Patterson appeals his convictions of the aggravated battery of Johnny Marlowe (Count I) and criminal attempt to commit aggravated assault on Dennis Stiles (Count II). His convictions arose from a shooting inсident following an afternoon of drinking “white liquor” at a local swimming hole.
The night before, Dennis Stiles visited Patterson’s home and spent the evening drinking and arguing. While Patterson does not agree entirely with the latter charаcterization, at some point in the evening Stiles felt that the best thing was to leave. At Patterson’s *450 urging, Stiles changed his mind and spent the night at Patterson’s house.
The next day Patterson and Stiles went their separate ways for a time but in the afternoon Patterson, with others, went to the swimming hole where they found Stiles and others, including Johnny Marlowe. Patterson, Stiles, and Marlowe went downstream away from the main group and drank white liquor. Accоrding to Stiles and Marlowe, Patterson continued his argument with Stiles. Patterson recalled, however, that Stiles continued to argue, not Patterson. After the others left the area, Stiles passed out on the stream bаnk, and Patterson and Marlowe went back to Patterson’s car.
According to Marlowe, they went there to smoke marijuana. Patterson says, however, that he went to his car to get his .22 caliber pistol so that he could fire a warning shot at Stiles to keep him from wanting to fight.
In Marlowe’s version of the events at the car, he saw Patterson standing next to the car near the closed driver’s door. Patterson’s wife and childrеn were inside the car, and Patterson and his wife were talking loudly. Marlowe recalls that Patterson said something to him which sounded “something like stay out of it.” At that time, Marlowe was standing a few feet in front of the car and saw that Patterson was holding a gun in his right hand along the side of his leg. Marlowe started to walk away, but turned to ask Patterson something. When Marlowe turned toward Patterson, Patterson raised the gun, pointed it at Marlowe, аnd shot him. The bullet struck Marlowe in the neck and he fell to the ground on his back.
Marlowe testified that the driver’s side door was closed and that Patterson’s hand did not touch the car door. Marlowe also testified thаt after he was shot, Patterson walked past him toward the swimming hole, but before enough time passed for him to go to the swimming hole and back Patterson returned. According to Marlowe, neither Patterson nor his wife assisted him as he lay on the ground. As a result of the gunshot wound, Marlowe is permanently paralyzed from his mid-chest down.
Patterson testified, however, that he did not intend to shoot Marlowe. He admits that he intentionally cocked the single action pistol which would not fire unless the pistol was cocked, and that he knew the pistol had a hair trigger. Nevertheless, he testified that he was standing between the car door and the car, that he used the pistol to push the door open, and, that the pistol hit the door causing it to fire. He testified he went immediately to Marlowe’s assistance, and he did not go past Marlowe down toward Stiles. Acсording to Patterson, he threw the pistol in the car after Marlowe was shot and he had no intention of going down to the creek and shooting Stiles. Both Patterson and his wife testified they tried to assist Marlowe until others *451 came and took him to the hospital. Patterson’s statement to the investigating officers that he was mad at Stiles because Stiles was trying to pick a fight with Patterson in front of Patterson’s wife and children, was admitted in evidеnce. In the statement he also said that he was going to kill Stiles.
Patterson appeals and enumerates that the court improperly charged the jury on inferences which could be drawn, by failing to recharge the jury on intention as a necessary element of the offense, by denying the defendant’s motion for a mistrial after a State’s witness improperly introduced evidence of Patterson’s character, аnd by denying Patterson’s motion for a directed verdict on the criminal attempt charge. Held:
1. The first enumeration of error contends that the charge to the jury on inferences which might be drawn from intentional use of а deadly weapon impermissibly shifted the burden of proof to the defendant. Patterson relies upon
Powell v. State,
2. The second enumeration of error asserts that the trial court erred by failing to recharge the jury on intention when the court reсharged on other matters specifically requested by the jury. No error was committed. Whether to recharge in full or only on the points requested by the jury is a matter within the sound discretion of the trial judge.
Dyson v. State,
3. The third enumeration allegеs that the trial court erred by refusing to grant a mistrial motion after an agent from the Georgia Bureau of Investigation testified that Patterson’s wife had said that he was on probation and had two DUIs. The record reflects that the trial court admonished the agent about this testimony, and promptly informed the jury that the agent’s testimony was improper and that the court had so admonished the agent. Further, the trial court also instructеd the jury that they were not to consider those matters for any purpose. After these instructions Patterson renewed his motions, and alleges that such instructions were insufficient and that as the State asked the questiоn which elicited the objectionable response, a mistrial was required. He relies upon our decisions in
Boyd v. State,
4. Patterson’s fourth enumeration of error asserts the failure of the trial court to direct a verdict of acquittal оn Count II charging Patterson with the criminal attempt to commit the crime of aggravated assault on Stiles in violation of OCGA § 16-5-21. He alleges that the State failed to introduce sufficient evidence to establish that Patterson committed the criminal attempt. We must reverse, but not for the precise reason Patterson asserts in support of this particular enumeration of error.
Patterson was charged with attempting to commit an aggravated
*453
assault on Dennis Stiles. According to OCGA § 16-5-21, a person commits the offense of aggravated assault when he assaults another with specific intent to commit certain enumerated crimes not relevant here, or assaults with a deadly weapon or an object which actually or is likely to produce serious bodily injury. In this state one commits an assault against another when one either аttempts to commit a violent injury to the person of another, or when one commits an act which places another in reasonable apprehension of immediately receiving a violent injury. OCGA § 16-5-20. Bеcause Stiles was unquestionably asleep or passed out on the creek bank during the time relevant to this count, he could not have been placed in apprehension of receiving an injury, and thus thе assault charged in Count II perforce must have been based upon the attempt theory. Consequently, Patterson was charged with and prosecuted for the criminal attempt to attempt to commit а violent injury to Dennis Stiles with a deadly weapon. “We know of no law authorizing the conviction for an attempt to commit a crime which itself is a particular type of attempt to commit a crime.”
Porter v. State,
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part.
