A jury on November 26, 1969, brought in a verdict for the defendant Zayre of Beverly Inc. in an action by the plaintiff John Carey who claimed that the defendant’s negligence caused him to slip and fall on the floor of the defendant’s store with resulting personal injuries. The defendant had denied negligence on its own part and asserted contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff. The plaintiff is here on a bill of exceptions and the only exception pressed as a ground for reversal and a new trial is that the judge allowed the defendant to impeach the plaintiff, who testified in his own behalf, by introducing (see G. L. c. 233, § 21) the records of six misdemeanor convictions without first proving that the plaintiff had either been represented by counsel or had waived counsel at the several trials.
In his direct testimony the plaintiff testified that he had had emotional problems after his discharge from the United States Marine Corps in 1956, drank a lot, and was arrested half a dozen times for drinking, assault and battery, and illegal operation of an automobile. During cross-examination, over the plaintiff’s objection, records were admitted in evidence of six convictions of the plaintiff, all in the District Court of Eastern Essex: (1) a 1958 conviction for assault with a $25 fine; (2) a 1958 conviction for drunkenness, stemming apparently from the same incident, resulting in a $5 fine; (3) a 1959 conviction for assault on a police officer and obstruction of his performance of his duties for which the plaintiff drew a three-month suspended sentence and a year’s probation; (4) a 1959 conviction for disturbing the peace, apparently arising from the same incident, which was filed; (5) a 1964 conviction for assault which resulted in a $50 fine, a three-month suspended sentence, and a year’s probation; *127 and (6) a 1965 conviction for driving after license suspension for which he was fined $50. 1
The error claimed in the admission of the convictions raises substantial questions, which have been briefed and argued by the parties, concerning the scope and implications of
Argersinger
v.
Hamlin,
The
Argersinger
case reversed a State court denial of a writ of habeas corpus to an indigent prisoner who had been sentenced to jail for a misdemeanor without being provided with counsel. Emphasizing the importance of counsel in assuring a defendant faced with imprisonment
*128
an adequate opportunity to defend himself, it held that “absent . . . waiver, no person may be imprisoned . . . unless he was represented by counsel at his trial.”
Nevertheless the plaintiff in the present case must surmount several hurdles before he can demonstrate error on the basis of an
Argersinger
violation. The
Argersinger
case itself forbade only sentences of imprisonment. But since the plaintiff here suffered nothing worse than two suspended sentences with probation as a result of his prior convictions, his claim that even those two convictions, and hence their use in the present case, were infected with error,
3
depends upon an extension of
Argersinger
to cover such sentences as well. While it can
*129
plausibly be argued that
Argersinger
should be so extended, since the person convicted may later be sent to jail on the basis of the original conviction without a new hearing on the question of his guilt, the few cases on the point are divided. Compare
State
v.
Moore,
More important, however, in casting doubt on the plaintiff’s
Argersinger
claim, is the fact that most of the law on exclusion of evidence that is the fruit of the government’s depriving a person of his constitutional rights, deals with its exclusion in criminal cases. There is substantial authority for extending exclusionary rules to situations in which the government is opposing the individual in a noncriminal milieu.
One 1958 Plymouth Sedan
v.
Pennsylvania,
Turning now to the argument that Rule 10 of the General Rules, which required provision for counsel in the 1964 and 1965 convictions, 5 should be the basis for excluding the use of those convictions, we need only point out that the weaknesses described in the arguments for applying an exclusionary rule in civil cases are corn- *132 pounded where the violation is merely of a court rule, not of the Constitution, and again the burden of proof issue could arise. 6
Having glimpsed at the complexities and possible infirmities in the arguments for exclusion thus far discussed, we conclude that they need not now be resolved. For, even assuming that the plaintiff were to thread his way to favorable answers on the questions posed about the application of
Argersinger
and Rule 10, he would only have shown error in the admission of three of the six conviction records — the 1959 and 1964 assault convictions, and the 1965 conviction for driving after license suspension. Any argument for exclusion of the remaining thtee, which predated Rule 10 and for which no
*133
more than fines were imposed, depends on the recognition and application of a due process right to counsel in misdemeanor cases in which only a fine is imposed. Mr. Justice Powell, concurring in
Argersinger,
suggested that there was such a constitutional right, at least in certain cases where special circumstances such as complex legal or factual issues were present.
*134
In summary, the jury had heard the plaintiff testify that he had been arrested half a dozen times for assault and battery, and illegal operation of an automobile, and the jury were further entitled to receive and consider at a minimum the records of three of the six resulting convictions. In the circumstances we believe the additional impeachment by means of showing the convictions for the two assaults, which involved suspended sentences, and for driving after license suspension, even if erroneous, was not significant. These assault convictions were repetitious of the assault conviction properly introduced; and we can doubt that the conviction for driving after license suspension could add much to whatever discredit had already accumulated. See
Subilosky
v.
Commonwealth,
Exceptions overruled.
Notes
The plaintiff was also questioned about a conviction for assault on a police officer in 1958 which resulted in six months’ probation but no record" of "such" a conviction was introduced. Some minor discrepancies appeared in the questioning about the sentences on the convictions numbered 4 and 5 in the text, but no complaint is made of the variances.
Rule 10 of the General Rules, adopted June 29, 1964, is now in effect as S.J.C. Rule 3:10, as amended,
There is authority, see
Morgan
v.
Juvenile & Domestic Relations Court, Halifax County, Va.
Accord,
Terpstra
v.
Niagara Fire Ins. Co.
26 N. Y. 2d 70, 72-73 (1970). See
Mitchell
v.
Silverstein,
The reluctance of courts to exclude illegally seized evidence in civil cases is further demonstrated by the division of authority as to whether a private party in a civil action may use evidence which he himself has obtained through violations of the law. Compare
Sackler
v.
Sackler,
15 N. Y. 2d 40, 42 (1964), and
Del Presto
v.
Del Presto,
97 N. J. Super. 446, 452-454 (1967) (admitted), with
Williams
v.
Williams,
The 1964 conviction for assault and the 1965 conviction for operating a motor vehicle after -license suspension both carried the possibility of a jail sentence. See G. L. c. 265, § 13A; G. L. c. 90, § 23.
We said in
Williams
v.
Commonwealth,
There lurks in the background a possible argument that, regardless of whether the final conviction is itself admissible for impeachment, it is, in the absence of affirmative proof of compliance with Rule 10, an insufficient basis for satisfying the requirements of G. L. c. 233, § 21, permitting the use of misdemeanor conviction records more than five years old for impeachment, only if the witness “has subsequently been convicted of a crime within five years of the time of his testifying.” Since the other five misdemeanor convictions were all more than five years old at the time of the trial, it could be argued that their admissibility turned on the validity of the latest conviction. But the same considerations that argue against excluding in civil cases prior convictions obtained in violation of court rules, also argue against forbidding the use of such convictions for § 21 purposes. Thus the argument for excluding all of the convictions on this basis is weak at best. Moreover, there is at least as much reason in this context to impose the burden of proof on the party seeking to prevent the use of the conviction. We note in this connection that counsel for the plaintiff evidently concluded that the argument was not of sufficient force to present — indeed he conceded at trial that “there is no question about . . . the time element” under G. L. c. 233.
Our result, we note for completeness, also turns on the inapplicability here of the reasoning of
Commonwealth
v.
Barrett,
Mass. App. Ct. (1975) (
