In Fеbruary, 1973, the petitioner (Gagne) was convicted of murder in the second degree. We affirmed the conviction in April, 1975.
Commonwealth
v.
Gagne,
A Federal District Court judge denied Gagne’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus, but hе did not reach the merits because he concluded that Gagne had not exhausted his State remedies.
Gagne
v.
Meacham,
Gagne filed this petition for a writ of error in February, 1977, and a single justice of this court reserved and reported the case for our decision. We conclude that the judgment should be affirmed.
The emphasis of Gagne’s chаllenge to his conviction has changed somewhat since we considered his appeal in 1975. In response to Mullaney v. Wilbur, Gagne focuses on the judge’s charge and claims that the judge placed the burden on him to disprove maliсe arising from his use of a deadly weapon. Since our decision in Commonwealth v. Gagne, supra, on several occasions we have considered the application of the principles of Mullaney v. Wilbur.
In
Commonwealth
v.
Rodriguez, supra
at 687-688, noted by the Federal judge
(Gagne
v.
Meacham,
The propriety of the failure of a trial judge to charge the jury concerning the Commonwealth’s burden of proof on self-defense, reasonable provocation, and excessive force came before us in
Commonwealth
v.
Stokes,
Gagne argues that the judge instructed the jury that malice was presumed from Gagne’s conduct, thus shifting to him the burden of overcoming that presumption. Such a shift of the burden of persuasion would be constitutionally impermissible.
Hankerson
v.
North Carolina,
*421 In this case, on the other hand, nowhere in the charge does the judge expressly place any burden on Gagne to rebut any inference or any presumption, to disprove malice, or to prove justification, excuse, or mitigation. Nor do we see any such burdens placed on Gagne by infеrence. The judge did not tell the jury that Gagne had the burden to prove or to disprove anything. Repeatedly, the judge defined malice in a variety of words which indicated that malice could be proved only if Gagne’s conduсt was unaccompanied by “legal justification or excuse or extenuation,” was “without mitigation or excuse,” or was “without justification, excuse or extenuation.” Repeatedly, he also instructed the jury that the burden was on thе Commonwealth to prove beyond a reasonable doubt every essential element of the crime charged. One of the essential elements of murder, as he instructed the jury, is malice. As he defined malice as an elеment of murder, the Commonwealth had the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that Gagne’s killing of the victim was intentional and without justification, excuse, or mitigation.
We view the judge’s charge in this respect, examined in its entirety, аs falling within language in our Stokes opinion describing a constitutionally acceptable charge. “For example, a jury charge might well be constitutionally sufficient which clearly placed the burden of proving malice beyond а reasonable doubt on the Commonwealth and contained other discussion which, although not referring to the burden of proof as to self-defense and reasonable provocation, adequately defined those factors and established them as negating a finding of malice.” Commonwealth v. Stokes, supra at 591.
*422
In this case, there are no extenuating and potentially misleading instructions such as we have seen in other cases. The self-defense language in the charge in
Commonwealth
v.
Rodriguez,
We decline tо depart from what we have said concerning the proper treatment of the inference of malice which may be, but need not be, drawn from evidence of the intentional use of a dangerous weapon.
Commonwealth
v.
McInerney,
It is a common and expected function of triers of fact to draw reasonable inferences from established facts, and it is proper for judges so to instruct jurors. A judgе does not violate constitutional principles of due process by advising the jury that, if they think it reasonable, they may infer the existence of malice from the fact, proved beyond a reasonable doubt, that a defеndant shot the victim, stabbed him,
*423
or otherwise harmed him with a deadly weapon. The judge’s charge in this case, read fairly in its entirety, did no more than this. See
Commonwealth
v.
Peters,
Gagne argues next that the testimony of one witness, William R. Roberts, was inherently incredible and that, because that evidence related to malice and contradicted Gagne’s explanation of the shooting, he was denied a fair trial. Roberts’s credibility was for the jury, and his testimony was not inherently incredible. We need not consider the consequences if that testimony had been inherently incredible.
Finally, Gagne argues that he was denied due process of law because this court misstated certain facts in its opinion in Commonwealth v. Gagne, supra at 526-527. The issue arises in thе context of our previous consideration of the question whether, in denying Gagne’s motion for a new trial, the judge abused his discretion by declining to order a new trial on the ground that the verdict was against the weight of the evidencе. Id. at 526. We concluded that there was no abuse of discretion and that there was sufficient evidence to support the verdict, but the opinion misstated two facts. We said that Gagne shot the victim twice and that Gagne had beеn carrying a gun “for only a few days.” Id. at 527. The facts are that, although Gagne shot twice, the victim was apparently struck only once, and it was the victim, not Gagne, who had carried a gun for only a few days. These misstatements do not аffect our conclusion and do not constitute a denial of due process of law. The evidence warranted Gagne’s conviction, and the trial judge did not abuse his discretion in denying the motion for a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Gagne did raise the issues in his motion for a new trial. The judge denied the motion for a new trial but allowed a request for a ruling that the burden was on “the Commonwealth to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the Defendant did not act in self-defense and that the homicide was not justified.”
We indicated that as to trials occurring after the
Mullaney
decision, and particularly after our
Rodriguez
decision, we would bring “greater expectations, and consequently more careful scrutiny” to charges on the issues of self-defense and reasonable provocation. Thus, on the sаme day as the
Stokes
decision, we reversed a conviction where, in a trial occurring after the
Mullaney
decision, but before our
Rodriguez
decision, the judge refused to give a requested instruction placing the burden of proof concerning reasonable provocation on the Commonwealth.
Commonwealth
v.
Collins,
Current requirements of due process in the placing of burdens of proof in State criminal trials are at best only subtly discernible. Seemingly, a majority of the Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States would find nothing wrong if the Legislature were to eliminate malice as an element of the crime of murder and were to place on the dеfendant the burden of proving, as an affirmative defense, for example, that he acted in the heat of passion so as to justify a manslaughter verdict. See
Patterson
v.
New York,
