There was much pleading in this case, but the view we take of it relieves us of the necessity to review the rulings of the court thereon.
The case was tried on the pleas of not guilty and contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff’s intestate ; and to these issues we confine our investigations.
1. The duties that railroad companies owe to their, émployés in respect to low bridges has received such careful consideration at the hands of. this court, .in thp opinion of the late Chief Justice Stone, in the case of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. v. Hall, 87 Ala. *514708 — a case similar in its essential features to the one in hand — as relieves us from its further discussion at this time. We do no more now than to summarize the principles there settled and apply to the facts of the case before us. It was there said : “When, in-crossing a public highway, it becomes necessary for a railroad company to span it with a bridge, it is its duty, if reasonable and practicable, to place the structure at such an elevation as that trains, with their customory employes can pass under it unharmed;” but it was added, that this is not an absolute or unbending requirement, but yields to a reasonable extent to circumstances, as many other natural and social rights must yield to other rights and interests, which duty requires to be conserved; that in no case would it be permissible to so construct a bridge, that brakemen on top of the cars', in the discharge of their duties, could not avoid danger by bending or stooping; otherwise it would be a nuisance and the company guilty of gross negligence in its structure and maintenance; and whenever such a bridge is constructed below the line of absolute safety, then other duties rest on the railroad company. These other duties are specified to be, that when a brakeman is placed on a freight train, running on a road with which he is not familiar, and such train is to pass under a low bridge or bridges, notice shall be given him of the danger he is to encounter, which notice must be reasonable; that is, he must be reasonably instructed so as to put him on the lookout, and on enquiry and observation, so that he may not only be warned of the danger attending him, but inform himself of its locality and when to avoid it. But, as was said: “The whole duty is not on the railroad company. The employé must give heed to the notice and instructions given him, and must employ his senses, his reason-' ing faculties and his attention, alike for his own safety and the welfare of the road. If he has not been sufficiently warned or notified to enable him, by proper attention and diligence, to learn where the points of danger are, then this would be negligence for which the railroad company would be liable. On the other hand, if he has been sufficiently warned or notified, and from inattention, indifference, absent-mindedness, or forgetful ness, he fails to inform hitnself, or fails to take the necessary ■ steps to avoid the injury, this is negligence, and he should *515not recover.” If the company should build its bridges not of sufficient elevation for absolute safety, without some of the excuses which the law would allow for such a structure under the special circumstances of the case, then negligence is shown, and,unrebutted, would,prima facie, authorize a recovery by the plaintiff receiving injury, unless overcome by proof on the part of defendant, that the plaintiff was guilty of proximate contributory negligence. As to what would constitute the contributory negligence, the court said as to the facts of that case, so like this : “If, under the rules we have stated, the plaintiff was sufficiently notified or warned, and from inattention, indifference, absent-mindedness, or forget..fulness, he failed to inform himself, or failed to take the necessary steps to avoid the injury, this was proximate, contributory negligence, and is also a complete answer to the action. He must avail himself of the instructions given him, or furnished for his use; and, taking into account the surroundings and perils attendant upon the nature of the service he enters upon, he must bestow such care, watchfulness and caution as ordinarily prudent men would usually exercise in reference to their safety, under like circumstances. There are perils in the very nature of the service, against which prudence can not always guard. Of these the employe takes the risk. He is guilty of contributory negligence, if, in his care, diligence, and watchfulness, he falls below the standard above stated.” The numerous authorities supporting the propositions above announced are collated in that opinion.
2. Another principle which may be regarded as finally settled is, that if an emplové knows of the existence of dangers arising from defects in ways, works and machinery of the company, and continues in its service after the lapse of a reasonable time for the defects to be remedied or removed, he .assumes this additional risk, though not incident to his original employment even; or, as it has been stated in another form, “If the employé, while engaged in the service, acquires knowledge of any de^ fect in the materials, machinery or instrumentalities used, and notice thereby of an increased risk of danger, and afterwards continues in the service, without objection or notice to the employer, he assumes the increased risk •himself;” and if he is injured in consequence of such *516defect, he is guilty of- contributory negligence. — Geo. P. R. Co. v. Davis, 92 Ala. 309 ; Birmingham R. & E. Co. v. Allen, 99 Ala. 359; Eureka Co. v. Bass, 81 Ala. 201.
3. Again: where dangers are obvious, such asean be seen and known by ordinary care and prudence, in the use of the senses, it is held that the master need not advise his servants of their existence, and instruct them as to the necessary means of avoiding them, since they, equally with himself, are held to know both the fact of the peril and how to avoid it. — Holland v. Tenn. C. I. & R. R. Co., 91 Ala. 444; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Boland, 96 Ala. 632 ; E. T., V. & G. R. R. Co. v. Turvaville, 97 Ala. 122.
4. Now, what, as touching the foregoing principles, do the uncontradicted facts in this case show? The Pond Street bridge, the instrumental cause of the accident, had been built by the Memphis & Charleston Railroad Company more than forty years ago, at the time of its original construction, and since repaired and maintained by said company ; that this bridge was a part of a public street in the city of Decatur, under its authority and jurisdiction and subject to its control; that the Memphis and Charleston Railroad Company owned the track through the city, which was spanned by this bridge, and that the defendant company, under some agreement with or license from the M. & C. company, — which was not made known, — ever since the completion of its line that far, and making its connection with another line, South, a great number of yéars ago, had, in connection with the M. & C. company, been using that part of their line, extending north from the depot in Decatur, to the junction across the Tennessee river. It was further shown that this bridge had been maintained at its original height from the railroad track, during all these years, with the trains of both companies passing under it, coming and going; that it was 16 ft. 2 in. from the top of the rails to the stringers of the bridge, and the height of an ordinary freight car was eleven feet, leaving but fiye feet 2 inches from the top of such a car to the stringer of the bridge; and Thomas was a man “slender in build and tolerably. tall.’ ’ Under this evidence the defendant company was prima faei,e guilty of negligence in running its trains under such a structure, known to it and the M. & C. company and to the authorities of the city of *517Decatur, and to any one else whose attention was called to the fact, to be a dangerous bridge for brakemen on any freight train to pass under. It was obviously dangerous to all observant, intelligent railroad employés, whose attention had been directed to the fact, and grew more so to them, as they became acquainted with it, and passed under it. No brakeman over five feet two inches tall, who had ever gone under it once, in an erect position could have failed to know its dangers. There was no witness examined on the subject, who did not say, that it was necessary for brakemen on top of trains to stoop when passing under it, to avoid being injured. It could have been elevated at small expense, and without public inconvenience, and it was negligence for these railroad companies to operate their lines without the bridge being elevated beyond the danger line to brakemen. But under all rules laid down on the subject, it can not be held, under the evidence, that it was willful, wanton or intentional negligence. The circumstances do not imply a willingness on the part of these companies to injure their employés. — L. & N. R. Co. v. Hall, 87 Ala. 708; G. P. Railway Co. v. Lee, 92 Ala. 270 ; Richmond & D. R. R. Co. v. Vance, 93 Ala. 148.
5. But, was plaintiff’s intestate guilty of contributory negligence to overcome the simple negligence of the defendant? The accident happened near midday, at twenty minutes past twelve o’clock.- The day was sunshiny and bright; there was nothing to obscure the view of the bridge as the train passed under it. There was some evidence, that the engine as it passed under it might have emitted smoke, which has the tendency to bank at such a place, but that this was done, if important, is not shown. S. D. Armstrong, a witness examined by plaintiff, whose testimony is not rendered doubtful by anything that conflicts with it, settles the question as the unobscured view of the bridge at that time. He says he was standing across the Market Street bridge on the ground at the approach of that bridge, which is three hundred feet north of Pond Street bridge, when the accident occurred ; that he could see under Pond Street bridge and there was nothing obstructing his view ; that he saw the train pull out from the depot which was over 600 feet away, and saw a brakeman on top of the cars going to set up a brake, as he supposed; that the brakeman *518went down at the bridge, and he thought the bridge knocked him off; that when he first saw Thomas on top of the train, he was about middle way between the Church and Pond Street bridges, (and these were admitted to be 300 feet apart), and had his face turned towards witness, (which was towards the Pond Street bridge), and he turned when about two car lengths from the bridge and went towards the rear end of the train, as he thought, to set up a brake ¡‘that he was looking at him all the time till he disappeared ; that Thomas continued going south, with his back to the engine and his face towards the coaches on the rear of the train, until he saw him fall, about the time he got to the bridge, and he seemed to fall between the cars.
It was shown that Thomas entered the service of the defendant in August, 1890. A. J. Corbett testified that he lived in Nashville in 1890, and was the general yard master of the defendant, having charge of the handling and distribution of all cars, and employingbrakemenfor freight trains ; that in the latter part of August of that year he employed Thomas and started him out on the road as a cub brakeman, to learn the duties before giving him a position ; that on the 4th September, he started him out as an employed brakeman; that when he first started him out to learn the route, he notified him to be careful and look out for all low bridges, and of each of these three bridges at Decatur, and to be careful and not be knocked off(jby them; and on the day he started him out as an employé, that witness went over the bridges again and examined him as to all the low bridges on the defendant’s road, to see whether or not he was competent to fill the duties of a brakeman, and told him that such low bridges would not clear him and that he must look out for them and stoop, and in cautioning him, he specified the three low bridges at Decatur, between the river and the switch at the yard. Kendall, a brakeman on the defendant’s road since 1889, who had been with Thomas on different trips, testified that during the Fall and Winter he told Thomas to look out for these bridges at Decatur they would not clear him. The widow of Thomas testified, that he had been almost continually in the service of the road to the time of his death, missing but few trips, with the exception of two months, when he was off; that he was 26 years old and in good health. *519It was shown, also, that on regular service since, he would have passed under this bridge thirty times a month, or 120 times in the four ■ months of his regular employment. ■
6. To recapitulate then: the accident occurred in broad, open, daylight; the bridge was not shown to have been in anywise obscured; it had stood there for thirty or forty years and whatever dangers it threatened to brakemen were open and observable; the intestate had passed under the bridge on top of his train, nearly, if not quite, 120 times and every time he stooped, or he would have been injured; nobody knew of the dangers of the structure better than he from actual observation and experience; and besides, he had been carefully warned by an officer of the company, at the time he was employed, to look out for this bridge, that it was low ; and a fellow brakeman had also warned him of the danger. So far as notice goes, the company performed its full duty ; and being warned, and having full knowledge of what was an open and manifest peril to himself, of which he took the risk when he entered the service of the company, by his own inattention, absent-mindedness or forgetfulness, he failed to take the necessary steps to avoid the injury which befell him, and this is a complete answer to the action.
7. There is nothing in the argument that the cards containing a warning of low bridges on the line of defendant’s road, which were posted in the cars, did not contain these bridges. Those cards only purported to warn of the dangers of bridges on defendant’s own line, and not of those on the line of any other company ; and the road between the junction near Decatur and the depot in the city belonged to the M. & C. R. R. Company, and not to the defendant. Aside from that, 'however, the brakeman was warned — as he might have been as well as by these cards — by an officer of the company of the low bridges in Decatur, before he entered its service, and was shown to have been well acquainted with the bridge and its dangers . •
The general charge as requested by the defendant should have been given. We do not consider other questions raised and discussed, since they are not likely to again appear in this cause.
Reversed and remanded.