Dolphus Ray Wooten was charged with attempted aggravated robbery and aggravated assault. A jury trial was waived. The circuit court granted a directed verdict on the attempted robbery charge, but found Wooten guilty of aggravated assault and sentenced him to five years imprisonment.
The sole issue on appeal is whether the evidence is sufficient to support the conviction. We hold that it is not, and we modify the decision of the circuit court.
In determining the sufficiency of the evidence we are obliged to consider it in the light most favorable to the appellee, Booth v. State,
The relevant facts are relatively simple. On June 21, 1989, Jim Puckett, a North Little Rock police officer, received a report that there was a man with a gun outside the Jackpot store on West Broadway. The officer testified that as he pulled into the parking lot he saw Wooten. He testified that Wooten reached into his right pants pocket and started backing away. Officer Puckett got out of his car with his own pistol drawn and ordered Wooten several times to stop and get on the ground. Wooten continued to back away and appeared to Officer Puckett to be trying to pull something out of his pocket that was stuck. The officer testified that when Wooten had backed up behind a parked car he pulled his hand out of his pocket, and the officer saw that he was holding a small handgun. Puckett testified that Wooten dropped to his knees behind the car, and that he “could see him lifting his head up slightly as if to try to locate my position.” When a backup officer arrived Wooten finally dropped to the ground as ordered. The officers approached him and handcuffed him. When they rolled him over they found a .25 caliber pistol underneath his leg. The pistol had a bullet in the chamber and five in the clip.
On cross-examination the officer testified that Wooten had not pointed the gun at him. He admitted that his arrest report stated that Wooten had pulled the gun out as he was lying on the ground but testified that the arrest report was incorrect.
Arkansas Code Annotated Section 5-13-204(a) (1987) defines aggravated assault:
A person commits aggravated assault if, under circumstances manifesting extreme indifference to the value of human life, he purposely engages in conduct that creates a substantial danger of death or serious physical injury to another person.
In examining cases dealing with assault, we recognize at the outset that whether certain conduct is sufficient to constitute a given category of assault must be determined in reference to the language of the statute under which the defendant is charged. See Anderson v. State,
In Dodd v. State,
In Johnson v. State,
The question presented is whether a mere drawing of a pistol with intent to use it, but without actually presenting it in the attitude of firing constitutes an assault. There is a conflict in the authorities on this question, but we are of the opinion that the better rule is that the act of drawing of the pistol, if accompanied by threats evidencing an intention to use it on the person threatened, constitutes an assault.
Our aggravated assault statute, Ark. Code Ann. §5-13-204, has been described as “unique.” See Holloway v. State,
On these facts we cannot say that the conviction for aggravated assault is supported by substantial evidence. The evidence is, however, amply sufficient to sustain a conviction for assault in the third degree. Ark. Code Ann. § 5-13-207 (1987) provides, “[a] person commits assault in the third degree if he purposely creates apprehension of imminent physical injury in another person.” Assault in the third degree is a lesser included offense of aggravated assault. See Holloway v. State, supra. We therefore modify the judgment of the circuit court to reflect a conviction for assault in the third degree and remand to that court for sentencing. Hughes v. State,
Affirmed as modified and remanded.
