This is an action for personal injury. Plaintiff recovered judgment in the trial court in the sum of five hundred dollars.
It 'appears that plaintiff was a brakeman in defendant ’s employ and that defendant’s switch crew in charge of a foreman were endeavoring to cut off four freight cars from .the main train. That plaintiff was placed on top of one of the four cars so as to set the brake when the cars should be separated. That in endeavoring to pull out the pin holding the link which connected the cars, the foreman found.it held fast; that he stepped from between the cars and instead of giving a signal to the engineer .to slow up the train, he gave one to bring it to a full, or sudden stop, the effect of which was to throw plaintiff off the car. A full statement of the case may be found reported in 87 Mo. App. 637, it having been here on a former appeal. We reversed the cause then on account, among other things, of plaintiff not having proved ia custom among railroads to' first give a slow up signal, so as to enable a brakeman in plaintiff’s situation to prepare himself for the jerk consequent on stopping the train. And that negligence in failing to adopt proper rules regulating the switching of cars had not been pleaded by plaintiff. Plaintiff filed an amended petition setting up the failure of defendant to adopt the rules to which we have referred.
While the defendant, as appellant, has filed an elaborate brief demonstrating from its point of view that plaintiff has totally failed to make out a case against it, plaintiff has not seen fit to make any answer thereto by any showing in his own behalf. It was perhaps unnecessary that he do so, for we are satisfied that his case must fail. In the first place, there was a failure to prove the custom alleged in the manner required in the opinion in the case when first here. Secondly, we are *518of the opinion that if negligence on defendant’s part should be conceded, the plaintiff was clearly guilty of contributory negligence, or that he at least assumed the risk of injury. He was a man of experience in railroading and his own statement shows that he placed himself in the perilous situation with full knowledge of the probable results, and that there was no rule adopted by defendant, or enforced by it, as to the signals which should be given.
The judgment will be reversed.
All concur.