The defendant was convicted, after a trial to the jury, of the crime of assault with a deadly or dangerous weapon. She has appealed from the judgment and assigns error in the court’s charge to the jury and in its refusal to set the verdict aside.
The state offered evidence to prove, and claimed to have proved, the following facts: The state highway department, through five of its employees, was endeavoring, preparatory to erecting a fence, to line up the boundary between land of the state and land owned by the defendant in the town of Union. The defendant, without warning, fired three or four short cartridges from a .22 caliber rifle in the general direction of these employees. The cartridges had sufficient force, at a distance of 250 feet, to penetrate from three to five pine boards, seven-eighths of an inch thick, backed up against each other. The highway employees were within striking distance, and when they heard the defendant threaten to harm one of their number, they were frightened by her actions and left the scene. The men were not on the defendant’s land. On a prior occasion when the highway department had commenced the erection of a fence, the defendant had threatened to use a gun and shoot if the work continued. The defendant admitted, during the trial, that she had fired the shots, but stated that she fired them into the ground, not at the highway employees, and did so only with the intention of frightening them away and not with the intention of doing them harm.
The principal contention of the defendant is that
A loaded rifle such as that employed by the defendant here is a deadly or dangerous weapon per se. Although the defendant claimed that her purpose was merely to frighten the highway employees, the jury could find, upon the evidence, that she fired in the direction of the employees and that they were within striking distance. Firing in the direction of another with the intention of frightening him and firing in his direction with the intention of wounding him are equally assaults, and if the person toward whom the assault is directed is within the range of harm the act constitutes an assault with a deadly or dangerous weapon.
State
v.
Baker,
There is no merit to the further claim of the defendant that in order for her to be convicted of the crime charged the state had to prove a specific intent on her part to do harm. To constitute the crime, no specific intent is necessary other than that embraced in the act of making an assault with a dangerous weapon, that is, an intent to cause fear. 1 Wharton, Criminal Law & Procedure, p. 720 § 361, p. 680 § 332. The intent may be inferred from the act.
State
v.
Litman,
The defendant’s assignment of error on her challenge to the array has not been briefed and is considered as abandoned.
Attardo
v.
Connecticut Ry. & Lighting Co.,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
