Bittick v. State
Bittick v. State
Opinion of the Court
Appellants were jointly indicted for assault with intent to murder. The indictment charges that the accused, with force and arms, upon the body of J. H. Verner an assault did make, and with intent him, feloniously and of malice aforethought, to kill and murder. It also alleges the time and county, but does not ■ allege the instrument or means used, nor the circumstances how, or in what particular place the assault was made. Exceptions by motion to quash, in charges asked to the jury, and by motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment, were made to this indictment in various forms testing its sufficiency in charging any ofíense; that it is not in intelligible words; that evidence of an aggravated assault, or aggravated assault and battery, were not sufficient to convict under it; and finally, that a verdict of “guilty of aggravated assault and battery,” should not be held valid under it, when the evidence only showed an aggravated assault.
As to the sufficiency of the indictment, it clearly was good for a simple assault, even at common law, and should not have been quashed on exceptions. It was also valid and sufficient in charging an assault with intent to murder, as we recently held in Martin v. The State. The exact point, that it is not necessary to allege the means or instrument used, was also held in The State v. Croft, 15 Texas, 576, which was decided by common law rules, and has since been followed in other cases.
At the trial the prosecution did not contend for a conviction of assault with intent to murder, but only for an aggravated assault. The court read to the jury the arti
It is quite clear that the charges asked were in conflict with the plain provisions of Article 498, which the court read to the jury, and by which it was justified in refusing them. So the law is written, is a sufficient answer to the ingenious argument of counsel.
It is further assigned as error, that the verdict, “guilty of aggravated assault and battery,” is not warranted by the indictment, nor by the evidence, and that it will not support the judgment for the lowest fine allowed in such cases. It is true, that the evidence does not prove a battery, and the formal and proper verdict on such an indictment would be only, guilty of aggravated assault. But that the verdict does find this? is clear. Does its including also a battery vitiate the whole % We think not; and especially as the same penalty and judgment apply to the one as to the other. It is not a material error.
Finally, exception was taken to a ruling of the court
Thereupon the State introduced another witness in rebuttal, who corroborated the first, and denied that defendants’ witness was present at the assault, and again rested. Then defendants offered to introduce another witness, wife of their first, to rebut the State’s last witness, and in corroboration of her husband, to which the State objected, and the witness was excluded. This was in accordance with the rule as stated by Q-reenleaf, Section 469a, and the usual practice in Texas. But we do not regard it as a fixed, invariable rule, which the court may not relax. Exercising a sonnd discretion, it might have been relaxed in favor of defendant, but we do not pereive in this record any reason why it should have been done.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Samuel Bittick and John Williams v. State
- Cited By
- 21 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. An indictment for assault with intent to murder is not defective for failing to allege the instrument or means used, or the circumstances, or the particular place the assault was made. 3. Under an indictment for assault with intent to murder, a conviction can be had for an aggravated assault, even though the indictment does not set out any one of the state of circumstances named in Article 488 of Penal Code, defining aggravated assaults. 3. A verdict of “guilty of aggravated assault and battery,” where there was no battery charged or proven, is nevertheless valid ; the words “ and battery ” may be considered surplusage. 4. Where the district attorney examined one witness, who proved the case, and closed, and the defendant introduced a witness who contradicted the State’s witness, and closed, and the district attorney examined a second witness sustaining the first witness, and thereupon defendant offered the wife of his first witness to rebut the State’s second witness, to which the district attorney objected — held, that there was no error in excluding the testimony of this witness.