The intestates were struck by an electric street car and were killed. They were standing about a foot to the north of the street railway track laid in a reservation at a point where a paved crossing, constructed by public authority as a duly established break for highway purposes, extended across the reservation. They were struck by the right hand corner of the car which overhung the rails on which the car rested. To any one standing where they were the approaching car had been in sight for more than a thousand feet. It was lighted. It was moving at from thirty to thirty-five miles per hour. It was making the usual noises which attend moving street cars. These noises were heard by all the witnesses before the car struck the intestates. No bell, gong or whistle signal was sounded as it drew near; and no application of brakes was made before the impact. There was a white pole stopping place just before the break in the reservation.
*43About at the time the intestates reached the point where they were standing when struck, a little girl, who had been with them, left the group and, hurrying toward the northern sidewalk of the portion of the highway north of the reservation, ran in front of an automobile. Apparently seeing her danger, one of the party, her father, called to her in Italian. The driver of the automobile slowed and let her pass in safety. As the automobile slackened speed the electric car, which had been gaining on it from behind, passed it; and about as the little girl reached the sidewalk and the automobile came to the nearer side of the break in the reservation, the car struck the intestates. It hurled them into the northern way. One was thrown about twenty, one about forty and one nearly one hundred feet from where they had stood. The street car did not stop until it had gone some five hundred feet beyond the point of collision. For a considerable distance on either side of the break in the reservation there was a three and one half per cent down grade in the direction in which the street car was moving. There was some evidence of conscious suffering.
The defendant rested at the close of the plaintiffs’ case. The judge directed verdicts for the defendant. The plaintiffs except. They contend that there was sufficient evidence both of negligence of the motorman and of the due care of the intestates to require submission to the jury.
Certain facts are indisputable. The intestates had crossed the car tracks on a part of the reservation where they had the rights of travellers upon a highway. At that point the defendant had no exclusive right of way, or right paramount to that of the intestates to pass over the reservation. Welch v. Boston Elevated Railway, 214 Mass. 168. Minihan v. Boston Elevated Railway, 260 Mass. 490. See also Hammond v. Boston Elevated Railway, 222 Mass. 270. A single step would have taken each of them beyond the overhang of the car. They had plenty of time to take that step after the little girl left them. They were not struck until she had reached the further sidewalk. Upon the evidence the only explanation for their failure to reach a *44place of safety which is consistent with due care on their part is that they paused in horror at the apparent danger threatening the little girl. The approaching street car running upon the rail near which they stood was in plain sight, moving swiftly, and making noises heard by witnesses in houses near at hand. Unless held spellbound by the child’s danger, motionless as they stood, and, for that reason, disregardful of their own peril, the evidence requires a finding, of lack of due care. ‘ The emergency removed all thought for themselves. In Renwick v. Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway, 275 Mass. 145, Notaro v. Boston Elevated Railway, 273 Mass. 296, and Loyle v. Boston Elevated Railway, 260 Mass. 404, where we held that persons being so near car tracks that they were hit, were as matter of law not in the exercise of due care, there was an element of continuous absorption in some occupation, more than momentary, that established lack of care for safety. In each case the injured persons had been in what, if they had given it thought, they must have known to be a place of danger for some period of time without taking any precaution to guard against an oncoming street car. Here, having passed almost out of a place of danger under circumstances such that no lack of care for themselves could properly be predicated of them, it could be found that a happening not to be anticipated, not, in ordinary experience, to be thought of and allowed for, prevented them from going on in safety as they had planned to do and held them in a dangerous position in which, before the danger was realized, injury came upon them. Although there was a lack of care, the lack was one of which a jury might justifiably believe any prudent person might well be guilty, and so was not that lack of due care which bars recovery if it contributes to an injury.
This case more nearly resembles Austin v. Eastern Massachusetts Street Railway, 269 Mass. 420, where we held it for a jury to determine whether one was using due care who unexpectedly was forced by passing automobiles to pause as he was passing in front of a street car; and the somewhat similar case of McBride v. Middlesex & Boston Street *45Railway, 276 Mass. 29. We can not say that the intestates created the emergency which resulted and so are unable, to invoke the doctrine of sudden peril. See Rundgren v. Boston & Northern Street Railway, 201 Mass. 156, 158. It follows that in the opinion of a majority of the court the issue of contributory negligence was for the jury.
On the issue of the motorman’s negligence it was for the jury to say whether a speed so great, or a disregard of conditions at this crossing so complete, that the car was not stopped before it had gone nearly five hundred feet, did not indicate failure to have his car in proper control. Although he could see that the intestates had crossed the track and presumably would be in a place of safety before his car reached them, jurors might justifiably find that proper attention to his rails and to what was within dangerous distance of them, would have shown them still in danger and have led to gong or whistle signals that might have warned the intestates in time to save their lives. See Gould v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 276 Mass. 114. Although in view of other warnings the intestates might not have been in position to set up lack of gong or whistle signal as grounds of negligent conduct entitling them to recovery, the failure to give them might be significant on the question whether the motorman was using proper care in handling his car.
Exceptions sustained.