Opinion op the Court by
Chiep Justice Settle—Affirming.
■ The appellants, Robert Brown, Charlie Woods, and Pearl Wiggins were indicted, tried, and convicted of the crime of robbery, the punishment of each being fixed at confinement in the penitentiary two years. Appellants ask a reversal of the judgment of conviction.
Numerous errors are assigned, but only two of them are relied on for the reversal asked. The first complaint is that the court erred in overruling appellant’s demurrer to the indictment. At the close of the indictment appears the name of Gr. A. Denham, as commonwealth’s attorney of the Twenty-Sixth judicial district, when it should have contained the name *637of J. B. Snyder, present commonwealth’s attorney, of the judicial district. Denham was the predecessor in office of Snyder, and it is admitted that the indictment against appellants was written upon a partly printed form, which was one of a lot that had been procured by Denham while commonwealth’s attorney, and that in preparing the indictment Snyder forgot to erase the name of Denham and write his own in lieu thereof as commonwealth’s attorney. The error did not affect the validity of the indictment. In the case of Sims v. Commonwealth, 13 S. W., 1079, 12 Ky. Law Rep. 215, it is said: “The Code does not require the commonwealth’s attorney to sign the indictment. It makes no difference whether the person signing the indictment was a county or commonwealth’s attorney. The law did not require either to sign it. ’ ’
If, as thus held, neither the county nor the commonwealth’s attorney is required by the Code to sign the indictment, it necessarily follows that the signing or printing by mistake of the name of a person to it as commonwealth’s attorney who is not such officer would not invalidate it. The mistake could have no other effect that would the absence from the indictment of the name of the commonwealth’s attorney or county attorney. It is further insisted for appellants that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury as to the law in respect to larceny, and that the evidence upon which they were convicted, if it showed them guilty of any crime, more directly tended to prove them guilty of larceny than robbery; and, $6 being'the amount of which the owner was deprived by them, they should have been convicted of petit larcney if convicted at all; whereas the instructions that were given only contained the law as to robbery, and compelled the jury to find appellants guilty *638of that crime, or to acquit them. It remains to be seen whether the evidence supports this contention. That introduced by the commonwealth conduced to prove that William Roberts and another man named Johnson were in the city of Middlesboro on the night of the robbery, having gone there from the state of Virginia.' Together they walked along one of the streets of the city until they reached a point in front of the Shady Grove saloon and near a restaurant, where they met two negro men and a negro woman. The negro woman was Pearl Wiggins, and one of the negro men the appellant Charles Woods. The other man was a one-eyed negro, but there was contrariety of evidence as to whether he was the appellant, Robert Brown, or another one-eyed negro known as “Bram.” Upon meeting the three negroes something was said by Johnson to them, and the appellant Charles Woods then started away with Johnson, ostensibly for the purpose of conducting him to a barber’s shop, leaving Roberts with the other negroes. At that juncture Pearl Wiggins asked Roberts for a dime to buy a bucket of beer. Evidently intending to comply with her request, Roberts drew some money from his pocket, and after he did so the one-eyed negro man with Pearl Wiggins suddenly, and with force and violence, snatched or wrenched the money from Roberts’ hand, and with equal suddenness swiftly fled and escaped with it. The amount thus taken was $6. The arrest of the three appellants speedily followed. Mrs. Ger:ish, a witness for the commonwealth, was standing-in the door of the restaurant, in plain view of the parties, when the robbery occurred, and claimed to have seen the entire transaction. She testified that the negro man, who snatched the money from Roberta’ hand and ran away with it was a one-eyed man, and *639identified the appellant Brown as the gnilty person. Two other witnesses testified that he was in a negro restaurant on an alley in the rear of the Shady Grove saloon' immediately before the robbery, and one of them said that he was then trying to borrow a bucket to get some beer for Pearl Wiggins. The evidence fails to show that he was seen at the place of the robbery after its occurrence. The appellants, Brown and Pearl Wiggins, admitted all the facts as to the robbery, except they claimed that it was the one-eyed negro Bram, and not Brown, who siezed and fled with Roberts’ money. They also proved by two or more witnesses that Bram resembles Brown; that he, too, was seen near the scene of the robbery shortly before it was committed, and that immediately thereafter he left Middlesboro, and has not since returned.
While the evidence was conflicting as to the identity of Brown and as to Woods’ connection with the crime, we are unable to say that it furnished no basis for the verdict of the jury. It was for the jury to say whether Brown or Bram was the money-snatcher, and whether Woods and Pearl Wiggins were aiders and abettors in the commission of the crime. We are not at a loss to understand how the jury constructed from the evidence as a whole the theory that each of the appellants contributed to the crime charged; the part assigned Woods being to get Johnson separated from Roberts that he might not assist the latter to resist the robbers, the act of Pearl Wiggins in asking of Roberts the dime to buy beer being a subterfuge to get him to pull the money from his pocket that Brown might be afforded the opportunity to forcibly take it from him, and Brown’s part of the enterprise to possess himself by force of the money after Roberts drew it from his pocket. The evidence clearly shows that *640force was required and used to deprive Roberts of his money, and to constitute robbery the person robbed must be deprived of his property by force, or by putting him in fear. In Davis v. Commonwealth, 54 S. W. 959, 21 Ky. Law Rep., 1295, it was held the fact that the defendant snatched money from the hand of another was evidence of actual violence, which entitled the prosecution to an instruction to the jury to convict if the money was taken against the owner’s will, by actual force. And in Jones v. Commonwealth, 112 Ky., 689, 66 S. W., 633, 57 L. R. A., 432, 99 Am. St. Rep., 330, it was also held that, where defendant snatched a pocketbook from the hand of another so quickly that he had no chance to actively resist, there was such a taking by violence as authorized a conviction under an indictment for robbery.
The trial court did not err in f ailing to give an instruction under which the jury might have found appellants guilty of larceny. There was indeed no proof of larceny; it was wholly and altogether to the effect that Roberts’ money was taken from him by force and with such violence and suddenness as gave him no opportunity to resist the robbers. The crime was therefore robbery, and the instruction authorizing the jury to find appellants guilty of robbery, together with the one as to the reasonable doubt, gave to the jury all the law of the case.
Wherefore the judgment is affirmed.