16 P.2d 889 | Okla. Crim. App. | 1932
The plaintiff in error, hereinafter called defendant, was convicted in the district court of McIntosh county of manslaughter in the first degree, and was sentenced to serve a term of 10 years in the state penitentiary.
At the time charged, defendant and John Kelly, the deceased, full-blood Creek Indians, were at the home of defendant, both intoxicated and engaged in a fight. It is admitted defendant struck Kelly with his hands and feet and that Kelly's death was caused by two fractures in the back part of the skull. His face and other parts of the body also were bruised. The information in substance charges that defendant assaulted Kelly with a certain heavy, dangerous, blunt instrument, the kind and nature being unknown to the county attorney. No weapon was found at the scene of the homicide; defendant was wearing shoes with rubber heels. *203
The only contention made is that the testimony does not sustain the charge; that, while there is testimony that defendant struck Kelly with his fists and knocked him down against the stove and that some time in the fight kicked him, there is no proof of the allegation of an assault with a heavy, dangerous, blunt instrument. Defendant relies for a reversal on the case of Elliott v. State,
The only question then is, Is there a fatal variance between the charge and the evidence? The courts of several of the states have gone to an extreme length in holding a variance fatal. Some of these opinions have reversed cases on a variance on some point or some purely technical matter which by the later and better reasoned cases and the more modern rule would be brushed aside as immaterial. This court has followed the later sensible rule as stated in Woods v. State,
This being the only question argued, the case is affirmed.
DAVENPORT, P. J., and CHAPPELL, J., concur.