Just how the plaintiff was injured cannot be ascertained from the evidence. He was a child three years and ten months old, had escaped from his mother’s house and care, and had evidently followed his elder sister and her playmates across and along the defendant’s tracks about 500 feet to the place where he was injured. ÍTeither his sister nor her companions observed his presence among them, and it is not quite clear that he had joined them before he received his injury. The plaintiff was first observed with his right foot lying upon the outside rail of the most southerly track of six switch tracks, which, in addition to two main tracks, compose what is called the defendant’s yard. His body was lying southerly of the track, and outside of it. His foot had been crushed. The defendant had just previously deposited nine freight cars upon the track, “kicking” them there from the east and off the main track. The most westerly wheel of the most westerly of the freight cars was stained with blood, and an examination of the track disclosed blood stains and crushed flesh upon the rail for two car lengths easterly of where the blood-stained wheel came to a rest. A brakeman had stood at the brake upon the westerly end of this westerly car until it came to a rest, or very nearly so, *591and he did not see the child upon the track, nor know of its injury until told of it on his next trip. The plaintiff’s sister and her companions stepped down the embankment into some bushes as the cars went by. The brakeman saw them, and he testified that he saw the plaintiff with them as the cars went easterly on the main track, past the switch which opened after the cars had passed it, and back over which they passed westerly upon the side track upon which they were left; but no one saw the child on the track. Possibly the plaintiff was attempting to cross the track in front of the backing car, and was not seen by the brakeman. Possibly the brakeman jumped off the car as it slowly drew to a stop, and before it had actually stopped, and that the child then came upon the track and was hurt. Possibly, also, the child caught hold of an iron rod which ran under the side of the body of the freight car, and tried to catch a ride.
Suppose the negligence of the defendant to be conceded. It would still remain an open question whether the child received its injury in consequence of it. If the child caught hold of the iron rod suspended beneath the side of the car, it is conceivable that its foot projected beneath the wheel. Its hands would then relax their grasp, and its body would fall outside of the tracks. If the child bad been struck by the foremost end of the advancing car, the child might have fallen into the same position. The jury had simply the position in which the child lay, and a description of the locality and movement of the ears, and the fact that the accident was not witnessed by any one, from which to draw their inferences.
It is conceded that it is the province of the jury to draw the proper inference, provided the evidence is such as tends to support the inference drawn. In Searles v. Railway Co., 101 N. Y. 661, 5 N. E. Rep. 66, it was held that where the damages were occasioned by one of two causes, the defendant being responsible for one, but not for the other, the plaintiff must fail if it was just as probable upon the evidence that the damages were occasioned by the one cause as the other. That case had been tried before a jury. The general term, which has power to weigh the evidence, and to set aside a verdict, because against the clear weight of the evidence, affirmed the judgment; and yet the court of appeals, which has no power to weigh the evidence upon which the jury render a verdict, set aside the verdict because there was no evidence to support it,—that is to say, the probabilities arising upon the evidence being balanced, there is no preponderance in favor of the plaintiff, and he therefore fails in the judgment of the law, notwithstanding the jury have drawn their inference in his favor. It might captiously be said that, unless the evidence is weighed, the fact that it is balanced cannot be ascertained. However this may be with the court of appeals, the general term meets with no such embarrassment.
We think that in this case conjecture has been too freely used to supply the defects in the testimony. We are also of opinion that the evidence failed to show any negligence on the part of the defendant. The place where the accident occurred was the private land of the defendant. It is true, foot travelers were in the habit of walking up and down along the tracks, and children were in the habit of going across them and along them for the purposes of amusement. All this was known to the defendant, but there was no particular place for crossing, certainly none where the plaintiff was injured. This license, if it was such, must be considered in connection with the usual slow movement of cars in a switch yard. A person sui juris could keep out of their way if reasonably careful. The cases applicable to crossings and thoroughfares upon the private lands of a railroad company, and with its implied license, have no application beyond their reaffirmance of the general proposition that care should always be exercised with a vigilance proportioned to the danger reasonably to be apprehended. To permit the jury to hold that the defendant could not “kick” a car a few yards upon its switch tracks, used for *592the storage and making up of trains, without first ringing the bell, or giving some signal of approach, or stationing a flagman or brakeman so as to give warning to people wandering there, would be .unreasonable. Besides, how can a person non sui juris be warned? The defendant was lawfully engaged in its proper business upon its own property. It had no reason to apprehend that such a child would come unattended upon its tracks in the immediate front of a slowly moving freight-car. Chrystal v. Railroad, Co., 105 N. Y. 164, 11 N. E. Rep. 380. There was no apparent reason why it should not move its cars just as it did. The care it exercised was reasonable, tested by the rule that it must be-exercised with a vigilance proportioned to the danger reasonably to be apprehended. The motion for a nonsuit should have been granted. The judgment should be reversed, a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Ingalls, J., concurs. Learned, P. J., takes no part.