100 N.W. 697 | N.D. | 1904
Defendant was tried on a plea of not guilty to an information of which the charging part was as follows: “That at the said time and place the above-named defendant, Frank J. Cruikshank, did feloniously, then and there having a present ability to commit the crime of murder, assault one Fred Martin with a deadly weapon, to wit, a pistol then and there held in the hands of said defendant, and then and there pointed and aimed at said Fred Martin, and with felonious intent to kill said Fred Martin.” The trial court instructed the jury that this information accused the defendant of the crime defined in section 7115, Rev. Codes 1899. The jury were further instructed that the offense defined in section 7145, Rev. Codes 1899, was necessarily included in the offense charged in the information, and hence that the defendant might be found guilty of the lesser crime, under section 7145, if they found that the defendant intended to do bodily harm, but not to kill. The jury returned the following verdict: “We, the jury, find the defendant guilty of the crime of assault with a dangerous weapon, with intent to do bodily harm to the complaining witness, Fred Martin, although without intent to kill him, as he stands charged in the information.” Motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled, and the defendant sentenced to a term of imprisonment in the penitentiary. He appeals from this judgment.
This information, in substance, charges that the defendant feloniously aimed a loaded pistol at another, with the then existing intent to then and there kill the -person aimed at. No reasonable deduction from the facts stated is possible, other than that the defendant intended to discharge the pistol with the intent thereby to kill the person aimed at, and that he was in the act of executing his wicked design. This is clearly an “attempt to shoot.” The defendant had the present intention to shoot, the present ability to carry his intention into effect, and the aiming was an overt act essential to, and immediately connected with, the act of discharging the pistol.
Tire appellant challenges the sufficiency of the verdict to sustain the judgment and sentence. We are of opinion that the judgment and sentence are not warranted by the verdict, but our conclusion is based on reasons different from those urged by counsel. In order to explain the reasons for our conclusion, it will be necessary to consider and construe sections 7115, 7145, Rev. Codes 1899, which read as follows:
*341 . “Sec. 7115. Every person who shoots or attempts to shoot at another, with any kind of firearm, air gun or other means whatever with intent to kill any person, or who commits any assault and battery upon another by means of any deadly weapon, or. by such other means and force as was likely to produce death, with intent to kill any other person, is punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary not less than one and not exceeding ten years.”
“Sec. 7145. Every person who, with intent to do bodily harm and without justifiable or excusable cause, commits any assault or assault and battery upon the person of another, with any sharp or dangerous weapon, or who without such cause, shoots or attempts to shoot at another, with any kind of firearm or air gun or other means whatever, with intent to injure any person, although without intent to kill such person or to commit any felony, is punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary not less than one and not exceeding five years, or by imprisonment in a county jail not exceeding one year.”
It will be seen that the second clause of section 7115 declares that assault and battery with a deadly weapon, with intent to kill, is severely punishable as a felony, but does not make criminal an assault with like weapons and intent. This language clearly excludes from the class of acts referred to by it all mere assaults with a firearm unless the gun or pistol is used as a club, or unless the gun or pistol is discharged, and the person assaulted hit or touched, so that the act amounts to an assault and battery. The preceding clause of the same section, however, deals exclusively with assaults by means of firearms or weapons of that general character. It declares, in effect, that any assault or assault and battery with such weapons with intent to kill the person assaulted, if the assault is of such a character as to constitute shooting or attempting to shoot, shall subject the offender to the same punishment as the acts mentioned in the succeeding clause. It is clear that the acts denounced in the first clause of section 7115, dealing with firearms .and similar weapons, constitute in every instance an assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill, because an assault is defined to be “any wilful and unlawful attempt or offer with force or violence to do a corporal hurt to another.” Rev. Codes 1899, section 7141. It is sufficient to constitute an assault that there be an overt act of threatened violence, with the apparent ability to commit a battery. 2 Bishop, Crim. Law, sections 22-32; 1 Wharton, Crim. Law, section
The judgment appealed from is reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to the district court to render judgment on the verdict as for an assault, under section 7144, Rev. Codes 1899.