The defendant was convicted of robbery, aggravated assault, armed escape, and kidnapping. The robbery indictment alleged that he took a .38-caliber pistol from the victim “by use of force.” The *899 defendant contends that the evidence is insufficient to support this charge. Held:.
1. The evidence showed that while on a prisoner trash-pickup detail with an armed guard, the defendant distracted the guard and snatched his pistol from his holster. The offense of robbery may be committed by use of force, by intimidation, or by sudden snatching. See Code § 26-1901. Force is implicit in sudden snatching, both as a fact and as a legal proposition, the force being that effort necessary for “the robber to transfer the property taken from the owner to his possession.”
Hickey v. State,
2. Next, the defendant contends that the kidnapping count is void on its face because the victim’s name is omitted. The indictment describes the victim as “a person.” “One accused of crime has a right, if he demands it by timely demurrer, to have an accusation perfect in form and substance.
Harris v. State,
3. The defendant also complains that the charges of aggravated assault and kidnapping were based on identical evidence and thus merge. The evidence showed that after obtaining the guard’s gun, the defendant pointed it at him and ordered him “to drive.” The guard then drove the city-owned truck at gunpoint to a location some five miles distant. While the offense of aggravated assault is not included in kidnapping as a matter of law, it does merge as a matter of fact on this evidence. Therefore, only one punishment may be imposed. See generally,
State v. Estevez,
Judgment affirmed with direction.
