Convicted of murder in the first degree, see
Commonwealth
v.
Sires,
*599 We supplement the facts as described in Commonwealth v. Sires, supra at 542-543, with additional evidence pertinent to the question of the defendant’s intent. The defendant disputed the issue of criminal intent at trial. The defendant testified that he was so intoxicated at the time he entered his mother’s room that he did not know whether the gun was loaded. The defendant testified that while he was about to hand the gun to his mother, who was lying on her bed, she asked him to pull the trigger. According to the defendant, he fired the gun, intending to miss her. A bullet struck his mother, who began rolling on the bed and she asked him to fire again. When asked on cross-examination as to why he shot her the second time, the defendant stated: “Because she asked me.” The defendant fired a third shot. The reason for this shot was that, “if she wanted me to shoot her, then she must have wanted to be dead, and I didn’t want her to live and be crippled or anything.”
The judge, when charging the jury on general intent, made the following statement: “Everybody is presumed to intend what they did in fact do, and the intent, when we do things many times, is present unconsciously.” The judge, in his charge on malice aforethought, stated that “where the fact of killing is shown and there are no circumstances disclosed tending to show justification or excuse, then there is nothing to rebut the natural presumption of malice. This is the legal definition of malice.” (Emphasis supplied.)
The jury submitted a question to the judge fifteen minutes after they began their deliberations, which read: “Could we have a copy of your charge which includes definitions of terms? We are particularly interested in the difference between malice, premeditated, etcetera.” The judge did not give the jury a copy of the charge, but he reinstructed the jury on malice aforethought and premeditation. The judge repeated verbatim his statement regarding “the natural presumption of malice.” Almost five hours later, the jury returned with another question: “We would like to hear again how the law differentiates between first and second degree murder. Further, we would like to hear again how the law views intoxication with regard to murder.” The judge complied with the jury’s request, again *600 repeating word-for-word his instruction concerning “the natural presumption of malice.”
“[I]t is constitutionally impermissible to shift to a defendant the burden of disproving an element of a crime charged.”
Commonwealth
v.
Moreira,
The Commonwealth concedes that the judge’s statements were not correct, but argues that in the context of the charge as a whole, “a reasonable juror could not have considered the charge to have created an unconstitutional presumption.”
Francis
v.
Franklin, supra
at 315. We reject the Commonwealth’s contention. Although the judge included in his charge instructions on malice which arguably did not shift the burden of proof to the defendant, these statements did not explain the “impermissible instructions sufficiently to ensure that a juror did not misunderstand the instructions or could not view them as burden-shifting.”
Commmonwealth
v.
Repoza, supra
at 521. Contrast
Commonwealth
v.
Adrey,
We do not consider the
Sandstrom
error to have been harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. See
Rose
v.
Clark,
We therefore reverse the order denying the defendant’s motion and remand the matter to the Superior Court for a new trial.
So ordered.
Notes
Although the judge made no specific ruling on the issue of harmless error, he concluded that other language in the charge “outweighed the damage (if any there be) done by the offending phrase.” For the reasons stated, we disagree.
The defendant did not object to the burden-shifting language at his trial. However, “[bjecause the defendant’s trial and direct appeal both occurred prior to the
Sandstrom
decision, he did not have a ‘genuine opportunity’ to raise his constitutional claim on those occasions.
[DeJoinville
v.
Commonwealth,
