The appellant was convicted of assault with intent to kill and was sentenced, as a habitual offender, to imprisonment for 21 years. His contentions for reversal may be grouped together as two separate points.
First, the information, in charging an assault with the intent to kill Gene Ray Cannon, asserted that the assault had been made with a deadly weapon, namely, a knife. The State’s proof, however, was that Ridgeway shot Cannon twice with a pistol and that it was a co-assailant, Butch Vaughn, who cut Cannon with a knife. The appellant, citing Clemons v. State,
That argument is not sound. In the Clemons case the indictment charged that the accused stole two cows belonging to George Carlson, but the proof was that the accused stole a steer belonging to Carlson. We held that the offense proved was not the offense charged. Similarly, we found a fatal variance between an indictment charging the theft of “one cow, the property of Joe Randolph,” and proof showing the theft of one cow belonging to Mrs. F. S. Randolph. Von Tonglin v. State,
Here the only crime charged was assault with the intent to kill Gene Ray Cannon. It was not necessary for the information to include a statement of the act constituting the offense. Ark. Stat. Ann. § 43-1006 (Repl. 1964); Cluck v. State,
Secondly, the appellant questions the validity of our habitual-criminal statutes and the manner in which they were applied in this case. The constitutionality of such acts has long been sustained. Ferguson v. State,
In the case at bar the information charged Ridgeway as a habitual offender who had committed nine other felonies. At the close of all the proof the court submitted to the jury the question of guilt or innocence, along with an instruction authorizing the jury to impose a sentence of from one to twenty-one years, that being the range of punishment for a first offender. Ark. Stat. Ann. § 41-606 (Repl. 1964). The jury returned a verdict of guilty and fixed the punishment at imprisonment for nine years.
The State was then permitted to show that Ridge-way had previously been convicted four times for forgery, four times for uttering a forged instrument, and one time for burglary. The court then sent the jury out again, with instructions that if Ridgeway was found to have been guilty of four or more previous offenses, the punishment would range from a minimum sentence of twenty-one years to a maximum of thirty and a half years. The jury then returned a verdict assessing the punishment at twenty-one years.
No prejudicial error is shown. The trial court, in originally submitting the issue of guilt or innocence along with the punishment for a first offender, stated that he was following our holding in Miller v. State,
Affirmed.
