Motion in arrest of judgment. The defendant was convicted upon a complaint for keeping and depositing intoxicating liquors intended for unlawful sale in this State. He then filed this motion, which was overruled, and he excepted. The motion sets out two grounds for arrest.
I. It is contended that the complaint is double, ambiguous and indefinite, in that it is based upon two inconsistent situations, and upon two differing statutes. The defendant claims that the complaint contains the necessary allegations for obtaining a warrant for a search and seizure of intoxicating liquors, under R. S., chap. 29, sec. 49, and likewise the allegations necessary for obtaining a warrant for the seizure of liquors already taken without a warrant, under section 48 of the same chapter. As to this ground it is only-necessary to say that the defendant has misinterpreted the language in the complaint. R. S., chap. 29, sect. 48 provides that "in all cases where an officer may seize intoxicating liquors, or the vessels containing them, upon a warrant, he may seize the same without a warrant, and keep them in some safe place for a reasonable time until he can procure such warrant.” This is sometimes called, perhaps not with strict accuracy, a "seizure” warrant, in distinction from a "search and seizure” warrant. Such was the warrant in this case. In order to obtain such a warrant, it was necessary for the officer after seizing the liquors without a warrant, to make complaint setting out that he had already seized and was holding the liquors, and also in apt terms that he was, when he seized the liquors, an officer authorized by law to seize, upon a warrant, liquors intended for unlawful sale. Such an officer only can obtain a "seizure” warrant, and his authority must be alleged. The language which the defendant now complains of as one of two inconsistent descriptions of the offense is in these words, namely, "being then and there an officer, to wit, a deputy sheriff, within and for said county, duly qualified and authorized by law to seize intoxicating liquors kept and deposited for unlawful sale and the vessels containing them, by virtue *393of a warrant therefor issued in conformity with the provisions of law. ” This is not descriptive of the offense. It is merely the averment of the officer’s authority. Having alleged his authority, the complainant then proceeded to allege that he had found and seized the liquors, and he prayed for a warrant. So far the complaint appears to be in proper form.
II. The other alleged ground for arresting judgment is that the allegation of the time of the seizure is an impossible date, or to use the language of the motion, "that the officer says he seized the liquors by virtue of a warrant therefor on the fourth day of January A. D. 198.” This is not an accurate statement. There is no allegation that the liquors were seized "by virtue of a warrant.” But passing that, it is not correct to say that the complaint alleges the seizure to have been "on the fourth day of January, A. D. 198.” What the actual date written was the court, of course, must determine, if it can, by inspection. We have inspected the certified copies which were evidently intended to be fac simile copies of the original, but we find that they are not alike. The complaint made January 6, 1908, sets out that the defendant unlawfully kept and deposited the liquors "on the fourth day of January in said year.” And the time of the seizure is alleged as "on the fourth day of January A. D.” Then the year appears in four figures, first 19 and then an 8 written upon and partly above an 0, or an 0 written upon and partly beneath an 8. But the 0 and the 8 are not in the same perpendicular line. In some of the copies the 8 appears to be a little to the left of the center line of the 0, and in others a little to the right.
Though the complaint in this respect was bunglingly made, we think it would be putting too fine a point upon it to say that we cannot tell by inspection that this was written and should be read not as 198, but either as 1908 or as 1980, according to the relative positions of the 8 and O. But which? If 1908, the complaint was good. If 1980, it was bad. It is doubtless true that the writer intended to write "1908.” But that does not help the case. We cannot rewrite it. We must take it as written. And that is uncertain. The defendant has not clearly shown to us how it was written, *394or at any rate, that it was written "1980.” For the purposes of this case we do not place any stress upon the fact that the defendant in his motion described the date as 198 instead of 1980. But we think that it was incumbent upon him, in support of his exceptions, to show that the date was 1980 instead of 1908, and that he has failed to do. It therefore has not been shown that the date was impossible as alleged.
Exceptions overruled.
Judgment for the State.