Hines v. Sweeney

Blume, Justice.

This action was brought by the administratrix of the estate of John C, Sweeney, deceased, as plaintiff, on account of the death of said deceased by a train of plaintiff in error, defendant below, which was alleged to have been run at .a dangerous and negligent rate of speed. For convenience the parties will be hereinafter referred to in the same order as in the court below. The evidence is nearly *65undisputed, and in giving the material facts, we Shall closely- follow the lucid statement contained in the brief of coum sel for defendant.

On May 15, 1918, and for some time prior thereto, the deceased, a man then 35 years of age, was engaged as section foreman on the railroad of • defendant. The section upon which he was employed was situated in Campbell County, Wyoming, and extended from a small station, called Felix, to Echeta, which was about six or seven miles west of Felix. He resided at Echeta where he returned each day after his labors were finished. His duties required him to superintend a gang of section laborers engaged in the work of repairing track. For this purpose he had a gasoline motor car, which carried him and his men to and from their work.

On the day in question,- the deceased with his four men, all of whom were Mexicans, after finishing the work on the track about five o’clock in the afternoon, and after adjusting or filling some switch lights, drove the motor car to the station at Felix, and inquired of one Mooney, the station agent, concerning the passenger train, coming from the east, and was informed by Mooney that the. train was past due and would arrive at any moment. Upon Sweeney intimating that he intended to start for Echeta ahead of this train, he was admonished by Mooney as well as by Mooney’s father, who was present, not to go. Notwithstanding this advice and warning, the deceased started with his men on the motor car for Echeta.

To the east of Felix a train could be seen coming for a distance of one and one-half miles. A fourth of a mile to the west of Felix was a cut, curving sharply to the right. The cut is nearly a fourth of a mile in length. The deceased was killed at a point about 1350 feet from the east end or mouth of the cut, apparently only a short distance from the west end thereof. From this point to the place where the engineer, when in the cut, could first see the motor ear on the track was about 900 to 990 feet.

*66After Sweeney started from Felix and had proceeded a short distance, but before he reached the cut, the agent, Mooney, observed the passenger train. approaching from the east. He • thereupon, in an effort to signal and stop Sweeney, went out on a knoll or elevation, near by, and tried to signal for Sweeney to stop, and continued to do so until Sweeney entered the cut to the west of Felix and went out of sight. He failed to attract Sweeney’s attention, Sweeney and his men apparently never looking back after they started towards the cut. Thereupon, Mooney went to the station, wrote upon a piece of paper the words “Motor car just ahead,” and, when the engineer of the ■passenger train passed the station (the train not stopping), handed this paper to the engineer. This warning, as the engineer testified, meant to him that he was to use extra precaution.

This passenger train was a mixed train, consisting of an engine, eight box cars filled with household goods, one baggage coach, ’ and eight passenger coaches filled with passengers.

The train approached Felix from the east at about forty miles per hour, and the engineer checked the speed upon approaching Felix until the train was traveling at about twenty-eight or thirty miles per hour in passing Felix. By the time the engineer had read the note he was past Felix and near the east end' of the cut. . He immediately, according to his testimony, which is corroborated by other witnesses, applied his brakes, reducing the speed to 18 or 20 miles per hour, sounded the whistle, and after entering the cut again sounded the whistle, keeping at all times a careful lookout ahead. He discovered the motor car on the track when about 900-990 feet distant from it, but testified that he saw no men on or near the motor car, or on the track, and that he did not know that Sweeney was pinned beneath the car. He saw, however, several men on the side of the track. Then he immediately put on the emergency brakes, applied sand to the track, blew the whistle, and did everything in his power to stop the train and to avoid a col-*67li'sion: Before the' train eonld be stopped;' however, it collided with the motor car and threw it, together with Sweeney, who was found to have been caught' beneath it, off the track. The engine ran about three car lengths past the point where the collision occurred before stopping.

Sweeney, in going toward Echeta, drove the motor car himself. After he had gone some distance west of the cut, he discovered the approaching train in the cut back of him. It was a clear day and still daylight. As soon as Sweeney discovered the passenger train approaching, he apparently became excited and failed to apply the brake, but opened the throttle, thus accelerating the speed of his engine. He went, it seems, about 66 feet further, then apparently jumped off in front of the car,- was knocked down by it and pinned beneath it on the track. He was unable to extricate himself and called to the men to help him. These men had safely jumped off the ear to one side immediately upon seeing the train. One of them went to the assistance of Sweeney, but was unable alone to lift the car off the deceased, and he thereupon crossed the track to the north side in order to signal the engineer and gave the stop signal, but the train was then almost upon them, and immediately thereafter the deceased was run over by the train and so severely injured that he died within a few hours thereafter. A few other facts will be stated later in the opinion.

The defendant moved for a directed verdict both at the close of plaintiff’s testimony as well as at the close of all the evidence, both of which motions were overruled. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $3,425.54, upon which judgment was entered. A motion for a new trial was filed by both parties; both motions were overruled and the case is here on petition in error of defendant and upon cross-error of plaintiff. The only point raised by defendant is that under the evidence the lower court should have directed a verdict in its favor, and seeks to have judgment for it entered in this court under the provisions of Section 5897 of the statutes of 1920.

*681. 'In,the absence of legislation to the Contrary, no rate of speed, though great, is, in thinly populated‘districts, Ordinarily negligence per se. (Elliott on Railroads, § 1160; Ry. Co. v. Carter, 180 Ky. 765; 203 S. W. 740; Warner v. R. R. Co., 44 N. Y. 465; Byson v. R. R. Co., 57 Conn. 9, 17 Atl. 137; R. R. Co. v. Kistler, 66 O. S. 326, 64 N. E. 130.) The main duty of an engineer in charge of a passenger train is to look after the safety of the passengers. The needs and conditions of the times and the people demand speedy conveyance, and in order to maintain that speed, and safely and properly operate the trains, the railroad company employs track workers and section men. These men are necessarily engaged in a hazardous occupation, and it is their duty to see that the purpose of their occupation is fulfilled. Hence upon them rests the primary duty of self-preservation in the line of their employment, by keeping a look-out for, and avoiding, trains which pass along the tracks on which they are at work. (Tober v. R. Co., 210 Mich. 129, 177 N. W. 385. Connelly v. R. Co., 201 Fed. 54; Hoffard v. Railway, 138 Ia. 543, 110 N. W. 446, 16 L. R. A. N. S. 797.) As to them the railroad company will generally not be negligent if the trains are operated in the ordinary way. An engineer is not bound, generally, to stop or even to check his train as a precaution against injury to persons working on the track, and he has the right to act upon the presumption that they will look out for their own safety. (Hoffard v. Railway, supra., O’Brien v. Railroad, 210 N. Y. 96; 103 N. E. 895; Connelly v. R. Co., supra; Ingham v. Ry. Co., 169 N. Y. S. 346; Sienchula v. Ry. Co., 209 Ill. App. 15.) Many eases go even to the extent in holding that no duty to look out for them ordinarily devolves upon the railroad company. (O’Brien v. Railroad, supra,) and see cases collated in L. R. A. 1916 F, 555 and 564. In any event, a man working or walking on the track, is, ordinarily, only entitled to sufficient warning of the approach of trains and an opportunity to get out of the way before the train reaches' him, and if he is given such warning, and an opportunity to escape, it be-*69eomes Ms duty; to act with reasonable promptness for Ms own safety. (Olsen v. Ry. Co,, (S. D.) 182 N. W. 454. Vizacchero v. Rhode Island Company, 26 R. I. 392, 59 Atl. 105.) The trackworkers and section men, however, are not trespassers. There is some duty that is owing them. The foregoing cases, therefore, but interpret and apply, and by no means abolish the fundamental rule, never to be lost sight of, that upon the railroad company, as in like eases upon every master, devolves the duty to use reasonable care and precaution in the operation of its trains, so as to protect from injury, in such way as the conditions demand, the persons working upon and rightfully upon its tracks. This principle has been frequently, and we think uniformly applied in cases where the presence of these men was known or was to be anticipated, the specific care in each case depending upon the circumstances. (33 Cyc. 809; R. R. Co. v. McCaskell, 118 Miss. 629, 79 So. 817; Hunsaker v. Coal & Iron Co., 181 Ky. 598, 205 S. W. 612; Brightwell v. Lusk 199 Mo. App. 643, 189 S. W. 413; Hoffard v. Railway, supra; Bennett v. Ry. Co., (Ia.) 174 N. W. 798; Grow v. R. R. Co., 44 Utah 160, 138 Pac. 398; Tober v. R. Co., supra.) In R. R. Co. v. McCaskell, supra, the court said:

“But the plaintiff has room to contend that the railroad company owed him the same duty which it owed to every other person lawfully on the right of way,.and as stated by the Supreme Court of Arkansas in St. Louis I. M. & S. R. Co. v. Neeley, 63 Ark. 636, 40 S. W. 130, 37 L. R. A. 616, ‘the railroad company owed him the duty to employ reasonable care to avoid injuring him. ’ ’ ’

In Hunsaker v. Coal and Iron Company, supra, the court said:

‘ ‘ So, if the Ashland Coal & Iron train crew from the circumstances should have anticipated the presence of Hun-saker or other persons on or near the ears standing on track No. 5, then it was the duty of that crew to sound a warning or maintain a lookout ahead, and to guard against injury to-such persons.”

In Tober v. R. Co., supra, the court said:

*70“Although it was primarily plaintiff’s duty when walking upon the tracks to look out for his own safety and keep out of the way of passing engines or trains, and the duty imposed upon defendant in its switching operations with reference to yard employes or section hands working upon the tracks was much less in degree than as to others, there was yet a concurrent or secondary duty to carry on the yard work with reasonable speed, caution and care for the safety of all employees at work in the yard, according to existing conditions.”

In the case at bar the engineer received a note stating “motor car just ahead,” which the engineer testified signified to him that he was to use extra precaution. The question, therefore, arises, as to what particular care he should have used under such circumstances. The cases nearest in point, which we have been able to find, are R. Co. v. Evans, 170 Ky. 536, 186 S. W. 173; and Ry. Co. v. Jone’s Adm’r., 171 Ky. 11, 186 S. W. 897. In both of these cases a signal was given that repair men were ahead on the track. We do not think that because the signals in these cases were apparently entirely ignored, and there are many facts in.these cases differing from those in the case at bar, that the general rule there laid down as to the duty of the engineer, in case such signal is given, is in any way affected thereby. That rule was stated in the Evans case, supra, as follows:

“It was the duty of the engineer in charge of the train, if he was warned some distance before reaching the hand car that it would likely be on the track, to keep a sharp lookout for its presence and to have the train under such control as that it could be stopped within a reasonable distance. ’ ’

And in the second case, above mentioned, the court said:

“It does not appear that the engineer had any knowledge .of $he presence of the section hands upon the road at the point where they were, but he should have operated the train cautiously, kept a lookout and the train under con*71trol, so as to have been, able to have stopped it. if necessity appeared. ’ ’

Under the holding of these cases, whenever a warning is given to the engineer in charge of a train that trackmen are ahead and apt to be in danger, he must take notice thereof, and must exercise that reasonable, care which the circumstances in each ease and the character of the warning demand. He must put his train under such control that he may stop it, should necessity appear. As to the exact extent of such control, and what may be the reasonable distance in which the train should be able to be stopped, will depend, of course, upon the particular circumstances of each case. If these principles are applicable in this case, as we believe they are, then instruction No. 14, given in this case by the court below, wherein the jury were instructed that if sufficient time was given Sweeney to get off the track in safety, then that the engineer was not negligent, as a matter of law was an instruction more favorable to the defendant than that to which it was entitled. No greater requirement, as we stated before, ebuld in the ordinary case be made of the engineer than indicated in that instruction, and often the court may so hold as a matter of law; but we cannot do so in this case any more than was done in the Kentucky cases, particularly in view of the peculiar warning given in this case. The facts in a particular case may require greater care. The warning given in the case at bar was more precise, more emphatic, than that given in the Kentucky cases cited above. “Motor car just ahead” might' well be held by the jury to have meant that it was immediately ahead, requiring instant, effective action to avoid injury. The note containing this warning was not official and out of the ordinary. When it was handed to the engineer, it must have conveyed to him knowledge that the station agent was greatly apprehensive of a collision, offsetting, as it might do, in the minds of the jury, the presumptions in which the engineer was ordinarily entitled to-indulge. The train was late, conveying to him the knowl-. edge that the men on the car ahead might consider, them*72selves safe, or at least, that they might be oblivious to danger. He, as a man of experience, might well be held to know that the motor car, in travelling, makes such noise as to make it difficult for those travelling thereon to hear the whistle of the engine. He knew the cut was just ahead of him; the track was curved; the men on the motor car could not see the train; they did not have the same means of taking steps for their own protection as they would have in ease of a straight track with an unobstructed view thereon. The person in control of the train did not know but what they might be but a short distance from him when he would arrive at the point where he could see them. Under these circumstances, we cannot say as a matter of law that the jury were unwarranted in finding that a collision should reasonably have been anticipated by the engineer. And if an injury of some character should have been reasonably anticipated by him, then that fact may be decisive of the question of negligence. (Christianson v. Ry. Co., 67 Minn. 94, 69 N. W. 640; Hill v. Winsor, 118 Mass. 251; Ry. Co. v. Whitehurst, 125 Va. 260, 99 S. E. 569; Ry. Co. v. Stepp, 164 Fed. 785, 22 L. R. A. N. S. 350.) We shall consider the element of reasonable anticipation more in detail when we come to the question of proximate cause. Though not necessary to be taken into consideration in our holding, we might call attention to the fact that the testimony showed that the engine on the day of the accident in question was equipped with a speed recorder, under the control of the railroad company. This recorder was not produced in court, and its non-production not explained. The testimony given by the railroad employees was to- the effect that the speed of the engine in going through the cut was reduced to 18 or 20 miles an hour. The speed recorder, no doubt, would have shown beyond cavil what the speed actually was. The jury are the judges of the weight of the evidence. The rate of speed at the station of Felix, which at that place was about 30 miles an hour, was some evidence of what the rate of speed might have been in the cut. (Kirby v. R. R. Co., 63 S. C. 494, 41 S. E. 765; see also Laufer v. *73Traction Co., 68 Conn. 475, 37 Atl. 379, 37 L. R. A. 533.) tt is not unlikely that in view of the unexplained non-production of the speed recorder, the jury may have believed that the speed in the cut was, perhaps, greater than that shown by the testimony of the witnesses on that point, and there can be no question that they had the right to come to such conclusion under the circumstances. (Ry. Co. v. Ellis, 54 Fed. 481. Studebaker Bros. Co. v. Witches (Nev.) 199 Pac. 477, 478.)

Practically the only protection in the power of the engineer in this case, after the motor ear passed into the cut, was to have his train under control. Upon the rate of speed largely depended his care or negligence, and the fact as to whether or not he could stop his train within what the jury would consider a reasonable distance. Shall this court say as a matter of law that 20 miles an hour was not, under the circumstances, negligent, and that the jury were bound to fix the reasonable stopping distance of the train by that rate of speed ? If 20 miles, why not 25 or 30 miles ? Where, in other words, would counsel have us fix the dividing line where the province of the jury ends and that of the court begins? The question itself suggests the difficulty and we believe that we would invade the province of the jury, if we should say that the rate of speed shown in this case was not negligent as a matter of law. In the case of Ry. Co. v. Ellis, supra, the court said:

“The presumption is that jurors are reasonable men and. that the trial judge is a reasonable man, and when the judge and jury who tried the case concur in the view that, the evidence established negligence, every presumption is in favor of the soundness of that conclusion. The whole fabric of our judicial system is grounded on the idea that jurors are better judges of the facts than the judges. ’ ’

In Kirby v. R. R. Co., supra, the court held that whether any rate of speed shows negligence, is a question for the jury, and that the court should not instruct the jury that a given speed does or does not constitute negligence. Whether this is universally true need not be decided. It has, how*74ever, been often held that whether a rate of speed is negligent, and as to what constitutes reasonable care is ordinarily a question for the jury. (Elliott, supra, § 1160 ; 33 Cyc. 792, 902; 29 Cyc. 634-636.) Even though the facts are undisputed, still, if more than one inference can be drawn therefrom, the question of negligence is for the jury. (Water Company v. Towage Co., 99 Me. 473, 485, 59 Atl. 953.) In the foregoing discussion we have not at all overlooked the contributory negligence, if any, of the deceased, but have mainly considered whether in any view of the case, some negligence might be ascribed by the jury to the defendant. We think there was no error in submitting this question to them.

2. Defendant further contends that its negligence, if any, is not the proximate cause of the injury, but that the accident of deceased in being pinned under the motor car, brought about by his own negligence, was the proximate cause. We must, at the outset, bear in mind that this action comes within the Federal Employers Liability Act of April 22, 1908, which in Section 3 provides that contributory negligence of the employee is not a bar to recovery, but that his negligence shall diminish the damages in proportion to the amount of negligence attributable to him. Under this act the railroad company is liable, if its negligence contributes proximately to the injury, no matter how slightly, and no matter how great may be the negligence of the employee. It is only when the employee’s act is the sole cause of the injury that the railroad company is absolved from liability. (Union Pac. R. R. Co. v. Hadley, 246 U. S. 330, 38 Sup. Ct. 318; Grand Trunk W. Ry. Co. v. Lindsay, 233 U. S. 42, 34 Sup. Ct. 581; Pennsylvania Co. v. Cole, 214 Fed. 948, 131 C. C. A. 244; R. Co. v. Niebel, 214 Fed. 952, 131 C. C. A. 248.) If the injury was caused in whole or in part from the company’s negligence, the statute cannot be nullified and the recovery defeated by calling the act of the employee the proximate cause of the injury, instead of contributory negligence. (R. Co. v. Campbell, 217 Fed. 518, 133 C. C. A. 370; R. Co. v. Wene, 202 *75Fed. 887, 121 C. C. A. 245; Grand Trunk W. Ry. Co. v. Lindsay, supra.) There may be more than one proximate cause of an injury (Hellan v. Lumber Company, 94 Wash. 683; 163 Pac. 9), and the negligence of the employee, even if one of the proximate causes, would no more defeat the action under this statute, than would an efficiently concurring negligence of a third person in the ordinary common law action, in which ease it is well settled that both parties may be held responsible, even though the negligence of one arises subsequent to that of another. (29 Cyc. 497; King v. Steel Co., 177 Ind. 201, 96 N. E. 337; Garlock v. R. R. Co., 55 Colo. 146, 133 Pac. 1103; Merrill v. Gas & Elec. Co., 158 Cal. 499, 111 Pac. 534, 31 L. R. A. N. S. 559.) In the case at bar, the negligent acts of the deceased, if any, at the time of stopping his motor car, came subsequent to the commencement of the negligence of the defendant, and might be termed an intervening agency. But an intervening agency, in order to supercede the original negligence of the defendant as the sole efficient legal cause, must be independent of the latter and not set in motion thereby, and must be in and of itself sufficient to produce the injury. (Lemos v. Madden, et al, 200 Pac. 791, recently decided by this court. 22 R. C. L. 133, 134.) We do not believe that it can be said that the accident of the decedent with the motor car was entirely independent of the negligence of the defendant. The train was the immediate instrument of death; its rapid approach was bound, in the nature of things, to have more or less immediate, direct influence upon the deceased in his attempt to escape. And the situation here is somewhat akin to that found in Union Pac. R. Co. v. Hadley, supra, where it was claimed that the negligence of the plaintiff was the proximate cause of the injury, and where the court said:

‘ ‘ But if the railroad company was negligent, it was negligent at the very moment of its final act. It ran one train into another when, if it had done its duty, neither train would have been at that place. Its conduct was as near to the result as that of Cradit. We do not mean that the *76negligence of Crad.it was not contributory. We must look at the situation .as a practical unit rather than inquire into a purely .logical priority. But even if Or adit’s negligence should be deemed the logical test, it would be emptying the statute of its meaning to say that his death did not ‘result in part from the negligence of any of the employees’ of the road.”

In the case at bar the motor car under which the de-. ceased was pinned was about 900 to 990 feet beyond the point where the engineer could see it. The train was stopped within about 1000 feet after the engineer saw the car, and the jury could have found that if the speed of the train had been such as, in their judgment, ordinary care under the circumstances required, the deceased might have escaped being killed. Under such circumstances, it is ordinarily, as we think it was in this case, for the jury to say as to whether the negligent speed of the train is the proximate cause, or one of the proximate causes of the injury. (33 Cyc. 902, 1312. R. R. Co. v. Mochell, 193 Ill. 208, 61 N. E. 1023; Crowley v. Ry. Co., 65 Ia. 658, 20 N. W. 467; Pasternak v. Ry. Co., 170 Mo. App. 663, 157 S. W. 109; Texas Elec. Ry. v. Whitmore (Tex. Civ. App.) 222 S. W. 644; Traction Co. v. Apple, 34 App. (D. C.) 559; Evans v. Ry. Co., 92 S. C. 77, 75 S. E. 275; Butler v. Ry. Co., 90 S. C. 273, 73 S. E. 185.)

3. Counsel for defendant, however, contend that the accident to plaintiff in being pinned under the motor car was so unusual and extraordinary that it could not have been reasonably anticipated, and they appeal to the oft-stated rule that an injury, in order to be attributable to an act of negligence as the proximate cause must be the natural and probable result thereof and such as to have been reasonably anticipated. Anticipation of some injury is a necessary element in establishing negligence, (R. Co. v. Wright, 183 Ky. 634, 210 S. W. 184), and according to the prevailing rule (though contested in some jurisdictions, e. g. Ry. Co. v. Whitehurst, supra) it is also a necessary element in establishing the proximate cause of an injury. *77(22 R. C. L. 120.) But it is also, further,' the univérsall’y accepted doctrine, from which no court, has dissented, that it is not necessary that the precise injury, or the particular manner or conditions under which it occurred, should have been1 anticipated, and all that is necessary is that an injury of some character could have been reasonably anticipated. (29 Cyc. 495; 22 R. C. L. 125.) In Ry. Co. v. Carlin, 111 Fed. 777, 49 C. C. A. 605, the court said:

“It must be conceded that the injury for which the action is brought occurred in an extraordinary and unusual manner. Just such an occúrranee was not to be anticipated. * * * The fact that it happened to cause the injury in a manner so unusual that it was not to be expected cannot prevent the act from being negligent when it was likely to cause injury in a way that might be foreseen.”

In the case of Walmsley v. Tel. Ass’n. 102 Kans. 139, 169 Pac. 197, the injury occurred through an accidental discharge of a gun, under peculiar circumstances which could not have been anticipated. The court said:

“That somebody would be shot through defendant’s negligence would not have been anticipated. But the law does not say that if the particular injury arising from the negligence cannot be anticipated, a recovery cannot be had. That some damage, some injury would probably arise from the existing negligence, and that it could reasonably have been anticipated is all that the law requires to justify a recovery.”

The numerous eases cited in the notes to 29 Cyc. 495, as brought down to date, illustrate in various ways the application of the principle there stated, and also show that the application thereof is not entirely uniform. (See Lawrence v. Ice Co., 119 Mo. App. 316, 330, 93 S. W. 897.) But it is unnecessary to say what this court would do in a case where consequences of an unusual character were involved, different from those existing in this case. While the particular injury occurring in this case might not have been reasonably anticipated, we think the jury were warranted in finding that it was not beyond the field of reasonable anticipa*78tion that injury might occur to the' occupants of the motor car. It would not, we think; make any difference in this ease, in determining the proximate cause of the injury, whether the plaintiff was negligent in the management of the motor Car, whereby he was pinned beneath it, or whether it was a pure accident for which neither party was responsible ; if he was guilty of negligence, that would in this ease only reduce the amount of his damages. Accidents of a similar nature have frequently been passed on by the courts. (Christenson v. Ry. Co., supra; Coel v. Traction Co., 147 Wisc. 229, 133 N. W. 23; Pasternak v. Ry. Co., supra; McDermott v. R. R. Co., 82 Mo. 285; Crowley v. Ry. Co., supra), are railroad'cases, the first two expressly holding that an accident, such as happened in the case at bar, is within the field of reasonable anticipation. In the Pasternak case the brake on a motor car failed to work. Other eases of accidents, where the plaintiff stumbled and fell, but not in railroad cases, are Winchel v. Goodyear, 126 Wisc. 271; 105 N. W. 824; Davis v. Lumber Co., 164 Ind. 413, 73 N. E. 899; Hartman v. Envelope Co., 127 N. Y. S. 187; Ziehr v. Paper Co., 28 Ohio Cir. Ct. Rep. 342; Harvel v. Lumber Co., 154 N. C. 254, 70 S. E. 389; Aaspenlaub v. Ellis, 43 Ind. App. 163, 72 N. E. 527; Music v. Packing Co., 58 Mo. App. 322; Finkle v. Lumber Co., 132 N. Y. S. 1038; Bales v. McConnell, 27 Okl. 407, 112 Pac. 978; Goe v. R. Co., 30 Wash. 654, 71 Pac. 182; McKean v. Chappell, 56 Wash. 690, 106 Pac. 184; Fegley v. Rubber Co., 231 Pa. St. 446, 80 Atl. 870. Many others might be cited. In the first three of these cases the court specifically discussed the element of reasonable anticipation; the others base the decision on the point that defendant’s negligence was an efficiently concurring cause of the injury; In the case of Coel v. Traction Co., supra, the court said :

. ‘ ‘ The argument to support the alleged absence of the element of reasonable anticipation is based on the erroneous assumption that it was necessary that defendant should anticipate that plaintiff would stumble and come in contact with the car in that manner. Counsel say: ‘To hold the *79motorman to the doctrine of reasonable anticipation under the facts of this case it must he said that he should reasonably anticipate the sudden stumbling of this plaintiff resulting in the collision’, and again: ‘Nor can it he said that an ordinary prudent man should reasonably anticipate that another will stumble and so he injured.’ These extracts are fair samples of the argument on this question. The element of reasonable anticipation is not limited to such a narrow field. It is not necessary that an ordinarily prudent man ought reasonably to have anticipated the particular injury to the plaintiff or to any particular person. It is sufficient that such a man ought reasonably to have anticipated that his conduct might probably cause some injury to another. # * * Hence it was within the field of reasonable anticipation that some one at some time might stumble or fall, or in some other natural manner suddenly come in front of a moving car as it passed a standing one discharging passengers. ” '

In the case aü bar, the field of reasonable anticipation should not, we think, have been confined to the exact spot where the injury occurred. Much of the argument used when we discussed the question of negligence is applicable here, but we shall not repeat it.. The train, even travelling at the rate of 20 miles an hour, would, unless checked, go nearly 30 feet in a second, or 300 feet in ten seconds, and 600 feet in 20 seconds. "When the engineer knew that the motor ear was just ahead of him, it would be no unreasonable requirement for him to anticipate that it might be in the cut, and that it might be, when he would first see it, only 50 feet or 500 feet ahead of him; yet in each of these cases it cannot be said as a matter of law that death of the motorman would not have been within the field of reasonable anticipation, because it is doubtful in such case, even if decedent had, not fallen, that sufficient time would have been given to get out of the way of the train with the motor car. And when this is so, this court cannot be asked to hold that the jury were not justified in holding that the engineer should have anticipated injury when the car happened to be *80only 400 feet further away, that is to say, about 900 feet beyond the point where he could first see it. Suddenly coming upon the decedent might well cause the latter to become confused and that an accident such as happened came to pass is not, under the circumstances, so surprising and'extraordinary that we can say, as a matter of law, that the jury were justified in their holding that this, too, came within the reasonablé field of anticipation of the engineer!, notwithstanding the evidence as to the usual rate at which a motor car travels; for they were the judges of the weight to be attached thereto. The engineer had within his control' a moving force that must inevitably result in death should it run over a living being; the care as well as reasonable foresight required of him should necessarily be commensurate with the knowledge thereof; and the jury, having the right to find, as stated before, that he should have reasonably anticipated that he might catch up with the motor car close to the point where he could first see it, had, we think, the further right to find that,' with his death-dealing instrument, he should not have taken the chance of not meeting up with it until it had reached a point perhaps beyond the zone of danger. While this question on the element of reasonable anticipation is close, we think, after most painstaking consideration and mature deliberation, that it was properly submitted to the jury.

4. The plaintiff assigns as cross-error the refusal of the court to give the following instruction:

■ “You are instructed that one who acts in a sudden emergency is not held to the same .degree of care for his own safety that would be required of him in the absence of such emergency, and in this case in determining whether or not the deceased was guilty of negligence in not abandoning the gasoline motor and running away from the danger, you may take into' consideration all of the facts and circumstances attending the transaction as shown by the evidence. Bearing in mind that the burden of proving contributory negligence is upon the defendant in this case and that contributory negligence, if established, is not a defense, but *81simply operates to diminish the amount 6f plaintiff’s recovery. ”

The court properly instructed the jury, in other instructions, on the burden of proving contributory negligence, and the effect of it in the action, so that no complaint is made as to that point. We are cited to the rule laid down in 29 Cyc. 521, wherein it is said that when one is required to act suddenly and in the face of imminent danger, he is not required to exercise the same degree of care, as at other times. But it is well settled that this rule applies only where the person injured was placed in a position of sudden peril without his own fault. (Thompson on Neg. § 194; Noyes v. R. R. Co. (Cal.) 24 Pac. 927, 928; 29 Cyc. 523; Dobbins v. R. Co., (S. C.) 93 S. E. 932; Birmingham Ry. & L. Co. v. Fox, 174 Ala. 657, 56 So. 1013; Atkins v. Transp. Co., 79 Ill. App. 19; R. Co. v. Cooper, 109 Tenn. 308, 70 S. W. 72; Berg v. Milwaukee, 83 Wis. 599; 53 N. W. 890; Baltzer v. R. Co., 83 Wis. 459, 53 N. W. 885; cases collated in 37 L. R. A. (N. S.) 54.) In R. Co. v. Cooper, supra, the court held that it was error to give an instruction relating to emergencies which did not embody the foregoing modification. The instruction asked in the case at bar clearly does not contain it. The last clause thereof can only relate to the effect of contributory negligence on the action as a whole. The difficulty in this case is that the evidence shows that the deceased was warned not to travel ahead of the train, but that he did so nevertheless, and failed to watch for the train. This, if true, was clearly negligent, and such negligence pervaded the whole incident, and would be distinct and separate from the negligence, - if any, in connection with the stopping of the motor car. We cannot, therefore, say that the emergency, if any, was brought about without the fault of the deceased, and to have given the instruction as asked would, we think, under the circumstances have been clearly misleading.

5. Plaintiff also assigns as cross-error the giving of instructions 9 and 10, which state in substance that if the deceased knew that the passenger train was due and was *82warned not to travel ahead of it, and if he nevertheless did so but failed to take dne care for his own safety, then that he would be negligent. Counsel for plaintiff contend that when the engineer was warned that the motor ear was ahead, such negligence of the deceased was eliminated from the case. They cite no cases in support of such contention. That it is unsound, appears, we think, sufficiently from what has been previously said.

We find no error in the record, and the judgment herein is accordingly affirmed.

Affirmed.

Pottee, C. J., and Kimball, J., concur.