delivered the opinion of the court.
*691A motor truck owned by the N. H. Slack Grocery Company was damaged in a collision with a street car owned by the Virginia Railway and Power Company. The grocery company, in an action against the railway company for the damage thus sustained, recovered the judgment here under review.
The accident occurred at the intersection of County and Washington streets, in the city of Portsmouth. These streets intersect each other approximately at right angles. The street car was going west on County street and the truck was going north on Washington street. Under the provisions of the city ordinances, neither street cars, nor motor trucks may pass over street crossings faster than six miles an hour; street cars must sound a’gong fifty feet before reaching a crossing; and when a street car and a truck are approaching each other at an angle, the one to the right has the right of way.
The negligence relied on is (1) excessive speed of the street car, (2) the failure, of the motorman to keep a proper lookout ahead, and (3) violation of the ordinance requiring the car to sound a gong.
The defendant contends that it was not negligent in any of the foregoing particulars, and that, even if it was, the driver of the plaintiff’s truck was guilty of contributory negligence barring the recovery.
[1] The verdict of the jury determined in favor of the plaintiff all disputed questions of fact.
[2, 3] The buildings on County street obstructed the truck driver’s view on that street until he was within about twenty-seven and one-half feet of the track. At that point, according to his testimony, he looked both ways and saw no car. How far he tried to look in each direction does not appear, but. there was no obligation on him to look as far as he could see. It was sufficient if he did what reasonably prudent men are presumed to do at street *692crossings and looked far enough to see that the way appeared clear for him to proceed. From the testimony of the witness, H. E. White, the jury would have been warranted in finding that when the truck was about twenty feet from the track, the street car was still seventy-five feet away, and that, therefore, when the truck driver was twenty-seven and one half feet from the track, where he could get the first cleár view down the street, the trolley car was still farther away. The driver says he was going at the rate of four or five miles an hour; that his truck was heavy and heavily loaded, and that he could not under these conditions stop within less than twenty feet. The truck was about half way across the track when the collision occurred and was struck “amidships.” As a result of the impact, the two vehicles formed a sort of wedge, the front end of the street car leaving the track and the car itself coming to a standstill at an angle of about forty-five degrees therefrom. According to the testimony of the truck driver and of the witness White, the car sounded no gong. This witness was in sight and sound of the car from the time it was seventy-fiye feet from the crossing until the collision occurred. Several witnesses further stated that the motorman was not looking ahead, but had his head turned to one side and was engaged in conversa-, tion with another man standing by his side. As one of the witnesses expressed it, “he (motorman) didn’t know whether he was passing, or where he was, or what he was doing.”
There was evidence to the contrary, but the jury could have believed, and manifestly did believe, that the situation here described was in accord with the true facts of the case, and we are bound by their verdict. If this was the true situation, the truck driver was not at fault, and it was at least a reasonable inference that the street car approached the crossing recklessly, without sounding the *693gong, without a proper lookout ahead, and came upon the crossing at a greater rate of speed than the ordinance or common prudence demanded.
[4, 5] The , driver of the truck testified that when he first saw the car it was only two or three feet from him, and it is argued that he thus admits his own negligence because he had a clear view all the way down the street. He made this further statement, however: ’’When I got to the corner I looked both ways. I didn’t see nothing. Just as I got the front wheels across the track, I looked around again and the street car was up on me and he was two or three feet from me.” Under these circumstances we cannot say that the truck driver was guilty of negligence as a matter of law. From the plaintiff’s standpoint, the evidence tended to show that until after the driver had reached the point beyond which it would have been impossible for him to avoid the accident by stopping the truck, he was acting prudently and that an ordinarily prudent person would have been warranted in attempting to make the crossing. Pedestrians and vehicles may cross the street car tracks in full view of approaching cars if it is consistent with ordinary prudence to do so. Bass v. Norfolk Railway & Light Co., 100 Va. 1, 40 S. E. 100; Richmond Traction Co. v. Clarke, 101 Va. 386, 43 S. E. 618; Virginia Railway & Power Co. v. Meyer, 117 Va. 413, 84 S. E. 742. The instant case is controlled by the doctrine of these and like decisions of this court, and not by the doctrine of Portsmouth Street Railway Co. v. Peed, 102 Va. 662, 47 S. E. 850; Virginia Railway & Power Co. v. Boltz, 122 Va. 649, 95 S. E. 467, and other cases of this type relied upon by counsel for the plaintiff in error.
[6, 7] The result is not affected by the fact that under the city ordinance when two vehicles are approaching each other at an angle the right-hand vehicle has the right of way. Such an ordinance can only be applied to cases *694in which it is reasonably apparent that one of the two vehicles must yield to the other to avoid a collision. Ordinances of this character must be given a reasonable construction, and merely mean that vehicles coming from the left must stop and wait for vehicles from the right in cases where under all the circumstances ordinary care and prudence would require such a stop. Virginia, Ry. & P. Co. v. Hill, 120 Va. 397, 405, 91 S. E. 194. There was evidence in the case tending to show that until it was too late for the driver of the truck to stop, there was no reason for him to suppose that he would be in the way of the street car.
[8] It is contended that the truck driver was negligent in failing to give warning of his approach to the crossing. He said: “Before I got to the comer I blowed my horn.” The context in which this statement appears indicates tñat he sounded this warning as an ordinarily prudent driver would do in coming to a crossing. No ordinance prescribes any particular rule. The jury accepted his statement and we must abide that result.
These observations are sufficient to dispose of the first assignment of error, which rests upon the action of the trial court in refusing to set aside the verdict as contrary to the evidence. The remaining assignments relate to the instructions given and refused, all of which will appear in full with the official report of the case.
[9] We do not understand that plaintiff’s instruction “A” was offered upon the theory of last clear chance, and the criticism of it upon this ground is without merit.
[10] The language which the court struck out of instruction No. 3, as originally requested by the defendant, might very properly have been allowed to stand. It was, of course, intended to explain to the jury that the doctrine of comparative negligence is not a part of the law of this State. The instruction as given, however, told the jury *695the same thing in general terms by informing them that they could not find for the plaintiff'if it was guilty of any negligence at all which contributed to the collision, and there was nothing in this or other instructions which could have led the jury to suppose that they were to be influenced by any question of the comparative negligence of the plaintiff and defendant.
[11] The defendant’s instruction No. 5 ignored the fact that it may have been impossible for the truck driver to stop after the street car was within ten feet’of the point of collision, and that this situation may have been brought about by the excessive speed of the car rather than by any fault of the driver of the truck. If the crossing appeared to be clear and reasonably safe, the truck had the right to proceed at not over six miles an hour. He says he was running four or five miles an hour, and at that rate could not stop within less than about twenty feet. If the street car was as far away as some of the evidence placed it at the time truck came to the south side of County street, the driver might reasonably have proceeded on his way, and later have found himself unable to stop in time to avoid a- collision with the car which by fast running had reached a point only a few feet from him.
We are of opinion that there was sufficient evidence to support the verdict, that there were no errors in the instructions, and that, therefore, the judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.