This action was brought by the plaintiff as assignee of C. W. Cavanaugh, the owner of an automobile insured by the plaintiff, to recover damages resulting to the automobile as a result of a collision with one of defendant’s cars, to which claim the plaintiff insurance company was subrogated.
The collision occurred at about midnight October 5, 1915, at the intersection of Forty-fifth street and Sixteenth avenue, Brooklyn. Forty-fifth street runs east and west and Sixteenth avenue runs north and south. The automobile was proceeding westerly on Forty-fifth street and the trolley car was proceeding northerly on Sixteenth avenue. According to plaintiff’s witnesses, the automobile, which was being driven by Cavanaugh, slowed down to between six and ten miles an hour when one hundred feet from the crossing and approached the crossing slowly and under control. At this rate of speed the automobile could be stopped within five feet. Cavanaugh looked to the left as he approached the crossing but his view in the direction from which the car was approaching was cut off by a corner building until he was within twenty-five or thirty feet of the track, at which point he saw the car *6approaching at a rapid rate of speed, distant from one-half to three-fourths of a block away. Concluding that he had time to cross, Cavanaugh proceeded, but the automobile was struck in the side near the driver’s seat by the front of the car, throwing one of the passengers out and damaging the automobile. As the car approached, no warning by gong or otherwise was given of an intention to attempt to cross ahead of the automobile. According to defendant’s witnesses, the automobile had a speed of over- twenty-five miles an hour and the car was not traveling more than twelve to fifteen miles an hour. The automobile was first observed by the motorman when the car was thirty feet from the near corner of Forty-fifth street, when the motorman applied the emergency brake and stopped the car within fifty feet; further, the automobile went upon the track when the front of the car was only five feet away from it.' While the jury might well have found the driver of the automobile guilty of contributory negligence upon his own testimony, the question was one of fact for the jury. A serious question is raised by an exception taken to the charge, dealing with the effect to be given to the city ordinance which provides that vehicles going in a northerly or southerly direction shall have the right of way over any vehicle going in an easterly or westerly direction. (See Code Ord. 1915, chap. 24, art. 2, § 15, subd. 1; Cosby’s Code Ord. [Anno. 1915] p. 336.) The learned trial justice charged the jury: “ The defendant has' put in evidence a city ordinance, which you are bound to consider in determining whether or not Cavanaugh was guilty of contributory negligence. That ordinance provides, in substance, that vehicles going in a northerly or southerly direction shall have the right of way over those going in an easterly or westerly direction. In this instance the trolley car was going in a northerly direction, and, under that ordinance, had the right of way over the automobile. That meant that if they arrived together at the point where the highways upon which they were traveling met, it would be the duty of the operator of the automobile, Cavanaugh, to wait and give the trolley car an opportunity to pass, it having the right of way. You should take that into consideration in determining whether or not Cavanaugh *7exercised that degree of care which an ordinarily prudent man would exercise under such circumstances.”
No exception was taken to this charge, but plaintiff’s counsel excepted to the court’s refusal to charge “ That if they find that the front of Cavanaugh’s automobile was from 20 to 25 feet from the trolley car, at a time when the car approaching, on the track was from half to three-quarters of a block away, that as matter of law the trolley car did not at that time have the right of way.”
The record shows that after the jury retired, the court received the following message in writing from the jury: “ Assuming the trolley car is 125 feet from the intersection and the automobile is 30 feet from the same intersection, who has the right of way? ”
The court sent the following answer in writing after submitting the same to the respective counsel: “ Under the ordinance referred to in the charge the trolley car had the right of way over the automobile. It was, therefore, the duty of the automobile to allow the trolley car an opportunity to pass if, in the opinion of the jury, the latter was likely to reach the crossing at the time the automobile intended to cross. The omission to do so may be regarded by the jury as a failure to exercise that degree of care which an ordinarily prudent person would exercise under like circumstances. The respective distances, fromi the intersection of the streets, of the trolley car and of the automobile, as relating to the right to continue on their several courses, is a question of fact to be determined by the jury in the light of all the facts found by the jury to have been proven and the inferences to be drawn from such facts.”
Plaintiff’s counsel excepted to thése additional instructions and requested the court to charge “ That it was the duty of the trolley car to be under control approaching 45th Street, that it was the duty of the trolley car to avoid a collision and to allow the automobile to pass if the automobile would apparently reach the crossing at the time the trolley car would reach the said crossing, and that the distances mentioned in the communication sent in by the jury are such that the question of the right of way has not arisen.” The court declined to charge except as already charged, and plaintiff excepted.
*8It is contended that the court’s answer to the jury’s inquiry was tantamount to an instruction that if the driver of the automobile, when 25 feet distant from the track, saw a car 125 feet on his left and approaching the crossing, it was the duty of the driver to stop and to allow the car to cross first. Such a charge would be erroneous (Demarest v. Forty-second St., M. & St. N. Ave. R. Co., 104 App. Div. 503, 506), for it would not take into consideration the relative speed of the vehicles or the right of the driver of the automobile to assume that the motorman would have his car under reasonable control as he approached the crossing. While the opening sentence of the court’s reply to the jury’s inquiry is susceptible of the interpretation placed upon it by the appellant, in fairness to the court and to the litigants this one sentence should not be stripped from its context but should be interpreted in the light of the qualifying and explanatory statements immediately following it. The court correctly stated what this right of way, which it had just referred to, meant and what duty it imposed upon the driver of the automobile, saying: “ It was, therefore, the duty of the automobile to allow the trolley car an opportunity to pass if, in the opinion of the jury, the latter was likely to reach the crossing at the time the automobile intended to cross.” That this was correct is shown by the opinion of Mr. Justice Laughlin in McCarragher v. Proal (114 App. Div. 470, 477). In that case counsel for the defendant requested the court to charge: “ I ask your Honor to charge the jury, in view of the charge just made, that the ordinance' provides that if a vehicle in the city of New York is going north or south, and if another vehicle is going east or west, and they come near to each other at a street intersection, and there is any imminence of a collision, the vehicle east and west must wait and let the vehicle going north and south pass.”
Mr. Justice Laughlin said: “ If the bicycle and automobile were approaching the point at which their lines of travel would intersect substantially at the same time and so near that there was imminence of a collision, and it was not the duty of the bicycle rider to slow down and stop if necessary to avoid a collision, it is difficult to see the object of the ordinance and to know what would constitute a violation of *9it. If the facts were as recited in the request to charge, I think the plaintiff in going ahead did not accord to the defendant the right of way, and if so, he was guilty of a violation of the ordinance and that should have been considered by the jury with the other evidence tending to show contributory negligence on his part.”
As the court in effect said in the main charge, the ordinance does not attempt to fix the relative rights of vehicles that arrive at crossings at the same instant. The court said: “ That meant that if they arrived together at the point where the highways upon which they were traveling met, it would be the duty of the operator of the automobile, Cavanaugh, to wait and give the trolley car an opportunity to pass, it having the right of way.” Heavy and rapidly moving vehicles, arriving together at a point where highways meet are almost inevitably bound to collide. The object of the ordinance is to avoid such collisions. To do this, it is necessary to exact vigilance and fix the relative rights and obligations of the vehicles as they approach a common crossing. In these collisions at crossings, one of the common causes is uncertainty on the part of the driver of one vehicle as to what the other intends to do. The ordinance seeks to eliminate this uncertainty by establishing a rule for the management of vehicles approaching common crossings where, if neither vehicle altered its speed or course, a collision would be imminent. Accordingly, the ordinance has declared which vehicle must give way and slow down or stop when, in the exercise of reasonable care and foresight, it is apparent that a collision is likely to occur. This rule substitutes reasonable certainty for confusion and uncertainty and affords a guide to each driver as to what the other ought to dp and, if law abiding, will do in such an emergency. The rule is not arbitrary and confers no absolute rights. It takes into account the exercise of reasonable judgment, the obligation of drivers of vehicles to have their vehicles under reasonable control at street crossings and the obligation to avoid inflicting injury upon another where it may be avoided in the exercise of reasonable .care. At the same time, in the conflict that nearly always exists respecting the exercise of reasonable care, the rule as to the right of way affords a very persuasive *10and satisfactory measure of responsibility for collisions at street crossings.
In the case at bar, while the significance of the ordinance as a measure of care might well have been more fully explained to the jury, there was no legal error in the charge as a whole, and, in view of the circumstances of this case, where the driver of the automobile was only going, according to* his own testimony, at about six miles .an hour and could have stopped within five feet, and yet deliberately proceeded slowly across the track in the face of a rapidly-moving trolley car, which was almost upon him by the time the front of the automobile went upon the track, the collision occurring before the automobile had proceeded more than six feet, the verdict of the jury should not be disturbed because of one sentence in the court’s charge, disregarding the context.
The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.