*54The opinion of the Court was delivered by
From a sentence of imprisonment at hard labor for two years the defendant appeals. The indictment contained two counts: 1, for inflicting wounds upon and cutting Elvira Gilkie with a dangerous weapon with intent to murder, not lyiug in wait, etc.; 2, for same acts committed upon Hadley Hess with intent to inflict wounds less than mayhem. Rev. Stats. See. 791.
There was a motion to quash for duplicity, iu that two distinct offences with different penalties are charged in the same indictment. The motion was properly overruled. Each offense was laid in a separate count. State vs. Depass, 31 Ann. 487, where the point is treated at length. State vs. Prosser, Cheeres, 103; Cash vs. State, 10 Humph. 111. No complaint could he made if the ruling was error, since the State offered to enter a nol. pros, on the second count, and on the defendant objecting, and insisting on a verdict, the jury returned a verdict on that count instanter.
Exception was made to the refusal of the Judge to charge, “ if the offence he such that had death ensused, it would not have been murder, the jury should acquit.” The jury have the power, and it is their duty, to find a prisoner guilty of a less offence than that charged, if the evidence does not warrant a conviction of the greater, and therefore to tell them they were bound to acquit under those circumstances would he error. The cases cited by defendant’s counsel are under a system which does not permit, or did not when they' were decided, a verdict for a minor offence included in a charge of a graver one of same class. The same reason applies to the refusal to unqualifiedly charge “ if the jury find that the accused cut FJvira Gilkie in a sudden affray in heat and passion without previous malice, they cannot find him guilty of the offence charged.” The charge was given with the qualification that they might return a verdict of guilty for a less offence than that charged.
The jury returned a verdict in these words: “ we, the jury, find the accused guilty of an assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill.” The Judge, thinking the verdict was not responsive to the charge, asked the jurors if they intended to find that the accused had inflicted no wound on the woman alleged to have been cut. The foreman replied the intention of the jury was to find the accused guilty of the offence, next highest in grade after that charged. The court informed them they had not done that by' the verdict rendered, when all of them expressed a desire to render a verdict such as the foreman had stated. They were polled and each repeated what had already been said. The Judge informed them they had a right to correct their verdict so as to make it conform to their finding. The jnry retired, and *55on reappearing rendered the following verdict: “ we, the jury, find the accused guilty of malting an assault with a dangerous weapon with intent to kill, inflicting wounds loss than mayhem,” to all of which excexitiou was taken.
There was manifestly no attempt by the Judge to influence the verdict, but only to assist the jury in putting in form what they had found. A justly esteemed authority in criminal prosecutions has held that the court lias a right to direct the jury to reconsider their verdict before it is recorded, and it is its duty to do so when satisfied there has been a X>alpable mistake. People vs. Bush, 3 Parker, 552. The Judge may require the jury to pass upon the indictment in such form of words as shall constitute a sufficient finding in point of law. Proffat Jury Trials, Sec. 459.
Wharton says: Until the jury are discharged the verdict may be amended. If there is any informality, uncertainty, or impropriety about a verdict, the court may require the jury to amend it before they separate. Even where a verdict of “ not guilty” was pronounced by one of the jurors, which was entered by the clerk in the minute book and the prisoner discharged, it was held that upon it appearing that the verdict the jury intended was “ guilty,” the record could be legally amended, the verdict guilty recorded, and the prisoner committed. 3 Wharton Crim. Law, §3195.
The Judge in the case at bar did not go as far as these authorities warrant, nor do we meau by citing them to entirely approve all of what was there said. He did not direct them at all, nor require them to do anything, but simply enabled them to do what they wanted, but did not know how to do until instructed. Judges cannot shut their eyes to the fact that the modern comxrosition of juries with us is not a guarantee of intelligence, and it is of every day observation that many of those who are by law declared competent jurors are incompetent to understand a verdict of more than two words, and would be staggered if required to frame a longer one. While we should promptly check an inferior Judge in an attempt to influence or direct a jury improperly, we must not hinder his efforts to enlighten them when he does not go beyond the bounds permitted by law.
Arrest of judgment was moved on the ground that the indictment does not charge an offence known to the laws of this State in this, that the charge is for cutting with a dangerous weapon while the statute makes penal only shooting, stabbing, or thrusting with, etc. It is argued that this section of the criminal law has undergone legislative construction, and the omission of the word “cut” has been impliedly declared material by an amendment inserting that word. The legislature did amend Sec. 790 by inserting “ cut, strike,” along with “ shoot, *56stab, and- thrust,” and singular enough, did not amend Sec. 791, which has the same verbiage, and needed it as much. Acts 1882, p. 40.
It is also urged that the distinction between the words cut and stab was observed in an early case by this Court, where authority was cited for holding that an indictment for cutting was not supported by evidence of stabbing. State vs. Patza, 3 Ann. 514.
Great and beneficial changes have been made in criminal pleading and practice since that decision, not the least important of which is the legalization of a verdict of an offence not charged in 'the indictment, provided it be less in magnitude and of the same generic class. State vs. Ford, 30 Ann. 313.
The gravamen of the charge is the wounding with a dangerous weapon with criminal intent, and the manner of using the weapon ought to be of minor importance. It would be a reproach if, by our law, stabbing one to death was punishable and cutting one to death was not, and it would be a return to those niceties of construction which the lawyers in the infancy of criminal procedure inherited from the schoolmen, to make the degree of guilt depend upon whether the criminal had thrust his weapon forward in the bosom of his victim, or had drawn its sharp edge across his throat.
In disposing of the present case it is not necessary to say whether the charge, as made in the indictment, is embraced within either of the words employed in Sec. 791 of the Revised Statutes. The offence, described and denounced in Sec. 794—whoever shall with a dangerous weapon, or with intent to kill, inflict a wound less than mayhem—is the crime! of which the defendant was convicted, as is manifest from the terms of the verdict. It is an offence of less magnitude than that for which he was indicted, and of the same class, and under the salutary reform in criminal practice, already noted, the jury was authorized to convict of a less offence under the indictment for a greater.
Judgment affirmed.