delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal is from a conviction of possessing intoxicating liquor with a fine of $100 and a jail sentence of sixty days each. The ¡Sheriff testified that he found fifteen pints and eighteen half pints of whiskey beneath the counter under the floor of a place operated by the defendants as a tourist camp, or filling station. Defendants did not testify and rely upon alleged defects in the search warrant under the authority of which the Sheriff acted. On the trial counsel for defendants objected to the evidence of the Sheriff and his objections were overruled by the trial Judge and the testimony admitted. It is of this action of the trial Judge that he complains in this Court.
Looking to the bill of exceptions, we find that the objections to the search warrant raised on the trial were (1) that “it was not sworn out by the Sheriff, but by a Deputy”, and (2) that “the body of the search warrant, the way it was written and purportedly sworn to, invaded the constitutional rights of the defendants.” Neither of these objections were well made. The fact that the affidavit was sworn to by a Deputy Sheriff, rather than by the Sheriff who served the search warrant, in no wise affected its validity. The second objection is too indefinite and too general. Tt in no way specifies the respect in which the search warrant “invaded the constitutional rights of defendants”.
*386 The foregoing are the sole grounds of objection specified on the trial of the case, and to these objections plaintiffs in error are confined on this appeal.
In the early case of
Ewell
v.
State,
14 Tenn. (6 Yerg.), 364,
On the trial of the case the defendants introduced the Magistrate in an attempt to impreach the affidavit. In the first place, this practice is condemned by this Court, it being held in numerous cases that the alleged
*387
falsity of the averments in the affidavit could not be shown by oral testimony on the trial and made the basis of attack. See
Bragg
v.
State,
