty of the lesser included offence of assault and battery. The judge refused this request, subject to the defendant’s exception. Assignment of error No. 5.
Whether assault and battery is a lesser included offence
*350
of which a defendant may be convicted under an indictment for murder is a question which appears not to have been discussed by this court. There is, however, an intimation in
Commonwealth
v.
Vanetzian,
There are varying views, however, as to what circumstances require an instruction that a verdict of assault and battery may be returned. Contrast
Marts
v.
State,
But the facts in the case at bar do not meet this test. Uncontradicted testimony established that the death of the decedent was a direct result of the stab wounds. Two wit *351 nesses gave completely consistent, though not identical, accounts of the defendant’s attack on the decedent. Miss Johnson testified that from a distance of ten to twelve feet she observed the defendant take a knife “from . . . [his] side” and stab the decedent twice in the chest. One Virginia Harper testified that she was ten or more feet from the victim and the defendant and that there were other people between her and them. However, her account of the relative positions of the victim and the defendant was consistent with Miss Johnson’s version. Miss Harper testified that she saw the defendant’s right clenched fist against the victim’s chest but saw no knife. Only in this last particular does her story differ from Miss Johnson’s. But a clenched right fist against the chest in the area where the stab wounds were found is entirely consistent with the stabbing that Miss Johnson described.
Moreover, two pieces of circumstantial evidence lend support to the inference that a fatal stabbing rather than a battery occurred. In response to a friend’s query as to who did the stabbing, the defendant said, “I got some sucker.” And blood was found on the floor of the dance hall.
In the light of this evidence there was no reasonable basis to allow the jury to return a verdict for assault and battery. Such a verdict could only have resulted from a distorted and palpably unrealistic view of the evidence.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Instead of moving for trial on so much of the indictment as charged murder in the second degree, it would have been more appropriate if the prosecutor had filed a nolle prosequi with respect to the first degree charge. But what was done was in effect a nolle prosequi and we treat it as such.
Commonwealth
v.
Wakelin,
It would appear that conviction for assault and battery, as the lesser included offence, is authorized by G. L. c. 278, § 12, which reads: “If a person indicted for a felony is acquitted by the verdict of part of the crime charged, and is convicted of the residue, such verdict may be received and recorded by the court, and thereupon the defendant shall be adjudged guilty of the crime, if any, which appears to the court to be substantially charged by the residue of the indictment, and shall be sentenced and punished accordingly.” The prescribed form for an indictment for murder (see G. L. c. 277, § 79), which was used here, contains an allegation of assault and battery.
