Plaintiff in error, a female over sixteen years of age, was indicted on a charge of shooting with intent to kill. Upon trial of the case in the Court of Common Pleas she was found guilty of assault and battery. The court overruled the motion for a new trial and sentenced plaintiff in error for an indeterminate period of not more than three years at the reformatory for women at Marysville, Ohio, and further ordered her to pay a fine of two hundred dollars. Prom such judgment of the Court of 'Common Pleas, error Í3 prosecuted to this court.
Various errors are assigned in the petition in error, and urged by counsel for plaintiff in error in their brief.
We have carefully considered all of the alleged errors which are claimed to have occurred during the trial of the case, and which are pressed by counsel for plaintiff in error, but find no prejudicial error in the rulings of the trial court occurring during the trial of the case.
A serious question, however, is presented by the ■record, relating to the validity of the sentence which was imposed by the trial court.
Plaintiff in error, having been found guilty only of assault and battery, claims that the sentence should have been imposed under Section 12423, General Code, which reads as follows:
“Whoever unlawfully assaults or threatens another in a menacing manner, or unlawfully strikes or wounds another,- shall be fined not more than *422two hundred dollars or imprisoned not more than six months, or both.”
This section has been in force for a number of years.
The court of common pleas justified its sentence under Sections 2148-1, '2148-7 and 2148-9, General Code.
Sections 2148-1 and 2148-7 were enacted in 1915 (106 O. L., 130), and are as follows:
“Sec. 2148-1. The Ohio reformatory for women shall be used for the detention of all females over sixteen years of age, convicted of a felony, misdemeanor, or delinquency as hereinafter provided, and for the detention of such female prisoners as shall be transferred thereto from the Ohio penitentiary and the girls’ industrial school as hereinafter provided.
“Sec. 2148-7. After the issuance of the first proclamation hereinbefore referred to, it shall be unlawful to sentence any female convicted of a felony to be confined in either the Ohio penitentiary or a jail, workhouse, house of correction or other correctional or penal institution, and after the issuance of the second proclamation it shall be unlawful to sentence any female convicted of a misdemeanor or delinquency to be confined in any such place, except in both cases the reformatory herein provided for, the girls’ industrial school or other institution for juvenile delinquency, unless such person is over sixteen years of age and has been sentenced for less than thirty days, or is remanded to jail in default of payment of either fine or costs or both, which will cause imprisonment for less than thirty days, provided that this *423section shall not apply to imprisonment for contempt of court.”
Section 2148-9 was enacted in 1913 (103 O. L., 672), and reads as follows:
“All provisions of law relating to suspension of sentences of persons sentenced to confinement in the Ohio penitentiary and the Ohio state reformatory shall be applicable to persons sentenced to the Ohio reformatory for women.
“Courts imposing sentences to the Ohio reformatory for women shall mate them general, and not fixed or limited in their duration. The term of imprisonment of persons shall be terminated by the Ohio board of administration as authorized by this act, but the term of such imprisonment for felony shall not exceed the maximum term nor be less than the minimum term provided by law for the crime for which such person is sentenced. In case of commitments for misdemeanor or delinquency the term of such imprisonment shall not be more, than three years, but such person shall be eligible for parole as follows: Persons committed for the first time, after imprisonment for two months; for second time, after four months; for third or greater time, after six months; and provided that they shall be continued upon parole for at least one year before receiving final discharge.
“If, through oversight or otherwise, a sentence to said reformatory should be for a definite period, it shall not for that reason be void, but the person so sentenced shall receive the benefits and be subject to the liabilities of this act in the same manner as if she had been sentenced in the manner required by law. In such case the Ohio board *424of administration shall deliver to each person a copy of this act and written information of her relations to them.”
Briefly stated, these sections of the code provide for the imprisonment of all females convicted of misdemeanors, as well as felonies, in the Ohio Reformatory for Women, and prohibit the sentencing of a female to any other institution.
The maximum sentence of imprisonment provided in such sections of the code for a misdemeanor is three years, and a minimum sentence is also provided.
Sections 2148-1, 2148-7 and 2148-9 were enacted long subsequent to the enactment of Section 12423, General Code, and the prosecuting attorney claims that Section 12423 is repealed by implication as to females, and that the provisions of Sections 2148-1, 2148-7 and 2148-9, subsequently enacted, control. This presents an interesting and important question.
It is admitted that a male person convicted of assault and battery can be imprisoned in a county jail or workhouse under a fixed sentence not to exceed six months, and fined a sum not exceeding two hundred dollars and costs, but it is claimed by the state that a female over sixteen years of age, convicted of the same offense, can be legally imprisoned in the state reformatory for women for an indeterminate period of not to exceed a maximum term of three years, and be fined a sum not exceeding two hundred dollars and costs.
We have carefully considered the authorities cited by counsel and cannot escape the conclusion that such construction of these sections of- the code would result in an unjust and unlawful dis*425crimination against females. We admit that the law would justify a different place for the imprisonment of women from that provided for the imprisonment of men. The reason for a separate place of imprisonment is obvious. We, however, cannot conceive of any just reason for the confinement of females for an indeterminate period, which might possibly extend for a period of three years, against a definite period for males, which cannot extend for a period of more than six months, for the commission of the same offense.
If it were necessary, this court would not hesitate to hold Sections '2148-7 and 2148-9 unconstitutional in so far as they relate to misdemeanors, because of their unjust discrimination against women.
We, however, do not find it necessary to so hold in the present case. It is a well-established rule of statutory construction that, when possible, statutes shall be so construed as to hold them constitutional. Section 12423 relates solely to assault and battery and has not been expressly repealed or amended.
We have a right to infer, therefore, that the Legislature, by the enactment of Sections 2148-1, 2148-7 and 2148-9 did not intend to repeal or amend such assault and battery statute, and we therefore hold that the assault and battery provision found in Section 12423, General Code, still remains in force and applies both to men and women.
The sentence of the Court of Common Pleas, therefore, is. illegal and should be reversed, vacated and set aside. The sentence of the trial court will, therefore, be reversed, and the cause *426remanded with instructions to resentence the plaintiff in error, under Section 12423, General C'ode, to imprisonment in the Reformatory for Women at Marysville for a period not exceeding six months, to a fine of not more than two hundred dollars, or both;
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded.
Allread and Ferneding, JJ., concur.