One Thrasher was the only witness examined for the prosecution. To a question asking if he had ever bought any whisky from the defendant, he replied that he had sent his boy to the defendant’s father’s house to get some whisky, and that he got a half pint of whisky and- brought it to him. Following this unresponsive answer to the question, the solicitor again asked the witness if he had bought any whisky from the defendant. This question was objected to on the ground that “the state had already made an election as to which offense it would prosecute the defendant, that is, for a sale or delivery of whisky to the witness’ son.” There was no merit in the objection, and it was properly overruled. The solicitor had done nothing to indicate a desire or willingness to bring out anything except testimony as to the purchase of whisky by the witness from the defendant. The failure of the witness to answer the question when it was first asked *188was not entitled to be given the effect, of an election by the state to base the prosecution on a transaction evidence of which had not been called for, and with which the defendant was not shown to have had any connection. The effect of permitting the question objected to to be answered was simply to allow the solicitor to elicit the testimony which his original question had called for. In answering that question, the witness did no more than answer the one which was asked before.
The witness testified to a purchase by him from the defendant of a pint of whisky, and that this occurred in Lawrence county within 12 months before the finding of the' indictment. The indictment charged that the defendant “sold, offered for sale, kept for sale, or otherwise disposed of spirituous, vinous, or malt liquors, contrary to law,” etc. No motion was made to require the prosecution to elect for which of the offenses charged in the alternative in the single count of the indictment a conviction would be sought. No election having been required or made, the prosecution was to be regarded as seeking a conviction of any offense embraced in the indictment of the commission of which there was evidence submitted for the consideration of the jury. The court refused to give the following written charge, requested by the defendant: “Under the evidence in this case you cannot find the defendant guilty of offering for sale spirituous, vinous or malt liquors, contrary to law, as charged in the indictment.” As the offense mentioned was embraced in the indictment, the charge was properly refused, unless there was an absence of evidence tending to prove the commission of that offense by the defendant. Only a single sale of whisky by the defendant was testified to; but it does not necessarily follow from this that the *189evidence could not tend to prove the commission of more than one offense. Often more than one offense is committed by a single act. — 2 Woolen & Thornton on Intoxicating Liquors, § 966, p. 1720. The charge in the indictment that the defendant offered to sell prohibited liquor did not, we think, necessarily import anything more than that he made an overt manifestation, by either words or acts, of a desire or willingness to sell such liquor, whether or not such manifestation was invited or solicited by the person dealt with. In other words, what is said or done may none the less amount to an offer to sell, though it is in response to another’s indication of a desire to buy. — State v. Dunbar, 13 Or. 591, 11 Pac. 298, 57 Am. Rep. 33. A sale must be the result of one party’s buying what another offers or tenders for sale. It follows that proof of the sale of a thing is evidence of the seller’s offering it for sale. Evidence of the consummated transaction tends to prove that which must have gone before. The conclusion-is that there was not an absence of evidence tending to prove the defendant’s guilt of the offense mentioned in the above-quoted charge, and that the court was not in error in refusing to give that charge.
The refusal of the court to give that charge cannot be interpreted as a ruling by it that the defendant could be convicted of anything if the jury did not believe that the single transaction testified to by the witness for the state occurred, as the court, in a written charge given at the request of the defendant, instructed the jury as follows: “Unless you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt, and to a moral certainty that the defendant sold spirituous, vinous or malt liquors, contrary to law, as charged in the indictment, you should find the defendant not guilty.” In the light of the fact that this instruction was given at the re*190quest of the defendant, his request of the refused charge in question amounted to his asking the court to rule that, though the jury should find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that there was a sale as testified to by the state’s witness, yet there was an absence of any evidence tending to prove that the defendant offered for sale spirituous, vinous, or malt liquors, contrary to law. It was not error for the court to refuse to make such a ruling, as the testimony of the witness for the state tended to prove an offer to sell, as well as a consummated sale. In striking at the traffic in prohibited liquors, the Legislature made separate offenses of different stages in the conduct of one who manifests a purpose to engage in such traffic. An offense is completed by his keeping such liquor for sale,, or by his offering to sell it. And the offense is not obliterated by the conduct which constitutes it also including the consummation of a sale. He is subject to conviction of either one of the offenses which was committed by what he did, though that is disclosed by the evidence as a single transaction. This is not saying that he can be convicted of more than one offense under a single charge made in the alternative.
From the testimony of the witness for the state, the jury might well have inferred that he got from the defendant a pint of whisky on the occasion of the purchase testified to. It was also a permissible inference from the fact that the defendant sold and delivered whiskey when he was afforded the opportunity to do so that he kept or had it in possession for sale. If one has in possession prohibited liquor for the purpose of sale, he is keeping it for sale within the meaning of the statute (Acts of Ala. 1909, p. 9, § 3), and of one of the alternative charges contained in the indictment in this case. — Priest v. State, 5 Ala. App. 171, 59 South. 318. *191It follows that the court was not in error in refusing to give written charge C, requested by the defendant.
The record does not show that the court had presented to it or decided the question as to whether or not it was permissible for the jury, on the evidence submitted to them, to convict the defendant of more than one of the offenses charged in the alternative in the single count of the indictment. It made no ruling in conflict with the one made by us in the case of Moss v. State, 3 Ala. App. 189, 58 South. 62, to the effect that a conviction of more than one offense under such a charge is not authorized.
The rulings above considered are the only ones of which complaint has been made in the argument of the counsel for the appellant. There is no error in the record.
Affirmed.