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Home/ Questions/Q 1097739
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T00:28:34+00:00 2026-05-17T00:28:34+00:00

I have a c# web service that I call using jquery ajax. It works

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I have a c# web service that I call using jquery ajax. It works fine except when a custom exception is throw inside the web method. For some reason, the XmlHttpResponse objects responseText only has the base Exception class’s properties. So I end up with a json object with the following properties: “ExceptionType”, “Message”, and “StackTrace”

My custom exception has a property called “FieldErrors” that doesn’t not show up in the return. Here’s the code for that class:

[Serializable]
[XmlRootAttribute(Namespace = "http://www.mydomain.com/", IsNullable = false)]
public class ValidationException : Exception
{
    public List<string> FieldErrors { get; set; }
    public ValidationException(string message = null, Exception innerException = null) : base(message: message, innerException: innerException) 
    {
        this.FieldErrors = new List<string>();
    }
}

My goal is to get the “FieldErrors” property to show up in the json response.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T00:28:34+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 12:28 am

    Don’t do this. You should never expose exceptions from your asp.net site.

    Even if it will end up hidden to the user, you are still sending it with all its detail to the client.

    In this case you actually want to control what will be sent, so explicitly sending the list of field errors without sending the json version of the whole exception instance is what you should be doing anyway.

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