delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an indictment against Thomas Cryer, determined in the Lafayette Circuit Court.
There were three counts in the indictment: the 1st and 2d charging, with some variation of form, that Cryer assaulted Sarah Stricklin with a pistol, with intent to commit murder; and the 3d charging that he assaulted her with a deadly weapon (a pistol), with intent to inflict upon her a bodily injury, without considerable provocation, etc.
The Court sustained a demurrer to the indictment, interposed by Cryer, and the State brought error.
It is insisted that the indictment was bad, and subject to demurrer; because, 1st, it charged two distinct offences, subject to different, penalties; and 2d, because it improperly joined counts for a felony, and a misdemeanor; and these ware the grounds of the demurrer, etc.
1. The offence charged in the first and second counts in the indictment, an assault with intent to commit murder, is punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary. Gould's Dig., p. 336. The offence charged in the third count, usually designated as an aggravated assault, etc., is punishable by fine and imprisonment in the common jail. Ib.
In Baker vs. The State, 4 Ark. 56, counts were joined in the same indictment, as in this case, charging Baker with an offence punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary, and an offence punishable by fine and imprisonment in the county jail. And this Court distinctly held that the objection for misjoinder of offences, if allowable at all, should have been taken before verdict, bjr motion to quash, or to compel the attorney for the State to elect between the counts; and that the objection was not good in arrest of judgment, or error, or upon demurrer.
In that case it appears that Baker was really prosecuted for but offence, and that several counts were inserted in the indictment, charging the offence in different degrees, with the view of meeting different aspects or contingencies in the evidence, which the Court clearly intimate that the prosecuting attorney had the right to do; and that, in such case, where the counts were inserted in good faith, he would not be required to make an election between them.
In the case now before us, there can be but little doubt, from the face of the indictment, but that the several counts were inserted for the same purpose, as in Baker’s case, and that there was no design to charge, .and prosecute for, separate and dis-distinct offences, subject to punishments differing in their character, etc. See 1 Arch. Cr. Law, Waterman’s Ed., p. 93, etc., and notes.
2. By act of December 18th, 1848, (G. Dig. p. 383,) an assault with intent to commit murder, being punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary, is a felony. An aggravated assault is a misdemeanor.
By the common law, it seems, counts for a felony and misdemeanor ' cannot be joined in the same indictment; and if improperly joined, the indictment will be bad on demurrer, or on motion in arrest of judgment. 1 Chitty Cr. Law 254.
In our country, some of the States have adhered to this rule (State vs. Freels, 3 Humph. 228); and in others, it has been held that the reason of the rule has no application in this country, and consequently the rule has not been observed. State vs. Boise et al., 1 McMullin 189; Buck vs. State, 2 Har. & J. 426; Waterman’s Ed. of Arch. Cr. Law, vol. 1, p. 93, 94, and notes.
So, by the common law, a party indicted for a felony, could not be found guilty of a misdemanor; but this Court, upon the authority of the adjudications of sister' States, has decided that the reason of the rule in England does not exist in our practice; and that upon an indictment for felony, the accused may be convicted of a misdemeanor, where both offences belong to the same generic class; where the commission of the higher may involve the commission of the lower offence, and where the indictment for the higher offence contains all the substantive allegations necessary to let in proof of the misdemeanor. Cameron vs. State, 13 Ark. 712; Guest vs. State, 19 Ib. 405; Sweeden vs. State, Ib. 205.
If, upon an indictment for a felony, a party may be found guilty of a misdemeanor, as above shown, it certainly can be of no prejudice to the accused to insert, with the count for the felony, a count for the misdemeanor in the same indictment.
Where there is doubt whether the evidence will establish a particular offence to be of a higher or lower grade — a felony or a misdemeanor — it is a convenient practice to permit the attorney for the State to insert a count for each, for the purpose of meeting contingencies in the proof. The accused is thereby advised that he is required to meet the charge in both of its aspects, and is surely less liable to be entrapped under this practice than if he were charged with the felony only, and yet subjected, upon the trial, to a conviction for the misdemeanor.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings, etc.