Under the first point made by the defendant, he insists that the complaint against him is defective and bad by reason of duplicity, inasmuch as it charges two offences in one and the same count. He predicates this objection upon the allegation in the complaint that the defendant, “ on the twenty-third and twenty-ninth days of July, did sell a quantity of spirituous liquor, to wit, one gill of brandy,” to John B. Cole. And he contends that this language imports, and is equivalent to a substantial averment, that the defendant sold liquor twice, on two different days, and by two distinct and separate contracts of sale. This position was not contested by the counsel for the Commonwealth; but while he proceeded to maintain that the complaint was nevertheless good and sufficient, he admitted that the position itself was correctly taken. We cannot however adopt that assumption, nor yield our assent to such an interpretation of the language of the complaint, though it is thus asserted by one, and its accuracy is conceded by the other of the parties. In truth, there is only one transaction, a single asserted violation of law, stated in it; and that is the sale of one gill of brandy. It contains no other averment whatever of an act done. It names two days, on either of which a contract of sale may have been wholly or partially made; but it asserts *483only one sale, and describes only a single quantity of the article sold. It does not therefore charge two offences in the same count, and is not obnoxious to the objection of duplicity.
But the complaint is erroneous and insufficient, because -the time of the commission of the alleged offence is not properly or legally stated. Time should be stated with such certainty that no doubt can be entertained as to the period really intended. In 2 Hawk. c. 25, § 77, it is said to be “laid down as an undoubted principle in all the books that treat of this matter, that no indictment whatsoever can be good, without precisely showing a certain year and day of the material facts alleged in it.” The same rule is recognized by the more recent authorities, and is constantly sustained by judicial decisions. Archb. Crim. Pl. (5th Amer. ed.) 37. 1 Chit. Crim. Law, 217. The
State v. Baker, 34 Maine, 52. The unlawful act, with the doing of which the defendant is charged, is the sale of a definite quantity of spirituous liquor. That sale therefore is the material fact which should have been alleged to have occurred on a day certainly and particularly stated. But the time being left uncertain and doubtful, that is, whether the sale was made on the 23d or 29th of July, the complaint is fatally defective.
Exceptions sustained.