The answer to this count was that, while plaintiff had no interest in the fixtures, the defendant borrowed of plaintiff money with which defendant purchased said fixtures, which sum he has never repaid, and that plaintiff would be entitled to a judgment against defendant therefor, except for defendant’s counterclaim. In this condition of the record, it was, perhaps, error for the trial court to rule that defendant admitted plaintiff’s cause of action, and award the opening and closing to the defendant; for defendant did not admit any indebtedness for conversion of the fixtures, but confessed an indebtedness for borrowed money on. account of
But the question as to which party has the burden relates, after all, merely to the procedure, and the ruling of the court with reference thereto will not be interfered with on appeal, unless an abuse of discretion is shown which has been prejudicial to the appellant. This is not one of the cases where prejudice is to be presumed; but,, on the other hand, to justify a reversal on such grounds, prejudice must be made to appear. Oxtoby v. Henley, 112 Iowa, 697; Ashworth v. Grubbs, 47 Iowa, 353; Preston v. Walker, 26 Iowa, 205 ; Fountain v. West, 23 Iowa, 9; Smith v. Coopers, 9 Iowa, 376, 379.
There is no allegation of a fraudulent conversion, such as described by Code, sec. 4841, as constituting embezzlement by a bailee; and the plaintiff is not in a situation to complain that he was not allowed to prove conversion as a part of his original cause of action under the second count of his petition, in view of the full opportunity which was given him to establish such conversion as an element of the crime with which he charged the defendant in the criminal case. It is plain that the real controversy between the parties was as to the cause of action for malicious prosecution set up in the counterclaim, and as to this cause of action, considered by itself, the right to open and close was with the defendant.
There is no evidence on the part of plaintiff as to the actual guilt of the defendant to require the submission of that question to the jury, as distinct from that- of reasonable belief on the part of - plaintiff with reference to defendant’s guilt and his reliance in good faith on the advice of counsel. It was not error, therefore, in the trial court to fail to submit to the jury the question of defendant’s guilt as distinct from the question of plaintiff’s reasonable belief of such guilt. We need not, therefore, pass upon the question whether the guilt of defendant, as distinct from reasonable ground of belief on the part of plaintiff with reference thereto, would constitute a defense to the counterclaim for malicious prosecution, nor upon the correctness of the instructions asked on behalf of appellant relating to that subject.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.