Plaintiff appeals from a directed verdict of no cause for action in bis suit for malicious prosecution for attempted arson. Essential to Ms right to recover is want on defendants’ part of probable cause to believe him guilty of the offense charged when they initiated the prosecution.
Thomas
v.
Bush,
In the instant case the testimony, after disclosing-a long record of trouble between plaintiff and one of defendants, established that defendant Miller owned, and defendant Godin leased from her, a cement block building, attached to which was a wooden lean-to 36 feet long and 5 feet wide in which empty beer and pop cases, cartons and paper were stored. Plaintiff operated a gasoline station nest door. A passer-by *23 testified that he saw plaintiff place burning paper against the wooden lean-to and heard him say, “Look out! Get out! I’m going to blow this place out.”' The witness further testified that he thereupon ran to defendant Miller and told her all this and that plaintiff “run away right away like lightning.” Defendant Miller told defendant Godin about the occurrence and they went to the office of the prosecuting-attorney and discussed the matter with an assistant there. He caused an investigation to be made by the-sheriff’s department and testified on trial that defendants had told him nothing that he did not later learn to be true from the sheriff’s report. After-receipt of that report the assistant prosecuting attorney told defendants to go to the municipal court to> sign a complaint, which defendant Miller did. A warrant issued, plaintiff was arrested, the case was set for trial and, after a number of adjournments, it was dismissed because of defendants’ failure to appear at the final adjourned date.
Plaintiff contends that the court erred in directing a verdict, first, because defendants could not reasonably have believed that plaintiff, by his above-described acts, was attempting to set fire to the building-when they knew it was of cement block construction, and, second, because defendants did not fully and fairly disclose to the assistant prosecuting attorney that the building was of such construction. These contentions are without merit in view of testimony that the fire was attempted to be set to the wooden lean-to containing cartons and papers and covered,, as was the building proper, with a wood and tar roof, and of undisputed testimony that the passer-by related this as a fact to defendant Miller, and of the fact that the complaint was not taken nor the warrant issued until after sheriff’s officers had interviewed witnesses, examined the premises, and reported with respect thereto to the prosecuting *24 attorney, and that on that basis the complaint and warrant were prepared, which described the building in question as being of cement block construction. From all this it is clear that the prosecution of plaintiff did not result from defendants having misinformed the prosecuting attorney, the magistrate ■or the sheriff’s officers concerning the construction of the building, and, further, that plaintiff failed to show want of probable cause on defendants’ part to believe that plaintiff was guilty as charged.
Affirmed, with costs to defendants.
