State v. Hammond

571 S.W.2d 114, 1978 Mo. LEXIS 360
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 12, 1978
Docket60086
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 571 S.W.2d 114 (State v. Hammond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hammond, 571 S.W.2d 114, 1978 Mo. LEXIS 360 (Mo. 1978).

Opinion

RENDLEN, Judge.

This cause was transferred by the Kansas City District, Missouri Court of Appeals after opinion, that we might examine the validity of Missouri Approved Instruction— Criminal 6.26 (MAI-CR 6.26). Portions of the Court of Appeals’ opinion are utilized without quotation marks.

Defendant Michael Hammond was charged with assault with intent to do great bodily harm under § 559.190, RSMo 1969, but was convicted of the lesser included offense of common assault, § 559.220, RSMo 1969, with punishment fixed by the jury at thirty days in the county jail. On appeal defendant attacks (1) sufficiency of the evidence and (2) adequacy of the main verdict directing instruction (MAI — CR 6.26, common assault) which defendant contends erroneously permits conviction without a finding as to the constituent elements of common assault.

I.

The evidence taken most favorably to the verdict would permit the jury to find that defendant intentionally offered to inflict bodily injury with a knife upon Lavon L. Jones and is sufficient to sustain the conviction for common assault. We discuss the facts in some detail, not only to demonstrate the sufficiency of the evidence but to make clear the efficacy of the trial court’s instructions to the jury.

It was undisputed that defendant, with a woman companion, was seen by three Safeway employees lingering in the vicinity of the supermarket meat counter of the Safeway Store in Independence, Missouri. The meat market manager, Jim Griffin, noticed the antics of the woman who was repeatedly picking up and putting down packages of expensive steaks and who then placed them in a cart. The manager directed E. D. Hewitt, meat cutter at the store, to keep defendant and his female companion under *115 observation. As they turned down the aisle toward the front of the store, defendant and the woman stuffed the merchandise into her purse. Hewitt, who had seen this, beckoned Griffin to the front of the store where they told Lavon Jones, another store employee, that they suspected the couple was stealing steaks. Defendant and his companion then passed through the checkout stand without a gesture of payment and thence from the store, the woman first followed by defendant.

The manager attempted to follow but defendant purposely blocked the doorway permitting the woman, who was then running from the store, to elude capture. In order to get past Hammond the store employees pushed him through the door but his tactics allowed the woman’s escape. Griffin pursued her as she ran across the parking lot tossing the steaks from her purse but her lead was such that he abandoned the chase, retrieved the steaks and returned to the store. Meantime Hewitt and Jones attempted to restrain defendant near the store. Hewitt took defendant by the arm asking him to return to the store but he jerked his arm away with the obscenity, “Get your f_g hands off me.” He turned to face Hewitt stating, “Stay away from me, man” and at that moment pulled a knife from his trouser pocket, “popped [open] the blade” and belligerently stated to the two men, “Leave me alone.” Jones, who was then only three or four feet from the defendant, warned Hewitt of the knife and both store employees backed away from him. The defendant moved off and the two followed, again asking him to return to the store. Defendant, brandished the knife with its open three inch blade by holding it near the right side at his waist, repeated his warnings and the employees continued to hold back from him. Jones explained his apprehension of defendant this way: “So again we just held back, you know, we wouldn’t — I respected the knife. I wasn’t going to . [go] up there and take it out of his hand . . . .” Hewitt testified it was when defendant first jerked his arm away and turned to address him in bellicose tones that he noticed the knife.

The defendant again moved off and the two employees followed, staying out of reach as he continued to display the knife. When defendant was about to leave the parking lot area, they asked once more that he return to the store but his knife kept them at bay. Immediately after defendant left the lot Jones reported the incident to the police.

Within the hour defendant was arrested and a search incident to the arrest disclosed a pocket knife on his person which was received at trial as evidence against him. This evidence supports the conviction for common assault and defendant’s first contention is without merit.

II.

We turn now to the question of whether challenged instruction No. 6 is a correct submission of the crime of common assault. Section 559.180 defines assault with intent to kill as:

Every person who shall on purpose and of malice aforethought . . . assault . another with a deadly weapon . . with intent to kill, maim, ravish or rob . . . shall be punished by imprisonment in the penitentiary not less than two years. . . . (Emphasis added.)

Section 559.190, implicitly referring to § 559.180, defines felonious assault without malice aforethought as:

Every person who shall be convicted of an assault with intent to kill, or to do great bodily harm, or to commit any . felony, the punishment for which assault is not hereinbefore prescribed, shall be punished by imprisonment in the penitentiary . . . or in the county jail . . (Emphasis added.) 1

Section 559.220, “common assault” provides:

Any person who shall assault . another, under such circumstances as not *116 to constitute any other offense herein defined, shall, upon conviction, be punished by a fine ... or imprisonment in the county jail . . . . (Emphasis added.)

Clearly the latter section defines common assault as a residual offense and misdemeanor, lesser to and included within the felonies defined in the preceding assault sections of the statute. Although common assault differs from the graver assaults listed above which involve specific intent to kill or to do bodily harm, each requires that the general intent to injure must be proved and each includes the term “assault” as a substantive act proscribed.

Ordinarily in a prosecution for assault it is sufficient if the indictment or information follows the language of the statute when describing the offense charged. State v. Pool, 314 Mo. 673, 285 S.W. 726, 727 (1926). This is true in prosecutions for felonies as well as misdemeanors. State v. Foster, 281 Mo. 618, 220 S.W. 958 (1920). 2 Complementing the practice of couching an indictment or information in statutory language, it is generally sufficient to frame an instruction to the jury in the same manner. As stated by this court in State v. Jones, 365 S.W.2d 508, 515 (Mo.1963):

[i]t has been repeatedly held that a verdict directing instruction, which is not erroneous for some other reason, meets the minimum requirements when in words and effect it follows the language of the statute . . . . (Citations omitted.)

This principle found application in

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Bluebook (online)
571 S.W.2d 114, 1978 Mo. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hammond-mo-1978.