delivered the opinion of the Court.
Defendant Baca was found guilty by a jury of assault to commit murder. On appeal he urges reversal on several grounds, including the ground that the еvidence is insufficient as a matter of law to sustain his conviction. In our view the evidence is fatally deficient. We, therefore, revеrse the judgment of the trial court and direct that the defendant’s motion for judgment of acquittal be granted. This disposition eliminates the neсessity of any discussion of the defendant’s other assignments of error аnd the assignment of cross-error.
John Cruz was shot in the back while exiting from the rear seat of a car being driven by one Vasquez. At the time of the shooting the vehicle was stopped to permit the victim.to lеave. The driver’s 5-year old daughter and the defendant were in the front seat of the vehicle with the driver. Previously the three men had cоnsumed some alcoholic drinks together and the prosecution’s evidence indicated that there existed no ill will between the men. Driver Vasquez and
The foregoing is a summarization of the prosecution’s evidence. What actually happened is unanswered by this evidence.
The crime for which defendant was convicted requires evidence of defendant’s “present аbility” to commit ah assault on the victim and specific intent to murder. Moyer v. People,
The evidence here fails to meet the above specifiеd requirements and is therefore insufficient as a matter of law to sustain this conviction. The trial judge erroneously failed to grant the defеndant’s motion for a judgment of acquittal. The evidence here is substantially deficient because it fails completely to presеnt any evidence of any nature that the defendant possessed the gun and, therefore, had the present ability to inflict the victim’s injury. Perhaps of greater importance, there is no evidence whаtsoever from which the jury could draw an inference that the defеndant had the specific intent to murder the victim.
The Attorney General concedes that the evidence to support the defendant’s conviction of assault with intent to commit murder is woefully weak but nоt fatally insufficient. In his effort to support the conviction the Attorney General aruges, but not persuasively in our view, that there exists an аssortment of circumstances from which the jury could draw an inference that the defendant had possession of a gun and had the intent tо murder the victim. Perhaps the strongest circumstance suggested by the Attorney General is that the defendant fled the scene. However, neither this nor the other
Judgment reversed and cause remanded with directions to grant the defendant’s motion for a judgment of acquittal.
