State v. Lehman
This text of 155 N.W. 399 (State v. Lehman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Defendant was indicted for an assault in the second degree and was convicted of an assault in the third degree. He made a motion in.arrest of judgment and also for a new trial. These motions were denied; sentence, was imposed, and he appealed.
The above statement of facts is given to show the bearing of that portion of the charge which defendant urges as error. In this portion of the charge, the jury were told in substance that, if they found beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant, knowing the position of the boys, “recklessly or carelessly discharged his pistol against the ground,” and further found “that such action on the part of the defendant was of such a reckless or careless nature as to show indifference as to whether another person was thereby injured,” and further found that such action resulted in the ball so discharged striking Mogren and inflicting grievous bodily harm upon him, they should find defendant guilty of assault in the second degree. The jury found him not guilty of an assault in the second degree,.but guilty of an assault in the third degree. Therefore assuming, without conceding, that this instruction was error as applied to the second degree, it is not cause for reversal unless also error in respect to the third degree. The statute defines what constitutes an assault in both the first and second degrees, and then provides: “Every person who shall commit an assault, or an assault and battery, [430]*430not amounting to an assault in either the first or second degree, shall be guilty of an assault in the third degree.”1 The statute does- not define what constitutes an “assault” nor what constitutes a “battery” within the meaning of this section, and these terms still retain their common law meaning.
In discharging his revolver at the time and place and under the circumstances stated, defendant committed an unlawful act. G. S. 1913, § 8803. It is the general rule that a person who intentionally commits an unlawful act, and in doing so inflicts an unforeseen injury, is criminally liable for such injury./Discharging a firearm without justification to frighten another, although intending not to hit him, is an assault and battery if the other be hit. State v. Triplett, 52 Kan. 678, 35 Pac. 815; Commonwealth v. Mann, 116 Mass. 58, Commonwealth v. Hawkins, 157 Mass. 551, 32 N. E. 862; Malone v. State, 77 Miss. 812, 36 South. 968; Smith v. Com. 100 Pa. St. 324; State v. Baker, 30 R. I. 375, 38 Atl. 653, 78 Am. St. 863; Tyner v. United States, 3 Okla. Cr. 689, 103 Pac. 1057; State v. Surry, 23 Wash. 655, 63 Pac. 557.
In view of the admitted fact that defendant intentionally discharged his revolver for the purpose of frightening the boys, the instruction complained of was proper in defining what would constitute an assault in the third degree. As defendant was found guilty in the third degree, and was found not guilty in the second degree, no prejudice resulted to him even if the court erred in applying the instruction to the second degree. Upon the conceded facts, defendant was clearly guilty of an assault in the third degree.
Judgment affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
155 N.W. 399, 131 Minn. 427, 1915 Minn. LEXIS 866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lehman-minn-1915.