OPINION
delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
A jury convicted appellant of retaliation by threat (a third-degree felony) and sentenced him to seven years’ confinement and a $7,000 fine. The indictment alleged that appellant threatened to harm the victim “by an unlawful act, to-wit: striking” the victim in retaliation for or on account
*355
of her services as a prospective witness.
1
The evidence shows that appellant struck the victim during a prolonged attack in which he “yelled at, cursed, grabbed, pushed, kicked, dragged, and punched the victim.”
See Schmidt v. State,
The court of appeals decided that the evidence was legally insufficient to support a finding that appellant threatened to harm the victim because “one cannot simultaneously be threatened with harm while the threatened harm is being inflicted.”
See id.
The State claimed on discretionary review in this Court that “[t]he fact that Appellant harmed the victim by striking her, does not mean that by the act of striking her, he did not also threaten to harm her.”
2
The State prevailed on this claim, and the case was remanded to the court of appeals for further proceedings.
See Schmidt I,
On remand, the court of appeals decided that the trial court reversibly erred in denying appellant’s requests for jury instructions on the lesser offenses of assault causing bodily injury (a Class A misdemeanor)
3
and assault by threatening to cause imminent bodily injury (a Class C misdemeanor).
4
See Schmidt v. State,
No. 07-04-0480-CR, slip. op. at 7-10,
Applying Hall, the court of appeals decided that, in establishing the elements of the retaliation-by-threat offense as pled in the indictment (i.e., that appellant threatened to harm the victim “by an unlawful act, to-wit: striking” the victim), the State was required to prove these lesser offenses, specifically that appellant’s act of striking the victim was “the legal equivalent of causing bodily injury” and “a threat to cause imminent bodily injury.” See Schmidt II, slip op. at 7-10. 6 After setting out the statutory elements of the retaliation-by-threat offense, as the State pled it in the indictment, and the statutory elements of assault causing bodily injury and assault by threatening to cause imminent bodily injury, the court of appeals’ opinion states:
Appellant maintains that these [lesser] offenses are lesser included offenses because they are established by proof of less than all the facts required to establish the offense of retaliation, to-wit: they do not require proof that the assault was in retaliation for or on account of the services of [the victim] as a prospective witness.
Therefore, whether assault causing bodily injury is a lesser included offense of retaliation, as charged, turns on whether proof of threaten to harm or striking is legally equivalent to proof of bodily injury. (Emphasis added). Likewise, whether assault by threatening to cause imminent bodily injury is a lesser included offense of retaliation, as charged, turns on whether proof of threaten to harm or striking is legally equivalent to proof of threaten to cause imminent bodily injury. (Emphasis added).
Under [dictionary definitions of “strike,” “bodily injury,” “harm,” and “imminent”], to strike someone would be the legal equivalent of causing bodily injury to that person and a threat to cause imminent bodily injury would necessarily constitute a threat to harm someone. Furthermore, during a prolonged assault, the aggressor’s actions can include both threats and actual harm. Schmidt [/],232 S.W.3d at 67 . Therefore, because the difference between the [retaliation] offense as charged and the lesser *357 offenses requested by Appellant is established by proof of less than all the facts required to establish the commission of the offense charged, the offenses of assault causing bodily injury and assault by threatening to cause imminent bodily injury are lesser included offenses of the felony offense of retaliation, as charged in this ease.
See Sclmiidt II, slip op. at 9-10 (emphasis in original).
We granted the State’s petition for discretionary review of this decision. The grounds upon which we granted review of this decision state:
1) Is assault by causing bodily injury a lesser included offense of retaliation when the indictment alleges that the defendant threatened to harm another by an unlawful act, to wit: striking?
2) Is assault by threatening imminent bodily injury a lesser included offense of retaliation when the indictment alleges that the defendant threatened to harm another by an unlawful act, to wit: striking?
3) In determining whether a lesser offense is included within the indictment, are all the allegations considered-even surplusage and strictly evidentiary facts- or only the elements and statutory manner and means of the offense?
4) Is a lesser included offense raised with respect to an element regarding the defendant’s motive for committing an unlawful act when there is no evidence that negates the motive alleged, but there is evidence of an additional motive to commit the unlawful act?
The State argues in its brief that it was not required to prove that appellant struck the victim in order to establish the retaliation-by-threat offense as pled in the indictment because the indictment alleged that appellant “threatened to strike, not that he did strike.” In its brief, the State argues: The Court of Appeals’ first mistake relates to its holding that assault by causing bodily injury was included within the allegations in the indictment. The Court of Appeals misconstrued the elements of retaliation as alleged in the indictment by viewing them in light of the evidence at trial. The indictment alleged that Appellant threatened to harm another, to wit: [the victim] by an unlawful act, to wit: striking. Striking was the unlawful act that Appellant threatened to carry out, and the means by which Appellant communicated his threat are not stated in the indictment. In other words, the indictment alleged that Appellant threatened to strike, not that he did strike. The Court of Appeals however, interpreted the indictment to mean that Appellant either threatened to harm [the victim] or struck [the victim].
Although the proof shows that he both threatened and struck, Hall requires the reviewing court to examine the allegations in the indictment, not the proof at trial. The Court of Appeals cited [Schmidt /] for the proposition that during a prolonged assault, the aggressor’s actions can include both threats and harm. [Citation omitted]. But [Schmidt I’s ] recognition that the State could use evidence of striking as proof of the threat dealt with sufficiency of the evidence. It was not a holding that the indictment allegations required actual striking in order to prove the threat was made. Therefore, even if assault by bodily injury was shown by the facta at trial, proof of striking was not a fact necessary to prove the allegation of a threat to harm by unlawful act: to wit: striking.
An allegation that Appellant threatened to strike the victim could have been proved by his making a fist and cocking *358 his arm back as if to hit her, or it could have been made by Appellant saying, “I’m going to hit you.” Therefore, striking is not necessarily included within an allegation of only a threat to strike. (Citation and parenthetical omitted). Because the indictment in this case did not require proof of striking or any kind of injury, the offense of assault by causing bodily injury was not a lesser included offense in this case. 7
(Emphasis in italics in original and emphasis in bold added). 8
The State, however, claimed in
Schmidt I
that “[t]he fact that Appellant harmed the victim by striking her, does not mean that by the act of striking her, he did not also threaten to harm her.” This necessarily included the claim that appellant’s act of actually striking the victim was included within the allegations in the indictment (we will not presume that the State would claim in
Schmidt I
that appellant’s conviction could have been upheld on a factual theory not set out in the indictment and the jury charge).
See Wooley v. State,
And we are not persuaded by the State’s argument that the allegation in the indict
*359
ment that appellant threatened to harm the victim “by an unlawful act, to-wit: striking” the victim should be construed to allege only that “appellant threatened to strike, not that he did strike.” We believe that such an indictment can be construed to allege that appellant threatened to harm the victim either by threatening to strike her or by actually striking her (as confirmed by the State’s opening statements at trial).
10
Construing the indictment in this case to include an allegation of actual striking finds further support in our decision in
Schmidt I
in which we accepted the State’s argument that a threat of harm can arise from actual striking.
See Schmidt I,
Having decided that the indictment in this case can be construed to allege that appellant actually struck the victim and that the State is judicially estopped from claiming otherwise, we agree with the court of appeals that the lesser offenses of assault causing bodily injury and assault by threatening to cause imminent bodily injury were established by proof of less than all the “facts required” to establish the commission of the charged retaliation-by-threat offense as the State pled it in the indictment.
See Hall,
The State claims in ground three that, even if the indictment can be construed to include an allegation that appellant struck the victim, the “to-wit: striking” allegation should not be considered in a lesser-included-offense analysis under Hall, because “striking” was not a “fact required” to establish the charged retaliation-by-threat offense. In support of this claim, the State argues that the “to-wit: striking” allegation was not required to be pled and is unnecessary surplusage that is “merely descriptive of an element but not statutorily required.” The State also argues that appellant could have been convicted of the same retaliation-by-threat offense under an indictment omitting the “to-wit: striking” allegation and merely alleging, for example, “that appellant threatened to harm the victim by an unlawful act in retaliation for the victim’s services as a prospective witness.”
*360
Our decision in
Hall
does not 'support the State’s position. The murder indictment in
Hall
alleged that the defendant caused an individual's death by “shooting the individual with a gun.”
See Hall,
In addition, that appellant could have been convicted of this retaliation-by-threat offense under an indictment omitting the “to-wit: striking” allegation does not necessarily make this allegation unnecessary surplusage. We note that this Court’s decision in
Doyle v. State
would support a holding that a defendant’s timely motion to quash such an indictment would require the State to provide the “to-wit: striking” allegation for purposes of providing adequate notice.
See Doyle v. State,
A decision that the “to-wit: striking” allegation is a “fact required” to establish the charged retaliation-by-threat offense under
Hall
is also consistent with
Hall’s
requirement that the step-one, lesser-included-offense analysis “may be, and to provide notice to the defendant must be, capable of being performed before trial by comparing the elements of the offense as they are alleged in the indictment or information vrith the elements of the potential lesser-included offense.”
See Hall,
The indictment in this case alleged that appellant threatened to harm the victim by an unlawful act, “to-wit: striking.” The “to-wit: striking” allegation was how the State pled the “unlawful act” element of the offense and “striking” was, therefore, a “fact required” to establish the commission of this element of the retaliation offense.
See Hall,
The State claims in ground four that appellant was not entitled to either of the lesser-included-offense instructions under the second step of the analysis for determining whether a lesser-included-offense instruction should be submitted, because there is not even a scintilla of evidence to show that if appellant is guilty, he is guilty of only either one of these lesser-included offenses.
See Hall,
We do not read the court of appeals’ opinion to decide that appellant was entitled to the lesser-included-offense instructions simply because the jury could have disbelieved evidence establishing appellant’s retaliatory motive. We read its opinion as basing its decision on what it claimed was affirmative evidence that rebutted appellant’s lack of a retaliatory motive. Its opinion states:
The defense strategy was, in part, an effort to show that Appellant and the victim had argued over several different subjects, including a relationship between Appellant and another young lady. In this regard, Appellant essentially contends that there was more than a scintilla of evidence that the altercation between Appellant and the victim was due to their dysfunctional personal relationship rather than in retaliation for her service as a prospective witness against Appellant.
During direct examination, the victim testified as follows:
Q. [sic] We argued a little bit about that girl, but I — he said that he wanted to talk to her because she kept calling. And I told him, I said, “You know what? You want to talk to her? I don’t care. Because once I leave here today, I’m never talking to you again.[”]
Later, during cross-examination, she explained that she had obtained the girl’s phone number and called her to tell her that she and Appellant had been romantically involved for almost four years. She added that the girl did not believe her. The victim also testified that she and Appellant argued over Brittany telling Appellant details about the victim’s private life.
Based on all the evidence presented, we conclude there was more than a scintilla of evidence that would have permitted the jury to rationally find that the assault was for reasons other than in retaliation for or on account of her services as a prospective witness. The second prong was met; therefore, the trial court erred in refusing to instruct the jury on the lesser included offenses of assault with bodily injury and assault by threatening to cause imminent bodily injury.
See Schmidt II, slip op. at 10-11. (Emphasis supplied). 22
*363 We note that the evidence also shows that the victim and appellant had broken up, got back together and argued many times in the past. At the time of the assault, the victim and appellant were trying to get back together after the victim had left appellant over him seeing the other girl. The evidence also shows that they argued about several things on the morning of the assault including issues about their interpersonal relationship and the victim’s statement to the police. We also believe that the record reflects that the evidence was conflicting on whether appellant referred to the victim’s statement to the police while he was assaulting her and whether his reason for assaulting her was in any way related to her statement to the police. For example:
Q. [STATE]: Was he saying anything to you while he was kicking you?
A. [VICTIM]: Just calling me a bitch and a ho.
Q. Did he ever mention anything else about him having to go to jail or do time because of you?
A. No.
⅜ ⅜ *
Q. [DEFENSE]: Okay. Kimberly, what I asked you was: He was yelling at you from the back. He wasn’t yelling at you about — he wasn’t yelling at you about the statement or anything that you told the police, was he?
A. No.
Q. You don’t know what he was thinking while he was back there, do you?
A. No.
Q. And then when he came outside to get you, he still wasn’t yelling at you about what happened between — what you may or may not have told the police, was he?
A. No.
Q. So at that time what could have been on his mind could have been the personal things that you told Bridgett or Brittany, correct?
A. Yes.
Q. Could have been the issues that we’ve talked about regarding this other girl, correct?
A. Yes.
[[Image here]]
Q. And while you-all were having this argument or altercation out on the porch, [appellant] didn’t really say much, did he? Called you some names, but he didn’t say much else, did he?
A. No.
Q. So he didn’t say anything out there that would tell you what was going on his [sic] mind—
A. He—
Q. —why that was going on?
A. He told me while he was pushing me and hitting me and stuff, that — he said — he didn’t say the exact words, but he said, “You stupid bitch, I’m going to have to do time because of you.”
*364 Q. Well, as I understood your testimony earlier, you said that he told you that while you-all were arguing verbally—
A. He said that to me several times.
Q. Let me finish my question, please. My understanding of your testimony— and I may be wrong, but my recollection was that you said it was in the living room when you-all were verbally arguing; is that correct?
A. Yes.
Q. And my question to you then is: he didn’t say much to you out on the porch, did he?
A. No.
Q. And out on the porch when you-all were having that altercation, he did not say anything that would indicate to you what was going on in his mind, did he? A. Yes, he did.
Q. That’s different from your testimony earlier when [the State] was asking you questions, isn’t it?
A. I’m not for sure.
Q. In response to [the State’s] questions about what happened out on the porch, did you tell him that [appellant] just called you names?
A. Yes, he called me names.
Q. But you didn’t tell him that he said anything else, did you?
A. Well, he had said that to me. He said that to me a few times during the day.
We decide that this record contains more than a scintilla of affirmative evidence that rebuts “the retaliatory purpose alleged in the indictment” and establishes the lesser-included offenses of assault with bodily injury and assault by threatening to cause imminent bodily injury as “valid, rational alternative^] to the charged offense.” See Hall, 225 S.W.3d at 536. We, therefore, find it unnecessary to address the State’s claim that we should overrule this Court’s decisions in Schweinle and Saunders.
The judgment of the court of appeals is affirmed.
Notes
. See § 36.06(a)(1)(A), Tex Pen.Code (person commits offense of retaliation if he harms or threatens to harm another by an unlawful act in retaliation for the other’s service as a prospective witness).
. The State’s argument on discretionary review was also consistent with its opening statements at trial:
[STATE]: We believe the evidence will show you that [appellant] was very upset with [the victim] because she had acted as a witness or a prospective witness by giving these statements against him for something else, and that he did threaten her by striking her.
[[Image here]]
And so I want you to listen very closely to testimony in this case. And whether you find an assault occurred or not, we will ask you to find that the actions that he took by striking [the victim] were threatening to her and that those threats were made in retaliation for her acting as a prospective witness.
(Emphasis supplied).
. See § 22.01(a)(1), Tex. Pen.Code (person commits offense of assault if the person, among other things, causes bodily injury to another person).
. See § 22.01(a)(2), Tex Pen.Code (person commits offense of assault if the person, among other things, threatens another with imminent bodily injury).
. Article 37.09(1) provides that an offense is a lesser-included offense if "it is established by proof of the same or less than all the facts required to establish the commission of the offense charged."
. We do not understand the Stale to challenge, and we did not exercise our discretionary authority to review, the court of appeals' decision that appellant's act of striking the victim was "the legal equivalent of causing bodily injury” and "a threat to cause imminent bodily injury.” For purposes of this case, we will assume that appellant’s act of striking the victim was "the legal equivalent of causing bodily injury” and "a threat to cause imminent bodily injury.”
See also Marrow v. State,
. We note that the State did not claim in its discretionary-review petition, as it appears to have in its brief on direct appeal, that the indictment in this case did not require proof of "any kind of injury.” See Footnote 6.
. With respect to the lesser offense of assault by threatening imminent bodily injury, the State argues that the evidence adduced at trial could have established the charged retaliation-by-threat offense without also establishing a threat of imminent bodily injury. The State argues:
Appellant could have been convicted of retaliation under the instant indictment if the facts showed he told the victim that if he had to go to prison because of her, he would beat her up when he got out. But these facts would not have been sufficient to prove a threat of imminent bodily injury.
(Emphasis in original).
. We further note that had the State not prevailed on this claim in
Schmidt I,
then it is almost certain that we could not have upheld appellant's conviction on the factual theory presented to the jury (i.e., the theory that appellant threatened to harm the victim by actually striking her) and that appellant would have been entitled to a reversal of his conviction.
See Wooley,
. We believe that a drafter of an indictment, wanting to draft an indictment alleging only that a defendant "threatened to strike, not that he did strike,” could do so with an allegation that the defendant threatened to harm the victim “by an unlawful act, to-wit: threatening to strike” the victim.
. Another retaliation-by-threat case recently decided by this Court helps to illustrate this.
See Pollard v. State,
.See Footnote 6.
. The non-statutory, manner and means allegation in this case of "striking" parallels the non-statutory, manner and means allegation in Hall of "shooting the individual with a gun.”
.
See Hall,
.
See Hall,
.The State claims that Doyle is distinguishable from, and does not apply to, this case because appellant did not file a motion to quash the indictment. We do not see what appellant could have accomplished by filing a motion to quash this indictment. We agree that Doyle does not apply to this case, but not because appellant did not file a motion to quash the indictment. Doyle does not apply to this case because appellant’s indictment alleged what the indictment in Doyle did not allege, i.e., how appellant’s threat was made (i.e., “to-wit: striking”).
. The State also does not suggest how such a retaliation-by-threat indictment would provide a defendant with notice before trial of the "facts required” to establish the unlawful act element of the offense.
See Hall,
.
See Gollihar v. State,
. Relying on Rousseau, this Court in Hall, 225 S.W.3d at 536, reaffirmed that the "evidence adduced at trial” is an important part of the second step of the analysis of whether a jury should be charged on lesser-included offenses:
The evidence adduced at trial should remain an important part of the court's decision whether to charge the jury on lesser-included offenses. The second step in the analysis should ask whether there is evidence that supports giving the instruction to the jury. “A defendant is entitled to an instruction on a lesser-included offense where the proof for the offense charged includes the proof necessary to establish the lesser-included offense and there is some evidence in the record that would permit a jury rationally to find that if the defendant is guilty, he is guilty only of the lesser-included offense.” [Footnote omitted). In this step of the analysis, anything more than a scintilla of evidence may be sufficient to entitle a defendant to a lesser charge. [Footnote omitted]. In other words, the evidence must establish the lesser-included offense as "a valid, rational alternative to the charged offense.” [Footnote omitted].
.
See Schweinle v. State,
. The State further explains that its "stance ... in this case" does not conflict with its argument in a recently decided case of
Wasylina v. State,
.The State’s brief does not address why this and other evidence presented at trial does not affirmatively raise the lesser-included offenses except to argue that “the evidence that Appellant and the victim argued over an additional topic did not rebut or negate the greater element of the offense” and "only offered another reason for Appellant's actions
in addition
to the retaliatory purpose alleged in the in
*363
dictment.” (Emphasis in original). This argument, however, does not address the court of appeals’ decision that the lesser-included offenses were raised by “more than a scintilla of evidence that would have permitted the jury to rationally find that the assault was for reasons other than in retaliation for or on account of her services as a prospective witness.”
See Degrate v. State,
