This is an action on the case brought to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff’s intestate a passenger on one of the defendants’ trains. The injuries wore fatal, and are alleged to have been the result of negligence on the part of the defendants’ servants in the management of the train. The verdict was for the plaintiff in the sum of five thousand dollars, and the case comes before this court upon exceptions and a motion for a new trial.
The first exception to the admission of the book containing the rules of the defendant corporation, is not insisted upon in the argument and cannot be sustained. The admission of the book as part of the evidence in the case for the purposes and under the limitations stated in the charge (to which the bill of exceptions authorizes the court to refer) was not erroneous; and the use of it by the jury in their room after retiring to consider the verdict, was within the discretion of the justice presiding at the trial.
Exceptions are also taken to, the refusal of the presiding justice *576to give two specific instructions requested by the defendants, upon the subject of contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff’s intestate, an¿ to certain extracts from the charge as it was given, relating principally to the same topic.
Although the precise language of the first request was not adopted by the court, the right of the plaintiff to recover was made to depend throughout the charge, upon proof to the satisfaction of the jury that the injuries were received by the fault of the defendant company without fault on the part of the plaintiff’s intestate contributing to the result; and the degree of care required on either side, failure to exercise which would constitute a fault, is stated in language to which no exception is taken. It can only be said that the first requested instruction was refused in the precise terms in which it is drawn: but this affords no ground for exception since its entire substance was covered by the charge as given.
The bill of exceptions further states that the judge gave appropriate instructions as to ordinary care and contributory negligence, but then follow certain sentences from the chai’ge, to which exception is taken.
We do not perceive that this exception is urged in argument, and upon examination we fail to see that whether standing alone or taken in their proper connection with the instructions of which they form a part, they are not, so far as they touch upon any matter of law, in exact accordance with well recognized and established legal principles.
The remaining exception has reference to the refusal of the court to give the instruction last requested.
This was substantially a request in a case where the issue was upon the negligence of the parties and where the testimony upon vital points was not only more or less remote and uncertain, but seriously conflicting, to withdraw from' the consideration of the jury and to determine, as matter of law, the question whether a certain state of facts, claimed on the one side to exist and denied on the other, would or. would not constitute negligence on the part of the plaintiff’s intestate. To grant the request, or at least to sustain exceptions for not granting it, would be to make the *577question of negligence, upon admitted facts, in all eases, in the first instance, a question purely of law. If it were erroneous to refuse this, it would have been equally erroneous for the court to decline upon request to declare whether any other state of facts, which it would be possible, or at least justifiable, for the jury to find from the evidence, would or would not constitute negligence on the one side or the other.
The decisions and the practice in the courts of this state do not go to that extent. The law establishes the standard of care required in given cases. It furnishes general rules and principles—as given to the jury at this trial— by which to determine whether the conduct of men, under varying circumstances, has been char-terized by a reasonable degree of discretion, or by the absence of it, whether there has been in any instance a departure from that standard. Whether there has been an absence of the degree of care required, is usually a question of fact. More especially should it be so regarded where the facts must be evolved from a mass of testimony more or less doubtful or conflicting, and where it might be impossible for any number of instructions based upon supposed facts to cover the actual finding of the jury.
We are aware that this court, in Webb v. P. & K. Railroad, 57 Maine, 117, 131, has said in substance that possibly there might be a case where the facts were so clear and free from controversy as to make the question of negligence a question of law, and that this doctrine may perhaps have been confirmed by the recent case of Kellogg v. Curtis, 65 Maine, 59 ; but we know of no case in this state in which it has been held to be error on the part of the judge presiding at the trial of a ease like this to decline to select a series of facts possible to exist from the testimony and state to the jury as matter of law whether such facts, if found, would or wo'uld not constitute negligence.
In cases like the present, which involve the credibility and the accuracy of witnesses, where the questions in controversy are questions of fact, where the vital issue is to be determined by drawing the correct inference from facts which immediately preceded and immediately followed the principal transaction, and when it is possible to perceive more than one decision at which the tribunal *578established for determining questions of fact might arrive without being open to the charge of manifestly disregarding the evidence, it is not the duty of the judge to anticipate every possible finding of the jury and state to them whether negligence is or is not the legal inference from each. Tn view of the instructions given, the refusal to give the last requested instruction affords no ground for exception. However true it may be as a proposition of fact, that the acts set forth in said request would constitute negligence on the part of the plaintiff’s intestate, notwithstanding, even, it might be the duty of the court (if the facts supposed were the real ones,) to set aside a verdict of the jury to the contrary, as against evidence, . yet after full and appropriate instructions on this subject, it was not error on the part of the judge to decline to assume these facts as an hypothesis and declare that they would constitute negligence. Clear definitions to the jury of what the law means by the term negligence, and' the control of the court properly exercised over verdicts erroneously rendered, will be adequate to preserve the legal rights of parties without requiring the judge presiding at a jury trial first to determine what may be the possible phases of disputed facts, and then to withdraw each from the consideration of the jury and say as matter of law whether negligence on the one side or the other does or does not result as a legal conclusion.
The exceptions state that after declining to give the requested instruction, the judge left it to the jury to say whether upon the whole facts Mrs. Hobbs’ negligence or want of due and ordinary care contributed at all to produce the injury which resulted in her death. This was correct.
Upon the motion for new trial on the alleged ground that the verdict is against law and evidence, much that has been said in regard to the exceptions is pertinent.
- That the defendant corporation was in fault, that at the time and place of the injury it was conducting the train on which the plaintiff’s intestate had taken passage without reasonable regard for the security of passengers and in violation of provisions of law intended to promote the safety of travelers upon railways, are conclusions to which if the jury were not compelled, they were at'least justified in reaching. • Whether such fault on the part of the *579defendants was the sole cause of the injury, or whether the negligence of the plaintiff’s intestate contributed in any degree to cause it, are questions upon which the jury have passed under correct rulings on matters of law. After careful examination of the case we do not find such disregard of the instructions of the court or such errors in findings of facts as will justify us in setting aside the verdict.
A partial obscurity rests upon the case as to what took place at the very time when Mrs. Hobbs left the train. But if the jury fonnd that at that moment the backing train had halted and by a sudden start, she while in t.he act of alighting was thrown under the wheels, or if they found that the train while backing, did not stop entirely, but that Mrs. Hobbs, while standing upon the platform of the car and not attempting to alight, was thrown off and under the wheels by a quick sudden increased motion of the train, we could not say that either finding was manifestly against the evidence in the case, or that it was easy to find any theory which would better explain the facts of the ease, than one of these; and if the jury were warranted upon the testimony in finding either of the above theories to be facts, then the other testimony in the case clearly justified them under the rulings given in finding that the defendants were liable. Sauter v. N. Y. C. & H. R. Railroad, New York case not yet reported.
The motion founded on the alleged ground that the damages are excessive, is also overruled.
There is no evidence of misconduct, mistake or prejudice on the part of the jury except the presumption which it is claimed arises from the verdict itself. In this class of cases, wide discretion is left to the jury in the assessment of damages, and it is clearly at present the intent of the laws of this state that it should be so.
We know of no standard by which it can be determined that the sum of §5000 for injuries sustained under the circumstances developed in the testimony in this case and resulting in death, are excessive. Motion and exceptions overruled.
Appleton, C. J., Barrows, DaNFObth and Peters, JJ., concurred.