This appeal from the defendant’s convictions of rape, kidnapping, and assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon challenges the judge’s refusal to permit the results of a polygraph examination to be admitted to corroborate the defendant’s testimony denying his guilt. The judge had conducted a voir dire examination of the polygraph examiner and had determined that he was qualified and that the test was properly conducted. The judge, concluding that he had wide discretion in the matter, excluded the results of the polygraph examination for two reasons. First, he did so because he had excluded evidence of the defendant’s prior conviction of a similar crime, offered to impeach the defendant’s credibility. *162 Second, the polygraph evidence was not critical, in the judge’s view, because the defendant, supported by a corroborating witness, was to testify to an alibi. We reverse the convictions.
In
Commonwealth
v.
Vitello,
We find no support for concluding that polygraph test results may be excluded in a judge’s discretion if in his discretion he
*163
has also excluded evidence of the defendant’s prior convictions. We have noted that the admissibility of favorable test results may aid the fact-finding process by encouraging a defendant to testify in spite of the admissibility of evidence of his prior convictions. See
Commonwealth
v.
Vitello, supra
at 455. We have never said, however, that polygraph test results favorable, to a defendant are admissible to corroborate his testimony only when evidence of a prior conviction has been admitted to impeach his testimony. Such a rule would benefit only defendants who had been previously convicted of a crime. Nor do we think that a trial judge, having found the examiner qualified and the examination properly conducted, has discretion to exclude the test results because he also excluded evidence of the defendant’s prior convictions. Such a conclusion would grant virtually unreviewable discretion to trial judges, would discourage uniformity of treatment of defendants, and should be avoided. As a general proposition, a judge does not have discretion to exclude relevant evidence. See
Poirier
v.
Plymouth,
The Commonwealth argues that, in any event, the polygraph results were unreliable and hence inadmissible because the defendant had previously been given a polygraph examination concerning the charges on which he was convicted. It is claimed that the prior examination tainted the later examination and its results. This question is one of proof, not argument. The trial judge did not rely on this contention, and the record does not support the Commonwealth’s claim. It is a matter on which expert testimony would seem to be required. See
Commonwealth v. A Juvenile (No. 1),
We have one collateral comment. A previous trial of the defendant on these same charges had ended in a mistrial when,
*164
because of an inadequately sanitized exhibit, the jury became aware of the defendant’s prior conviction of a similar crime and, as the judge was advised during jury deliberations, one or more not guilty votes were changed to guilty as a result. In that earlier trial, the question of the admissibility of the results of the polygraph examination had been fully considered and resolved in the defendant’s favor. In the absence of new evidence or a change in the law, such a matter need not have been reconsidered at the second trial, although it was within the discretion of the judge to do so. See
Commonwealth
v.
Upton,
Because there was a seriously contested question at trial as to the accuracy of the victim’s identification of the person who kidnapped her at knife point and raped her, we cannot fairly say that the exclusion of the polygraph results was not prejudicial error. The judgments are reversed and the verdicts are set aside. The case is remanded to the Superior Court.
So ordered.
