On 18 Oсtober 1993, defendant was indicted for three counts of involuntary manslaughter arising out of a collision between two boats, one of which was operated by defendant. A jury found him guilty of all three сharges, specifically finding in each case that defendant was “[operating his motorboat while under the influence of an impairing substance” and “[operating his motorboat after having consumed sufficient alcohol that he ha[d], at any relevant time after the boating, an alcohol concentration of .10 or more.” Defendant was sentenced to conseсutive terms of three years’ imprisonment for each offense. On appeal, the Court of Appeals held that “[d]ue process . . . required the trial court to instruct on the lesser included offense of DWI boating as an alternative to the choices of either guilty or not guilty of involuntary manslaughter” and ordered a new trial.
State v. Hudson,
The State’s evidence tended to show that on 6 June 1993, defendant, Amy Stevens, and Jason Charlton traveled from defendant’s home on Lake Wylie to the Bourbon Street Yacht Club in defendant’s nineteen-foot bass boat. They arrived at the club at approximately 9:00 p.m. During the сourse of the evening, defendant was observed consuming alcoholic beverages. At approximately midnight, defendant, Stevens, Charlton, and Tracey Hamilton left the club in defendant’s boаt and headed south on the lake. Defendant was operating the boat.
That same evening, Blake “Rusty” Hill was traveling on Lake Wylie in his twenty-six-foot cabin cruiser. Hill was proceeding north at a sрeed of approximately eighteen to twenty-two miles per hour when he glanced toward the shore to look at a miniature lighthouse. As Hill directed his attention back to the water in frоnt of him, his cabin cruiser collided with defendant’s boat. The collision instantly killed Stevens, Charlton, and Hamilton.
■ Sharon Pierce Porterfield, associate director of medical records at Carolinas Medical Center, testifiеd that a blood-alcohol test conducted at the hospital approximately an hour and a half after the collision revealed defendant’s blood-alcohol concentration to be 0.239.
Two accident-reconstruction experts testified on defendant’s behalf. Each stated that, at the moment of impact, Hill’s larger boat was traveling at apprоximately twenty miles per hour while defendant’s boat was either idling in the water or moving at a speed of less than two miles per hour. Both experts also testified that the larger boat overran the smaller.
The Court of Appeals set aside defendant’s three involuntary manslaughter convictions and ordered a new trial, holding that the separate charge of operating а motor boat while impaired (DWI boating), see N.C.G.S. § 75A-10 (1994), should have been submitted to the jury as a lesser-included offense.
Involuntary manslaughter is “ ‘the unintentional killing of a human being without malice, proximately caused by (1) an unlawful
act not amounting to a felony nor naturally dangerous to human life, or (2) a culpably negligent act or omission.’ ”
State v. McGill,
Thе State argues first that defendant waived his right to raise this issue before the Court of Appeals because he failed to ask the trial court to instruct the jury on DWI boating as a lesser-included offense of involuntary manslaughter and further failed to assign the issue as° error on appeal. This argument has merit. In
Collins,
we held that earlier cases “implying] that a defendant is entitled to assign error to thе trial court’s failure to give instructions on lesser-included offenses when there was no specific prayer for such instructions or objection to the instructions given . . . are disapproved and are no longer authoritative.”
State v. Collins,
The rule in this jurisdiction has long been as follows:
“When a defendant is indicted for a criminal offense, he may be convicted of the charged offense or a lesser included offеnse when the greater offense charged in the bill of indictment contains all of the essential elements of the lesser, all of which could be proved by proof of the allegations in the indictment.”
[A] 11 of the essential elements оf the lesser crime must also be essential elements included in the greater crime. If the lesser crime has an essential element which is not completely covered by the greater сrime, it is not a lesser included offense. The determination is made on a definitional, not a factual basis.
Weaver,
The elements of involuntary manslaughter are: (1) an unintentional killing; (2) proximately caused by either (a) an unlawful act not amounting to a felony and not ordinarily dangerous to human life, or (b) culpable negligence.
McGill,
We therefore hold that DWI boating is not a lesser-included offense of involuntary manslaughter. Accordingly, defendant was not entitled to an instruction on DWI boating when the indictments against him charged only that he feloniously killed the victims.
Defendant raised additional issues in his brief to the Court of Appeals which that court deemed to be unlikely to recur upon retrial and therefore did not reach. For the reasons stated, the decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the Court of Appeals for consideration of those issues.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The statute was amended in 1995 to provide that a blood-alcohol concentration of 0.08 or more will suffice to prove the second element of the offense.
