Plaintiff, the widow of George Mathews, deceased, sued to recover damages for the death of her husband which she alleges was caused by the negligence of defendant. A trial in the circuit court resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $4500 and defendant appealed to this court. We certified the cause to the Supreme Court but that court sent it back and it is now before us for determination.
Mr. Mathews was killed late in the afternoon of September 28, 1903, by falling from an electric street car operated by defendant on its Eighth street linein Kansas City. The car was going east on Eighth street and had' just started from Wall street where it had stopped to receive passengers. Mathews, who was forty-four years old and weighed about 210 pounds, came north on Wall street and, doubtless, intending to become a passenger on the car, ran to the rear steps and attempted to board the car while it was in motion.
There were two tracks and the car was running on the south track. From Wall street to Walnut, three blocks east, there is a steep ascent and the tracks run over a steel and concrete viaduct built by defendant and used only for street car traffic. The viaduct is just wide enough for the tracks, the outer lines of the structure being only some eighteen inches from the outer rails. The body of the car Mathews attempted- to board extended over the track far enough to bring the perpendicular line of the south side of the car about on a line with the edge of the viaduct table. The car was just *719starting np the west end of the yiadnct and was moving slowly when Mathews grasped the handhold and attempted to board it. He succeeded in placing one foot on the lower step but, despite his repeated efforts to pull himself up, was unable to do so. The conductor, who was either in the vestibule or in the back of the car, quickly discovered his 'plight and tried to help him. It is not seriously contended that the conductor was remiss in discovering the peril or in going to the assistance of the endangered man but it is insisted that he was negligent in not giving the signal to stop the car instead of trying, as he did, to pull Mathews up to a safe footing on the step. The combined efforts of Mathews and the conductor continued until the rear end of the car reached a point 92 feet east of the west end of the viaduct, which, at that place, was 16 feet above the street. Mathews still was being dragged along, supported by his arms and the lifting and pulling of the conductor, and his legs protruded beyond the side of the car. At this point a sign giving warning to trespassers had been placed by defendant. The sign was held aloft by a perpendicular iron rod attached to the south edge of the viaduct and bent out at or near the place of attachment so that the perpendicular part of the rod cleared the lower step, of the car by about eight inches. Mathews’ leg collided with this rod, he was knocked off the car, and fell to the pavement below.
Plaintiff insists that it was negligence for the defendant to maintain the sign in a place where its supporting rod would be so close to passing cars as to endanger the safety of a person in the situation of her husband. The court overruled defendant’s requests for a peremptory instruction and submitted to the jury the issues of whether defendant was negligent in maintaining the sign-in the manner described and whether the conductor was negligent in not giving a signal to stop.
*720There is nothing in the suggestion of plaintiff that its adversary is precluded from urging the demurrer to the evidence in this court for the reason that it offered, and the court gave, instructions which recognized the issues of negligence tendered by plaintiff as issues for the jury to determine. When a defendant is forced by the adverse rulings of the court to abandon one position and fall back to another he may return in the appellate court to his first position if he has properly preserved his exceptions to the adverse rulings. We find the exceptions to the refusal of defendant’s demurrers to the evidence are preserved and that plaintiff is wrong in thinking that this case falls within the rule recently applied by this court in McKee v. Jones D. G. Co., 132 S. W. 1191.
We find ourselves unable to agree with the view of some of the material facts expressed as follows in the brief of counsel for plaintiff: “Mathews was not in any danger except from being struck with the post. He was a man of large and powerful physique. It was palpable to the most casual discernment that with his two hands firmly grasping the handrails and his knees and body resting on the steps he was so far as any hazard from the mere movement of the car was concerned, in a position of perfect safety. Uncomfortable as his position was, he unquestionably could have ridden the entire distance of the viaduct without harm, but for the obstruction near the track. It was perfectly obvious that the puny efforts of the conductor to reach over and pull him farther upon the car before they would reach the standard were bound to be futile and unavailing. This was so palpable that a failure to recognize it by the conductor can be ascribed to nothing else than a complete loss of his senses'for the time being.”
The inference that the weight of Mathews’ body was being supported by the car steps rests on the testimony of a witness from which we give this quotation: “At that moment this man flashed across the sidewalk *721there in the ordinary way and grabbed the car and stepped onto the first—onto the bottom step with one foot and hopped with the other, bnt never hopped on— lie always hit underneath. He hopped, probably, twice or three times, and as he went back onto the ground then I could notice the car was just moving and then I noticed he began to follow the car down, like (illustrating)^—that is, the car was moving him along, and then he fell down onto the car or threw himself down and settled back with both knees in the step and then set back in the step and was carried across Eighth street and' up the hill in that way.”
Had Mathews succeeded in pulling himself up to a position of kneeling with both knees on the car step and thereby of having the step as his main support, he would not have required any assistance from the conductor, nor would he have been in any need of having the car stopped since with both hands firmly grasping handholds it would have been no task at all, and would have taken no appreciable time to pull himself up to a standing position on the step. The great mass of the oral evidence and the indisputable physical facts of the situation show beyond controversy that so small a part of the weight of the man’s body rested on the steps that his continued and supreme efforts to pull himself up, abetted by the utmost efforts of the conductor, were unavailing and he was being simply dragged along and every moment was in danger of losing his grip and dropping off. A careful reading of the testimony of the witness from which we have quoted convinces us that he did not intend to say that Mathews’, body was materially supported by the car step, but if such was his intention, we would reject the evidence as the statement of a palpably false impression received by the witness—false for the reason that a reasonable mind, cannot reconcile it with the undisputed and indisputable physical fact that the united strength, continuously exerted, of Mathews who *722was a powerful man, and of the conductor who gave every pound of strength he had to. spare, could not give the unfortunate man a footing on the ear step.
Whether the duty of the conductor to Mathews be measured by the standard of the extraordinary care a common carrier owes to its passengers or by that of ordinary care, the facts before us will not permit the indulgence of the conclusion that the conductor was guilty of negligence. It is always for the court to decide whether a given state of facts will support an inference of negligence and the issue should be treated as one of fact only when the evidence offers ground for a difference of opinion among reasonable minds in the characterization of the act alleged to be culpable. To allow the conductor to be stigmatized as one who negligently caused the death of plaintiff’s husband would be most unjust. T-Ie earnestly and honestly did all he could to save life and if it could be said that he would have exhibited better judgment had he stopped to pull the signal cord, still we find no ground in the evidence for pronouncing him negligent. A mere error of judgment committed under stress of exciting and imminent danger alone is no proof of negligence. We think the conductor committed no error and that he should be commended for what he did and tried to do. Here was a man hanging on for dear life and in extreme peril every moment from the instant in which the conductor started to rescue him. Suppose the conductor had stopped to ring the bell and Mathews had lost his hold and fallen to the pavement. Would not plaintiff be saying that he wasted precious time that better might have been utilized in the manner the conductor did use it? We deeply sympathize with plaintiff but do not approve her condemnation of one for whom she should cherish no feeling but gratitude.
Passing to the issue of negligence of defendant in having the supporting rod of its sign too near the path of passing cars, we first shall direct our attention to the *723question of the relationship that existed between defendant and Mathews. It is clear that the attempt of Mathews to board the car after it had left the usual stopping place and was starting up the incline did not create the relationship of passenger and carrier. As is said by the Supreme Court in Schepers v. Union Depot Ry. Co., 126 Mo. 1. c. 672:
“It must be conceded that there is difficulty in many cases in determining when the relationship of carrier and passenger begins, and what acts of the parties are sufficient to create it. The difficulty is greater in case the carrier operates a street railway, having no regular stations or station agents authorized to make contracts. In respect to such carriers passage must be taken hastily, on the streets, at points prescribed by the rules of the carrier or by the police regulations of the municipality. Yet, one test applies alike to all, and that is, the relation can only be created by contract between the parties, express or implied. There must always be an offer and request to be carried on one side, and an acceptance on the other. ... It follows from what has been said that plaintiff did not become a- passenger by a mere attempt on his part to board the car while it was in motion, as is declared by this instruction. There must have been some act on the part of the carrier indicating an acceptance. [Stager v. Railroad, 119 Pa. St. 70.]”
While the attempt of Mathews to board the car under conditions fraught with such great danger may be construed as an offer to become a passenger, there was-, no act of defendant on which an implied acceptance off the offer could be predicated and, consequently, it cannot be said that any sort of invitation was extended by defendant to Mathews to board the car. In the absence-of such invitation Mathews did not become a passenger, and defendant owed him no other duty than that of using ordinary care to avoid injuring him after it discovered, or should have known, that voluntarily and: *724uninvited, he had placed himself on the car in a position of danger.
The evidence shows that the peril was created solely by the negligence, even recklessness, of the unfortunate man. We are not holding that the act of a strong, able-bodied man in attempting to board a slowly moving street car is negligence per se. -“Making such an attempt would, undoubtedly, be evidence of negligence, but whether it was a contributing cause of the injury should be for the triers of fact to decide. The person making the attempt could only be held to assume the risk of injury from the ordinary movements of the car. [Booth on Street Railway Law, sec. 336; Briggs v. Railroad, 148 Mass. 75; Morrison v. Raiload, 130 N. Y. 169. Blumenthal v. Broch, 126 Mo. 1. c. 676.]”
But this rule applies only in cases where the act is not attended by unusual and extraordinary dangers. Circumstances alter cases. It is one thing for an active man to try to board a slowly moving car, running on an ordinary pavement where the success of the act.is almost certain and a failure ordinarily results in nothing more serious than missing the car, but it is another and entirely different thing to attempt to board a car starting up an inclined plane where success is not so certain and failure necessarily must result in placing would-be passengers in serious and ever-increasing danger. We declare as a matter of law that an ordinarily careful and prudent man would not voluntarily have encountered a risk so grave and that Mathews.’ predicament was due entirely to his- own lack of ordinary care. How then may any reasonable person say that defendant, when it placed the sign 92 feet away from the end of the viaduct should have anticipated, not that some passenger might lean out far enough to strike the rod, or that some employee might be caught while doing some service, such as adjusting the trolley, but ‘that some person not belonging to these classes might, uninvited and reckless of his own safety, attempt to jump on the *725car while it was starting up the plane and hang on until the rod brushed him off? Defendant could, and as far as we know, did, make suitable provision for safeguarding its passengers and employees and owed no duty to any other class of persons since no others had any right to be on the viaduct at that place and none could be there without being guilty of negligence. Without a duty there can be no negligence. Defendant could not possibly have owed any duty to Mathews to remove the rod or to safeguard him against its action unless, in the exercise of reasonable care, it should have anticipated that someone might do as he did or do something else equally dangerous. To hold that defendant should have anticipated an occurrence of such nature and guarded against it would be to hold it to the exercise of care most extraordinary towards persons to whom it could not, in any event, owe any greater care than that of not wantonly or negligently injuring them after the discovery of their peril.
It follows that the judgment must be reversed.
All concur.