Opinion by
All of the implications of
Escobedo v. Illinois,
Appellant, Leroy Padgett, after a June 1965 jury trial, wаs convicted of second degree murder. Post-trial motions were filed and denied, but no appeal was taken. Padgett subsequently filed a petition under the Post Conviction Hearing Act alleging only that the trial court erred in allowing the introduction into evidence of a statement оbtained in the absence of counsel at a time when representation was constitutionally required. Post-conviction counsel was appointed, an evidentiary hearing held and relief denied. We affirm.
*231
Although the Commonwealth in its brief admits that a statement was obtained from aрpellant under circumstances violative of
Escobedo,
it insists that this constitutionally tainted evidence is admissible for the purpose of impeaching credibility
1
if certain specified conditions exist. Support for this proposition can be found in
Commonwealth v. Wright,
A careful reading of
Escobedo
in light of the gloss placed upon that decision by
Miranda v. Arizona,
The Commonwealth next contends that utilization of the statement, if error, was harmless. 5 Since we are undoubtedly confronted with an error of constitutional proportions, the question thus presented is whether evidentiary use of Padgett’s statement can be tested by the harmless error standard, see Chapman v. California, supra, or whether Padgett’s conviction must be reversed without any inquiry as to the impact of the error under the doctrine of automatic reversal. 6 “There are *233 places in the law through which a pair of mutually oblivious doctrines run in infinitely parallel contrariety, like a pair of poolhall scoring racks on one or the other of which, seemingly at random, cases get hung up.” 7 This observation could easily be applied to the harmless error-automatic reversal dichotomy only partially resolved by Chapman. Although Chapman did recognize the existence of the automatic reversal cases, it made no attempt to articulate the rationale separating those constitutional errors requiring automatic reversal from those to which the harmless error doctrine can be applied other than to classify the automatic reversal cases as involving “constitutional rights so basic to a fair trial that their infraction can nevеr be treated as harmless error.” 8
Apparently the United States Supreme Court was content in
Chapman
to permit state and lower federal courts to fill the interstices between errors affecting rights basic to a fair trial and those which can be tested by the rubric of harmless error.
9
Fortunately, how
*234
ever, later decisions strongly indicate that the United States Supremе Court has taken a position on the proper classifications of
Escobedo
and
Miranda,
and would hold that an
Esobedo
or
Miranda
error can be harmless. In
United States v. Wade,
This observation is confirmed by
Stovall v. Denno,
We are therefore confronted with a decision indicating that the
Chapman
doctrine can he applied to lineup cases
(Wade)
and another decision holding that for purposes оf retroactivity
Wade
presents considerations markedly similar to those of
Escobedo
and
Miranda (Stovall).
Recognizing that the considerations evaluated in determining whether retroactive application is warranted are not in all respects identical to those involved in classifying a right as “so basic to a fair trial that . . . [its] infraction can never be treated as harmless error,” it remains clear that one of the primary bases for both decisions is the degree of impact that the right involved has upon the fact-finding process. For example, the right to trial counsel under
Gideon v. Wainwright,
All that remains is tо determine whether use of Padgett’s statement was harmless. On four separate occasions mention was made at trial of the statement. To place these references in context, a brief discussion of appellant’s case is necessary. Other than several сharacter witnesses testifying as to Padgett’s good reputation and as to the decedent’s reputation for violence, the defense consisted of appellant’s version of the shooting here involved. Padgett, a bartender, was working the night shift; as he was cleaning the counter, Donald Howard (the decedent) accused Padgett of taking his drink. Padgett denied this accusation and began to wash some glasses in a tub behind the bar. According to appellant, Howard then leaned over the bar and struck him in the mouth. Intending to eject Howard from the bar, Padgett then tоok a gun concealed in a cigar box under the bar and, holding the gun in his right hand, walked from behind the bar and confronted Howard. As Padgett reached for Howard with his left hand in an attempt to spin Howard in the direction of the exit, Padgett fired one shot into the side of the bar allegedly to frighten Hоward. Howard immediately thereafter “moved in on” Padgett and, as Padgett subsequently testified, his gun accidentally discharged the fatal shot.
*237 On four occasions during Padgett’s cross-examination the Commonwealth quoted from Padgett’s statement; two can be classified as involving contradictiоns, one as an omission and one as consistent. Tlie two contradictions comprise the following: Padgett testified at trial that Howard was standing at the bar when he accused Padgett of taking his drink while in the statement Padgett placed Howard as seated at the bar; at trial Padgett insistеd that he was not certain as" to the length of his acquaintance with Howard (but that it was more than one year) although in his statement he related that he knew Howard for about one year. Padgett testified that he told Howard that he had not served him a drink, but the statement, as pointed out by the prosecution, omitted any reference to this remark. Finally, Padgett testified that, at the instant the fatal shot was fired, Howard was “moving in” as if he was going to strike Padgett, while in the statement, as read to the jury, Padgett said “it was just as if he was going to leap on you.”
Cognizant of the fact that under the stringent Chapman standard we can classify the usе of Padgett’s statement as harmless error only if we are convinced that the error “was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt,” we nevertheless believe that this error was harmless. 11 The above four references constitute the only mention *238 made of the statement. 12 Assuming that the jury chose to believe Padgett’s statement and reject any part of his trial testimony inconsistent therewith, we can find nothing in that statement which in any way derogates from Padgett’s version of the incident. Furthermore, the statement played an insignificant role in the trial. Not only was there no mention in the trial judge’s charge of the statement, a fact which was crucial in both Chapman and Pearson, but the charge as to credibility of witnesses omitted the often included paragraph based upon the latin maxim “falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus” (false in one thing, false in everything). 13 Under these circumstances, the minimal prosecutorial use of Padgett’s statement “was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt” and the order below denying post-conviction relief was therefore corrеct.
Order affirmed.
Notes
Padgett’s statement was employed at trial solely for impeachment purposes.
See
Miranda v. Arizona,
supra at 444,
See
Miranda v. Arizona,
supra at 442,
Id. at 465,
Apparently the Commonwealth has advanced this contention in at least one other case. See
Commonwealth v. Coyle,
See, e.g.,
Haynes v. Washington,
Amsterdam, “The Void-For-Vagueness Doctrine in the Supreme Court,” 109 TJ. Pa. D. Rev. 67 (1960).
See
Chapman v. California,
supra at 23,
Our single
post-Chapman
decision applied the harmless error rule to a fourth amendment violation, see
Commonwealth v. Pearson,
supra, a decision in accord with the result reached by the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in
United States v. Ramseur,
United States v. Wade,
supra at 227,
Several of our
pre-Chapman
decisions involve a problem similar to the one here presented. See
Commonwealth ex rel. Edowski v. Maroney,
Appellant strenuously insists that the statement in fact played a considerably greater role since the jury had possession of it during its deliberations. Thе statement, never read in its entirety to the jury, was at one point marked for identification by the Commonwealth and a motion was made and granted for its admission. The record, however, gives no indication that this exhibit was taken into the jury room. At the post-conviction hearing, Detective John McGill testified that when he obtained the statement three copies were made. Two copies were at the time of hearing in his possession and he assumed that the third was given to the district attorney and then to the jury. It is not an invarient practice for the jury to be given all exhibits. Nor did post-conviction counsel question either trial counsel or the prosecuting district attorney as to whether the jury did in fact have the statement. Under these circumstances, appellant did not prove that the jurors had a copy of his statement while they deliberated.
We do not wish it thought that such a charge was required for such a charge would have been error. See
Western Show Company v. Mix,
