Following a jury trial on a complaint charging possession of a controlled substance (heroin) (G. L. c. 94C, § 34), the defendant was convicted of being present where heroin was illegally kept (G. L. c. 94C, § 35). The defendant contends that he was convicted of an offense not charged in the complaint.
The jury could have found that on November 8, 1977, at 2:00 a.m. the police, armed with a search warrant, entered the apartment occupied by the defendant, his girl friend and her five children. In the course of a lengthy search, the police seized, among other things, a paper bag containing: a box of aluminum foil, a spoon inscribed with the name of *380 a restaurant where the defendant worked, and a mortar and pestle each of which were found to have a residue of heroin.
Immediately prior to closing arguments, the judge informed counsel that he intended to charge the jury “on any lesser included offense.” In his charge, the judge told the jury, “you can bring back a verdict of guilty of a lesser included offense of being present at a place where heroin is kept or deposited,” and he correctly charged on the elements of that offense.
The defendant did not object to the instructions on the “lesser included offense,” although he had excepted to the denial of his nonspecific motion for a directed verdict at the close of the evidence. 1 Posttrial, the defendant moved to renew his motion for a directed verdict and added as a ground the claim that the offense of being present where heroin is kept is not a lesser included offense of possession of heroin, and that therefore his conviction cannot stand. He excepted to the denial of the motion as renewed.
A complaint which, as here, charges only a misdemeanor, not only charges the principal offense but also lesser included offenses, and a defendant may be convicted under such a complaint for a lesser included offense.
Commonwealth
v.
Gosselin,
The Commonwealth argues that the defendant waived any objection to this result when he failed to object to the instructions concerning the “lesser included offense.” The Commonwealth contends that the defendant, not having objected to the instructions, and having gained the advantage of an acquittal on the charge of possession, possibly as the result of a compromise verdict on the supposed lesser offense, and in other words, “having tested the water,” cannot withdraw and contest the conviction on the ground that he was improperly charged with the supposed lesser offense. It relies on
People
v.
Hensel,
We shall assume that the defendant’s exceptions to the denials of his motion for a directed verdict, as first made and as renewed, were not sufficient as objections to the judge’s instructions, and we shall reverse only if there is a “substantial risk of a miscarriage of justice.”
Commonwealth
v.
Freeman,
Judgment reversed.
Verdict set aside.
Judgment for the defendant.
Notes
The defendant also contests the denial of his motion for a directed verdict on the ground of insufficiency of the evidence. We do not reach that question.
The “same evidence” rule as bearing on double jeopardy protections is inapplicable. See
Commonwealth
v.
Cerveny, 373
Mass. 345, 354-356
*381
(1977);
Commonwealth
v.
Hogan,
General Laws c. 277, § 35A, was in effect at the time of trial. It was repealed by St. 1979, c. 344, § 35, but has been replaced by Rule 4(d) of the Massachusetts Rules of Criminal Procedure,
