The action is in case, brought by the appellee, Roach, to recover damages for personal injuries. Although the assignments of error are very numerous, a few principles are determinative of all questions material to the case.
The court sustained a demurrer to plaintiff’s third plea, as amended, which setup the defense of contributory negligence. The ruling of the court sustaining a demurrer to this plea is assigned as error. The complaint avers that plúiviff was an employe of the defendant, “whose duty it was to inspect cars of the defendant to test their fitness for use; and, to perform this duty, it was necessary to go underneath the cars; and. while *270engaged in such employment * * * in the yard limits, where such inspection usually took place, * * * one Cherry, the defendant’s switch foreman, who had control of an engine and cars of defendant, negligently ran the engine and cars against the car he was inspecting, and inflicted the injury, aud negligently failed to have a-watchman on lookout on the end of said box car towards where the plaintiff was, whose duty it was to have such signal or lookout,to give the engineer a signal that there was an obstruction on the track,” &c. The plea avers that the car being inspected by the plaintiff was on aside track; that it was dark ; and that it was difficult or impossible for the plaintiff to be seen or discovered; “and that plaintiff knew, or in the exercise of due care ought to have known, that the switching of trains of cars was going on in the said yard limits, and that cars ora train of cars would probably be switched or run at any moment upon the side track where he then was at work. Nevertheless, plaintiff did not put out any light or other signal on or about said car where he was at work, to notify persons in charge of such switching or trains of his presence under or about said car on said side track, and without being aware that any proper precaution had been taken or used, by any employé of the defendant * * * to warn persons in charge of such switching cars or trains of his presence under or about said car, ” &c. The argument that the plea is insufficient as a plea of contributory negligence to the complaint is, first, that it fails to aver that the danger incurred by the plaintiff “was obvious”; and, second, that plaintiff had aright to rely upon the presumption that plaintiff’s employers would do their duty in having a watchman or lookout to discover the obstruction on the track, and signal the engineer in charge of the switching train. Had the pleader, after stating the facts constituting the alleged negligence of the plaintiff, further averred, asa conclusion, that the danger thereby incurred"was obvious,” such additional averment would have added nothing to the force or sufficiency of the facts stated. The plea, in substance, states that, the plaintiff at night, when he could not be seen, without putting out signals to give notice of his presence, and without the precaution of ascertaining that one knew of his presence who might give notice to approaching trains of his presence and position, put *271himself tender a car on a «ido track, at a timo and place when he knew that cars were being switched on the side track, and “probably” a car would be switched or run upon the side track whore he was at work. In other words, appellee’s contention is, that if a person does an act which he knows, or could know by the exercise of due care — a care which', by reason of his employment and duty to be performed, he is called upon to exercise —will “probably” result in his injury, he may yet run such risk voluntarily without being guilty of contributory negligence. We do not understand such to be the law; nor do we understand the law to be that the right of one employe to presume that other employes will do their duty will exempt him from responsibility for his own negligence. In the case of Railroad Co. v. Mothershed, 97 Ala. 261, 268, we declared the law in such cases to be that one employe has no more right to presume that another employe will do his duty than such other has the right to presume that he will perform his duty, and where both are guilty of negligence, which contributed to their own injury, in such cases neither can recover. The plea presented a good defense' to- the action laid in the complaint, independent of any rule of the company, and the court erred-in sustaining a demurrer to it.
The defendant, as a further defense, by plea No. 4, averred that plaintiff violated rules 381 and 38, and thus negligently contributed to his own injury. Rule 381 is as follows : “When inspecting or making repairs to cars, they must protect themselves by placing a blue signal on each end of the car or train, as per rule 38.” Rule 38 : “A blue flag by day, and a blue light by night, placed on the end of a car, denotes that car inspectors are at work under or about the car or train, etc. The plaintiff seeks to avoid the effect of a violation of these rules upon the ground that the defendant had waived or had abandoned them, as regulations to be observed and obeyed by its employes and car inspectors. There is no doubt that a person or company having authority to establish rules for the government of emplo3ms may in any particular instance waive obedience to the rules, or may knowingly acquiesce in a disregard of the rules so continuously and for such a length of time as to justify the inference that they are no longer in force, and that *272obedience will not be required. This is the principle intended to be declared in the cases of Hissong, 97 Ala. 191, and Richardson, 100 Ala. 232, cited by appellee; but these decisions go no further. No evidence was offered which tended to show any special waiver of the rules, for the purpose of authorizing the plaintiff' to dispense with the use of the signals at the time and place where he was injured. There seems to be some confusion in regard to the law of “custom and usage,” and the doctrine of acquiescence on the part of the principal in the continuous violation of rules, by those for whose protection and government they were established. In the case of Railroad Co. v. Graham, 94 Ala. 545, we held that “'when a rule was clear and explicit, free from ambiguity and equivocation, evidence of usage and custom was inadmissible to vary or alter its terms.” We cited with approval 2 Greenl. Ev., § 251, “that the true office-of a usage or custom is to interpret the otherwise indeterminate intention of parties to fix the meaning of words and expressions of doubtful or various senses.” Many decisions of the State were also cited in support of the principle. Custom and usage of prudent persons and well regulated railroads may also be looked to in determining whether the use of any appliances or the doing of an act in a particular way, not obviously dangerous, is culpable negligence.—Andrews v. Railroad Co., 99 Ala. 438; Warden v. Railroad Co., 94 Ala. 277. But the custom and usage of prudent persons and well regulated railroads, acting independently of any rule regulating the matter, is never admissible to excuse or exempt from liability for the consequences of a violation of a rule reasonably and proper, adopted and promulgated by proper authority, for the protection of the person of employes, and the property of those adopting the rule; nor will custom and usage excuse the voluntary and unnecessary risk of an obvious danger, whether a rule exist or not 'When it is said that “custom and usage may be relied upon to excuse the violation of a rule” (Andrews’ Case, supra, and others), it is merely the-enunciation of the same principle we have already declared ; that is, that a principal may knowingly acquiesce in or assent to a continuous disregard of rules established and promulgated, and for such a length of time *273as to justify those for whom they were intended to consider that the principal has abandoned them. and that they have ceased to be binding. To justify this conclusion, it must satisfactorily appear that notice or knowledge of such disregard, by the persons for whom they were intended, has been brought home to the principal, orto some one whose duty it is to take action, and is authorized to bind the principal. The mere habit of the employe or person bound by the rule to disregard the rule, though done with the knowledge of any immediate superior less than the principal or person authorized to bind the principal by acquiescence or failure to object, will not be sufficient to justify the conclusion that the rules are no longer binding.- Such knowledge on the part of the principal may be shown as in other cases where it is necessary to show notice, either by direct proof or by circumstances.
The greater portion of the rulings of the circuit court upon questions of evidence and instructions to the jury which are assigned as error have been disposed of, by the rules of law declared to be applicable to the case. The trial court was consistent in these rulings with the proposition involved in the sufficiency of the amended plea of contributory negligence, numbered 3, and in the fourth plea. Those questions cannot be presented in the same way on another trial.
There was no error in permitting the plaintiff to exhibit. his injured hand to the jury. The extent of the injury and damage sustained was one of the questions at issue, and the injury itself threw light upon this inquiry. Wo presume that if the plaintiff had testified to the loss of a hand, and the truth was -chat he had lost only a finger, the defendant would have the right to require the plaintiff to exhibit his hand.
.Reversed and remanded.