The plaintiff in error, indicted in the Circuit Court of Columbia County for an assault with intent to murder, was found guilty of an aggravated assault and sentenced to confinement at hard labor in the County Jail for a period of six months. He seeks reversal by this Court on writ of error.-
The charging part of the indictment is as follows.: “That Nathan Howard, late of said county, on the 15th day of April, A. D. 1916, in the County and State.aforesaid, with force and arms, and with a deadly weapon, to-wit, a shot gun loaded and charged with gun powder and leaden balls, and which he the said Nathan Howard then *696and there had and held in his hands, in and upon one Mack Caesar, unlawfully, of and from a premediated design to effect the death of the said Mack Caesar, did make an assault; and the said Nathan Howard did then and there unlawfully, of and from a premediated design to effect the death of the said Mack Caesar, shoot off and discharge the leaden balls aforesaid out of the shot gun aforesaid at, toward, against, upon and into the body of the said Mack Caesar.”
The errors assigned for which plaintiff in error contends are based upon the refusal of the Circuit Judg'e to give to the jury this special instruction in law, requested by him: “The proof must show that the shot gun admittedly used in the encounter was loaded with powder and leaden balls, and whatever you may believe of the guilt of the defendant in other respects, you cannot convict the defendant if you believe from the evidence that the gun was loaded with small shot instead of leaden balls.”
The only evidence of how the-1 gun was loaded was given by the defendant, who testified it was loaded with “bird shot.” The plaintiff in error cites dictionary definitions to show the distinction between the terms “leaden balls” and “shot.” Thus from the Standard Dictionary: Leaden balls: “Any spherical or conoid projectile larger than a small shot.” Shot: “A spherule or pellet composed principally of lead, several of which are used for one loading of a fire arm; used chiefly in shooting small game.”
The Encylopedic Dictionary which he cites defines shot: “ small spherical pellets of lead used for shooting birds and other small game;” and Ball (leaden) as “a bullet; a globular piece of metal designed as a projectile to be expelled from a musket or rifle.” The Standard Die-, tionary, however, gives as its first definition of Ball, “a *697globular or spherical body of any dimensions,” and in its synonyms for “shot” gives “ball, bomb, bombshell, bullet, canister, chainshot, grape, grapeshot, lead, missile, projectile, shell, shrapnel, slug.” Soule’s Dictionary of English Synonyms gives for “Ball,” “missile (of fire arms)', bullet, shot, projectile;” and for “Shot” he gives “Ball, bullet, missile, projectile.” We therefore fail to find any authority in the lexicons for drawing such a distinction between the words “leaden balls,” and “bird shot,” as to make the use of the one in the indictment, and of the other in the proof, a fatal variance.
If, however, such a distinction were made by the dictionaries, we would not be limited by them, because it is a well settled principle of the common law that “Where the instrument laid and the instrument proved are of the same nature and character, thére is no variance.” Wharton’s Criminal Law (nth Ed.) Sec. 652; continuing, this high authority says: “Thus, evidence of a dagger will support the averment of a knife,” and he lays down the doctrine that where it is proven that the deceased was killed by an instrument “capable of producing the same kind of death as the instrument stated in the indictment, the variance will not be material.” Ibid. sec. 652.
In the case of Drummer v. State, 45 Fla. 17, 33 South. Rep. 1008, third headnote, this qpurt held that “Under an indictment which charges an assault with intent to murder by shooting with a pistol, a conviction.may be had on proof that the shooting was done with a gun, the two weapons being thé same in character and inflicting the the same character of wound.” If there is no fatal variance where the instrument laid is a pistol, and the instrument proven is a gun, there can be none, where the variance is merely in the size of the missle with which the gun or pistol is loaded. The fact that a gun loaded with *698large shot will kill at a greater distance than one loaded with bird shot, does not preclude the latter from- being a deadly Weapon within the range of its killing- capacity; neither will the fact that the wound inflicted was not a deadly one, support the contention of the plaintiff in error that a gam loaded with bird shot discharged at a person about six feet away, as in this case, is not a deadly weapon.
In the case of Regina v. Warman, 2 Car. & K. (61 E. C. L.) 195, the indictment charged the prisoner with killing his wife “with a certain instrument called a ‘swingle, made of wood, iron and leather;’” the evidence showed that her death had been effected by a blow on the head given with “a piece of wood;” The court said: “In a case of homicide it is sufficient if the 'inode of death is substantially proved as laid, and I think that here the death is sufficiently shown to1 have arisen from a stroke feloniously given by an instrument held by the prisoner.”
In th,e case of Goodwyn v. State, 4 S. & M. (12 Miss.) 520, the indictment charged that the mortal wound was “given with a gun loaded with powder and one leaden bullet;” the proof was that the gun was loaded with “duckshot.” The defendant requested the trial judge to charg-e the jury that “if they believed from the evidence that the deceased came to his death by means of the shot aforesaid, and not by one leaden bullet discharged from said shotgun as alleged in the bill of indictment, they must find a verdict for the accused.” This charge the court refused, but charged the jury “that the said proof was sufficient to sustain the said bill as alleged in the indictment:” In passing on the charges requested by tlie defendant, the Supreme Court of Mississippi said: “Tghe charge requested was -clearly properly refused. The instrument by which the death is caused need .not *699necessarily be strictly proved as laid in the indictment, aitid proof of its having- been caused by any other instrument capable of producing death in a similar mode satisfies the indictment in that respect.” .
In the Mississippi case the variance between the allegation and the proof was somewhat greater than in the instant case, in that in the former the allegation was that the gun was loaded with “one leaden ball,” and in the case under consideration the allegation is “leaden balls.” Shot, according to the American Standard, range in size from number twelve, the smallest, to number one, and th§n the size is designated by letters; “B” being the next largest in size to number one, and increasing until TTTT is reached, which are quite large. The gradation in size is very gradual, and it would be impracticable to accept the distinction sought to be made by plaintiff in error, and determine just when these pellets of varying sizes cease being shot and become leaden balls. The instrument with which the wound was inflicted in this case was “shot” and this term is sufficiently comprehensive to embrace all projectiles propulsed by high explosives out of any instrument of death, from the smallest shot known as mustard seed, to the largest armor-piercing shot used in ordnance.
There was no material variance in the description of the instrument which inflicted the wound, as laid in the indictment and the instrument proved, and there was no error in the court refusing- to give the charge complained of. As the evidence fully sustained the verdict, we find no reversible error.
The judgment is affirmed.
Taylor, Shackleford, Whitfield and Ellis, JJ., concur.