Appellant Rodney Gilliam was convicted of attempted burglary. Ind.Code § 35-43-2-1 (Burns 1985), Ind.Code § 35-41-5-1 (Burns 1985). The trial court imposed a prison term of twelve years.
Among the issues raised by Gilliam in this direct appeal is the sufficiency of the evidence. Gilliam specifically claims that the evidence does not establish that he intended to commit a theft, the underlying felony charged, although it may have established breaking and entering.
The offense of burglary requires proof by the State that the defendant knowingly or intentionally broke and entered the building or structure with the intention to commit a certain felony therein. Pratt v. State (1986), Ind.,
The evidence most favorable to the trial court's judgment indicates that at 5:30 a.m. on July 20, 1984, Warren Durrell was alone at home when he heard a noise coming from another bedroom. He walked into *1271 this bedroom and pulled the curtain away from the window. He saw a man trying to enter the house. Indeed, the man had already managed to extend his arm eighteen inches into the house. The man then ran from the house. Durrell reported this incident to the police. An officer who responded to this dispatch drove to the area and found appellant one-half block from the house. Appellant was subsequently identified by Durrell and by a neighbor. Durrell testified that he did not find anything missing from his home.
A police officer testified that Gilliam stated upon interrogation that he had been arguing with his girlfriend at her house down the block. The defendant asserted that he had chased her outside, that she fell and knocked the screen out of the window frame of Durrell's house. His girlfriend's testimony corresponded to Gilliam's statement to the police.
Burglars rarely announce their intentions at the moment of entry, so the intent to commit a given felony is one fact which may be inferred from the cireum-stances. Garcia v. State (1984), Ind.,
As the cited cases illustrate, the evidence need not be insurmountable, but only provide a solid basis to support a reasonable inference that the defendant intended to commit the underlying felony charged. However, in the case at bar, the State did not present any evidence from which the jury could have inferred the nature of the felony that appellant intended to commit when he broke and entered the premises.
The conviction is reversed and the cause is remanded with instructions to enter a conviction for the lesser included offense of attempted criminal trespass, upon which an instruction had been given.
