The respondent was convicted of manslaughter. He thereupon filed a motion for a new trial which was denied by the presiding Justice, and the case comes before this court on appeal from that decision under R. S., Chap. 136, Sec. 28. No exceptions have been reserved, and the single question now before us is whether, in view of all the testimony in the case, the jury were warranted in believing beyond a reasonable doubt, and therefore in finding, that the respondent was guilty of the crime charged against him. State v. Mulkerrin, 112 Maine, 544. State v. Albanes, 109 Maine, 199. State v. Lambert, 97 Maine, 51.
On the afternoon of July 29, 1925, the respondent, a young man twenty-three years old, picked up the deceased, Irving Upton, a ten-year old boy, and tossed him from the float in front of the yacht club below Bangor into the deep water of the river which flowed by. The boy struck partially on his back, and being unable to swim, with only a slight movement of one hand, sank and was drowned. The sole eye witness, Charles H. Jenkins, a boy eleven years old, gives in his testimony this graphic description of the respondent’s act: “Well, Pond came up and took Irving and he was going to throw him in, and Irving said ‘I cannot swim,’ and I said ‘No, he cannot,’ and Pond took him and threw him in.”
The respondent in his defense testifies that the deceased boy consented to all that was done. He declares that he asked the boy, ‘ ‘ Can you swim?” and received the reply, “Yes, I can,” and, “let her go.” He says he then dropped the lad from the slip believing that he could swim.
That the respondent dove and made an earnest endeavor to rescue the boy after he was in the water, is unquestioned. His efforts unfortunately, however, were unavailing. After sinking once the boy never rose, and his body was recovered some hours later when the river was dragged with grappling irons.
*455The respondent’s claim’of consent and statement that he could swim, by the deceased, is attacked by the State, which offered the testimony of Officer Golden who assisted in the search for the boy’s body. The officer testifies that the respondent at that time did not assert consent by the deceased or a statement of his ability to swim, but told the officer that “I was fooling with the fellow and tossed him overboard; I thought he could swim.”
The State offered the testimony of playmates and members of the family of the deceased from which the jury, we think, could have well found that the deceased was unable to swim, and unless they believed the respondent’s story, which evidently they did not, were justified in drawing the inference that he had no ground for belief that the victim of his horse-play could support or propel himself in the water into which he threw him.
Manslaughter is the unlawful killing of another without malice aforethought either express or implied, and may be either voluntary, as when the act is committed with a real desire and purpose to lull but in the heat of passion occasioned by sudden provocation; or involuntary, as when the death of another is caused unintentionally by some unlawful act not amounting to a felony nor likely to endanger life, or while doing some lawful act in an unlawful manner. State v. Conley, 39 Maine, 78. Commonwealth v. Webster, 5 Cush., (Mass.), 295. Commonwealth v. Pierce, 138 Mass., 165. 13 R. C. L., 784. R. S., Chap. 120, Sec. 2.
It is accordingly held that it is manslaughter when one kills another as the result of a practical joke which was a surprise to the deceased, and where death is imputable to physical agencies put in motion by the perpetrator. Wharton on Homicide, 346. Within this rule falls death resulting from building a fire around a drunken man Errington’s Case, 2 Lewin C. C., 217; upsetting a cart as a joke, Rex v. Sullivan, 7 Car. & P., 641; administering as a joke excessive quantities of intoxicating liquor, Rex v. Martin, 3 Car. & P., 211; throwing a thief into a pond without apparent intention to drown him, Rex v. Fray, East., P. C., 236; and in close analogy to the facts of the instant case, seizing and carrying a boy eleven years old into the deep waters of the Smoky Hill River where he was drowned, State v. Radford, 59 Kansas, 591.
That the drowning of the deceased was unintentional on the part of this respondent we have no doubt. But from the facts appearing *456in the record we are convinced that his act in throwing this boy into the Penobscot River, where as the evidence shows the water was twenty feet deep, was manslaughter. If his seizure and toss of the boy into the river be viewed either as a minor assault and battery, or, as in State v. Radford, supra, gross and culpable negligence, or both, the essential elements of the crime of manslaughter are present. To quote Bishop on Criminal Law, 6th Ed., Vol. 1, Sections 313, 314; “There is little distinction, except in degree, between a positive will to dp wrong and an indifference whether wrong is done or not'. . . . Every act of gross carelessness, even in the performance of what is lawful, and, a fortiori, of what is not lawful, and every negligent omission of a legal duty, whereby death ensues, is indictable either as murder or manslaughter.”
A careful study of the occurrences of this tragedy which were either uncontroverted or which from the evidence the jury were warranted in believing took place, not only justified but demanded the verdict rendered.
Appeal denied.
Motion for a new trial overruled.
Judgment for the State. ■