State v. Fling

210 P.2d 221, 69 Ariz. 94, 1949 Ariz. LEXIS 92
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1949
DocketNo. 998.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 210 P.2d 221 (State v. Fling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Fling, 210 P.2d 221, 69 Ariz. 94, 1949 Ariz. LEXIS 92 (Ark. 1949).

Opinion

LaPRADE, Chief Justice.

Clyde Fling, defendant-appellant, was by a jury convicted of the crime of aggravated assault, a felony. The “aggravation” had its origin in the allegation of the information that defendant assaulted the complaining witness in the private home of the latter. By section 43-603, A.C.A.1939, it is provided that when any person goes into a private home and there is guilty of an assault or battery, such assault or battery is “aggravated.” This appeal is from the resulting judgment and sentence to a term in the state penitentiary. Upon an additional count in the information cha'rging assault with a deadly weapon, the defendant was acquitted.

An abbreviated statement of the facts presents.the following picture. The parties lived in separate trailer houses located in a section of the Colorado River bottom called “Okie Flats,” approximately one-half mile south of Bull Head City, Mohave County, Arizona. Defendant secured his electricity through wires running from the trailer of the complaining witness Hodges, who testified that on the evening of the alleged offense defendant knocked on his door and was told to “come in”; that upon entering defendant said “ * * * Theodore, did you turn my lights off?” Hodges further testified: “ * * * and he used some bad language there when he said that, and I was sitting there and as I started to raise up is when he pulled his gun.” The examination of Hodges proceeded as follows:

“Q. You say that was when he pulled his gun? A. As I raised up out of the chair.
“Q. Did he pull a gun? A. Yes.
*96 “Q. From where? A. He had it stuck down in his belt.
“Q. What did he do with it? A. He stuck it in my stomach.
“Q. And you say he called you a vile name? A. Yes.
“Q. What did he call you? A. He said ‘You * * *, you better fix them lights.’
“Q. What did you do? A. I went down to see if I could help him fix them. There wasn’t anything for me to do, — he had a gun in my belly — except to say ‘Yes, yes, yes.’
“Q. He didn’t keep the gun against you all that time? A. No, not all that time.”

Hodges also testified that, while they were out examining the electric line with a flashlight, defendant continued to curse him and kept insisting that the line must be fixed that night. At this juncture of the examination this question was put to Hodges:

“Q. Did he threaten you with any injury with this gun? A. Well, he didn’t then, but he came back up there and beat around the trailer with something or other, a piece of pipe or a gun one. * * * ”

The testimony of Mrs. Hodges was essentially corroborative of that of her husband.

Defendant categorically denied practically all of the testimony of Mr. and Mrs. Hodges. He denied that he entered their trailer home; that he had a gun; or that he in any manner assaulted Mr. Hodges in the home. Defendant testified that when he discovered that the lights did not turn on he called to Hodges and asked him if he had turned the lights off; that at this time he was approximately 100 feet from Hodges’ trailer; that Hodges and his wife came out of the trailer and walked down to where he and Mr. McKenzie were examining the line; that he told Hodges that if he, Hodges, would pay him the $32.60 he owed him he would put in his own line; that Hodges said, “I don’t consider I owe you over two or three dollars.” Defendant further testified: “I told him he and his wife owed me $32.60, and he said I was a damned liar, so we argued around there a little bit and I did try to whip him with my fists but he wouldn’t fight and he went on back into his house and we went on back into the house, and that is all there was to it.” Defendant’s version of the affair was substantiated by the witness McKenzie, who lived with defendant.

Appellant’s chief assignment of error is that the verdict and resulting judgment finding him guilty of aggravated assault was voided by the verdict of not guilty upon the count charging assault with a deadly weapon, in that there was no evidence of assault other than that offered in support of the latter count. In view of the disposition of this assignment, no con *97 sideration will be given to the other assignments. Appellant’s argument under this assignment is based upon the proposition that “where two or more crimes involve an element essential to each, an acquittal on one bars a conviction on the other, provided the evidence of the essential element is the same in each case.”

The assault charged in count 2, for which defendant was convicted, must have occurred inside the home of Hodges. The charge fixed the place, but contained no allegation as to the manner or means by which the alleged assault was committed. If it was committed, it had to have been accomplished as Hodges said it was — by having the gun stuck in his stomach as he arose from his chair. Neither Hodges, Mrs. Hodges, nor the witness McKenzie testified to any other threatening or menacing movement made by the defendant to enforce his demand that the lights be turned on. This is the proof that was relied on by the state to establish the alleged assault with a deadly weapon and that was rejected by the not-guilty verdict. The finding of no assault with a deadly weapon necessarily makes the finding of an assault inside the home false.

To sustain this particular charge of aggravated assault, it would not be essential that the assault in the home be committed with a deadly weapon, but it is essential that an assault should have occurred in the home. Under the state’s evidence the only assault in the home was with a deadly weapon, but the verdict negatives such an assault. These two verdicts are irreconcilable and contradictory. In this situation we are constrained to believe that the following rule obtaining in many jurisdictions is applicable here— “Whenever a jury finds the defendant not guilty of a count in which is charged an act which forms an essential element of another count, a conviction on the second count cannot be sustained.” 10 So.Cal.Law Rev. 208. (For collection of cases see Anno. 80 A.L.R. 171.) Another line of authorities holds that no verdict, however illogical, should be reversed by reason of its inconsistency; and that each count in an indictment should be considered separately and apart from all other counts in the same indictment. Dunn v. U. S., 284 U.S. 390, 52 S.Ct. 189, 76 L.Ed. 356, 80 A.L.R. 161. The effect of this ruling is that an acquittal on one charge cannot be pleaded as res judicata on a different charge, though based on the identical facts.

The lack of consistency was excused in this last cited case by quoting, with approval, the following observation from Steckler v. U. S., Cir., 7 F.2d 59, 60: “* * * The most that can be said in such cases is that the verdict shows that either in the acquittal or the conviction the jury did not speak their real conclusions, but that does not show that they were not convinced of the defendant’s guilt.

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Bluebook (online)
210 P.2d 221, 69 Ariz. 94, 1949 Ariz. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fling-ariz-1949.