Opinion by
Head, J.,We are asked to reverse this judgment on two familiar grounds, viz:— (a) The evidence does not warrant a finding the defendant company was guilty of any negligent act; (b) The learned trial court should have declared, as matter of law, the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. In determining such a case we have so often said we must accept as established the facts as testified to by the plaintiff with every favorable inference that can reasonably be drawn therefrom.
In the case at bar the plaintiff testifies he was the driver of a team. Just before the accident his wagon was backed to the sidewalk with the heads of his horses turned in the line of the street in order to make as little obstruction as possible to the public traffic. When he was ready to start he first straightened his team and the horses’ heads then were about two and one-half feet from the track of the defendant .company. He declares he then looked both west and east and saw an east bound car coming. He estimated its distance from him to be three hundred feet and concluded he had ample time to cross the track.. He further states he urged his horses with the driving lines and, to use his expression, they had “just about jumped into a trot.” Before his wagon had quite cleared the track its rear wheel was struck by the oncoming car, the plaintiff was thrown from the wagon *217and Ms arm was broken in at least two places. There is in the evidence offered by the defendant strong contradiction of this state of facts, but the learned trial judge, in refusing to direct a verdict for the defendant, was bound to regard the plaintiff’s statement as credible. A fortiori are we obliged to accept it since the jury, by their verdict, have declared it to be credible. The plaintiff then, according to his statement, looked just before he urged his horses on the railway track. If he was right, or approximately right, in his estimate of the distánce of the defendant’s east bound car, no court could say, as matter of law, he was not justified in undertaking the crossing. The learned and experienced trial judge therefore rightly concluded that, on this branch of the case, the plaintiff had not convicted himself of contributory negligence.
Was there evidence to warrant a conclusion the defendant’s employee was operating the car at a rate of speed too high or without sufficient control? It is true no witness testified in so many words to the rate of speed at which the car was going. There is evidence to support the conclusion the operator of the car, at some time before the collision, realized it was imminent and reversed the motor. In spite of this the collision occurred. That it was of some violence is indicated by the nature of the injuries the plaintiff received. At the time of the collision the plaintiff’s wagon was moving close to one of the piers that support the elevated railway on Market street in Philadelphia. The effect of the impact of car and wagon was to push the latter against the pier.
From the circumstances we have recited the jury might determine the speed of the approaching car with at least as much accuracy as if they depended on the opinion evidence of a witness watching its passage. If it was in fact three hundred feet away from the plaintiff when he essayed to cross the track, it could not have collided with him unless it came rapidly. If it were coming slowly, under control, with the plaintiff in view of the *218motorman, a jury might naturally conclude that by reversing his power and applying his brake, the motorman could have prevented the collision. With these conditions and the inferences that might fairly be drawn from them, we cannot say the learned trial judge should have declared there was no evidence to support a find' ing the car was being negligently operated. There was therefore no solid ground for a binding direction in favor of the defendant and the case was properly submitted to the jury under instructions of which the defendant does not complain.
Judgment affirmed.