Commonwealth v. Vaughan
This text of 63 Mass. 594 (Commonwealth v. Vaughan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
We can perceive no sufficient ground to sustain these exceptions. On an indictment of the defendant, for the wilful burning of the bam of one Powers, evidence had been offered to implicate one Stacey with him, and to show conspiracy between them. To show malice on the part of Stacey towards the prosecutor, Powers, he had been asked by the counsel for the government, whether sometime before the fire, Stacey had instituted a criminal prosecution against him. Having answered that Stacey did commence such prosecution against him, from which he was discharged, the counsel for the defendant put questions to the witness, to show that such prosecution was founded on probable cause, in order to rebut malice; which was objected to and rejected. This rejection we think right; without relying much on the consideration that it would lead too far, and into the trial of a distinct issue, we think such an inquiry would be immaterial to the case on trial. It was not a question whether there was such want of probable cause and legal motive, that an action for malicious prosecution might have been sustained; and we think the authorities on the subject of malicious prosecution do not apply. It was a question of actual hatred and ill-will, which would naturally lead to a desire of revenge, and so operate as a motive. The mere fact that Stacey had commenced a criminal prosecution might have some weight, perhaps slight; but the manner in which the trial was conducted, and the testimony of the witnesses in it, were not competent.
Exceptions overruled.
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63 Mass. 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-vaughan-mass-1852.