(Concurring Specially). — While riding on a motor car or speeder William J. Framhein was killed by colliding with a train in tunnel No. á on the Willamette Pacific Railroad which extends from Marshfield to Eugene where physical connection is made with a main line of the Southern Pacific system. The Willamette Pacific Railroad was still in course of construction when the fatal accident occurred on June 26, 1916, and was still under the control of the defendant’s construction department, although a mixed train ran according to a regularly issued time-table and a tri-weekly freight train was “run extra” on a schedule which was issued “merely as a guide and information for shippers and others who may inquire as to the proper time that these trains will reach certain stations” and without “any idea of controlling movement of the trains which will run extra.” When proceeding from Marshfield to Eugene the mixed train was called No. 1 and when running from Eugene towards Marshfield it was known as train No. 2. The tri-weekly freight traiti. was designated as train No. 251 when *498proceeding towards Eugene and as No. 252 when running towards Marshfield.
It will be necessary to remember the names of a few of the stations and their relative locations. Noti is 18 miles from Eugene. Traveling towards Marshfield it is 10 miles from Noti to Walton, 40 miles from Walton to Cushman, about 5 miles from Cushman to Canary and nearly 4 miles from Canary to Lane. It is about 1,000 feet from the Eugene end of tunnel No. 4 to the switch at Canary. This tunnel is 624 feet in length and describes a seven degree curve from portal to portal. The curve does not immediately become a straight line at either end of the tunnel. Emerging from the Eugene end of the tunnel the track continues to describe a seven degree curve for about 20 feet from the portal and from that point it is reduced to four degrees “on back to a point about 400 feet toward Canary, and then it tapers from four to nothing, about 800 feet.” Leaving the Marshfield end of the tunnel the seven degree curvature continues for a distance of about 300 feet. One witness testified that, standing at the whistling post “you can see back to the tunnel from there, and you can see about 100 feet the other way.” The accident occurred about 10:25 a. m., and at or near the center of the tunnel.
One witness said that “it is quite dark in the center” of the tunnel and “you have to get out on the out end of the ties on the outside of the curve to see either way, from the center. ’ ’ Referring to the center of the tunnel, another witness testified that “it is not quite so dark as a very dark night. You can probably see your hand before you by putting it up pretty close to your face”; but “if the sun is right, you can see the rails all the way through as you walk through it.” The fireman stated that “in the center of it, it is not quite *499as dark as night, but it is dark in there.” F. A. Feickert, a civil engineer, testified that
“there is always a reflection on the rail of the light from the portal. Standing at this end of the tunnel, you can’t see any light clear into it. You get about halfway and you could see the light from the other end.”
The work train left Canary on the morning of June 26th and proceeded two or three miles beyond Lane to a place where a steam shovel was at work. Cars were loaded with dirt and the work train returned to Lane where the dirt was dumped along the track. The work train kept the steam shovel supplied with water and it became necessary to go for water to Canary where the nearest water tank was located. The locomotive .with its tender and a reserve tender behind it and a gondola coal-car and a water-car in front of it was uncoupled from the remainder of the train, and was started for Canary with an engineer, a fireman and two brakemen. The caboose and other cars which formed “the remainder of the train” were left at Lane in charge of the conductor who did some clerical work while the rest of the crqw were making the trip to Canary. There was no accessible turntable and the locomotive was run backwards with the reserve tender forming the front of the train. The work train was obliged to protect itself against trains numbered one and two and trains numbered 251 and 252, but it had the right of way as against all other trains. Train No. 2 was not due at Canary until 10:56 a. m. and consequently at the time of the accident the work train was entitled to the right of way as against all trains. No report was made to the dispatcher, who was at Noti, before leaving Lane for train orders because no orders were *500needed; and “there was no report of the movement of the train to anybody.”
Clarence H. Gaffney, one of the brakemen, testified that when they left Lane he “caught the rear end of the tank”; and in this particular he is corroborated by the engineer, fireman, conductor and Martin Dillon, the foreman of construction. C. G. Landerking says that while standing near the track and two or three hundred feet from the entrance of the tunnel he saw “a brakeman standing about the middle of the” reserve tender, which was the first car to enter the tunnel. Otto Schulz, a boy ten years of age, says that he saw more than one man on the cars and he saw “they were standing all around on the cars, and sitting down,” and that “most of the men that I saw was on top of the car.” The engineer and fireman state that Gaffney remained on the end of the tender from the time they left Lane until the collision. Gaffney testified that when he caught the rear end of the train he then sat “on the buffer beam with one foot on the step and the other on the train line, the angle cock”; and that he “stayed there until Framhein hit us in the tunnel.” No witness testified directly that there was no person on the end of the train at the place where Gaffney claims to have been. The only evidence tending to show that Gaffney was not on the end of the train consists of such inferences as may be drawn from the testimony of Landerking and Schulz.
The engineer says that the bell was ringing and Gaffney also states that he heard the bell ringing as the train approached the tunnel. The fireman explained that the bell was rung by an automatic-air ringer and that he turned on the valve- which started the automatic ringer at a point about 200 yards from the en*501trance of the tunnel. No witness testified that the hell was not ringing.
There is a “whistle-post” for the tunnel about 62 paces from the portal. The engineer stated that the whistle was blown about one half a mile from the tunnel and also at a point about 100 yards from the entrance of the tunnel. The fireman testified that the whistle was blown ‘ ‘ a quarter or a half the other side of the tunnel” and also at the whistle-post. Lander-king said that “it whistled when it was off about 200 or 300 feet from the entrance to the tunnel.” Otto Schulz says that he was with his- uncle O. G. Lander.king and heard the whistle before the train entered the tunnel. S. T. Evans was three or four hundred feet from the tunnel when he heard the whistle. Ga fney says that the whistle was blown just before the brain entered the tunnel. There is no evidence that the 'whistle was not blown.
Tbe speed of the train when entering the tunnel was estimated by the engineer at about eight miles per hour,, by the fireman and Gaffney at eight or ten miles, and by S. T. Evans at five, six or seven miles per hour. O. G. Landerking said that the train was going “pretty nearby as fast as the passenger trains run on the same ground now.” However, there is no evidence to indicate the speed of such passenger trains. The boy, Otto Slchulz, said:
“I tin ink it was going pretty fast. It was the first trains I ewer saw much.”
When sp'eaking of the collision, Gaffney stated that “I seen the s?hadow of the speeder jn tbe curve and heard the engine''.-working”; andyhen aske'd how far "the speeder was from him -£fit’the time” he an.-cwered;
*502“I would judge fifteen or twenty feet, when I first seen it” and “it looked to me like he was making twenty or twenty-five miles an hour.”
Gaffney says that when he first saw the shadow “I hollered to the engineer to plug her,” which in railroad parlance means to apply the emergency brake.
Fred L. Kirby, the train dispatcher, was stationed at Noti. There was an agent and a telephone at Cushman and there was a telephone at Canary. Kirby explained that they “had two cases of wire trouble, one at Walton and one at tunnel 5”; that on the morning of June 26th Framhein, who was then at Walton, asked him “for a line-up”; that he gave Framhein
“the line up as far as Cushman. I told him I knew nothing of Mr. Dillon’s work train and for him tc be on the lookout for Mr. Dillon.”
There is no evidence to show whether Framheir. did or did not make any inquiries of the agent at Cushman.
Olaf Larsen testified that Framhein stopped his speeder where the witness was at work on the drawbridge “out of Cushman” and that Framhein to lid the witness “I am going down the line. I don’t know, maybe I am going to Gardner,” whereupon ILarsen warned Framhein to “look out” for Dillon’fj work train. There is no evidence to indicate whetheiFramhein attempted to use the telephone at Canary/.
Aside from the testimony of Gaffney, a conversation that Kirby once had with Framhein and a tab a which Oliver A. Charlton, who was in charge of tide signal construction work, had with Framhein, ther'A is no evidence relating erectly or indirectly to Cue speed at which Fra'jnhein wsLtraveling when Killed except the testin'o’ ay of Fred B. Isioape’- vfhr^'says that Framhein raveling at about six miles per hour when between “n quarter and half a mile” north of tunnel 3. The *503length of tunnel No. 3 is 2,135 feet; and it is about a quarter of a mile from the south portal of tunnel 3 to the north portal of tunnel 4.
There were no lights in the tunnel and none on any part of the train. The engineer said that he could not see behind the tank and he admitted that he had testified at the coroner’s inquest that from his position in the cab he could not see “very far on account of the darkness; right where the accident happened I could not see at all.” The engineer testified that he “went to work there the first day of May”; and when asked “how many times in a day would you go through that tunnel?” he answered: “Well, always twice” and backwards “at least once.”
Gaffney and Dillon both stated that the train was operated through the tunnel exactly the same as on previous days. However, Gaffney testified that if the train had been going forward instead of backward “he [the engineer] probably would have lighted the headlight.” There is no evidence that lights were ever used when backing the train through tunnels and there is no evidence that Framhein had knowledge of the manner in which the work train was actually operated through tunnels.
The decedent was an experienced lineman and had worked for the defendant at different times, although the last period of employment began about six weeks prior to his death. During the four days immediately preceding his death, Framhein and his family lived at Cushman but during the prior portion of the six weeks of the last period of his employment he and his family lived at Reedsport, a station between Lane and Marsh-field.
The company’s business and Framhein’s employment bring the action within the Federal Employers’ *504Liability Act. Contributory negligence can be pleaded for the purpose of reducing the amount of recoverable damages but it is not a complete defense as it was formerly. Assumption of risk as a defense is abolished only where the carrier has violated some statute enacted for the safety of employees; and, therefore, since the carrier is not charged with the violation of any statute adopted for the safety of employees, the defensex of assumption of risk is available to the defendant: Jacobs v. Southern Ry. Co., 241 U. S. 229 (60 L. Ed. 204, 36 Sup. Ct. Rep. 588); Morata v. Oregon-Wash. R. & N. Co., 87 Or. 219, 225 (170 Pac. 291). The answer denies that the defendant was negligent and then pleads contributory negligence and assumption of risk.
The plaintiff is not entitled to recover unless the defendant was guilty of negligence. A complainant must now, as before the adoption of the Federal Employers ’ Liability Act, allege and prove that the carrier was negligent. The plaintiff alleges that the company was negligent in the following particulars: (1) the train was operated without any schedule; (2) the train was operated without any flagman on front of the same; (3) the defendant operated the train without “providing or giving any warning in any way whatever” to the decedent; (4) the defendant operated the train at a high rate of speed; (5) the defendant “failed to have any light upon said train and negligently failed to have any light upon the east end of said train”; and (6) the defendant “failed to have any lights in said tunnel of any kind whatever.”
Actionable negligence involves three elements: (1) The existence of a duty; (2)' failure to perform that duty; and (3) injury or death proximately resulting from such failure. If there is no duty there is no *505negligence: 23 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2 ed.), 732; Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. Langley (Okl.), 160 Pac. 451. It becomes necessary, therefore, to ascertain what duty the defendant owed Framhein before we can determine whether a failure to do any of the things specified in the complaint would be actionable negligence.
The decedent was not a trespasser but he was an employee whose duties required him to travel along the track on the speeder which the defendant had furnished him to be used for that purpose. The law imposed upon the defendant the duty of exercising the degree of care which an ordinarily prudent man would have exercised under the same circumstances. The company was obliged to employ such precautions as the imaginary ordinarily careful man would have employed for the protection and safety of its employees. "While no person on the work train knew that Framhein was in the tunnel yet in the language of the engineer; “I knew there was speeders on the road, or had been right along. * * I didn’t know where they were. I knew there had been speeders along all the time. ’ ’ The railroad company is obliged to give reasonable warning of the approach of its train when, under all the circumstances, the presence of and danger to its employees is reasonably to be anticipated: Louisville & N. R. R. Co. v. Bays’ Admr., 142 Ky. 400, 402 (134 S. W. 450, 34 L. R. A. (N. S.) 678); Southern Ry. Co. v. Sanders, 145 Ky. 679 (141 S. W. 77); Grow v. Oregon Short Line R. Co., 44 Utah, 160, (138 Pac. 398, Ann. Cas. 1914B, 481); Oliver v. Roach, 31 Ky. Law Rep. 284 (102 S. W. 274); Wilhelm v. Missouri O. & G. Ry. Co. (Okl.), 152 Pac. 1088; 2 Thompson on Negligence (2 ed.), 462.
*506Here was a work train which in the language of the conductor “was liable to be anywhere at any time”; it was run backwards into a tunnel built on a seven degree curve so that a person walking or riding between the rails could not, when at the center of the tunnel, see either way; and, moreover, it was dark near the center of the tunnel though “not quite so dark as a very dark night.” The company furnished Framhein a speeder so that he could perform the duties assigned to him; and in the performance of those duties he also, to borrow the words of the conductor, “was liable to be anywhere at any time.” The company not only gave him the right to use the track but it expected him to do so. It is true that he was bound to be on the lookout for trains and to yield the track to all trains and his use of the track was governed by rules promulgated by the company; but the duty prescribed for Framhein did not necessarily “relieve the employees in charge of the train from all obligation to be watchful on his account”: Brunell v. Southern Pacific Co., 34 Or. 256, 262 (56 Pac. 129). Indeed, the company itself recognized that the location and surroundings were such as to require a warning every time a train entered the tunnel, by planting a, “whistle-post” 62 paces from the portal as a notice to the engineer to blow the whistle at that place before entering the tunnel. Assuming that it was the duty of the defendant to warn employees in the tunnel of the approach of the train it yet remains to be determined whether the defendant performed that duty.
One of the specifications of negligence contained in the complaint is an act of commission while the others are acts of omission. The plaintiff claims that the train was run too fast; that it was run without a schedule, without a flagman at the front of the train, without *507blowing the whistle or ringing the bell, without a light on the end of the train and without a light in the tunnel.
The court properly instructed the jury that there was no evidence to sustain the charge of excessive speed. There is no evidence whatever to show that the whistle was not blown or that the bell was not rung. Every witness who testified about the whistle said that it was blown. No witness testified that the whistle was not blown. There was not even negative testimony from any witness that he did not hear a whistle. Indeed, C. Gr. Landerking, one of the witnesses for the plaintiff, stated that the whistle was blown when the train “was off about two hundred or three hundred feet from the entrance to the tunnel.” Every person who testified concerning the bell said that it was rung. No witness stated that he did not hear the bell. If one or more witnesses in a position to have heard the whistle or the bell had'testified that one was not blown and that the other was not rung or that he did not hear either the whistle or the bell then it would have been a question for the jury to determine what the fact was: Smith v. Southern Pacific Co., 58 Or. 22, 33 (113 Pac. 41, Ann. Cas. 1913A, 434); Morata v. Oregon-Wash. R. & N. Co., 87 Or. 219, 223 (170 Pac. 291); but all the evidence, including the plaintiff’s evidence in chief, was to the effect that the whistle was blown at the whistle-post and all the testimony was likewise to the effect that the bell was rung. If it was the duty of the defendant to ring the bell and blow the whistle then the defendant performed that duty. There is affirmative evidence of a “whistle-post” for the tunnel and all the evidence upon the subject is to the effect that the whistle was blown at a place opposite or near the “whistle-post.” If upon a retrial the evidence is the same as the record presented to us the court should *508instruct the jury that there is no evidence to sustain the charge that the bell was not rung or to support the claim that the whistle was not sounded. Buie 31 promulgated by the defendant requires the engine bell to be rung on approaching tunnels and until they are passed and the whistle to be sounded at all whistling-posts. However, sounding the whistle or bell does not necessarily acquit the railroad company of negligence for the reason that the circumstances may be such as to make it the duty of the company to do more than to blow the whistle and ring the bell: 33 Cyc. 812, note.
While there was no evidence that Gaffney was not riding on the end of the front car except the inferences to be drawn from the evidence of Landerking and Schulz yet their testimony and particularly that of Landerking made it proper for the court to ask the jury to decide whether Gaffney was in the middle and on top of the reserve tender or whether he was on the buffer beam where he claims to have been. Buie 102 declares that when cars are pushed by an engine “a flagman must take a conspicuous position on the front of the leading car, ’ ’ a position in the middle of the top of the car would not be on the front of the car; and hence it was a question of fact for the jury to decide whether Gaffney was on the front or in the middle of the car. The defendant is chargeable with negligence if Buie 102 was violated; but, of course, the defendant would not be liable for that act of negligence unless there was a causal connection between such negligence and the death of Framhein.
The defendant earnestly insists that it was under-no obligation to have a light on the forward end of the train while backing the engine through the tunnel with its tender and a reserve tender forming the front end of the train. Many and probably most of the au*509thorities declare that it is negligence to run a train in the night-time without a light. It is not necessary for the purposes of the instant case to decide whether running a train backward without a light in the nighttime is as a matter of law a violation of the company’s duty to its employees but it is sufficient to say that it would at least be a question of fact for the jury to determine whether running a train backward without a light in the night-time would be a failure to do what would be done by an ordinarily prudent man: Southern Ry. Co. v. Sanders, 145 Ky. 679 (141 S. W. 77); Hammett v. Southern R. Co., 157 N. C. 322 (72 S. E. 1077); Oliver v. Roach, 31 Ky. Law Rep. 284 (102 S. W. 274); Burling v. Illinois Cent. R. R. Co., 85 Ill. 18; Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. Langley (Okl.), 160 Pac. 451; Hargrave v. Shaw Land etc. Co., 111 Va. 84 (68 S. E. 278, Ann. Cas. 1912A, 151); 23 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2 ed.), 757; 33 Cyc. 958. The need of a light arises when darkness exists. It is because of the darkness that a light is needed. The sun may be below the horizon and thus cause darkness, or it may be above the horizon and yet its rays may be shut out and thus cause darkness; but in either event the need of a light on a train results from the condition of darkness rather than from the cause of that condition; and hence, reasoning by analogy, if a light is-needed between sunset and sunrise because it is dark it may also be needed between sunrise and sunset in a tunnel where the condition of darkness exists. • The defendant’s motions for a nonsuit and a directed verdict were properly overruled.
The decedent assumed both the risk of the work train running without a schedule and also the risk of the tunnel itself being unlighted. Framhein assumed all the risks that were ordinarily incident to his employ*510ment and also extraordinary risks which he knew, or ought to have known, and appreciated: Galvin v. Brown & McCabe, 53 Or. 598, 611 (101 Pac. 671). A railroad company is not hound to install lights along the entire length .of its tracks so that the right of way may be lighted in the night-time; nor was there any independent duty to install lights in the tunnel. For all practical purposes it is probable that a lighted train in an unlighted curved tunnel would be more likely to give notice of an approaching train than would an unlighted train in a lighted tunnel. However, even though it be supposed that it was the duty of the defendant to light the tunnel, nevertheless the failure of the company to install lights in the tunnel does not make it liable. It is conceded that the tunnel never had been lighted. Framhein knew that the tunnel was dark, because in the performance of his duties he necessarily passed through it from time to time and consequently if the darkness of the tunnel was an extraordinary peril produced by the negligence of the company it. was a peril which Framhein must be deemed to have assumed.
The defendant seeks to apply the doctrine of assumed risk to the failure to maintain a light on a train while backing through the tunnel. It is true that the evidence is to the effect that the train was backed through the tunnel on June 26th in the same manner in which it had previously been backed, but there is no evidence that Framhein knew of this practice; and therefore if it was negligence not to maintain a light on the train the risk was an extraordinary peril unknown to Framhein and not assumed by him: 3 Labatt on Master and Servant (2 ed.), p. 3203; Barley v. Southern Ind. R. Co., 30 Ind. App. 406 (66 N. E. 72).
*511The decedent knew that the work train was run without a schedule. Kirby 'warned Framhein before he left Walton; Larsen warned him at the bridge near Cushman; the purpose for which the train was used probably made a schedule impracticable; and therefore, even though it be supposed, without deciding, that it was negligence to run the work train without a schedule it was a risk which Framhein assumed.
Aside from and independent of the requirements of Rule 772 and the instruction contained in the letter of April 12,1916, it was the duty of Framhein to exercise care to protect himself; and if he failed to exercise reasonable care to discover the approach of the train he was negligent: Hawley v. Chicago, B. & Q. Ry. Co., 71 Iowa, 717 (29 N. W. 787).
The letter advising Framhein of the shipment of the motor car warned him
“in rounding curves on obscure points, have your car under complete control at all times and do not proceed without properly protecting “yourself or flagging.”
Rule 772, so far as material here reads as follows:
“Hand cars, motor cars (section and inspection cars), push cars, gravity cars, and velocipedes must be run with great caution at all times and particularly at night and in fogs. When the view of approaching trains in either direction is so obscured by any cause that there would not be ample time to remove the car from the track before being struck by a train running at maximum allowable speed, stop signals must be used in either or both directions, as may be necessary.
“Employees operating inspection ears (motor ears or velocipedes) who have not enough assistance to flag in either or both directions when necessary, as herein prescribed, must walk with their cars until the view for a safe distance is not obscured in either direction.
*512“All cars must display a -white light to both front and rear when operated between sunset and sunrise. * * ”
If Framhein disobeyed Eule 772 by riding on instead of wallring with the speeder and if such disobedience was causally connected with the collision then he was guilty of contributory negligence: 3 Labatt on Master & Servant (2 ed.),§1281; 18 E. C. L. 659'; 26 Cyc. 1267. Both the plaintiff and the defendant allege that Framhein was riding on the speeder. The complaint avers that the decedent “was required to ride through said tunnel No. á on the said motor car * * and'in so doing * * ” was struck by the train. Again, the plaintiff says in his complaint that the train ran into him while he “was proceeding through said tunnel on said motor car.” The answer alleges that Framhein met his death by causing a motor car “on which he was riding” to collide with the train. If the view of an approaching train was so obscure that there would not be ample time to remove the speeder from the track before being struck by a train running at maximum allowable speed then it was the duty of Framhein, under Eule 772, to walk with his ear, until the view for a safe distance was not obscured in either direction. This phase of Eule 772 was not submitted to the jury in any manner; but the court instructed the jury that “the only evidence in this case which you can consider as a violation of Eule 772 is the evidence with reference to the rate of speed which Framhein was traveling at the time of the accident.” The question of the duty of Framhein to walk “until the view for a safe distance is not obscured” should be submitted to the jury upon a retrial.
Two applications for employment, one dated October 25, 1915, and the other dated April 16, 1916, were re*513ceived in evidence. Bach of these applications purports to be signed by William J. Pramhein and both acknowledge receipt of a copy of the rules and regulations for the government of employees of the operating department of the company; and each application also contains an agreement on the part of Pramhein to familiarize himself with and observe all the rules and regulations. If Pramhein signed the applications for employment, and received a copy of the rules and was able to read he must be deemed to have had knowledge of Rule 772 since he had a reasonable opportunity to familiarize himself with the rules: Georgia Pacific R. Co. v. Dooly, 86 Ga. 294 (12 S. E. 923, 12 L. R. A. 342, 345); Darracott v. Chesapeake etc. R. R. Co., 83 Va. 288 (2 S. E. 511, 5 Am. St. Rep. 266); Little v. Southern Ry. Co., 120 Ga. 347 (47 S. E. 953, 102 Am. St. Rep. 104, 66 L. R. A. 509); 18 R. C. L. 661; 3 Labatt on Master & Servant (2 ed.), § 1133.
The judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Bean, J., concurs..