Berfield v. State

458 P.2d 1008, 1969 Alas. LEXIS 159
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1969
Docket960
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 458 P.2d 1008 (Berfield v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berfield v. State, 458 P.2d 1008, 1969 Alas. LEXIS 159 (Ala. 1969).

Opinion

OPINION

DIMOND, Justice.

A jury found appellant guilty of assault with a dangerous weapon. An appeal has been taken to this court.

Appellant’s conviction arose out of an incident that occurred on July 8, 1967. Shortly after midnight, David Baker and Malcolm Brown drove to the Forest Park Golf Course, near Anchorage, to meet some friends. Near the golf course they turned on to a dead-end road. After they had proceeded a short distance, they observed appellant standing in the middle of the road. They tried to drive around him but appellant stepped in the way. They stopped the car and someone opened the door and pulled Baker out. Baker fell to the ground and was kicked in the ribs and about the head. Brown testified that the kicking was done by appellant and Chris *1009 topher Ransom, and that appellant was wearing heavy black boots at the time.

At trial, one of the instructions given the jury was Instruction No. 17 which provided :

A dangerous weapon is a weapon which, either in its very nature or by reason of the use made of it in [the] case under consideration, is capable, when used against another, of serious bodily injury or even causing death.

The instruction is challenged as erroneous because it did not require the jury to find that before the boots could be classified as dangerous weapons the jury would have to find that serious bodily injury actually resulted from the assault. And since Baker did not suffer serious bodily injury, 1 appellant contends that his motion for a judgment of acquittal ought to have been granted.

We agree with appellant that boots cannot be classified, as a matter of law, as dangerous weapons in themselves, 2 a fact which appellee concedes. But we do not agree with appellant’s further contention that where an object used in an assault is not in itself a dangerous weapon, it must be established that actual, serious bodily injury resulted from the assault before one may be convicted of assault with a dangerous weapon.

Almost any object, depending upon its use or attempted use, is capable of or is likely to produce bodily harm. The test is not whether serious bodily harm actually results. Rather it is whether the object was so used that serious bodily harm may have resulted. 3 The object’s latent capability alone is not determinative. What is determinative is such capability, coupled with the manner of its use. 4

Appellant used his boots to kick Baker about the face and head. The boots were dangerous because they were used as something to fight with — as instruments of offensive combat. 5 They were dangerous in these circumstances because their use was accompanied by the exposure or liability to serious injury to Baker’s head and brain. The fact that such serious injury did not result is not controlling. It is enough that the manner that appellant used his boots to assault Baker was capable of producing serious injury. The instruction stated the law correctly — it was not erroneous.

Instruction No. 18 informed the jury of the following:

With regard to the offense of assault with a dangerous weapon, you are instructed that it is not necessary that there be found present a specific intent to actually inflict death or serious bodily harm, and it is sufficient if there be found to exist a general criminal intent to use the weapon as the means of offering or attempting bodily injury *1010 coupled with actual ability to inflict great bodily harm.

Appellant acknowledges that this instruction would be proper as to the element of intent where the assault was alleged to have been committed with a weapon dangerous per se. 6 But he argues that where the object used in the assault is not a dangerous weapon in itself, then it is necessary for the jury to be instructed that before returning a verdict of guilty they must find that serious injury or great bodily harm did in fact occur as a result of the assault.

We have already held that there may be a conviction of assault with a dangerous weapon where the object used in the assault, not per se a dangerous weapon, is capable of or may cause serious bodily harm, considering the manner in which it was used, and that it is not necessary to establish that serious bodily harm in fact did occur. This holding disposes of appellant’s contention as to Instruction No. 18. That instruction was proper and not erroneous. Similarly, this disposes of appellant’s further contention that a judgment of acquittal ought to have been granted because it was not proved that serious bodily injury resulted from the assault.

Appellant also contends that it was error to deny the motion for a judgment of acquittal because there was insufficient evidence of guilt to take the case to the jury. He refers to Baker’s testimony that he did not know who kicked him, and the testimony of the only other witness for the state, Malcolm Brown, to the effect that he was not sure which of three parties involved, including appellant, had been fighting with Baker.

The test of whether a case should be submitted to the jury after a motion for judgment of acquittal has been made is stated in Beckley v. State 7 as follows:

Considering the facts in the record most favorable to the state and such reasonable inferences as the jury may have drawn from them [the question is whether] * * * fair minded men in the exercise of reasonable judgment could have differed on the question of whether appellant’s guilt had been established beyond a reasonable doubt.

Applying that test here, we find that the case was properly submitted to the jury for its determination. It is true that Baker did not know who kicked him — whether it was appellant or his two companions. But Malcolm Brown testified, both on direct and cross-examination, that he saw appellant kick Baker in the ribs and head. Based on this testimony, fair-minded men in the exercise of reasonable judgment could at least have differed, and in fact could have concluded, that appellant’s guilt was established beyond a reasonable doubt. The fact that Brown was the only witness who testified as to appellant kicking Baker does not detract from that result. The testimony of a single witness, if relevant and credible, is sufficient for a conviction. 8

Appellant was sentenced to three years imprisonment. He contends that that the imposition of such a sentence was an abuse of discretion because the trial judge, in determining the sentence to impose, placed undue emphasis on appellant’s juvenile record, and because the sentence was inconsistent with sentences given to defendants convicted of assault with a dangerous weapon in other cases.

In Bear v. State, 9

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Bluebook (online)
458 P.2d 1008, 1969 Alas. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berfield-v-state-alaska-1969.