By а petition for a writ of error, filed in May, 1979, Leslie A. Reddick, whom for convenience we shall call the defendant, challenges his June, 1970, conviction of murder in the first degree. We affirmed that conviction on direct appeal in
Commonwealth
v.
Reddick,
1. The defendant argues that, at his 1970 trial, over timely objection, the prоsecutor improperly used peremptory challenges to exclude all but one black person from the jury and that the jury selection procedures of
Commonwealth
v.
Soares,
Without deciding the point, we shall assume that the prosecutor’s challenges to all black veniremen, except the one black who sat on the jury, were made solely on the basis of their race. The issue then becomes whether the rule announced in the Soares opinion should be applied to this trial that took place almost nine years before the Soares opinion was released.
We think the
Soares
principle should not be applied retroactively, at least in this case where race was not a factor in the trial.
1
See
Commonwealth
v.
Lumley,
The reasons why a newly created constitutional principle should be apрlied to cases on direct appeal but not automatically to cases of post conviction or collateral attack are well articulated in
Linkletter v. Walker,
In
Linkletter
v.
Walker, supra,
the Court stated that a newly announced change in law would be given effect in cases on direct review, but that the effect of such rules on final judgments being collaterally attacked depended on a number of considerations. The most important consideration is the extent to which the new rule is designed “to improve the ‘integrity of the factfinding process.’ ”
Hankerson
v.
North Carolina,
The United States Supreme Court has given full retroactive effect to a newly created constitutional rule in relatively few instances. In
Ivan V.
v.
City of New York,
The United Stаtes Supreme Court has also given full retroactive effect to rules involving an indigent’s right to the advice of counsel at trial
(Gideon
v.
Wainwright,
The case before us is of a different character. See
Tehan
v.
United States ex rel. Shott,
There are factors in addition to the effect on the fact-finding process that bear on the propriety of making a newly announced constitutional principle retroactive. The Supreme Court has considered (a) the purpose of the new rule, (b) the extеnt of reliance by law enforcement authorities on the old rule, and (c) the effect that retroactive application would have on the administration of justice. Stovall v. Denno, 388 U.S. 293, 297 (1967).
The purpose of the principles announced in the
Soares
case would not be served by applying them retroactively in a case of the kind now before us. The rule of the
Soares
case was designed, in major part, to deter counsel from influencing the composition of juries by peremptorily challenging persons solely because of their membership in a particular group. Making the
Soares
principle retroactive would not better accomplish the goal of improving future jury sеlection. See
DeStefano
v.
Woods,
The rule announced in the
Soares
case was not “clearly foreshadowed” by prior case law. See
Desist
v.
United States,
The retroactive application of the
Soares
rule would adversely affect the administration of justice. See
Commonwealth
v.
Lumley,
Our treatment of the retroactivity of the holding in the
Soares
case has a substantial parallel to the Supreme Court’s treatment of the retroactivity of
Taylor
v.
Louisiana,
2. The defendant challenges the judge’s instructions on the burden of proof as to self-defense and provocation. The defendant’s trial counsel made no request for instructions concerning the Cоmmonwealth’s burden of proof on these points, and neither made any objection nor took any exception to the charge as given. Although the defendant’s trial took place in June, 1970, his brief on appeal was not filed here until November 23, 1976, and the case was argued before this court on March 8, 1977, after the decisions in
Mul-laney
v.
Wilbur,
Normally, a “writ of error cannot be used to review issues that could have been raised at trial and thereafter on appeal.” DeJ
oinville
v.
Commonwealth, ante
246, 248 (1980). However, this court has entertained constitutionally based, postconviction, collateral claims that jury instructions misplaced the burden of proof as to self-defense, even where the issue could have been but was not raised at trial or on appeal.
Connolly
v.
Commonwealth,
In determining whether the judge’s charge on the Commonwealth’s burden of proof is constitutionally adequate, we consider the charge in its entirety.
Commonwealth
v.
*405
Fluker,
The defendant argues that the judge committed constitutional error by inсluding the following sentence in his charge: “If this defense of self-defense is established to your satisfaction, a defendant should be acquitted of both murder and manslaughter.” Similar language has been criticized in previous cases. See
Connolly
v.
Commonwealth,
The defendant also argues that the judge should have reiterated, in his remarks on mitigating factors, that the Commonwealth has the burden of disproving provocation. But “the law does not require repetition of the same thought at each turn.”
Id.
at 846, quoting from
Commonwealth
v.
Peters,
The defendant’s reliance on
Commonwealth
v.
Harrington,
The defendant’s argument that the judge erred in failing to instruct the jury that the use of excessive force in self-defense reducеs the crime of murder to manslaughter is not constitutionally based, was not preserved for appeal, and has been waived. Commonwealth v. Harrington, supra at 455 n.5. The same is true with respect to the defendant’s argument that the judge should have charged on the possible effects of the defendant’s intoxication on his capacity for deliberate premeditation. Even if the evidence was sufficient to raise this issue, the defendant did not preserve the point by an objection to the charge and, as a matter of reasonable trial tactics, may not have wished to press the point because it would have tended to undermine his claim that he acted in self-defense.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
This trial did not involve the racial tension of the Soares case where the defendants were black and the victims were white. Here, the defendant and the victim were both black, eight of the eleven prosecution witnesses were black, and only the defendant testified for the defense.
One of the cited opinions was
People
v.
Wheeler,
“We here stress that the choice between rеtroactivity and nonretroactivity in no way turns on the value of the constitutional guarantee involved.”
Johnson
v.
New Jersey,
On similar analysis, the United States Supreme Court has declined to give retroactive effect to other constitutional rules involving the Sixth Amendment right to jury trial. See, e.g.,
Gosa
v.
Mayden,
The judge’s instructions included the following language:
“In order to establish murder in the first degree under the first way set out in the statute, it is not only necessary for the Commonwealth to prove thаt the killing was done with malice aforethought — you will recall that murder is a killing that is done with malice aforethought — but it must also appear that the act was deliberately premeditated in the language of the statute.
“When murder is proved, it is deemed to be murder in the second degree unless the characteristics of murder in the first degree are proved beyond a reasonable doubt.” .
