delivered the opinion of the court.
At the trial plaintiff offered in evidence the decree of the United States District Court for the District of Oregon, above referred to, for the purpose of showing that the receiver was discharged, and that plaintiff’s cause of action against the receiver was continued against defendant company. It was competent, for this purpose, *192but objection was made to a portion thereof, relating to matters that were stricken out of the complaint. There is nothing in the record to show what was stricken out of the complaint, or what portion of the decree was objected to, and therefore there is nothing for us to consider, and, if there is anything stated in the decree that might have been prejudicial to the defendant’s case, its effect should have been limited by proper instructions.
There are several assignments of error based on the admission of evidence as to the relative duties of the head brakeman and the rear brakeman, and as to whether it was negligence for plaintiff to attend to this switch, which ordinarily was the duty. of the head brakeman. Plaintiff testified that Thomas was first brakeman and plaintiff second; that he is supposed to ride upon the rear end of the train, while the first brakeman is supposed to ride on the front end, but that they worked together generally; that his duties depended on his position. If he was where he could open a switch, he would do it. As to the duties of the second brakeman, he says:
“Well, it was just owing to what we were working at. If we happened to be in a place it was convenient for the second brakeman to be on the engine, he would be there, and, if convenient for the other brakeman to be at the rear of the train, he would be there. * * A person would be wherever it was necessary for him to be.”
There is nothing in the evidence indicating that the duties of the second brakeman were limited to any part of the train, or that the work of the first and second brakeman was so divided that it would be a violation of the rules or negligence for either of them to perform any duty of the other. At least, it is evident that plaintiff had no knowledge of such a distinction.
1. Whether it was negligence for plaintiff to ride on the step of the tender from Beaver Hill Junction over the trestle is immaterial, as he was not injured in going over the trestle or by reason of riding on the step. The *193question is whether it was negligence to be on that step when he approached the switch. This cannot as a matter of law be said to be contributory negligence. . Albert Abbott, defendant’s train manager, testified in reference thereto:
“Q. How do they (the brakemen when the engine is backing up) go from the tender to the ground to turn the switch?
“A. Generally go down the steps at the back part of the tender. That is what it is Tor, to get on and off there.”
Another witness says that on that step was the proper place for him when getting in reádiness to turn a switch. This was the only act of contributory negligence alleged, and whether it was negligence was properly left to the jury.
2. It is apparent from plaintiff’s own testimony that he knew the Klondyke switch was open, and he was acting upon that knowledge when injured. He says he took the position on the step of the tender “for the purpose of throwing this switch on the trestle” (meaning the Klondyke spur switch).
“I had an awfully good idea that it was open. * * It was reasonable to believe that the switch was left open after we pulled out with the double-header. * * It has always been the custom to never stop and line up the switch. * * I had some recollection of this switch being left open for the simple reason that we pulled out of there. * * That was one reason. Another reason was because these empties were left on the main line. I asked orders about putting them on this spur, and that was the case, and having pulled out of there it would be reasonable to suppose that it was left open.”
And the other trainmen testify that a heavy train going out of that switch always left it open, and that the train returning was expected to stop and close it, so that plaintiff was undoubtedly acting upon the knowledge that this switch was open. Therefore the open switch alone *194was not actionable negligence on the part of defendant, but the loaded car left on the spur increased the danger, and, if plaintiff was ignorant of its presence, a question for the jury would arise as to whether, under the circumstances, it was negligence for the company to so leave the car, and whether that was the approximate cause of the injury.
3. The negligence of defendant upon which plaintiff relies is that it left a loaded car upon the Klondyke spur and the switch open when the train pulled out, and that this was negligence, causing the injury. Plaintiff contends that the Beaver Hill branch was a main line and the Klondyke branch only a spur, and that the switch should have been kept closed in favor of the Beaver Hill line. The rule that all switches should be closed to the main line is for the protection of the public. But operatives running logging trains equally over two branches of a road, diverging from the same switch, it being usual to leave the switch open as the last train passed over it, cannot claim the benefit of that rule. If in such a case the switch was left open as the train passed out, such being the usual manner of operating these branches, and a disabled car was left on that branch, it is a question for the jury whether the defendant company is chargeable with negligence for an injury resulting to one of the operatives of such train by reason thereof. Plaintiff as one of such operatives knew his train was to be the first to pass the switch, that the switch was open, and that the train should stop and close it to take the other branch, but contends that he did not know that the loaded car had been left there. So far as relates to the use of these two branches by the logging trains, if, as indicated by the business conducted over them and the manner of their use, the switch was left open to the track last used, the operatives so using it cannot charge such use as negligence of the defendant.
*1954. Instruction No. 14 upon this question is as follows:
“If the jury find as a matter of fact from the evidence in this case that the line of railroad running from Beaver Hill to Beaver Hill Junction was in general use by the company for passengers and freight service, and so offered to the public, and that the line of road running from Pierce’s logging camp to Klondyke Junction, and there connecting with said Beaver Hill line, was used exclusively as a logging road, then they must find that the line from Beaver Hill Junction is what would be called a main line track and the line from Pierce’s logging camp to Klondyke Junction was a spur connecting with said main line track, and that the two lines were so operated together subject to the rules, regulations, customs, and practices of railroads as to main lines and spur tracks, respectively.”
This we think was error. If it were a claim for damages by a passenger injured by reason of the open switch, the instruction might have been proper, but it was error to give it under the facts of this case. It makes the company liable to the plaintiff by reasomof an open switch to the same extent as to a passenger, without taking into consideration the conditions under which the roads were actually operated, plaintiff’s connections therewith, and knowledge of the conditions. It is a question, considering the manner in which the logging trains were operated, whether the disabled car left on the track was an obstruction as to operatives for which defendant is liable within the rule that the company must use reasonable care in operating its road to prevent obstructions on its track dangerous to its employees.
We think the giving of this instruction was error, prejudicial to defendant’s rights, and for which the cause is reversed and remanded. Reversed.