The plaintiff introduced much evidence tending to establish an alibi for the plaintiff at the time the offense for which he was prosecuted was committed, and that these facts were known to the defendant, and for the obvious purpose of showing that the said defendant did not have probable cause for believing that -the plaintiff had committed the offense with which he was charged. But, as we view the evidence, the plaintiff utterly failed to prove that the prosecution or indictment was based upon the conduct or action of the defendant. The plaintiff’s own witness, the solicitor, testified that he took the initiative after getting information that the negro boy had confessed and implicated the plaintiff and called the defendant, Dollar, the owner of the property burned, and concluded to summon said Dollar and others before the grand jury. “Jesse Williams told me that Letaw
The trial court did not commit reversible error in ruling upon the evidence. Whether or not Dollar was the prosecutor was one of.the main issues in the case, to be determined by the court and not the witness. Moreover, the witness stated Dollar’s conduct and action in the matter throughout and which showed that he was not the prosecutor. Again, as to whether or not Dollar assisted him, the plaintiff got the full benefit of this question, as the witness stated what Dollar ■did and the extent to which he assisted him.
We find no such ruling as the one designated in the second assignment of error.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.