Upon a second indictment for the murder of Frank Duarte on October 24, 1966, Rollins was found guilty of murder in the second degree of Frank Duarte by shooting. The case is before us under G. L. c. 278, §§ 33A-33G. The facts pertinent to each assignment of error are stated in connection with that аssignment.
*632 1. On November 15, 1966, Rollins was first indicted. On March 9, 1967, the District Attorney filed a nolie prosequi with respect to so much of that indictment as charged murder in the first degree. On that day also Rollins (for whom counsel had been appointed) filed a plea of guilty of second degrеe murder.
A Superior Court judge on November 7, 1967, granted Rollins’s motion pro se to vacate sentence and to retract his plea of guilty. A new indictment for murder against Rollins was returned on November 9, 1967. The earlier sentence was revoked with the notation on the docket that Rollins had “this day been reindicted.”
To the new indictment Rollins filed a plea of not guilty. He also filed a motion to dismiss so much of the second indictment as charged murder in the first degree. In this he asserted essentially the facts set out above concerning the рroceedings on the first indictment and the reindictment. A second Superior Court judge, who later presided at the trial, denied this motion prior to trial of the second indictment. He also, during the trial, twice denied a second motion to dismiss so much of the indictment as charged first degree murder.
When the nolle prosequi of the first degree murder charge in the first indictment was filed, no jury had “been called and charged with the deliverance of the accused.” Rollins had not been placed in legal “jeopardy.”
Kepner
v.
United States,
Rollins, although not acquitted of first degree murder on the first indictment, argues that “fundamental justice” (see the Hetenyi case, supra) should preclude his reindictment for first degree murder following the District Attorney’s discontinuance of the first degree charge in the first indictment. This contention is without merit. We think that the Superior Court judge, whose order vacated the second degree sentence upon Rollins’s motion, could have permitted the District Attorney to withdraw his discontinuance of the first degree charge. It may reasonably be inferred that Rollins’s willingness to plead guilty to a second degree charge, and thus avoid the risks and burdens of a capital trial, was the reason for the District Attorney’s discontinuance of the first degree charge. When Rollins sought to withdraw his plea, there would have been no injustice in placing not only Rollins, but also the Commonwealth, in the same position in which they severally were bеfore the acceptance of the discontinuance of the first degree charge and the plea to second degree murder. The same result could be obtained by reindictment. The trial judge properly refused to dismiss so much of the second indictmеnt as charged first degree murder.
2. The trial judge was not required to charge that the jury would not be warranted in returning a verdict of guilty of murder in either the first or second degree. The evidence most favorable to the Commonwealth permitted the jury to conclude (a) thаt Rollins spent a considerable period prior to the shooting of Duarte drinking in the Broadway Cafe in New Bedford; (b) that, at some time during the evening, Duarte gave Rollins a demonstration of judo or karate, in which Rollins fell to the floor two or three times; (c) that Rollins “was feeling pretty good” and had been “drinking to excess,” (but there was conflicting testimony concerning whether he was drunk or was walking fairly well); (d) that *634 at some time Rollins was hurt or became angry, and told Alfred Santos, who was in the cafe, that he (Rollins) had a gun and would shoot Duarte; (e) thаt Rollins left the cafe, went to his house, and returned with a loaded rifle, after an absence of about fifteen minutes; (f) that no one struck Rollins after his return, until Rollins fired a shot which hit Duarte, at a time when Duarte was about to leave the cafe; and (g) that the shot resulted in Duаrte’s death. The jury were not required to believe Rollins’s testimony, in effect, that during the evening he had been attacked by Duarte, a much bigger man, with judo blows; that Duarte had twisted his arm (before Rollins left the cafe to get his rifle) without Rollins’s consent or provocation; that, whеn Rollins returned from his house with the rifle, he had no intention of firing it; that after Rollins’s return, Duarte approached him and slapped him; or that Rollins was seriously under the influence of alcohol during the altercation and later when he made somewhat incriminating admissions to рolice officers (after being warned of his rights).
The jury, on the conflicting evidence, could reasonably have concluded that Rollins, for at least fifteen minutes, had entertained the intention of shooting Duarte and had made a substantial taxi trip to obtain a rifle fоr the purpose. It was open to the jury, particularly in view of the prolonged opportunity for premeditation, to find Rollins guilty of either first degree or second degree murder. See
Commonwealth
v.
Soaris,
3. Rollins contends that the situation before us is similar to that considered in
Commonwealth
v.
Baker,
4. The trial judge was warranted in admitting evidence of Rollins’s statements to police officers immediately after the shooting. The judge could reasonably conclude, both on the testimony at a voir dire and before the jury, that Rollins had been given the warnings required by
Miranda
v.
Arizona,
5. The jury retired to consider the case at 11:48 a.m. on Januаry 30, 1968. At 5 p.m. on that day, the jury were recalled to the courtroom. The judge commented that there seemed to be “disagreement or failure to reach a verdict at this point.” He then read to them essentially verbatim the charge approved in
Commonwealth
v.
Tuey,
The
Tuey
charge was approved in
Allen
v.
United States,
We are aware that the
Tuey
and
Allen
charges have been the subject of recеnt adverse criticism. See Am. Bar Assn. Project on Minimum Standards for Criminal Justice, Standards Relating to Trial by Jury (1968), § 5.4, pp. 145-156, and cases cited. This report recommends that use of this type of charge be discontinued. Certain additions to, or variations of, the charge have been disаpproved as coercive.
Jenkins
v.
United States,
*638 Most objections to the Tuey charge, and to some modifications of it, have been that the charge may coerce jurors improperly to disregard their reasonably entertained, conscientious judgments. The language plainly was originally carefully formulated to avoid any such effect, and to state merely what an intelligent juror should set as a standard for his own conduct. Obviously, the charge should be used with care to avoid all coercion and any indication of judicial bias or pressure. It should not be еmployed prematurely or indiscriminately. While expansion of the language may run the risk of appellate disapproval, much must be left to the discretion of the trial judge in this, as in other matters affecting the conduct of the trial.
We think that the language of the Tuey case has stood the test of time as a reasonable method of inviting a jury’s attention, even after the original charge, to considerations which, as reasonable men, they should take into account, without surrendering positions which conscience and careful judgment have led them to adopt. The parties are entitled to have a jury appropriately guided at all stages by the trial judge, whose proper participation is essential to fair trial by jury. The Tuey charge seems to us a method by which a trial judge may assist a jury when requesting them to consider a case further.
No special circumstances made the use of the Tuey charge inappropriate in the present case. The evidence was not unduly extensive. The issues were not complicated. The jury had been considering the case for at least four hours. Nothing in the record gives basis for аny inference concerning how the jury were divided. The judge apparently merely read the material from the Tuey case without adding more than (a) that he agreed with the language he had read and (b) a “request that you now recess for further deliberations, and seе if you can agree on a verdict.”
We perceive no prejudice to Rollins in the omission from the complete Tuey charge (fn. 1) or in the judge’s action in reading also from the opinion of the court in that case. If Rollins had any objections to these two aspects of the judge’s *639 supplemental instructions, the nature of the objections should have been stated much more clearly.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The judge omitted the italicized words in this passage from the charge (8 Cush, at p. 2):^ “And with this view, it is your duty to decide the case, if you can consсientiously do so. In order to make a decision more practicable . . . (naturally) the law imposes the burden of proof on one party or the other, in all cases. In the present case, (he burden of proof is upon the commonwealth to estаblish every part of it, beyond a reasonable doubt; and if, in any part of it, you are left in doubt, the defendant is entitled to the benefit of the doubt and must be acquitted. But, in conferring together, you ought to pay a proper respect to each other’s opiniоns, and listen, with a disposition to be convinced, to each other’s arguments.” The word “(naturally),” set out above in parentheses, does not appear in the Tuey charge. The complete italicized sentence, of course, would be inappropriаte in a civil case, without some modification. The judge also varied the charge by referring to a jury of “twelve men (or women),” adding the words in parentheses.
For additional discussions of this general type of additional charge, see
United States
v.
Rogers,
