171 Mass. 431 | Mass. | 1898
This is an action for malicious prosecution, in causing the plaintiff to be arrested and bound over on a charge of larceny. The grand jury returned “No bill.” The alleged
The remaining question is whether the exclusion of the evidence operated to the prejudice of the defendant. The plaintiff admitted that the constable had attached the property, and that he had broken open the premises and assisted in carrying it away. If the court had excluded the evidence,- in the exercise of its discretion, on the ground of the plaintiff’s admission, the defendant would have had no just ground for exception to the ruling. Dorr v. Tremont National Bank, 128 Mass. 349, 360. But the court did not put the exclusion of the evidence on that ground, and apparently would have admitted it but for its view regarding the effect of the officer’s return. A majority of the court cannot say that its exclusion, under the circumstances under -which it was excluded, without calling the attention of the jury in any way, so far as appears, to the effect of the plaintiff’s admission, may not have operated to the defendant’s prejudice, and that the defendant was not entitled to introduce the evidence notwithstanding the plaintiff’s admission. Priest v. Groton, 103 Mass. 530. Commonwealth v. McCarthy, 119 Mass. 354.
Exceptions sustained.