On Mаy 14, 1980, defendant entered a convenience food store, selected two bottles of wine and a 12-pack of beer, and placed his selections on the check-out counter. After leaving the store for a moment, defendant returned, picked up one of the bottles of wine, and threw it. The bottle of winе hit a customer on his hip. Defendant then left the store with the other bottle of wine and the 12-pack of beer without paying for them. These two items had a retail рurchase price of under $10.
Following trial by jury, defendant was convicted of larceny in a building, MCL 750.360; MSA 28.592, and felonious assault, MCL 750.82; MSA 28.277. Defendant was sentenced to two conсurrent terms of from two years and eight months to four years imprisonment. He appeals as of right.
In the trial judge’s charge to the jury, he correctly instructed:
"Now, the offense charged in this second case, felonious assault, is one which is commonly termed a specific intent crime. When a certain intent is a necessaryelement in a crime, the crime cannot have been committed when the intent did not exist.”
"If you find that the defendant for any reason whatsoever did not consсiously and knowingly act with the intent to commit an assault upon the person of Kenneth Rudy, then the crime of felonious assault cannot have been committed аnd you must find the defendant not guilty of the crime of felonious assault.”
The trial judge stopped then and conducted an off-the-record discussion with counsel. Returning to his charge, the judge continued:
"Now, I have made a mistake here and I will have to correct it. I instructed you as to specific intent and I did so incorrectly. Felоnious assault is not a specific intent crime and the burden is not on the prosecution to show that at the time of that alleged offense the defendant had thе specific intent to commit an assault on Kenneth Rudy. The crime of larceny in a building is a specific intent crime and I must correct my instructions accordingly and we will ask you to erase from your minds the instructions of specific intent as has been related to — as I tried to relate it to the crime of felonious assault * * *.
"* * * I will cоrrect the record to erase the instructions on specific intent as I erroneously gave it in connection with the second offense, the felonious аssault charge.”
No objection was raised to these revised instructions.
Failure to object to jury instructions waives appellate review unless manifest injustice could occur.
People v Williams,
The trial court’s instructions on felonious assault were erroneous. Feloniоus assault is a specific intent crime requiring either an intent to injure or an intent to put the victim in reasonable fear or apprehension of an immediatе battery.
People v Joeseype Johnson,
The prosecution argues on appeal, however, that
People v Vinson,
"Battery is
" 'The wilful touсhing of the person of another by the aggressor or by some substance put in motion by him; or, as it is sometimes expressed, a battery is the consummation of the assаult.’ ”
People v Bryant,
Here, the jury was not required to make any determination of the intent of defendant or the wilfulness of his act in hitting the victim with the wine bottle. Rather, the trial court speсifically withdrew the element of intent from the jury’s consideration on the felonious assault charge. The jury should have been instructed that it had to find either an intent to injurе or an intent to put the victim in reasonable fear or apprehension of an immediate battery. We hold, therefore, that defendant is entitled to revеrsal of his conviction of felonious assault and to a new trial on this charge. If he is retried, the jury should be instructed in accordance with the mandate of People v Joeseype Johnson, supra.
Defendant raises a number of other issues for our consideration. He argues that the trial court erred in denying defendant’s directed verdict motion on the felonious assault charge since a bottle of wine cannot be considered a dangerous weapon within the meaning of the felonious assault statute. Many items, however, can be considered to be dangerous weapons within the meaning of the felonious assault statute. See,
e.g., People v Ragland,
Defendant argues next that the prosecutor abused his discretion by charging defendant with larceny in a building, a felony, instead of larсeny under $100, MCL 750.356; MSA 28.588, a misdemeanor. Since both statutes were applicable, the prosecutor had discretion to choose between them in charging defendant. See
People v Freeland,
In addition, contrary to defendant’s arguments on appeal, our decision in
People v Hart,
Defendant requests that we modify the rule established in
People v Chamblis,
Finally, defendant asserts that reversible error occurred during the prosecutor’s opening remarks, when, in discussing a photographic line-up, he stated:
"* * * What Detective Winter did was went back through his police files at the Detective Bureau, came up with some other pictures, one of which included Mr. Rivera.”
Defendant objectеd. The trial court instructed the jury to disregard the prosecutor’s remark because it had been unsupported by evidence and was not evidence itself. On appeal, defendant argues that the remark inferred previous criminal activity by the defendant. We find any error in this statement, when coupled with the trial court’s curative instruction, to be harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
Defendant’s conviction for felonious assault is reversed, His conviction for larceny in a building is affirmed.
Reversed in part; affirmed in part.
