delivered the opinion of the court :
Hazel Carter was indicted at the March, 1950, term of the criminal court of Cook County on three counts. She was charged in the first count with assault with a dangerous weapon with intent to murder, in the second with assault with a dangerous and deadly weapon with intent to inflict bodily injury, and in the third count with an assault with a sharp instrument with intent to inflict a bodily injury. Upon a plea of not guilty, she was tried before a jury and convicted of assault with intent to murder and sentenced to the Women’s Reformatory at Dwight for a term of not less than one and not more than three
The pertinent facts set forth in the record show that on February 18, 1950, at about 11 o’clock in the evening, Virginia Jackson, mother of the complaining witness, and Lottie Adams, a friend, were engaged in conversation while standing in the common vestibule of a building having two addresses, 4015 and 4017 South Park Avenue, in Chicago, Illinois. The plaintiff in error, Hazel • Carter, entered the vestibule from the 4015 side of the building. Soon thereafter an argument developed between Virginia and Hazel, during the course of which several uncomplimentary remarks passed between the parties. Dorothy Carter, the complaining witness, was summoned for the ostensive purpose of disengaging her mother from the dispute. She, too, entered into the argument by demanding that Hazel refrain from addressing Virginia in insulting epithets. Several other persons, summoned by the noise of the dispute, arrived on the scene. Among them was one Charles Hughes, who, in the interests of peace, did attempt to take Hazel up the stairs to the second floor. As he did so, Hazel, by her own admission, struck at Dorothy with a small pocket knife by reaching over the shoulder of Hughes. Dorothy thereby sustained a cut just over her left eye. This laceration was treated thereafter at the county hospital and later necessitated the removal of Dorothy Carter’s left eye.
The first error urged by the plaintiff in error is that the evidence failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt the elements necessary to sustain a conviction of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to commit murder. She bases her position on the assertions that the State failed to prove the use of a deadly or dangerous weapon, and failed to show the specific intent necessary to sustain such charge.
It is contended by the plaintiff in error that there has been no proof by the State of the specific intent necessary to support a charge of assault with intent to murder. Specific intent is by definition an essential element of the offense charged and must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. While considering the proof of such intent in Weaver v. People,
The necessary element of malice may be either express or implied, as where the' fact has been attended with such circumstances as to evince a plain indication of a reckless heart and mind. (People v. Wilson,
The blow delivered by the plaintiff in error struck Dorothy Carter on a vital part of her body, that being her head. It is evident that had the blow landed at any one of the several more vital places on Dorothy’s head, death could easily have resulted. The jury was justified in finding that from the reckless nature of the deliberate attack by Hazel Carter upon the person of Dorothy Carter, evident of a malicious and abandoned heart, the specific intent necessary to support the charge was present. Hazel acted on the impulse to do injury to Dorothy. She so acted while having in her hand an open pocketknife. The blow was aimed at random over the shoulder of Charles Hughes, to do whatever mischief it might upon contact with the victim. The instrument used, while not by definition deadly per se, became such a deadly weapon when put to the use here employed. Such reckless disregard of human life is not to be condoned and the consequences of such an act clearly give rise to the presumptive intent. Had the act here performed resulted in a killing, the malicious action, together with the intent arising from this reckless use of a dangerous
The second error urged is that the trial court erred in refusing to allow the jury to hear evidence bearing on the issue of whether the injury was of such character as to warrant the inference of an intent to commit murder, because the jury might believe that the loss of the eye by the prosecuting witness was the result of her failure to allow reasonable treatment, rather than the injury itself. The plaintiff in error offered to prove by a witness that a doctor at the hospital where the victim was taken for medical treatment told her that if she left there they promised nothing, but if she would stay she would have only a small scar. This conversation has no bearing on the case, and is highly improper and immaterial. There is no merit in this contention by the plaintiff in error, since it was not a question of what injuries were sustained, but whether the evidence proved the crime of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to commit murder. The specific intent required by the charge is found, not from the nature or seriousness of the injury inflicted, but from the proof of the reckless character and manner of the assault, the instrument made use of by the assailant, and the other facts and circumstances shown by the evidence as indicating a malicious heart and mind. Therefore, no error was committed by the court in excluding the evidence offered by the defense.
We are of the opinion that the defendant in this case has had a fair trial, free from prejudicial error, and this court will not disturb a verdict of guilty on the ground that the evidence is not sufficient to convict unless the evidence
Judgment affirmed.
