Lead Opinion
Defendant first assigns as error the court’s failure to grant defendant’s motion to dismiss the charge of armed robbery for insufficiency of the evidence. Since defendant was acquitted of that offense, this assignment of error is groundless.
Defendant’s next assignment of error is the court’s instruction to the jury on the offense of common law robbery. Defendant argues there was insufficient evidence to permit instruction on that offense in that the State presented no evidence of an essential element of common law robbery, to wit, that the life of the victim of the wrongful taking of property, here Dewey Brogden, was endangered or threatened. Defendant contends that the State’s evidence tended to show that only Ellen Sampson’s, not Brogden’s, life was threatened by defendant.
Common law robbery is the taking of money or goods with felonious intent from the person of another, or in his presence, against his will, by violence or putting him in fear. State v. Moore,
Defendant also assigns as error the court’s instructions to the jury on the offense of false imprisonment. Defendant argues that false imprisonment is not a lesser included offense of the offense charged in the indictment, ie., kidnapping, and therefore should not have been submitted for the jury’s consideration. This argument is without merit. “[W]hen a defendant is indicted for a criminal offense, he may be convicted of the charged offense or a lesser included offense when the greater offense which is charged in the bill of indictment contains all the essential elements of the lesser.” State v. Hunter,
Defendant’s next assignment of error is the court’s use of a hypothetical illustration in instructions it gave to the jury after a juror requested further elaboration on the “permanent taking” element of common law robbery.
In explaining legal principles to a lay jury, the trial judge’s use of illustrations should be carefully guarded to avoid suggestions susceptible of inferences as to facts beyond intended, but the mere use of hypothetical illustrations will not result in vacating the verdict on appeal unless’ the appellant can show that he was materially prejudiced by their use. Rea v. Simowitz,
In the present case, the court gave a hypothetical example contrasting a temporary and a permanent taking. Defendant has
Finally, defendant assigns as error the court’s failure to grant his motion to dismiss, for insufficiency of the evidence, the charge of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill. Defendant argues that the State presented no evidence that defendant had the requisite intent to kill.
“[T]here must be substantial evidence of all material elements of the crime • charged to withstand the motion to dismiss.” State v. Murphy,
In the present case, the State presented evidence that defendant grabbed the matron and held a knife to her throat and inadvertently caused the knife to make a small abrasion on her left cheek and that defendant said that he would kill Ms. Sampson if he had to, and that he said “[D]on’t any of [you] be no damn hero, I will kill this woman” and “I don’t want to hurt this woman but I don’t have any choice.” Even if this evidence tended to show that
The State’s evidence really tended to show that defendant threatened to kill Ms. Sampson only if she and other persons present at the jail failed to comply with his orders. This evidence is evidence of only a conditional intent to kill, the converse of which is a specific intent not to kill anyone if Brogden and the others complied with defendant’s demands. The State presented evidence of an intent to kill which would be activated only upon the captives’ noncompliance; the State presented no evidence that the intent was ever activated; rather, the fact that the captives did comply and that Ellen Sampson was not killed or exposed to an attempt by defendant to kill her negates the possibility that defendant ever intended to kill her. The State’s evidence shows only that defendant committed an assault with the intent to intimidate. The trial judge, therefore, improperly submitted to the jury the charge of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill, and defendant’s conviction of that offense must be reversed.
There was ample evidence that defendant, using an instrument capable of producing great bodily harm, committed a show of violence causing Ms. Sampson to have a reasonable apprehension of immediate bodily harm. Hence, the State presented sufficient evidence to allow the judge to submit to the jury the offense of assault with a deadly weapon. The jury, in finding beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant committed assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill, necessarily found beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant had committed the elements of the lesser included offense of assault with a deadly weapon. Hence, this case will be remanded solely for entry of a verdict of guilty of assault with a deadly weapon, and for a proper judgment on that verdict. See State v. Goss,
No error in part; vacated and remanded in part.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part:
I concur in the majority opinion finding no error in the trial of the common law robbery and false imprisonment charges. For the reasons set forth below, I dissent from the portion of the opinion with respect to the charge of assault with a deadly weapon with the intent to kill.
The majority holds that the state failed to present sufficient evidence of defendant’s intent to kill to allow the felonious assault charge to be submitted to the jury. They argue that any intent on the part of defendant to kill Ellen Sampson was conditional and, relying upon a 1923 Mississippi case, hold that the evidence is insufficient on the element of intent to carry the case to the jury on this charge. I cannot agree.
From the majority’s holding comes the inescapable conclusion that evidence of intent to kill is insufficient as a matter of law in any hostage-taking situation where a deadly weapon is used as a coercive device to force compliance with the defendant’s demand. Moreover, by logical extension of this reasoning, it would be possible for any defendant to negate the intent element as a matter of law by simply informing his victim that he does not intend to kill or promising not to kill as long as the victim submits. To be sure, the law does not contemplate that the accused can control the degree of his culpability in this fashion.
Intent is a condition of the mind, seldom, if ever, capable of direct or positive proof, but is arrived at by such just and reasonable deductions from the acts and facts proven as the guarded judgment of a reasonably cautious and prudent person
Intent to kill is a mental attitude and ordinarily must be proved by circumstantial evidence, that is, by proving facts from which the intent may be reasonably inferred. Intent to kill may be inferred from the act in question, the nature of the assault, the manner in which it was made, the purpose of the assault, the conduct of the parties, and other relevant circumstances. State v. Cauley,
In determining whether a charge should be submitted to the jury, the evidence must be considered in the light most favorable to the state, and the state is entitled to every reasonable intendment thereon and every reasonable inference therefrom. Discrepancies and contradictions in the evidence are disregarded, as they are matters for the jury and do not warrant nonsuit. State v. Witherspoon,
Applying the above rules to the facts of this case, I find ample evidence to take the case to the jury on the issue of intent to kill. Defendant was a prisoner in the Wayne County jail. In escaping from the jail, he grabbed Ellen Sampson, a female employee in the jail, from behind, holding her around the body with one arm and putting and holding a knife to her throat with his other arm. He kept the knife at her throat at all times until he left the jail, a period of some five to seven minutes. He held her up with such force that she lost her shoes. When he first assaulted her, he had the knife at her face, causing a small abrasion on her cheek. Then he lowered the knife to her throat. I find no evidence that the small cut or abrasion to her face was “inadvertent,” as it is described by the majority. The statements of defendant, when
The jury had no difficulty in considering all the evidence and resolving the issue of defendant’s intent when he assaulted Ellen Sampson. It was the jury’s province to do so. Allen, supra.
I find no error in the trial of the felonious assault charge.
