OPINION
Steven Menard was convicted of assault with a dangerous weapon, in violation of AS 11.15.220. In this appeal, Menard claims that the trial court erred in excluding certain portions of an expert’s testimony, in giving the so-called Mann instruction to the jury, and in failing to instruct the jury as to all of the elements of assault. In addition, Menard appeals from the sentence imposed on the ground that it is excessive.
On the afternoon of September 20, 1975, Menard drank a six pack and three quart bottles of beer and smoked a quantity of marijuana. That night, while partying with Jack Bennett and several others, Me-nard continued to drink beer and smoke marijuana, in addition to drinking tequila.
As the evening wore on, Menard began acting strangely, and got into a fist fight with Bennett, but the fight was broken up by others present at the party. Shortly thereafter, Menard started another fight with Bennett, during which Menard stabbed Bennett three times. Bennett was taken to the hospital where he was treated for his wounds and kept under observation for 36 hours before being released. Menard was arrested the next day.
Menard was indicted and tried on the charge of stabbing with intent to wound, in violation of AS 11.15.150. Dr. Francis Whe-lan, a psychiatrist, testified that in his opinion, Menard had been too drunk at the time of the stabbing to have been able to form a premeditation to purposefully do wrong.
*968 The jury acquitted Menard of the stabbing with intent to wound charge, 1 but found him guilty of the lesser and included offense of assault with a dangerous weapon. Menard was sentenced to four years’ imprisonment, with two years suspended. This appeal followed.
Menard’s first point on appeal is that the trial court erred in excluding that portion of Dr. Whelan’s testimony relating to his administration of a sodium amytal test to Menard. Dr. Whelan had performed three tests on Menard, one of which was a sodium amytal diagnostic interview. In addition, the doctor had interviewed Menard on two separate occasions, listened to a tape recording of the grand jury proceedings, read an affidavit concerning the preliminary hearing, inspected photographs of Menard depicting wounds allegedly received in the fight with Bennett, and read copies of Alaska State Department of Safety investigation forms from Menard’s file prior to reaching his opinion as to Menard’s inability to form a specific intent. The prosecutor objected to the admission of evidence regarding the sodium amytal test, claiming that mention of the so-called “truth serum” would be inflammatory and irrelevant. Defense counsel replied that the purpose of the testimony was to establish that the sodium amytal test was one of the diagnostic tools used by Dr. Whelan to reach his diagnosis. The judge then asked the doctor whether he would be able to render an opinion without resorting to the sodium amytal test. The doctor replied that he could do so, and that excluding the sodium amytal test, his opinion would still be that the defendant was too drunk to form a specific intent. The judge then ruled that Dr. Whelan’s testimony would be permitted, but without mention of sodium amytal.
The decision to exclude mention of the sodium amytal test was within the discretion we have afforded trial courts in controlling expert testimony.
See State v. Guinn,
Menard next contends that the giving of the following instruction constituted reversible error:
“It is reasonable to infer that a person ordinarily intends the natural and probable consequences of acts knowingly done or knowingly omitted. So unless the contrary appears from the evidence, the jury may draw the inference that the accused intended all the consequences which one standing in like circumstances and possessing like knowledge should reasonably have expected to result from any act knowingly done or knowingly omitted by the accused.”
This instruction is identical to that given in
Mann v. United States,
Other circuits 3 have been critical of the Mann instruction but, in the years immediately following the Mann decision, most courts held that reversal was not required when the instructions on intent, taken as a whole, were adequate to insure that the jury would not be misled. 4
More recently, however, the Second Circuit reversed a conviction for uttering forged checks because the Mann instruction had been given, even though defense counsel had not objected, stating that
“ . . . the ‘natural and probable consequences’ charge, particularly when . it contains the phrase ‘unless the contrary appears from the evidence,’ is a burden-shifting charge which has the potential for misleading the jury with respect to the requirement that the government must prove every element of an offense beyond a reasonable doubt.”
United States v. Robinson,
Meanwhile, the Fifth Circuit seemed to be backing away from its
Mann
decision, distinguishing
Mann
in
Helms v. United States,
Finally, in
United States v. Chiantese,
We are persuaded by the extensive criticism which this instruction has evoked. We hold that the giving of the Mann instruction is error, and we admonish Alaska trial courts to cease using it. Like the Fifth Circuit, however, we decline to hold that this error will always be deemed reversible.
In the instant case, the jury acquitted Menard of the specific intent charge, stabbing with intent to wound, apparently believing Menard’s diminished capacity defense, but found him guilty of the general intent crime of assault with a dangerous weapon. The jury did not have to find any specific intent to do any particular kind or degree of harm to the victim in order to find Menard guilty of assault with a dangerous weapon.
See Thompson v. State,
Menard also maintains that the trial court erred by failing to instruct the jury as to all of the elements necessary to a conviction for assault with a dangerous weapon. He claims that reasonable apprehension of bodily harm by the victim is an element which must be included in the definition of assault, citing an Oregon case,
State v. McLennen,
The Alaska statutes fail to define the word “assault.” Appellant is, therefore, correct in assuming that we will look to the interpretation of the Oregon Supreme Court prior to 1900 when construing Alaska statutes which originated in Oregon,
(see Nicholson v. Sorensen,
“ ‘An assault is any unlawful physical force, partly or fully put in motion, creating a reasonable apprehension of immediate physical injury to a human being; as *971 raising a cane to strike him, pointing in a threatening manner a loaded gun at him, and the like.’ 2 Bish.Crim.Law, § 23. Or, more tersely, an assault is thus defined by Wharton: ‘An assault is an intentional attempt to do an injury to another.’ 2 Whart.Crim.Law, § 1241.”
We do not read this statement as requiring the element of reasonable apprehension in every assault. Our interpretation is bolstered by a later Oregon case,
State v. Godfrey,
“I think these authorities clearly show that to constitute an assault there must be an intentional attempt to do injury to the person of another by violence, and that such attempt must be coupled with a present ability to do the injury attempted. It is equally manifest that the element of fear or apprehension on the part of the person against whom the attempt is made cannot be controlling, or in any way influence the conclusion, for the reason that such person may be assaulted and be wholly unconscious of the injury.”
Menard’s final contention is that the sentence imposed was excessive. As we said in
State v. Chaney,
The maximum penalty for this offense is ten years. We recently upheld a five-year sentence for assault with a dangerous weapon where the defendant had no previous felony convictions.
Dawson v. State,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In order to have found Menard guilty of this offense, the jury would have had to find that Menard had been capable of forming a specific intent.
. In
Sherwin v. United States,
.
See, e. g., United States v. Barash,
.
McCarty v. United States,
.
Cohen v. United States,
.
United States v. DeSimone,
.
United States v. Wilkinson,
.
United States v. Durham,
. It should be noted that Menard did not deny stabbing Bennett. Although AS 11.70.030 provides that the jury may, as it did here, consider the defendant’s intoxication when the existence of a specific intent is a necessary element to a crime, the statute clearly states that “[a]n act committed by a person while in a state of voluntary intoxication is not less criminal because he was intoxicated.” AS 11.70.030(a). We decline to hold, as appellant urges us to do, that intoxication ought to be considered with respect to the general criminal intent necessary to the commission of assault with a dangerous weapon. Nor are we willing to abandon the classic distinction between specific and general intent crimes, as suggested by appellant.
. The Oregon Supreme Court has not been entirely consistent on this point through the years, as some cases have included the element of fear in the definition of assault, and others have not.
See State v. Wilson,
. Two instructions were given regarding the essential elements of the crime of assault. One instruction contained no mention of the element of fear. In the other, mention of fear was tacked onto the end of the instruction, apparently as an afterthought.
