ORDER DENYING PETITION FOR REVIEW
The Appellant pro se having filed a PETITION FOR REVIEW on November 2, 1989, and a supporting BRIEF on November 14, 1989, of the Court’s Opinion issued October 26, 1989,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Appellant’s PETITION FOR REVIEW be, and hereby is, DENIED and the dissent on Denial of the Petition for Review by Bistline, J., be, and hereby is, RELEASED.
On Denial of Petition for Review.
It now appears that the Court on occasion will defer to the Court of Appeals notwithstanding the fact that the three judges of that court are in disagreement concerning an issue of law which this Court has not decided. This practice does not comport with reason or common sense, to say nothing of the fact that there is no precedent for such deference in any jurisdiction, excepting Idaho, and that precedent’s parentage remains somewhat in doubt. State v. Prestwick,
In State v. Osborn,
The defendant in this case was convicted of aggravated battery as being a lesser included offense of the charge of rape. He contends that aggravated battery is not such a lesser included offense, and that this is not an issue which we have previously had the opportunity to consider. In addition, Judge Swanstrom has written a persuasively reasoned dissent which questions whether the evidence and the jury instructions supported a conviction of aggravated battery or only a conviction of aggravated assault. Both are issues which merit the attention of a state’s court of last resort.
Notes
. The “Johnson Rule” announced in Hays v. State,
. In State v. Tisdale,
