Plaintiff’s intestate was killed through the overtiming of an automobile owned and driven by one Barnett, on the rear seat of which he was lading. Plaintiff claims that the accident was caused by the negligent operation of a car owned and driven by the defendant, which attempted to pass the Barnett car.
The plaintiff offered to show that the deceased was a passenger for hire, and that the witness Barnett was paid for carrying him on the trip in question. The court excluded the evidence, and the plaintiff excepted. The defendant claims that this offer was so essentially defective that it was not error to exclude it. It is said that in order to reserve a sufficient exception to the exclusion of evidence a proper question must be asked, and that the offer made on objection must show what answer is expected and the purpose of the testimony, and present all the facts necessary to establish its admissibility; that the fact that *361the deceased was a passenger for hire did not of itself prevent an imputation of negligence, and that the offer should also have proposed to show that the deceased did not exercise any control of the car, and was not engaged in a joint enterprise, and was not guilty of contributory negligence.
It appears from the transcript, which is referred to and made controlling, that near the opening of the direct examination of Barnett, plaintiff’s counsel asked him what arrangement he had with these men as to the expense of the trip, and that on objection being made the court asked what the purpose was; upon which plaintiff’s counsel made the claim that the doctrine of imputed negligence would not apply for the reason that the deceased was a passenger for hire, and defendant’s counsel urged that under the Yermont decisions this made no difference. The question was then temporarily withdrawn in order that authorities might be submitted to the court. At the close of Barnett’s cross-examination plaintiff’s counsel again presented thé matter, and made the offer stated above, and the court disposed of the question as follows: “While we are aware of the fact that the courts in other jurisdictions hold otherwise, we are inclined to think that our Court is committed to the doctrine claimed by the defendant, and we therefore exclude the offer.”
It appears from this statement that a proper question was asked, and that the purpose of the inquiry and the answer expected were plainly indicated and fully understood. Nothing further was needed to show to the court the applicability of the testimony to the main issue on trial. The proposition that the deceased was a passenger for hire fairly implied that he was not in control of the car, and was not engaged in a joint enterprise which included the driver. The evidence would be admissible, notwithstanding the possibility of a claim that the deceased took some action inconsistent with his position as a mere passenger. The situation as regards the question of contributory negligence is not different. It is true, as urged by the defendant, that the burden of proof as to this was on the plaintiff. But the fact that success on one issue will be of no avail unless another issue is sustained, does not require that an offer of evidence pertinent to one contain an undertaking to prove the .other.
The uncertainty regarding the position of our Court which existed at the time of this trial, because of the opinion in Carlisle v. Sheldon, 38 Vt. 440, has since been removed by the *362decision in Wentworth v. Waterbury, 90 Vt. 60, 96 Atl. 334. The exclusion of the offer to show that the deceased was a passenger for hire, and the charge that any negligence of Barnett was imputable to the deceased, were errors.
The plaintiff is not precluded from taking advantage of these errors by the fact that her counsel, in presenting the matter to the court, expressed a belief that the holdings in this State were adverse to the claim he was making. We find nothing in the transcript that sustains the defendant’s contention that counsel became partly responsible for the rulings complained of. The substance of the discussion had between counsel and court when the inquiry was first made is given above. The only thing said by plaintiff’s counsel at the time of the ruling that could possibly be referred to as a request, was the suggestion that the trial court would probably rule in accordance with what seemed to be the holdings of the Supreme Court of the State, but that they would like to save the question in view of the probability that our Court would now adopt the rule which prevails in the Supreme Court of the United States. The question presented by this record is very different from that disposed of in Thorworth v. Blanchard, 87 Vt. 38, 87 Atl. 52, Ann. Cas. 1916 A, 1226.
The defendant was permitted to testify, in reply to questions excepted to as calling for a characterization of what was seen, that he saw something that indicated that they wanted him to 'go by — -saw a man motion to him. He was then asked to describe the motion, and did this by a physical illustration. He was thereupon asked, under a like exception, what the motion was with, and replied, ‘ ‘ He swung his hand * * towards him, I thought as though I would come to him.” The defendant testified further that he acted on the motion by blowing his horn, and that they then started to turn out and gave him half the road, and he started to go by.
It is conceivable that a motion may be made so distinctive and unambiguous, and so capable of an exact reproduction by the observer, that his opinion as to what it meant will not be essential to its full and intelligent presentation. Whether this was a motion of that character cannot be determined from the record before us, and the matter must necessarily stand upon the ruling of the trial court. But there is another ground on which the exception is for consideration. The witness was the *363defendant, and the question in issue was whether he was negligent.' The situation in which the defendant acted, and the knowledge which he had, or in the exercise of due diligence ought to have had, regarding it, were matters material to the inquiry. Embraced in these matters were the questions what the defendant might reasonably understand, and did in fact understand, regarding the purpose.of those whose movements were to be made in connection with his own. In this view' the defendant was entitled to state, in connection with his illustration of the motion, what he understood it to mean.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.