— The indictment in this case was against Yance Brigman, and it was signed, “Vance Brigman, Special Solicitor of the Twelfth Circuit.” We take it that this was a result of a mere inadvertence on the part of the person who dráfted the paper. But, whether this was the fact or not, the signature to the indictment did not render it subject to be stricken or *402quashed on the motions made to those ends. “It is not essential to the validity of the indictment that it should have been prepared or signed by the solicitor. It ‘receives its legal efficacy from the finding and return of the gnand jury; and the legal evidence of its verity is the return ‘a true bill’ apparent upon some part of it bearing the signature of the foreman.’ ” — Prince v. State, 140 Ala. 158, 37 South. 171; Holley v. State, 75 Ala. 14; Joyner v. State, 78 Ala. 448. If the signature as made be taken as importing that it was the act of the defendant himself, done without authority, he cannot be heard to complain of it, especially as the signature was mere surplusage, and cannot vitiate the indictment.— State v. Mace, 86 N. C. 668; State v. Kovolesky, 92 Iowa, 498, 61 N. W. 223 ; 22 Cyc. 251. The mere presence of the defendant’s name to the indictment cannot import anything more than that he, or some other person, wrote it there, and does not give rise to a presumption that he, and not the person whose appointment is shown by the • record, acted as special solicitor in the proceedings of the grand jury, which resulted in the finding of the indictment.
There was evidence tending to prove that a considerable quantity of whisky was found in'a cellar of a storehouse, in which a business was conducted of which the defendant had charge as general manager. The defendant was not entitled to prove that the officer who seized the whisky did not' regard it as the property -of the defendant, and did not seize it as such. The ownership of the whisky and the officer’s opinion on that subject were immaterial matters. — Roden v. State, 3 Ala. App. 197, 58 South. 71.
After the officer who made the seizure of the whisky bad described in detail the room in the cellar in which it was found, had stated that it was in that room to *403itself, and was separate from the furniture in the cellar, which was a part of the stock of goods used in the business in which the defendant was ostensibly engaged, and had testified as to his finding that room locked, and getting the key to it, not from the defendant, but from his brother, J. A. Brigman, who was in the store at the time, he was asked if it was not a fact that the liquor was in the possession of J. A. Brigman. Conceding that the question could, without error, have been permitted to be answered, yet the defendant could not have been prejudiced by the action of the court in sustaining the objection- to it. It is plain that the defendant had already been permitted to elicit from the witness all the facts within his knowledge which could shed any light on the inquiry as to who was in possession of the liquor. The witness having fully detailed what came under his observation as to the location and control of the whisky, the result of sustaining the objection to the question could not have been to withhold from the jury any part of what he really knew as to who was in possession of it. The circumstances under which the question was asked were such as to justify the court in treating it as not calling for any fact observed by the witness to which he had not already deposed, and as not capable of eliciting any additional testimony that could shed light on the defendant’s connection, or lack of connection,- with the keeping of the whisky at the place in which it was found.
When it was made to appear on the cross-examination of the defendant’s witness Forrester that the statement which the witness had made, in the course of his direct examination, as to the ownership of the business, which was conducted in the store in which the whisky was found, was not based on any personal knowledge of the witness as to the fact deposed to, but only on infor*404mation imparted to him by a third person, his statement on that subject was properly excluded, as amounting to no more than hearsay testimony.
It was brought out on the cross-examination of the defendant, who testified in his own behalf, that during the period covered by the indictment he received considerable quantities of prohibited liquors, which he stated were kept by him at a place other than the storehouse in which was found the whisky as to which the state had offered evidence. The charge made against the defendant that he kept prohibited liquors for sale could be supported by evidence of his doing so either at the storehouse mentioned in the evidence offered by the state, or at the place referred to by the defendant in his own testimony. The evidence as to the frequency and amounts of his receipts of liquor was such as to furnish some support for an inference that he was getting it for sale.- — Freeny v. City of Jasper, infra, 62 South. 385. As it cannot be said that there was an absence of evidence to support a conviction of the defendant for keeping prohibited liquor for sale at a place other than the one named in the written charge requested by him, that charge. Avas properly refused.
Besides it is not made to appear that the charge was requested before the jury retired to consider its verdict.
No error is found in the record.
Affirmed.