There is but little controversy as to the material facts in the case. The plaintiff is an expressman. He used an express wagon and one horse in carrying on his business. On the nineteenth of September, 1885, he was driving along Fourth street, in said city, his horse going in a walk. He was met in the street by a butcher’s wagon, in which there were two *393men. The wagons collided, by reason of which the plaintiff was violently thrown ont upon the ground, his wagon upset, his wagon-bed fell on top of him, his horse ran away, and there was a general smash-up of his wagon. The injury to the plaintiff was not, however, occasioned by the running of his horse, but by the collision with the butcher’s wagon. One of the men in the butcher’s wagon, who was a witness for the plaintiff, testified that said wagon was driven, at the time of the accident, at the rate of ten to fifteen miles an hour. All of the other witnesses who testified on this point concur in the statement that said wagon was driven very fast. A witness for plaintiff, who. saw the whole occurrence, stated that the team was going at the rate of fifteen miles an hour, and did not check speed until they were stopped by the collision. Another witness stated that the team was traveling “at a great rate,” and “terrible fast.” There was a city ordinance in force at the time of the accident prohibiting the driving of any vehicle in any street of the city faster than at the rate of six miles an hour, or driving “in such manner as to come in collision with or strike any other person or object.” The plaintiff claims that the city is liable for his injuries, because it permitted the street-car tracks which were in the street to become out of repair to such an extent that the iron rails were so1 much above the surface of the street that, as the vehicles approached each other, the plaintiff and the driver of the butcher’s wagon, could not turn out so as to avoid the collision, because they could not pull the wheels of the wagons over the rails, although" they endeavored to do so ; that the wheels of the wagons slid along the rails, and thus caused the collision. The defendant requested the court to give to the jury the following, among other instructions :
“ If the jury find from the evidence that the accident by which the plaintiff was injured was caused by the negligence of the city, in not keeping its street in repair, combined with the acts of a third party for which the city was not responsible, and would not have hap*394penecL but for the acts of such third party, then the city is not liable.”
“If the jury find from the evidence that, although the defendant was negligent in keeping its streets in repair at the time and place where the accident occurred, the accident would not have happened to the plaintiff by reason thereof without the driving of the team of lbs upon the street-railway track in the manner in which it was driven, and that the driver of said team and wagon of said lbs, in driving upon said railway track at the -time and in the manner and at the rate of speed he did, was not using ordinary care, then the defendant is not liable.”
These instructions were refused, and the court, on its own motion, charged the jury, as to this feature of the case, as follows :
“The jury are instructed that, in general, the negligence of third parties, concurring with that of the defendant to produce an injury, is no defense ; but if the jury find from the evidence that the accident in question was caused or occasioned by the negligence or carelessness of the driver of the team that collided with plaintiff’s team, without any fault or negligence on the part of defendant concuriing therein, then the plaintiff cannot recover ; but if you find that the defendant was negligent, under this charge, in permitting the defect in the street at the time of the accident, and at the place as alleged, and that such negligence and defect contributed to produce and occasion the injury in question, then the fact that the driver of the wagon colliding with plaintiff’s team.was negligent would not defeat plaintiff’s right to recover.”
The defendant insists that these rulings of the court are erroneous, and we think his position must be sustained. As we have said, there is no question but that the butcher’s wagon was driven in a careless and negligent manner. Not only this, its rate of speed was reckless, dangerous, unlawful and criminal. Under the ordinances of the city its driver was liable to a fine of one hundred dollars, or imprisonment for thirty days. *395The effect of the collision was perhaps stronger evidence of the reckless conduct of the driver than the testimony of the witnesses. No such a general smash-up would have occurred if the butcher’s wagon had been driven as it ought to have been. Under the undisputed facts of the case, conceding that the street was out of repair, the plaintiff, to say the least, received his injuries by reason of the combined negligent acts of the city and the driver of the butcher’s wagon. More than this, the reckless driving was the immediate and proximate cause of the injury. There is no warrant in the evidence for a finding that, if the team had been driven at a lawful and proper rate of speed, the collision would have nevertheless injured the plaintiff. This being so, the condition of the street was not the direct and proximate cause of the injury. Whatever the rule may be in other states, we think that the law in this state is settled that, under such circumstances, there can be no recovery against the city. See Dubuque Wood & Coal Ass’n v. City of Dubuque, 30 Iowa, 184, and Knapp v. Sioux City & Pac. Ry. Co., 65 Iowa, 91.