This petition for a wit of error relates to the 1966 convictions considered by this court in
Commonwealth
v.
Subilosky,
On November 13, 1967, the Supreme Court decided
Burgett
v.
Texas,
As a consequence of the
Burgett
decision, Subilosky sought a wit of habeas corpus in the United States District Court alleging, among other matters, denial of his constitutional rights in the use of six prior convictions to impeach his credibility at his 1966 Superior Court trial. In the proceedings which led to four of these convictions, one in 1937 and three in 1940, Subilosky was not represented by counsel. The district judge denied the wit.
Subilosky
v.
Scafati,
Upon the present petition, the single justice made the following findings concerning the prior convictions, records of which were introduced in evidence at the 1966 trial. (1) Subilosky had no counsel and did not waive his right to counsel in the following instances: 1937 — Norfolk County conviction for prison escape, and 1940 — three Middlesex County convictions for (a) robbery while armed with intent to kill or maim; (b) assault with intent to murder being armed" and (c) assault with intent to rob. (2) He *392 was represented by counsel at the time of two 1958 Suffolk County convictions for 1951 offences, robbery while armed and unlawfully carrying a pistol on his person. 1
The single justice reserved the case, without decision, for the determination of the full court, on the petition, the amended answer, the Superior Court return, one assignment of error, the findings, certain exhibits, and “the trial transcript.” We interpret this as referring to the transcript of the original 1966 trial under G. L. c. 278, §§ 33A-33G. That transcript is a part of the record in the appeal decided,
1. In
Gilday
v.
Commonwealth,
Massachusetts has had a long practice (see Rev. St. c. 94, § 56; St. 1866, c. 260, Wigmore [3d ed.] § 579), under a general statutory rule of evidence, of admitting prior convictions (subject to proper limiting instructions) to impeach the credibility of any witness. See G. L. c. 233, § 21 (as amended by St. 1950, c. 426);
Commonwealth
v.
Ladetto,
2. We do not attempt a complete new summary of the direct evidence at the 1966 trial concerning the robbery and Subilosky’s participation in it. A thorough summary was made by Mr. Justice Whittemore in the earlier opinion. See
Subilosky, among other matters, gave the following testimony. In 1966, he was forty-five years old. • In his early years he was “in a great deal of difficulty with the police” and “as a result” spent “a substantial amount of time in State prison.” Elsewhere, he testified, “I’ve lived in prison all my life. I was born out of a wall of a prison.” He was released from prison on July 8, 1965, apparently as
*395
a result of the reversal of Ms 1952 Middlesex convictions for armed robbery in
Subilosky testified concermng Ms presence in and near Worcester on August 27, 1965, the day of the robbery, when he was released from Ms job unexpectedly about 12:30 p.m. He admitted seeing Saunders in a bar that afternoon. He claimed that he had been drinMng “a lot” that afternoon and evening at various bars until he went to the house of a Mr. and Mrs. Hebert, about 11 p.m. There, he said, he spent the rnght on the sofa. During Ms stay, Mrs. Hebert read aloud a news account of the robbery and “came to Saunders’ name” (cf. Mrs. Hebert’s account,
During the cross-examination of Subilosky, the records of the 1937, 1940, and 1958 convictions were introduced in evidence. The judge instructed the jury at once that they were “offered for a very limited purpose,” and only to affect Subilosky’s credibility. 7 After Ms charge, at the re *396 quest of Subilosky’s attorney, the trial judge gave a similar instruction.
3. Subilosky, by his own testimony on direct examination, opened up the subject of his long prison career. See
Commonwealth
v.
Redmond,
The actual records made specific what Subilosky had said in general terms. Except in detail, they added little if anything to what the jury already properly knew, viz. that a man, then forty-five years old, had “lived in prison all . . . [his] life.” The jury hardly could have thought that such a long prison career was for trivial offences. They knew of his 1958 conviction (represented by counsel) for the violent crime of armed robbery. See
Howard
v.
Craven,
We conclude, assuming it to have been error to have admitted the 1937 and 1940 records, that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
Chapman
v.
California,
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
Pertinent proceedings involving or affecting Subilosky are set out below in chronological order.
1987
— Norfolk conviction (no counsel) for escape —■ sentence two and one-half to three years.
1940
— three Middlesex convictions (those mentioned in the text of this opinion) — concurrent sentences of fifteen to twenty years. Subilosky had no counsel.
1952
— • Middlesex County convictions (not mentioned in the body of this opinion) for assault with intent to rob and three charges of armed robbery. These were reversed (July 2, 1965) by this court in
Subilosky
v.
Commonwealth,
See concerning application of the
Burgett
case to the use for impeachment purposes of conviction records in cases where a criminal defendant had no counsel,
Tucker
v.
United States,
299 F, Supp. 1376, 1377 (N. D. Cal.); and
*393
Johnson
v.
State,
The decisions which have applied the
Burgett
case retroactively have dealt principally with using prior convictions to prove a criminal defendant guilty of a sufficient number of earlier offences to make applicable to him
recidivist
or
habitual offender
statutes. Such proof would enhance his punishment. See e.g.
Williams
v.
Coiner,
For the authorities dealing with c. 233, § 21, and related problems, see Leach and Liacos, Handbook of Massachusetts Evidence (4th ed.) 122-126; cf. pp. 302-304. General discussions of this type of impeachment include Wigmore, Evidence (3d ed.) §§ 579, 977, 980-987 (cf. § 194); McCormick, Evidence, §§ 42-43; Anderson, Wharton’s Criminal Evidence (12th ed.) § 946. See also
Spencer
v.
Texas,
Subilosky’s brief points out that witnesses were not in agreement whether the 1965 bank robbery was the work of four or of three men. (See
The evidence showed that this pistol was found in an automobile abandoned (at least by codefendants) _ after the robbery. Counsel for Subilosky stipulated that it belonged to Subilosky.
Subilosky’s then attorney (Mr. Joseph J. Balliro) objected to the introduction of the records on various grounds, including that Subilosky had “already admitted that he ha[d] spent most of his life . . . in jail,” so that the records were not likely “to assist this jury in determining how credible his testimony” was. The same ground was argued briefly to this court in the 1967 appeal. Of course, Subilosky’s counsel could not have anticipated the then undecided
Bvrgett
ruling and saved an exception on that ground. This court (
Excluding days spent selecting a jury.
