OPINION
for the Court.
In this сase, the Supreme Court is confronted with yet another victim of domestic violence who, after her abuser was arrested and charged with a felony, changed her story and gave markedly different testimony at trial to protect her abuser. 1 The *670 jury was provided with two versions of the events leading to this prosecution — the first was the statement given to the police on the scene and the second was the testimony at trial. By its verdiсt of guilty, the jury chose to believe the statement the witness gave to the police immediately after the crime. We affirm.
This case came before the Supreme Court on January 26, 2009, pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not summarily be decided. The defendant, Gerardo Cardona (defendant), was convicted by a jury in the Superior Court of two counts of domestic assault in violation of G.L. 1956 § 11-5-3 (simple assault or battery) and § 12-29-5 (disposition of domestic violence cases), against his wife, Catherine Cardona (Catherine), and Catherine’s son, Bernard Baton (Bernard). After hearing the arguments of counsel and examining the memoranda submitted by the parties, we are of the opinion that cause has not been shown, and we shall decide this appeal without further briefing and argument.
Facts and Travel
This case arose from an incident of domestic abuse that took place on August 9, 2005. That evening, the South Kingstown Police Department received a report of a domestic disturbance and dispatched several officers to a home on Broad Rock Road, where defendant lived with Catherine and Bernard, who was twenty-eight years old at the time and is developmentally disabled. Upon arrival, several officers questioned Catherine and memorialized her answers in a witness statement. Catherine reported that she saw her husband hit her son in the face and, when he fell to the ground, defendant kicked him. She also informed the officers that when she went into the house to call the police, defendant followed her; he was swearing at her, and he attempted to slap the telephone out of her hand. After she told the officers that shе wanted defendant arrested and charged, Catherine signed both pages of her witness statement. A no-contact order was issued the next day that prohibited defendant from having any contact with Catherine or Bernard. The defendant, having been convicted of domestic assault on two prior occasions, was charged by criminal information with two counts of felony domestic assault. However, during the time between defendаnt’s arrest and the trial, Catherine’s resolve wavered.
At trial, Catherine provided a different account of the evening of August 9, 2005 than she had when she spoke with the police. She testified that she was in the swimming pool in the backyard when she heard yelling from the front yard. After *671 calling for her husband and son to quiet down, Catherine moved to the right side of the pool, which afforded her a view of what was transpiring in the front of the house. Catherine first testified that she saw the arms of both men “flying in the air,” but she then clarified that “[i]t looked like my husband was hitting my son.” Catherine also testified that she went into the house at a “fast-paced walk” to call the police, but admitted that she might have told the police that she “ran” for the phone. She stated that her husband followed her, “tapping [her] arm,” swearing at her, and calling her names while attempting to explain that nothing happened аnd, according to Catherine, to stop her from calling the police.
Catherine admitted that she called the South Kingstown police, but she denied telling the police that defendant struck and kicked her son. She also denied telling the police that defendant slapped her arm, and she refused to look at a copy of the signed witness statement, explaining, “I didn’t write that statement.” Catherine acknowledged that she inquired about obtaining a restraining order, but claimed that she did so only because she was angry that defendant had been fighting with her son and because defendant’s former girlfriend had been interfering with their marriage. Although Bernard took the stand at trial, he could not recall any of the events that caused the police to respond to his home.
Officer Craig Young (Officer Young), a patrolman with the South Kingstown Police Department, testified that when he arrived at the house, Catherine was shaken and speaking excitedly, and Bernard looked “agitated and nervous.” Additionally, there were visible grass stains on Bernard’s clothes and his left cheek was “slightly red.” According to Officer Young, Catherine informed him that defendant struck Bernard, then followed her into the house, and slapped her hand as she attempted to call the police. Catherine also told the officer that she no longer wanted defendant in her home. Officer Young testified that although Bernard did not verbally respond to his questions, when asked if defendant had struck him, Bernard nodded, lifted his shirt to show his lower torso, and pointed to his reddened left cheek.
Officer Sean Clarke (Officer Clarke) also responded to the scene. He recalled that Catherine and Bernard were both visibly upset; he described Catherine as “flushed,” “fidgety,” “shaky,” and “having trouble сommunicating.” Bernard had “a red mark” on the left side of his face, and he was pacing continuously. The officer testified that Catherine gave a statement, and he recorded it for her because she was too nervous to write it herself. According to Officer Clarke, Catherine told them that she saw her husband strike her son and that when she ran into the house to call the police, defendant followed her, “slapping at her hand” and calling her names. After Officer Clark reviewed the questions and answers with her, Catherine signed the statement and informed the officer that she wanted defendant to be arrested and prosecuted.
At the close of the state’s case, defendant moved for judgment of acquittal on the charge of assault against Catherine; the motion was denied. The jury affirmatively answered four separate questions on the verdict form: defendant committed domestic assault on Bernard, domestic battery on Bernard, domestic assault on Catherine, and domestic battery on Catherine. The defendant moved for a new trial and argued that the state’s case rested on Catherine’s prior inconsistent statement, which, he contended, was insufficient evidence to support the criminal *672 conviction. The trial justice denied the motion, concluding that in addition to the prior inconsistent statement there was other credible evidence to support the jury’s verdict. The defendant was sentenced to five years in the Adult Correctional Institutions — one year to serve on each count to run concurrently, the balance suspended, with probation. The judgment of conviction was entered on September 7, 2006. The defendant filed his notice of appeal prematurely on August 7, 2006. 2
On apрeal, defendant makes three arguments. First, he contends that the trial justice erred by denying his motion for judgment of acquittal as to the assault of Catherine and his motion for a new trial with respect to both counts in the criminal information because the verdict rested on Catherine’s prior inconsistent statement which alone was insufficient evidence as a matter of law. Second, defendant argues that in charging the jury, the trial justicе erroneously omitted an instruction that surmise, suspicion, or a hunch alone is insufficient to support a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Third, defendant argues that the trial justice erred by instructing the jury on assault and battery because the criminal information only charged him with assault.
Analysis
Prior Inconsistent Statement
The defendant argues that the trial justice should have granted his motion for judgment of acquittal and his motion for a new trial based on the insufficiency of the evidence. The crux of defendant’s argument is that the only evidence offered by the prosecution to prove that a crime was committed was Catherine’s prior inconsistent statement to the police, which, standing alone, legally is insufficient to support a criminal conviction. The state argues that in addition to Catherine’s prior statement, there was other evidence presented at trial such that the totality of the evidence produced constituted adequate proof to support the conviction.
Because both of defendant’s motions raised the same challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, we shall conduct the more exacting analysis required for review of a ruling on a motion for a new trial. “When deciding whether to grant or deny a motion for a new trial, ‘the trial justice acts as a thirteenth juror.’ ”
State v. Espinal,
“On review, we accord great weight to a trial justice’s ruling on a motion for a new trial if he or she has articulated sufficient reasoning in support of the ruling.”
Espinal,
In seeking a new trial, defendant argued that a prior inconsistent statement, without more, cannot support a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. This Court previously has considered the evi-dentiary force of a prior inconsistent statement in a criminal prosecution in
Espinal.
In that case, we reviewed a similar challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence raised in the context of a motion for a new trial in which the defendant alleged that his cоnviction for assault was based solely on the prior inconsistent statements of the complainants.
Espinal,
This Court is not persuaded, nor was the trial justice, by defendant’s attempts to distinguish this ease from Espinal, and we are of the opinion that the evidence presented by the state was not limited to Catherine’s prior inconsistent statement. Catherine’s trial testimony revealed that she heard her husband yelling at her son, saw their arms flailing, and concluded that “[i]t looked like my husband was hitting my son.” She also testified that she went into the house to call the рolice and her husband followed her, “tapping [her] arm” and “swearing at [her],” in an attempt to prevent her from calling the police. Other relevant evidence included the testimony of two police officers that Catherine and Bernard both were noticeably agitated and that Bernard appeared to have been struck in the face, had grass stains on his clothes, and when asked if defendant assaulted him, Bernard lifted his shirt and displayed his lower torso.
Assault is “a physical act of a threatening nature or an offer of corporal injury which puts an individual in reasonable fear of imminent bodily harm.”
Broadley v. State,
Additionally, we note that Catherine’s statement has the same indicia of reliability as we discussed in
Espinal.
The statement was taken immediately after the incident, and it was given to the police officers who had been called to- the home.
See Espinal,
*674
The trial justice explained that he denied the motion for a new trial because there was substantive and credible evidence in addition to Catherine’s prior witness statement to establish defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. After a careful review of the record, we are of the opinion that the trial justice correctly found that the evidence presented to the jury was sufficient to support the verdict. “[Hjaving concluded that the evidence “was sufficient to withstand the more stringent review applicable to a motion for a new trial, it follows that the evidence was also sufficient to withstand a motion for a judgment of acquittal.’ ”
State v. Hesford,
Jury Instructions on Reasonable Doubt
The defendant argues that the trial justice’s failure to inform the jury that surmise, suspicion, or a hunch alone cannot support a criminal conviction was reversible error. “It is incumbent upon a trial justice to instruct the jury on the law that applies to each issue that the parties raise at trial.”
State v. Garcia,
Included in the trial justice’s jury instructions on reasonable doubt was the following admonition:
“I must point out to you that there are very few things in the world that we know with absolute certainty and, in criminal cases, the law does not require the [s]tate to prove the elements of the offense beyond all possible doubt or to a mathematical or scientific certainty. The law does not require the [s]tate to prove their case beyond a shadow of a doubt. A reasonable doubt, again, cannot be a doubt based on sympathy. A reasonable dоubt cannot be a fanciful or whimsical doubt. A reasonable doubt must be a doubt based on reason.”
Although the trial justice provided a written copy of the jury instructions to counsel before the jury charge, it was only after the jury was charged that defense counsel stated that he had “not so much an objection, it is a request.” The substance of that request was that the trial justice provide the jury with an additional instruction “that surmise, suspiciоn[,] or hunch alone is not enough to establish proof beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Even if we agree that counsel’s request, as opposed to an objection to the jury instructions, properly preserved an appellate challenge, we nonetheless affirm the conviction. “Although a defendant is free to request that certain language be included in the jury instructions, there is no requirement that the trial justice usе any particular words or phrases in the instruction.”
State v. Palmer,
We are of the opinion that the jury instructions adequately explained the law on reasonable doubt, and that the trial justice did not shift the burden of proof to defendant. Additionally, we are satisfied that the requested language was unnecessary in the context of the instructions in their entirety.
Counts of the Criminal Information
Finally, we rеject defendant’s argument that it was reversible error for the trial justice to instruct the jury on the crime of battery because the criminal information charged only assault. The criminal information charged in count 1 “[t]hat [Gerardo Cardona] * * * did assault Bernard [Baton] after having been previously convicted twice of domestic assault * * * in violation of § 11-5-3 and § 12-29-5,” and it charged in count 2 “[t]hat [Gerardo Cardona] * * * did assault Catherine Car-donа after having been previously convicted twice of domestic assault * * * in violation of § 11-5-3 and § 12-29-5[.]” 3
Section 11-5-3, entitled “Simple assault or battery,” provides:
“(a) Except as otherwise provided in § 11-5-2, every person who shall make an assault or battery or both shall be imprisoned not exceeding one year or fined not exceeding one thousand dollars ($1,000), or both.
“(b) Where the provisions of ‘The Domestic Violence Preventiоn Act,’ chapter 29 of title 12, are applicable, the penalties for violation of this section shall also include the penalties as provided in § 12-29-5.”
Assault and battery are both chargeable under § 11-5-3.
4
Assault is “a physical act of a threatening nature or an offer of corporal injury which puts an individual in reasonable fear of imminent bodily harm.”
Broadley,
In light of the referеnce to § 11-5-3 in the criminal information and the evidence that was presented at trial, we are satisfied that it was not error for the trial justice to instruct the jury on both assault and battery. Ultimately, the defendant was convicted of the two counts charged in the criminal information and sentenced accordingly; the defendant was neither convicted of nor sentenced for a criminal battery.
Conclusion
For the aforementioned reаsons, the judgment of the Superior Court is affirmed. The papers may be remanded to the Superior Court.
Notes
.
See State v. Tillery,
. "We repeatedly have said that we treat premature appeals as timely filed.”
Brown v.
State,
. General Laws 1956 § 12-29-5 provides in pertinent part:
"(c)(1) Every person convicted of an offense punishable as a misdemeanor involving domestic violence as defined in § 12-29-2 shall:
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"(ii) For a third and subsequent violation be deemed guilty of a felony and be imprisoned for a term of not less than one year and not more than ten (10) years." Section 12-29-2(a) provides in relevant part that " 'Domestic violence' includes, but is not limited to, any of the following crimes when committed by one family or household member against another: (1) Simple assault (§ 11-5-3)[.]”
. We note that defendant did not request a bill of particulars as permitted in Rule 7(f) of the Superior Court Rules of Criminal Procedure.
