Affirming.
Appellant, F.C. Prater, prosecutes this appeal from a judgment of the Fleming circuit court convicting him of illegally transporting liquor, and imposing upon him a fine of $150.00 and imprisonment in jail for 45 days as punishment.
Appellant's contention that the place or possession to be searched was not sufficiently described in the search warrant is not well founded. It was described in both the affidavit and search warrant as a "Scripps-Booth automobile touring car, license number 232504." It is true that in the search warrant itself the word "license" was not used in connection with the given number of the car. That omission, however, does not make a difference, because for purposes of identification of an automobile *Page 453 in transit no other number could be used than that appearing upon the license plate. It is difficult to imagine a more definite description of the thing or possession to be searched under this search warrant than that given.
Appellant insists that since the search warrant commanded the search of the automobile "now being used and occupied and controlled by John Doe, et al.," there is not a sufficient description of the person to make the search warrant valid. That contention can not be sustained because this search warrant did not command that any person be searched, and, acting under it, the peace officers did not search the person of anyone. If the evidence used against appellant herein had been discovered by a search of his person there would perhaps have been some force to the argument advanced by appellant that he could not be searched under a search warrant which issued for John Doe with no other description or identification of the person to be searched. Such was not the case here, however, because the evidence used against appellant was discovered by searching the automobile and that was authorized by the search warrant because the automobile was particularly and exactly described therein.
Appellant insists that neither the affidavit nor warrant charges a public offense and that his demurrer should have been sustained. The affidavit for it and the search warrant itself do not contain the charges under which appellant was tried. In other words, they do not constitute the pleading preferring the charge of the Commonwealth against defendant. The affidavit for it and the search warrant were valid. Acting under the latter the peace officers searched the automobile described therein. They found two gallons of whiskey belonging to appellant which the search disclosed that he was then illegally transporting. He was committing that offense in the presence of the officers. In that state of case, as was fully written in Puckett v. Commonwealth,
Perceiving no error the judgment herein will be affirmed.