OPINION
Four indictments charged the appellant with the aggravated robbery of a bartender and three patrons of a bar. With the consent of the parties, the four cases were tried together. A jury found the appellant guilty in each case. In cause 56,351, the jury found that the appellant had previously been finally convicted of two felony offenses, which fixed the punishment at confinement for life. In each of the other causes, the jury assessed the punishment at 75 years’ confinement. The appellant says that there are fundamental errors in each charge to the jury.
During recent years, we have reversed no small number of cases for fundamental error in the court’s charge. See
Cleland v. State,
An omission from the court’s charge of an allegation in the indictment which is required to be proved has long been held to be fundamental error. See, e. g.,
Moore v. State,
A second kind of fundamental error occurs when the charge to the jury substitutes a theory of the offense completely different from the theory alleged in the indictment. See, e. g.,
Gooden v. State,
A third kind of fundamental error is committed when the charge to the jury authorizes conviction on the theory alleged in the indictment and on one or more other theories not alleged in the indictment. Such a charge would permit conviction on proof different from (and sometimes less than) that required to prove the allegations in the indictment. Most of the recent cases have involved such charges that enlarge on the indictment.
This third type of error is illustrated by aggravated robbery cases in which the indictment alleged threatening and placing in fear, while the charge also authorized conviction for causing bodily injury.
Edmond v. State,
This third kind of fundamental error, the charge that enlarges on the indictment, is not limited to robbery cases. We have reversed voluntary manslaughter convictions in which the indictment alleged intentionally and knowingly causing death, while the charge also authorized conviction for intending to cause serious bodily injury and committing an act clearly dangerous to human life that causes death. See
Garcia v. State,
A fourth kind of fundamental error is committed when the charge authorizes con
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viction for conduct which is not an offense, as well as for conduct which is an offense. See
Jackson v. State,
With the perspective of the foregoing collection of cases, we approach the appellant’s first ground of error. The indictments alleged that the appellant threatened and placed the complainants in fear of imminent bodily injury. The court’s charges authorized conviction if the jury found that the appellant threatened and placed the complainants in fear of imminent bodily injury or death. The appellant argues that the addition of the words “or death” is an enlargement on the indictment which constitutes fundamental error of the third kind discussed above. We cannot agree.
The evil of the charge that enlarges on the indictment is that it authorizes conviction on proof different from (and sometimes less than) that required to prove the allegations in the indictment. That evil is not present in this case, because proof of threatening and placing in fear of death is not different from (or less than) proof of threatening and placing in fear of bodily injury. “Bodily injury” means physical pain, illness, or any impairment of physical condition. V.A.P.C., Section 1.07(a)(7). Death necessarily involves impairment of physical condition (if not pain and illness), so “death” necessarily includes “bodily injury,” Therefore every “threatening and placing in fear of death” necessarily includes “threatening and placing in fear of bodily injury”; proof of the former is not different from (or less than) proof of the latter. The evil presented by the charge that enlarges on the indictment is not present in this case, nor do we perceive any of the other kinds of fundamental error discussed above. The first ground of error is overruled.
The appellant’s other ground of error sets out another claim that fundamental error was committed in the charges. Each indictment alleged that the appellant acted with the intent to obtain and maintain control of the property of the complainant, the said property being (in the respective indictments) “Current Money of the United States of America,” “Two Hundred Dollars ($200.00) current money of the United States of America,” “one billfold,” and “Twenty-five Dollars ($25.00) current money of the United States of America.” Each charge describes the property taken only as “the property as alleged in the indictment.” The appellant claims that this phrase is only an abstract statement of law which fails to apply the law to the facts, citing
Perez v. State,
There is some authority for the proposition that a charge may describe property by reference to the indictment.
Lindsey v. State,
This is not to say that the appellant would not have been entitled to a more detailed description of the property had he presented his objection or special requested charge to the trial court. But we note that the reference to “the property as alleged in the indictment” prevented that kind of fundamental error that is committed when the court’s charge enlarges on the indictment. Again, we do not perceive any of the other kinds of fundamental error discussed above. The second ground of error is overruled.
Finding no fundamental error, we affirm the judgment.
