Appellant was convicted of an aggravated assault. The indictment was in two counts. After the formal allegations the first averred that on September 5, 1917, appellant, “in and upon Mary Checkle, a female, then and there under the age of fifteen years, other than the wife of the said G. Cirul, did make an assault, and did then and there attempt to ravish and have carnal knowledge-of the said Mary Checkle.” The second alleged that on said date G. Cirul “did by force, threats, and fraud, attempt to ravish and have carnal knowledge of Mary Checkle, a female, then and there under the age of fifteen j’ears, the said female not being then and there the wife of the said G. Cirul.”
In Taylor v. State,
In Runnels v. State,
In Atkinson v. State,
“The only distinction between an ‘intent’ and an ‘attempt’ to do a thing is that the former implies purpose only, while the latter implies both the purpose and an actual effort to carry that purpose into execution ; and, since the word ‘attempt’ embraces the full meaning of ‘intent’ with something more, it is not impossible that the courts may hold it to be an admissible substitute in an indictment. Smith v. State,
Unquestionably, under these authorities, the first count properly charged an assault with intent to rape.
The statute (article 771, Code of Criminal Procedure), provides that “where a prosecution is for an offense consisting of different degrees, the jury may find the defendant not guilty of the higher, but guilty of *11 any degree inferior to that charged in the indictment.” The next article provides that “the following offenses include different degrees: “ . 2 An assault with intent to commit any felony, which includes all assaults of an inferior degree.”
Article 837, subdivision 9, Code of Criminal Procedure, provides that a verdict is not contrary to the law and evidence where the defendant is found guilty of an offense of inferior grade to, but of the same nature as, the offense proved.
Under these statutes it has been repeatedly held by this court that an indictment for an assault with intent to rape includes all degrees of assault of the same nature:- Kearse v. State,
In Loftin v. State;
This being true, it would necessarily follow that the manner or means used to commit the lesser degree of the offense need not be alleged. This conviction was had under article 1022, subdivision 6, of the Penal Code, which prescribes that an assault and battery becomes aggravated when committed under any of the following circumstances: when the instrument or means used is such as inflicts disgrace upon the person assaulted, as an assault and battery with a whip or cowhide. Under this, this court expressly held that by naming a whip or cowhide it was not intended to limit the assault by the character of instrument with which it was made; that they were merely illustrative, and that under said subdivision of said article any other means which inflicts disgrace is within the meaning of the statute. And in that case the fondling of the private parts of a female and the insertion of the appellant’s finger in her vagina was held an aggravated assault (Slawson v. State,
Therefore, the appellant’s objection to the court’s charge wherein he *12 submitted the offense of aggravated assault when, the- instrument or means used was such as to inflict disgrace upon the person assaulted, such as the indecent fondling of the private parts of a female child by a man, because the indictment did not allege that he was an adult male, can not be sustained. The statute and the decisions establish the reverse of the contention as true.
The proof in this case shows a most aggravated assault and battery by appellant, a man, thirty-one years of age, on a little girl seven and one-half years old, by fondling her private parts and inserting his fingers in her vagina and violently disrupting her hymen.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
