delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of appellee and against appellant for the sum of $5,000, rendered in an action for the alleged negligence of appellant, by reason of which, it is claimed, appellee’s intestate, Louis Smith, was killed December 16, 1893.
The declaration alleges as negligence,. the running of appellant’s train at .a high and unreasonable rate of speed; failure to ring a bell or sound a whistle: leaving gates open; failure to give warning of approach of train, and to provide a flagman.
Louis Smith was killed December 16,1893, between six and seven o’clock at night, at the intersection of appellant’s tracks with Ewing avenue in the city of Chicago. He was then about thirty-two years of age, and left surviving him a widow and two children, a boy about one year old, and a girl between three and four years old, at the time of his death.
Ewing avenue runs north and south, and One Hundredth street east and west. ■ The railroad tracks of the Ft. Wayne, Lake Shore & Michigan Southern, and Baltimore & Ohio Eailroad Companies cross Ewing avenue in a northwesterly and southeasterly direction, as hereafter described. Each of the companies has double tracks, so that six tracks in all cross Ewing avenue. The relative situation of the tracks of the three companies, and their distances from each other, are as follows : The Fort Wayne tracks cross from the southeast corner of the intersection of Ewing avenue and One Hundredth street, to the northwest corner of said intersection; parallel with the last mentioned tracks and northeast therefrom about eighty feet, are the tracks of the appellant; parallel with and northeast of the last tracks and distant therefrom about 110 feet, are the tracks of the Baltimore & Ohio Company. The distance from the most northerly rail of the B. & O. B. B. to the most southerly rail of the Ft. Wayne railroad is about 245 feet. These distances are estimated by the scale of the map contained in the record, viz.: twenty feet to the inch: There is a gate northeast of the B. & 0. tracks, and parallel with them, across Ewing avenue, and also a gate southeast of the'Ft. Wayne tracks and parallel with them, across the intersection of Ewing avenue and One Hundredth street. Between the gates mentioned there are no other gates. The train that killed Louis Smith was the west bound train, and was approaching Chicago on the southerly track of appellant. The accident occurred about 6:30 o’clock at night. The preponderance of the evidence is that the night was very dark and stormy, and that it was snowing and cold. We think also, that the preponderance of evidence is that the crossing was dark, or at least was poorly and insufficiently lighted. The plaintiff’s witnesses so testified, and Hesselquist, a witness for appellant, who was a watchman for the three railroad companies above mentioned, in a tower at Ewing avenue and One Hundredth street, testified : “ There were some lights there at the time of the accident, but it was rather dark and I could not see. There was an electric light burning there the evening of the accident; it was very dark at the crossing.” In another place, he says, “ I remember they lighted the electric lights before dark. I guess those lights have been put there since the accident.” The evidence shows that the station agent and the conductor of the train used lamps in looking for appellee’s intestate at the crossing, after he was struck by the engine. There was a station of appellant between One Hundredth street and Ewing avenue, about twenty-five feet northerly from its tracks. The witnesses, in testifying as to the speed of the train at the time of the accident, vary in their estimates from twenty-five to forty-five miles per hour. Appellee’s witnesses vary from thirty to forty-five miles per hour, but all testify that the train was running very fast. Appellant’s engineer, conductor and fireman testify it was running between twenty-five and thirty miles per hour. The conductor testified that the train was half an hour or so late, and that they had been trying to make up time between Elkhart, Indiana, and Chicago. The engineer and fireman of the train testified that the bell was ringing as the train approached Ewing avenue; and that it had been ringing ever since it left La Porte, Indiana. All that the conductor testified about the bell was that it was ringing when the train stopped. The engineer further testified that at the Indiana State line, about three-quarters of a mile from Ewing avenue, and again, within from 200 to 300 feet of E wing avenue there was one long blast of the whistle; that between 200 or 300 feet east of One Hundredth street the crossing whistle, consisting of two long and two short whistles, was given, and that when near to Ewing avenue he gave a signal whistle for the gates to lower, and also gave an alarm whistle—three or four short blasts of the whistle; that when he gave the first of the short Avhistles he was about 150 feet from Ewing avenue, and when he gave the last, he was very close to EAving avenue. He also testified that when about 250 feet from Ewing avenue he saw a man about from thirty to forty feet southerly from the tracks in Ewing avenue, approaching the tracks. The fireman and conductor corroborate the testimony of the engineer substantially, except that the fireman testifies that the train was very close to the Ewing avenue crossing when the first alarm whistle was sounded. The engineer testified that, as the train was running, he could have stopped it in the space of fifty feet. Hesselquist, witness for appellant, says he heard the bell ringing and the first whistle one block before the train reached the crossing. Shoemaker, appellant’s Avitness, says he heard a long whistle just before the signal Avhistle, but don’t knoAV what train it came from; that it came from the east; that the first signal Avhistle was given just back of the depot, not very far back, and that Avhen he looked, the headlight of the engine appeared above'the corner of the depot.
Appellee’s witnesses testified as follows:
Matthews: Was about twenty to twenty-five feet from the place where deceased was struck; don’t recollect whether bell was ringing; heard two or three whistles, the first close to the depot.
Mrs. Eingman: Was about forty feet southerly from tracks, on Ewing avenue; heard neither bell nor whistle.
Thompson: Was standing out in front of depot; didn’t hear any bell; heard whistle, but the train was then on Ewing avenue.
Wells: Standing near depot, heard no bell; heard no whistle till train was up to Ewing avenue sidewalk. This witness say the bell was not rung.
Wells and Thompson, witnesses for appellee, testified that they were waiting at appellant’s depot for a dummy train to go east to Whiting, Indiana, the dummy train being behind time; that the deceased came into the depot and inquired of the station agent what time it was; that the agent informed him, when he immediately turned round and walked pretty fast to the east Ewing avenue sidewalk, and thence south on that sidewalk to appellant’s tracks. Measured by the scale of the map contained in the record, the distance from the southwesterly corner of the depot, measured on the line of the front of the depot produced westerly, is about forty-two and one-half feet, and from the point where such produced line would strike the sidewalk, to the northerly rail of appellant’s west bound or southerly track, is about forty feet. The depot is about thirty-five to forty feet northeasterly from the north rail of appellant’s west bound track, on which the deceased was struck. Matthews and Mrs. Eingman, who were approaching appellant’s tracks from the south, on the east side of Ewing avenue, saw the deceased on the sidewalk ahead of them. Matthews could not state whether the deceased was north or south of the tracks when he saw him, but Mrs. Eingman testified that he was north of the tracks when she first saw him.
The body of the deceased was found, immediately after the accident, under the west sidewalk of Ewing avenue, about twenty feet south of the track.
Counsel for appellant contends that appellee did not exercise ordinary care in approaching the tracks, and that, in this respect, he was guilty of contributory negligence, such as should bar a recovery. This contention is based, at least in part, on the evidence of Thompson and Wells, that Smith, as he walked south on the sidewalk, looked straight ahead.
But Smith was walking due south when on the sidewalk; the train was approaching from the southeast; the witnesses Thompson and Wells were just outside the depot; the nearest they could have been to Smith, standing where they were, while he walked south on the sidew'alk, was. about thirty feet, measured by the scale of apppllant’s map, and it was a dark, stormy night and snowing, as both Wells and Thompson testified. Under such circumstances, it must have been apparent to the jury, as it is to us, that the witnesses could not know whether or not the deceased looked in the direction from which the train came. Counsel also refers to the testimony of Wells to the effect that the deceased had a cap over his face. The evidence on this point is as follows: “You say this man, when he came into the depot, had a cap ? ” “ Yes, sir.” “ What kind of a cap was it ? ” “I didn’t pay any attention; I know that he had a cap on, and that is all. ” “ You didn’t pay any attention to the cap ? ” “I know he came in with a cap on; it looked like it was a black cap, or something or other.” “ How far did it come down on his face ? ” “ It came just right about there” (indicating over his face). “ How far did it come down on the side 2 ” “ He had it right around here, it looked like” (indicating over his ears). '
How it seems from the testimony of the witnesses Wells and Thompson, that the cap did not prevent the deceased from either seeing or hearing, because they say he came into the depot, went straight to the station agent, asked him what time it was, and, on receiving an answer, immediately turned around and went away. How he wore his cap while walking south on the sidewalk and before he reached the tracks, does not appear, but that it was on his head pretty loosely is probable from the fact, testified to by Matthews and Mrs. Eingman, that when the engine struck him his cap flew off and fell on the sidewalk in front of them. We can not say, as matter of law, that the deceased was negligeht. Whether he was or not, was a question for the jury under all the facts and circumstances in evidence. Chicago & N. W. Ry. Co. v. Hansen, 166 Ill. 623; Pennsylvania Co. v. Frana, 112 Ill. 398; Chicago & E. I. R. R. Co. v. O’Connor, 119 Ill. 586; Terre Haute & I. R. R. Co. v. Voelker, 129 Ill. 551; Chicago & I. R. R. Co. v. Lane, 130 Ill. 116; Lake S. & M. S. Ry. Co. v. Johnson, 135 Ill. 647.
The court, in C. & N. W. Ry. Co. v. Hansen, and Terre H. & I. R. Co. v. Voelker, supra, and in other cases, have said that it can not be held, as matter of law, that a person about to cross a railway track is guilty of negligence if he does not look and listen. In the Hansen case, supra, the court say: “ It seems to us impossible that there should be a rule of law as to what particular thing a person is bound to do for his protection, in the diversity of cases that constantly arise, and the question what a reasonably prudent person would do for his own safety under like circumstances, must be left to the jury as one of fact.” See also Toledo, St. L. & K. C. R. R. Co. v. Cline, 135 Ill. 41.
While it is our duty to consider the evidence and determine, when the question is properly presented, whether the verdict is manifestly against the weight of the evidence, it is the reverse of our duty to usurp the province of the jury and set aside their verdict, merely on the ground that, had we been sitting as jurors, we might or would have found differently. In the present case, we can not say that the finding of the jury, that the deceased was not lacking in ordinary care, is manifestly against the weight of the evidence.
The next question is whether the jury was warranted by the evidence in finding that appellant was guilty of negligence, as charged in the declaration, which caused the death of appellee’s intestate.
That the crossing at Ewing avenue was an exceedingly dangerous one is beyond doubt. Six d'ouble tracks crossed the avenue within a space of about 245 feet. It was proved on the part of appellee that Ewing avenue is a business street, and that many people crossed and re-crossed the tracks at the place in question. Appellant’s engineer testified that there were houses on both sides of One Hundredth street south of the Ft. Wayne tracks; that on the north side of the Ft. Wayne tracks there are houses on both sides of One Hundredth street, but that until you get north of the B. & O. tracks, it was not populated as close to the tracks on the west side as on the east side.
Whether, in view of the circumstances in evidence, appellant, at the time of the accident, was running its train át a dangerous and unreasonable rate of speed, was a question for the jury.
Chicago & A. R. R. Co. v. Engle, 84 Ill. 397, was a case for negligence in killing a horse within the territorial limits of a village. The court, in its opinion, says: “ Then, from the evidence in the case, were the juyy warranted in finding that the company was guilty of negligence ? The employes of the company certainly knew the track was not fenced through the village. They knew that persons might, at any hour of the night, be on the track or crossing over it, and they knew the same was true of cattle and horses. Knowing of this danger, it was their duty to have run through, or while in the village, at such a rate of speed as to have their trains under control, and (be) able to avoid injury to others.” Lake S. & M. S. R. R. Co. v. Ouska, 151 Ill. 232; Chicago & R. I. R. R. Co. v. Still, 19 Ill. 508; Rockford R. I. & St. L. R. R. Co. v. Hillmer, 72 Ill. 235; Indianapolis & St. L. R. R. Co. v. Stables, 62 Ill. 318.
In the last case the court say: “ Again, the train was running at a rapid rate of speed. All of the witnesses for defendant in error say the train was running very fast; and one of them, faster than he had ever traveled. It may be they could not say that it ran at precisely so many miles an hour—and it is probable that experts could alone have determined that question—but the witnesses, having at least ordinary intelligence, could determine whether it ran fast or slow, or whether it was very fast, although they could not state the number of miles per hour. And, if very fast, the the jury could say whether that, with the location of the roads and other circumstances, constituted negligence.”
The evidence is that there was no flagman at the crossing, and although there was no evidence of any ordinance requiring a flagman, and therefore no absolute duty incumbent on appellant to have one at the crossing, as the court instructed the jury, yet the fact that there was no flagman, was proper to be considered by the jury in passing on the question of the alleged negligence of appellant in running its train. Chicago & I. R. R. Co. v. Lane, 130 Ill. 116.
Appellant’s engineer testified that, when about 250 feet distant from the crossing, he saw a man from twenty to forty feet distant from the track, approaching the tracks*, and that at the rate the train was running, he could have stopped it within a space of fifty feet. Appellant’s counsel contends that this evidence was not competent under the declaration, but we think it was clearly competent under the averment in the first amended count, that appellant, by its servants, so carelessly managed the said locomotive engine and train, in driving the same at such high and unreasonable rate of speed, that by and through the negligence and improper conduct of the defendant, etc., the engine struck the deceased, etc.
Appellant’s engineer and fireman testify that the bell was ringing, but it is apparent from the engineer’s evidence that the jury might reasonably infer from his evidence that he so testified merely because it was his habit to ring the bell when approaching a crossing. He testified: “ That bell is rung by steam. I set it going and then don’t pay any more attention to it, except to know that it is ringing. If the accident had not happened, I would have had an independent recollection of that bell ringing, for the reason that we sound a crossing whistle at every railroad crossing; and'if the bell is not ringing on approaching that crossing, my attention is attracted to it at all the crossings, the whole length of the road.”
The witnesses for the appellee were each and all where they could have heard a bell of the weight of thirty pounds, such as was on the engine, ring, and testified that they did not hear it, and one of them, Wells, testified that it did not ring. Under these circumstances, the question was one for the jury. Rockford, R. I. & St. L. R. R. Co. v. Hillmer, 72 Ill. 235.
Appellant’s counsel assigns as error the giving of appellee’s first instruction, on the ground that it does not restrict recovery to negligence averred in the declaration. The language of the instruction objected to is: “ And if the jury believe from the evidence that the said injury to the said Louis Smith was caused by the negligence of the servants or employes of the defendant in charge of said locomotive engine,” etc. This instruction was evidently given with reference to the first amended count and the additional count of the declaration, in both of which careless and negligent management of the’engine are averred. • In another instruction, given at appellant’s request, the jury were instructed that the plaintiff could not recover, unless he proved by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant was guilty of negligence, as stated in the declaration or some count thereof. We do not think that the jury could have been misled, by the instruction objected to, into finding the appellant guilty of negligence not averred in the declaration. In Chicago, B. & Q. R. R. Co. v. Avery, 109 Ill. 314, an instruction much less restricted in its terms was held not to be cause for reversal. Appellant’s counsel objects to the refusal of appellant’s instruction 2a, its modification, and the giving it as modified, and to the refusal to give its -9th, 14th and 15th instructions. All these instructions relate to the degree of care required by law of appellee’s intestate, in regard to which the jury was fulty and fairly instructed.
The court had called the attention of the jury, in six instructions for appellant, to the necessity of the exercise of ordinary care by the deceased, and had fully defined ordinary care, and the giving further instructions in reference to that subject would have been superfluous.
The judgment will be affirmed.