The defendant was loading its gravel train by means of a steam shovel, while the train was obstructing a highway crossing. The plaintiff attempted to' cross the train between two' cars, just as the filling of one car was completed and the train was about to be moved to' bring forward another. As the plaintiff was getting upon the end of a car, the train started, causing the injury complained of. The plaintiff claims that he was induced to malee this attempt by the conduct of McMahon, the steam shovel boss, who1 was then directing the movements of the train.
It appears that McMahon made a motion with his arm, which the plaintiff supposed was an invitation for him to climb over the cars. The referee finds that the plaintiff was justified in thinking the motion was an invitation to cross, and that he was not negligent in making the attempt. But the referee finds that the motion so understood by the plaintiff was *461in fact a signal to the engineer to move the train/ or some other signal; and says he is unable to find that any invitation to cross was given the plaintiff, or that defendant’s employees were negligent in any respect as regards the plaintiff’s movements.
If we confine our attention to the circumstances attending the plaintiff’s attempt to cross and the starting of the train, it is clear that the plaintiff has no case. The findings amount to this. The defendant’s employee, without negligence, gave some signal in the line of his duty. The plaintiff, without negligence, took this to be an invitation for him to cross. The occurrence resulting from this combination was a mere accident.
But the plaintiff argues that the obstruction of the crossing was an unlawful and negligent act; that the findings relieve him from fault in being upon the car; and that the starting of the train which caused his injury was but one of a series of movements' included in the continued occupation of the crossing. The plaintiff would thus make the obstruction of the crossing the proximate cause of his injury.
But, assuming the correctness of the plaintiff’s position as regards the unlawfulness of the obstruction, it does not follow that the maintenance of the obstruction was a negligent act as regards the plaintiff. The disregard of a statutory requirement is not necessarily negligence in the juridical sense. Negligence is a shortage of legal duty that causes injury. The fact that an act is in violation of law does not dispense with an inquiry as to the relation which that act sustains to the injury complained of. If it is not an efficient cause of the injury there is no liability.
Generally, in cases of this class, the test of actionable negligence is whether the injury which followed the act or *462omission in question was a natural and probable consequence of it in the sense that a prudent man ought to have foreseen it. Morrisette v. Canadian Pacific R. R. Co., 74 Vt. 232 (242), 52 Atl. 520. It is by an application of this test that we determine whether the first of two causes is the proximate cause, or only a remote cause, of the resulting injury.
The plaintiff assumes that his case stands like that of Isham v. Dow’s Est., 70 Vt. 588, 41 Atl. 585, and cites particularly that part of thé opinion which says that in such circumstances the law treats the act of the defendant as the proximate cause of the injury, whether the injury was or could have been foreseen or not, or was or was not the probable consequence of the act. But in that case the injury was due to an unlawful act operating through a succession of resulting events whose continuity was not broken by any other agency. The bearing of the decision is also manifest from the further statement : “On the question of what is negligence, it is material to consider what a prudent man might reasonably have anticipated ; but when negligence is once established, that consideration is entirely immaterial on the question of how far that negligence imposes liability.” •
The finding which relieves the plaintiff from the imputation of negligence does not affect the relation which his act sustained to the injury received. That act, whether prudent or negligent, was the immediate cause of his injury. It was an independent cause, for it resulted from an exercise of his own judgment and will. It was- not a consequence of the obstruction of the crossing in the legal sense. It is true that if there had been no train there the plaintiff would not have had an opportunity to' make the mistake that he did. But, the making of such a mistake and an attempt to cross under such circumstances because of it, were not con*463sequences that could reasonably be expected to result from the obstruction. So the act of the plaintiff, although free from the taint of negligence, must be considered the sole proximate cause of his injury.
Judgment affirmed.