The plaintiff was driving an inclosed automobile in a westerly direction upon a certain highway. The defendant’s train was moving westerly upon railway tracks lying to the north of the highway and nearly paralleling the same. At a point where the highway crossed the railway at an acute angle the automobile of the plaintiff and the locomotive of the defendant came into collision with the result that the plaintiff was injured.
The facts most favorable to the. plaintiff are these: The plaintiff was traveling at six miles an hour and the train was traveling at forty miles an hour. The plaintiff turned and looked to the rear when 125 feet from the crossing. At this point he could see down the track to the east fully 300 feet. The plaintiff did not see the train and the train was not then in sight. The plaintiff looked again when 40 feet from the crossing and saw no train, though he could see to the east for a distance of more than 300 feet. As the train was traveling less than seven times as fast as the automobile, which had 40 feet to go, while the train had 300 feet, it is clear that the train was then in sight had the plaintiff exerted effort sufficient to see it. The plaintiff continued his journey to the crossing without looking again, and the collision occurred.
The case is unusual in three respects. 1. Owing to the fact that the railway and the highway were almost parallel the approaching train presented to view little more than the forward end of its locomotive. 2. Owing to the same fact the plaintiff in order to *542see must have turned his head to face almost completely to the rear. 3. The automatic crossing bell familiar to the plaintiff was not ringing. We think that the case of Elias v. Lehigh Valley R. R. Co. (226, N. Y. 154) is a strong authority for the plaintiff. In that case the plaintiff, who was driving a team towards a railway crossing, looked to the east when 80 feet from the crossing. At this time he could see to the east 300 feet and no train was in sight. Lulled into a sense of security by the absence of a flagman at the crossing who was customarily present he did not look again, with the result that his sleigh collided with a west-bound train and he was hurt. A recovery in his favor was permitted to stand. This plaintiff did more than the plaintiff in the Elias case. Having looked at a point 125 feet distant he looked again at a point 40 feet distant. It was necessary to guide his car by looking to the west. It was necessary to guard against a train by looking almost directly to the east. He could not do both at one and the same time. The danger of looking directly east while driving the car directly west was great. In this situation it may well have been that the absence of the bell played its part. That fact may have induced the plaintiff to look to the rear with a glance so fleeting that the forward end of the approaching locomotive did not catch his eye. Under the circumstances we think the question of the plaintiff’s contributory negligence was a question for the jury, and that the complaint should not have been dismissed.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted.
Kilby and Hasbkouck, JJ., concur; Hinman, J., dissents, with an opinion, in which Van Kibk, J., concurs.