The defendant was charged with the crime of an assault with a deadly weapon, to wit, a pistol, upon one Frank Haddad. Pen. Code, par. 219. From a judgment of conviction, the defendant appeals.
The only point made by the defendant on the appeal is that the evidence is insufficient to establish as a fact that the weapon with which the assault was made was a deadly weapon, inasmuch as' it fails to show that the pistol was loaded with bullets. It appears that the complaining witness Haddad and the defendant had quarreled about the payment of two dollars which the complaining witness claimed the defendant owed him, and that during the quarrel the defendant threatened to kill Haddad. Soon after the quarrel, the complaining witness was driving along the road in an automobile in company with another man, and met the defendant, who said to him, “I am going to pay you,” and drew a pistol and fired twice at the complaining witness while he was driving rapidly away. The first shot was fired at a distance of *387twenty-five to thirty feet from the complaining witness; the second at a distance somewhat greater. Neither shot took effect. The defendant’s explanation of the affair is that the pistol was only loaded with blank cartridges, and that he fired at the complaining witness to “scare” him so that he would let him “alone.” The pistol was examined by the arresting officer not long after the shooting took place, and was found to contain two empty shells and one loaded cartridge. The defendant explained that after the shooting he went home and was going to put the pistol where he got it, and that the loaded cartridge happened to be there, and he “placed the bullet in it.”
In Territory v. Gomez, 14 Ariz. 139, 42 L. R. A. (N. S.) 975, 125 Pac. 702, we held that a man pointing a cocked pistol at another in an angry and threatening manner was guilty of an assault with a deadly weapon, and that the burden of proving that the pistol was unloaded rested upon the accused. The present case is a much stronger one for the prosecution. In the Gomez case the pistol was not discharged; here, it was. Furthermore, the pistol in the present case was found to contain two empty shells and one loaded cartridge. Certainly the evidence was amply sufficient to carry the case to the jury upon the question whether the pistol was loaded with bullets, and to sustain a verdict of guilty. The explanation' of defendant that he fired blank cartridges at the complaining witness, and subsequently placed the loaded cartridge in the pistol, only raised a conflict in the testimony. It was the province of the jury to settle the conflict. They were not bound to accept the statement of the defendant. That a loaded pistol fired by one person at a distance of twenty-five or thirty feet against another is a *388“deadly weapon” will not be questioned by anyone in possession of Ms ordinary senses.
The judgment is affirmed.
CUNNINGHAM, C. J., and BOSS, J., concur.