253 Mass. 600 | Mass. | 1925
This complaint charges that the defendant kept intoxicating liquors with intent to sell the same contrary to law. There was evidence to the effect that, on the sérvice of a search warrant in the absence of the defendant but in the presence of his wife, about a pint of liquid, containing approximately twenty-six per cent of alcohol, numerous empty whiskey bottles, some with alcoholic odor, and a large quantity of stoppers were found at a store operated by the defendant, and that during two months previous, on six or seven occasions, there was travel to and from this store by persons under the influence of liquor. A verdict in favor of the defendant could not rightly have been directed on such evidence. Commonwealth v. Hurley, 158 Mass. 159. Commonwealth v. Martin, 162 Mass. 402. Commonwealth v. Meskill, 165 Mass. 142. Commonwealth v. Kozlowsky, 243 Mass. 538. Commonwealth v. Slavski, 245 Mass. 405, 418, 419.
If the exception relates to each separable part of the testimony, it cannot be said that the admission of the accusations of the husband of the woman and the replies of the defendant constitutes reversible error. The excitement and resentment of the husband expressed vocally in the immediate presence of facts vitally affecting his domestic happiness was a part of the competent incident or at least an accessory of it. Its effect was carefully restricted so as not to be considered as proof of the truth of the husband’s statement. On this point the case is governed by Hartnett v. McMahan, 168 Mass. 3. See Wigmore on Ev. § 1755. The defendant was not under arrest. He had whatever benefit flowed from his contemporaneous denial of the accusation. See Commonwealth v. Russell, 160 Mass. 8. The case at bar is distinguishable from Commonwealth v. Kenney, 12 Met. 235, where the defendant was under arrest, and from cases like Fitzgerald v. Williams, 148 Mass. 462, and Gray v. Boston Elevated Railway, 215 Mass. 143, 146.
There was no error in the instruction to the jury that the testimony of the police officer could be considered “in case
Exceptions overruled.