Eugene Leonard Wright was indicted by a Chatham County grand jury for aggravated assault with a handgun, aggravated assault with a knife, aggravated battery, possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. He was also charged as a recidivist under OCGA § 17-10-7. He was acquitted of aggravated assault with a handgun and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon but convicted of the remaining charges. His motion for new trial was denied, and he appeals, asserting as his sole enumeration of error the failure of the trial court to merge the aggravated assault and aggravated battery convictions as a matter of fact. Finding no error, we affirm.
Construed to support the verdict, the evidence shows that *168 Wright attacked his wife with a large butcher knife, inflicting 26 stab wounds to her arms, chest, back, and shoulder. Several of these wounds were life-threatening, including a stab wound that lacerated her heart, another that punctured her lung, and a third that severed a major artery. Still another wound inflicted by Wright severed nerves in his wife’s arm, leaving her with permanent nerve damage requiring that she wear a brace on the arm. According to the victim, the attack took place over a period lasting “two, maybe three — less than five minutes.”
Wright was charged in the aggravated assault count with assaulting the victim “by stabbing her with a knife, an object which when used offensively is likely to and does result in serious bodily injury.” In the aggravated battery count, Wright was charged with maliciously causing bodily harm to the victim “by seriously disfiguring her body or a member thereof, to wit: did inflict multiple stab wounds hindering the use of her arm and a stab wound to her heart.”
Wright contends, as at sentencing and on his motion for new trial, that the convictions for aggravated assault and aggravated battery should have merged, citing
Montes v. State,
It is this proposition upon which Wright relies in contending that the stabbing of his wife 26 times constitutes only one aggravated assault and cannot also support a conviction for aggravated battery. Similarly, Wright cites another shooting case,
Dupree v. State,
But
Montes
involves the merger of aggravated assault with malice murder and is not the appropriate authority to apply in this case. A decision more pertinent to the facts shown here is
Grace v. State,
The evidence used to prove the commission of the aggra *169 vated assault was not used at all in proving the commission of the aggravated battery and thus there is no merit to Grace’s contention that the aggravated assault was a lesser included offense of the aggravated battery. Compare Montes v. State, [supra].
Id. Similarly, in
Knight v. State,
Excluding the evidence of Wright’s two acts that seriously injured the victim’s arm and heart and were explicitly used to support Wright’s conviction for aggravated battery, the 24 remaining acts of stabbing were not “used up” in proving the aggravated battery and provided sufficient evidence to support the separate conviction for aggravated assault. 2
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
While
Knight
was originally physical precedent only with respect to this issue, one judge having concurred specially in Division 2, it has been cited with approval by the Supreme Court of Georgia.
Lowe v. State,
The State in its brief requested that “[i]f this court does merge the aggravated assault conviction into the aggravated battery count, this court should remand the case for resentencing on the latter count as the sentence entered therein is void.” But the State has not cross-appealed. Assuming without deciding that the sentence is void, the State has the right to appeal it. See
State v. Willis,
