The defendant, Wayne Kimball, was indicted for first and second degree assault. A jury acquitted the defendant of first degree assault and convicted him of second degree assault. The defendant argues that the Superior Court (O’Neil, J.) erred when imposing sentence by improperly considering the first degree assault charge. We affirm.
Both indictments arose from a single incident involving the defеndant’s son. The first degree assault indictment alleged that the defendant knowingly caused bodily injury to his sоn with a deadly weapon, a stick. The second degree assault indictment alleged that the defendant knowingly caused serious bodily injury to a person under the age of thirteen, his son, by striking him on thе legs and right foot. At trial, the State presented evidence that the defendant, angry with his son, struck him twice with a stick. As a result the
The sole question on appeal is whether the trial сourt, in sentencing the defendant, improperly relied on the first degree assault charge. The defendant argues that the court found that the defendant had used a deadly weapon in dirеct contravention of the jury’s acquittal on the first degree assault charge of causing bоdily injury through use of a dangerous weapon. The State contends that even if the court’s statеments imply that the court relied on the first degree assault charge, any error was cured by the court’s later statements.
A trial court has broad discretion “in choosing the sources and tyрes of evidence on which to rely in imposing sentence,” State v. Tufts,
A trial court abuses its discretion by rеlying on charges that have been resolved by acquittals. State v. Cote,
the jury believed that this defendant struck his son with that stick.
[Y]ou may be a wonderful person . . . and you could have done an awful lot more damаge to your son than you did. ... So that stick and your anger — and that was it; it was just plain anger — could have struck him somewhere else. It didn’t. Thank God. But that’s a deadly weapon as far as I’m, concerned, and that can cause serious bodily injury or death with that stick that you had that night.That’s why you are here, as regrettable as it is, and you’ve got to be punished aсcordingly.
(Emphasis added.) The defendant argues that the emphasized language indicates that the court considered the charge on which the defendant was acquitted in determining his sentence.
The trial court, however, later expressly stated that it had not considered imprоper evidence in determining the defendant’s sentence. Cf. State v. Wisowaty,
Let’s get this straight. I’m saying what I think. I’m not sentencing him on the deadly weapon, because if it wеre it would be more than this. I just want you to know that. If it would, be a different charge, it would be a first degreе assault. So I’m not considering that. [The jury] couldn’t say unanimously that it was a deadly weapon. That’s сonsistent. That’s the way it works. So I just want you to know that I’m not sentencing him on the basis of a deadly weapon because he wasn’t convicted of that, and I can’t and I won’t, but it certainly was . . . somеthing that could inflict some injury, and it did, serious injury.
(Emphasis added.) Even assuming that the court’s earlier statemеnt could be construed as implying that the court was considering improper evidence, the later statement makes clear that the court did not consider the defendant’s first degree assault charge when imposing sentence. Taken as a whole, the trial court was obviоusly admonishing the defendant and stating that by using a stick to hit his. child,, the defendant could have inflicted far greater damage, even death, had he hit his child elsewhere on his body. We hold, therefore, that the trial court did not abuse its discretion, when sentencing the defendant.
Affirmed.
