OPINION
Cassandra Yolanda Hooks appeals her conviction for aggravated assault. In a bench trial, Hooks pleaded not guilty. The cоurt found her guilty and assessed punishment at ten years’ confinement, probated for ten years. Hooks complains that her waiver of a jury trial wаs involuntary and unintentional. Because, under the facts presented, the trial court’s guilty finding necessarily involved an affirmative finding that a deadly weapon was used, we hold the trial court’s judgment to be void. As the judgment is void, we need not address Hooks’s jury waiver complaint. We re *644 verse the trial court’s judgment and remand the cause for a new trial.
FACTS
On April 26, 1991, Hooks appeared before the trial court on a charge of aggravated assault. She waived her right to a jury trial and entered a plea of not guilty. The complainant testified that Hooks stopped her cаr and got out. She said Hooks approached her car while screaming obscenities, reached in the car window, began hitting her in the face, and then “raised her — her shirt up, pulled a gun out, stuck it in my face, and said she would shoot me.” The evidence indicated that no one besidеs Hooks and the complainant were involved in the attack.
The trial court found Hooks guilty and referred her to a probation officеr for a pre-sentencing interview. After receiving the pre-sentencing report, the court entered a final judgment, finding Hooks guilty of “aggravated assault a third degree felony as charged in the indictment. DW.” The judge sentenced Hooks to ten years’ confinement in the Texas Departmеnt of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division, but suspended the sentence and placed Hooks on probation for ten years.
APPEAL
The thrust of Hooks’s appeal is that she waived a jury trial based upon misrepresentations by her attorney that the judge had authority to grant her probation. However, she also points out that, because her conviction as charged in the indictment required proof that she used or exhibited a deadly weapon, the court did not have the authority to order probation in her case.
See
Tex.Code Crim.Proc.Ann. art. 42.12, § 3g(a)(2) (Vernon Supp.1992) (Texas law рrohibits a judge from granting probation in a conviction involving use or exhibition of a deadly weapon);
Shannon v. State,
VOID JUDGMENT
The Texas Code of Criminal Procedure prohibits a trial judge from granting probation to а defendant found guilty of an offense involving use or exhibition of a deadly weapon. Tex.Code Crim.Proc. Ann. art. 42.12, § 3g(a)(2);
1
see Shannon,
The State points out that article 42.12, section 3g(a)(2) of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure applies only where the fact finder makes an affirmаtive finding on the use of a deadly weapon.
Jones v. State,
A trial court has several means of making an affirmative finding.
Polk v. State,
In Hоoks’s case (1) the indictment specifically alleged the use of
“a deadly weapon,
to-wit: a firearm”; therefore, placing the issue before the trier of fаct,
see Polk,
The State’s Cases
To support its argument that the trial court failed to make a deadly weaрon affirmative finding, the State relies on
Ex parte Brooks,
In
Brooks,
the Court of Criminal Appeals held that merely attaching additional words such as “deadly weapon” to a judgment is not an affirmative finding sufficiently satisfying
Jones. Brooks,
Hughes
and
Lucke
also differ from our case.
3
In both
Hughes
and
Lucke
the judgments did not find the defendants “guilty as charged in the indictment.”
See Hughes,
Conclusion
We conclude that the trial court effectively made an affirmative finding of a deadly weapon, and we hold that the limitation of article 42.12, section 3g(a)(2) of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure applies to Hooks. We hold that the trial court’s judgment and sentence are void and remand the cause for a new trial consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. We note that while sections 3g(a)(2) and 3g(b) of article 42.12 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure are inconsistent and confusing, courts interpret section 3g(а)(2) to bar eligibility for probation “unless it is recommended by the jury."
See Shannon,
. We recognize that
Polk
was decided before article 42.12 was amended by the legislature.
See
Act of June 15, 1991, 72nd Leg., R.S., ch. 541, § 1, 1991 Tex.Gen.Laws 1876, 1877 (current version at Tex.Code Crim.Proc.Ann. art. 42.12, § 3g(a)(2)). However,
Polk
remains good law.
*645
See Long v. State,
. In distinguishing
Hughes,
we find no difference between our statutory authority under Tex. R.App.P. 80(b) and (c) to reform a judgment to speak the truth, and the authority under
Polk
to make an affirmative finding on a deadly weapon when it is necessary to the prima facie case under consideration.
See Asberry v. State,
