At about half past six o’clock in the morning of December 28, 1914, plaintiff was struck by an automobile owned by appellant. Plaintiff was employed by the Spokane Street Railway Company in sweeping snow from the car tracks on Monroe street, a few feet north of the intersection of Bridge street. There had been a new fall of about six inches of snow during the night, and a snow plow had been driven over the track. It was the duty of the plaintiff to sweep the rail clear and pick out the ice and snow from around the switch tongue. While engaged in his work, he was facing north. The car approached from the south. Just before he was struck, he was stooping over, engaged in clearing the switch tongue. He raised himself to his full height, and was almost immediately struck *437by the car. There is sufficient in the record to warrant the finding of the jury that no horn was sounded, and it was possible for the jury to find, also, that the lamps on the automobile were not lit.
Appellant relies upon that line of cases, of which Jones v. Wiese, 88 Wash. 356, 153 Pac. 330, is a type, holding that it is incumbent upon a pedestrian to take some care for his own safety, and that if he negligently puts himself in the way of traffic, and is injured, his injury will be attributed to his own negligence, and a recovery denied him.
Respondent was on the street at a time when there was but very little traffic. His labor demanded that he work on the side of the street that was in the path of traffic. The driver of the automobile might have seen him in ample time to stop his machine. He says he could have stopped it in seven or eight feet at the rate he was going, but that he'did not see respondent.
We think the holding of the court in Lewis v. Seattle Taxicab Co., 72 Wash. 320, 130 Pac. 341, is conclusive of respondent’s right to recover:
“The degree of care required of such a person of course varies with the circumstances. It depends largely upon the place and upon the condition of the street; whether the street is crowded with traffic or comparatively free therefrom; whether he enters the street at a place usually used by travelers on foot, and perhaps on many other conditions, but the degree of care required is ordinary care under the circumstances, and this as we say may be vastly different from ordinary care with reference to crossing fixed tracks upon which railway or street cars are operated.”
See, also Budman v. Seattle Elec. Co., 61 Wash. 281, 112 Pac. 356; Hillebrant v. Manz, 71 Wash. 250, 128 Pac. 892; Mickelson v. Fischer, 81 Wash. 423, 142 Pac. 1160.
Exceptions are taken to some of the court’s instructions, but we find no prejudicial error in them.
Affirmed.
Ellis, C. J., Morris, Main, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.