Anthony H. Jamroz, Jr., was charged with manslaughter with a motor vehicle pursuant to the provisions of MCLA § 750.321 (Stat Ann 1954 Rev § 28.553). The defendant was convicted in the traffic and ordinance division of the recorder’s court of Detroit and was placed on probation for five years, ordered not to drive for that *646period, and required to pay $750 costs and a $750 fine. Defendant appeals from the conviction.
Testimony adduced from witnesses during the trial indicated that defendant’s auto and the small Volkswagen bus driven by the deceased, George Borda, Jr., had been engaged in a game of “tag” just before the collision in which Borda was seriously injured. Borda later died as a result of the injuries sustained. The evidence indicated that defendant was the aggressor in this deadly activity and, as a result, the vehicle driven by the deceased was eventually forced from the road and into a parked truck, whence his fatal injuries were sustained.
The main issue raised on this appeal is whether the evidence was sufficient to support the verdict. We are also asked to address ourselves to an error by the trial court in its failure to instruct the jury on the issues of intervening cause, justifiable homicide or contributory negligence.
Defendant argues that testimony taken from one of the witnesses to the effect that defendant forced the deceased into the truck contradicts the statements of officers from the accident prevention bureau which indicated that the deceased’s auto veered off the road and hit a snowbank before hitting the truck. Defendant also avers that “it appears equally likely from the evidence that the deceased’s Volkswagen went out of control prior to the impact and that this was the proximate cause of death.”
It has long been within the province of the jury to resolve factual disputes and this Court can only interpose when there is a total want of evidence on some essential point. People v. Henssler (1882, 48 Mich 49; People v. O’Leary (1967) 6 Mich App 115. An examination of the record in this case does not indicate a total want of evidence on some essential *647point, and the alleged contradictory statements could in fact be reconciled by a jury.
Defendant argues the existence of certain intervening factors which broke the chain of causation and thus prevented his actions from constituting manslaughter. There was no objection to the instructions by the trial court regarding this matter and it appears that the question of causation was well defined, considering the instructions as a whole. See People v. McIntosh (1967), 6 Mich App 62, and People v. Leonard E. Smith (1968), 15 Mich App 173. Since no objection was raised in the trial court, none shall be entertained on appeal, there being no obvious miscarriage of justice. MCLA § 768.29 (Stat Ann 1954 Rev § 28.1052) and People v. Mallory (1966), 2 Mich App 359.
Defendant’s contention that the charge should have been reduced, on motion, from manslaughter to negligent homicide on the basis of insufficient evidence, is without substance.
Affirmed.
All concurred.