7 Ga. App. 44 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1909
Two questions are raised by this record. One is whether, upon an accusation charging a riot, in which it is alleged that the defendants assaulted the prosecutrix, it is competent to prove that the defendants not only assaulted, but beat the prosecutrix. That is, whether proof that the alleged rioters committed a battery, as well an assault upon the prosecutrix, creates such a variance between the allegations and the proof as to require the defendant’s discharge. The second question arises upon the verbiage of the accusation, in that the only allegation which would tend to show that the offense charged' was riot is that the defendants are alleged to have made an unlawful assault upon the prosecutrix with a common intent.
1. To be more specific in regard to the allegation of the accusation on the first point, it is perhaps proper to quote. The language employed is “did then and there, acting with a common intent, make an unlawful assault on one Janie Jones, and did then and there attempt to commit a personal injury on said Janie Jones by throwing rocks at said Janie Jones.” The mere fact that the proof showed that the defendants not only attempted to commit a personal injury by throwing rocks, but that they succeeded in the
2. •' The decision upon the second point seems to be controlled by the ruling in Lock v. State, 122 Ga. 730 (50 S. E. 932), in which it was held that it was not necessary to allege that riot had been committed in the commission of an unlawful act, or in the commission of a lawful act in a riotous and tumultuous manner, but that it was sufficient if the act as alleged Avas really an unlawful act, or an act done in a riotous and tumultuous manner, provided that it