The plaintiff sued for damages for personal injuries received it is alleged by reason of the negligence of a driver of defendant, Thomson Transfer Company. Plaintiff recovered judgment against defendant in the sum of $500.
The driver had stopped in Missouri avenue, in Kansas City, Missouri, to allow his team to eat its noon-day feed. He had removed the bits from the horses’ mouths and, plaintiff’s evidence was, had removed the bridles and they hung upon the hames. The wagon was loaded with drums of condensed liquid carbonic acid gas. The safety valve, a contrivance to enable gas to escape and avert an explosion, was blown off of one of the drums, making a loud noise. The team became frightened and ran away. The driver and another ran to the heads of the horses and endeavored to stop them, but to no purpose. The horses ran down Missouri avenue, to Main street, along which plaintiff *122was traveling at tbe time in a two-seated buggy. He beard cries of “Runaway” and bad bis children get out. He looked np and saw two teams coming in a run down Missouri avenue and turned bis borse towards tbe east into tbe avenue to allow them to pass. ' Thinking they were tbe runaways, be proceeded on bis journey, but, bearing more cries, looked up again towards tbe. west and back of him and saw tbe defendant’s team coming down upon him, Avhich was following tbe same course as tbe two teams he bad thought were running away. He whipped up bis borse, but tbe team ran into tbe rear end of tbe buggy throwing him out and injuring him. This was bis version.
Defendant insists that tbe explosion, and not the negligence of defendant’s driver in leaving tbe team unsecured, was tbe proximate cause of tbe plaintiff’s injury and for support of bis theory relies upon tbe rulings in Saxton v. Railway, 98 Mo. App. 494, and Insurance Co. v. Boon, 95 U. S. 117. We think they overthrow its theory. There was an intervening cause between tbe explosion and tbe injury, viz., tbe negligence of tbe driver, without tbe occurrence of which tbe team would not have escaped and run away. Under tbe rule in Saxton v. Railway, supra, the proximate cause is tbe one <£which in tbe natural and continuing sequence, unbroken by an intervening cause, produces tbe injury and without which tbe result would not have happened.”
Defendant relies mainly on tbe ground that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence. We think that is equally untenable. Defendant states tbe matter thus: “If plaintiff bad left bis buggy when bis three children did, be would not have been injured.” If be had not driven bis borse south after tbe first two teams bad passed, but bad remained still, be would not have been injured; or, if be bad turned and driven north, be would not have been injured. Admitting all *123this to be true,' we .think plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence. In tbe first, instance, he would not have been justified in abandoning his horse in the street under the circumstances, as it would in all probability have run away and injured some one else. In the second instance, plaintiff, having seen the two other runaway teams, or what he thought were runaway teams, pass and not knowing that defendant’s team was also running in his direction, drove on without apprehension of further danger and became aware of it too late to get out of the way. This is an answer to the rest of defendant’s premises. At most, it was a question for the jury. It is the rule that when a person is placed in a situation of impending peril by the negligence of another and does not adopt the safest and best course to avoid injury, but acts as an ordinarily prudent person might be expected to act under similar circumstances, he is not guilty of contributory negligence. [Root v. Railway, 195 Mo. 348; Bischoff v. Railway, 121 Mo. 216.]
The' point is made that plaintiff did not prove that the injury was inflicted within the corporate limits of Kansas City. That was not important as the locality was sufficiently described. But there was evidence that Missouri avenue was within the city limits and, as the injury occurred at its intersection with Main street, we may safely infer that Main street was also in the city limits.
Defendant’s objections to instructions 1, 2 and 4, given for plaintiff are not well taken.
Defendant complains of the action of the court in refusing instruction 5. The instruction is well enough and, if there had been any evidence of contributory negligence, it ought perhaps to have been given. However, under the evidence and construing it the most unfavorably to the plaintiff, as. a matter of law he was not guilty of the slightest negligence.
*124All other alleged errors we believe to be unimport-. ant. The verdict was for the right party and ought to be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
All concur.