*351Opinion op the Court by
Wm. Rogers Clay, CommissionerReversing.
Bartley King, as administrator of W. T. King, instituted this action against the Louisville &• Nashville Railroad Company to recover damages growing out of the death of the decedent. The jury awarded plaintiff damages in the sum of $8,000. From the judgment based thereon the railroad company prosecutes this appeal.
A reversal is asked upon three grounds: First, the failure to give a peremptory instruction in favor of defendant; second, misconduct of counsel; third, the refusal of the court to give an instruction offered by defendant.
The facts in the case are as follows: W. T. King at the time of his death was an employe of defendant, acting as conductor of a work train which was being operated in the vicinity of Bardstown Junction, in Bullitt county. Bardstown Junction is the point at which appellant’s Bardstown and Springfield branch road diverges from the main line of its railway. For a considerable distance north and south of Bards-town Junction the • defendant road is double tracked.' About 4 o’clock on the afternoon of July 15, 1907, the work train of which King was conductor was stationed on the south-bound main track, a few hundred yards north of Bardstown Junction. It was necessary to move this train to permit the passage of a through train bound southward from Louisville. With this object in view, the work train was backed south on the south-bound main track with the intention on the part of those in charge of the train to switch it into what is known as the “Y track.” While the train was *352backing south, King, the conductor, and Ryan, the rear flagman, were stationed upon the rear platform of the. caboose, which at that time was the leading-part of the train. Just as the caboose passed over the north switch connecting the main tracks with the Bardstown and Springfield branch, the switch was thrown under the caboose, or the car next to it, and both were derailed. King was thrown from the platform and instantly killed. The switches at Bards-town Junction are manipulated by levers from the office of the company’s station agent. The depot is but a short distance south of the switch that was thrown under the work train. Upon the occasion in question, the levers were operated by a young man named Louis Crigler, who held the position as assistant agent. According to the testimony for plaintiff, there was no purpose upon the part of those in charge of the work train to take the switch at the place of the accident. They intended to go further down the track and enter the Y where the switch was operated by trainmen, and not from the office of the station agent. At the time Crigler threw the switch he did not know what the work train crew proposed doing, and there was therefore no necessity for throwing the switch. Defendant’s defense consisted of general denials of the allegations of the petition and a plea of contributory negligence. According to its evidence, there were a number of levers in the depot which it was necessary to operate in order to change the various tracks and switches and give the various signals required at that point. None of these levers, which controlled the signal board or switches at that point, could be moved until the lever which controlled the signal board indicating the danger or stop signal was operated. After the danger *353stop signal was given, then the other lever used to operate the switches and cross-tracks could he moved. Upon the occasion in question the signal was given that the train upon which plaintiff’s intestate was conductor was coming down the south-bound main track for the purpose of crossing over to the main branch of the Springfield line. When this signal was given, the agent’s assistant immediately moved the lever which controlled the danger signal. This was a signal to plaintiff’s intestate that the switches were being moved, and not to bring his train toward the switch until the switch was moved, the red signal lowered, and a safety, or white signal raised. The red signal was raised at a time when the work train was several hundred feet from the switch, and in plenty of time for the train to have been stopped. Plaintiff’s witnesses denied that the red signal was raised. We have not attempted to give the evidence in detail, but suffice it to say there was abundant evidence upon which to submit the ease to the jury, and the court did not err in refusing to give a peremptory instruction in favor of the defendant. In view of the fact that we have determined to reverse this case on other grounds, it will not be necessary to consider the alleged misconduct of counsel.
Appellant’s main ground for reversal is the failure of the court to give the following instruction: “(a) If the jury believe' from the evidence that, before plaintiff’s intestate approached the point where he received the injury which resulted in his death, the signal had been given which required him to stop his train before reaching that point and that said plaintiff’s intestate saw said signal, or by the exercise- of ordinary care upon his part' could have seen it, and failed to obey same, and said failure resulted in the *354injury which caused his death, they should find for the defendant.” Counsel for appellee insist that this was unnecessary because the question covered by the instruction offered was fully presented in instruction 7 and 8, which are as follows:
“No. 7. The court instructs the jury that the defendant railroad company has the right to establish and enforce reasonable rules and regulations for the government of its employes in the management and operation of its trains.
“No. 8. The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that the injury which occasioned the death of plaintiff’s intestate was occasioned by his own negligence and careless conduct, which conduct so contributed to said injury that without which same would not have been received, they should find for the defendant, or, if the jury believe from the evidence that the injury which occasioned the death of plaintiff’s intestate was occasioned by his failure to observe and follow the rules and regulations for the government of the train under his charge, they should find for defendant.”
Counsel for appellee further insist that the instruction offered is erroneous because it particularized and singled out certain evidence. It was plaintiff’s theory that those in charge of the .work train did not intend to take the switch at the point of the accident and had given no signal for the switch in'question; that there was, therefore, no occasion for throwing the north switch, and that such switch ought not to have been thrown; that the red signal was not raised, but, if raised, it was raised when the caboose was so near the switch that the train could not Have been stopped; that the accident, therefore, resulted solely from the negligence of defendant’s agents. The defendant’s *355theory of the accident was that those in charge of the work train gave a signal for the north switch; that the operator immediately raised the danger signal at a time when the train was several hundred feet from the switch; that plaintiff’s decedent was negligent in running the train into the switch in the face of a danger signal, and this negligence on his part was the cause of his death, Instruction “a,” offered by defendant, is not, we think, subject to the criticism that it particularizes or singles out certain evidence. It grouped all the facts constituting defendant’s defense of contributory negligence. The only question, then, is whether or not instruction 7 and 8 sufficiently presented the idea contained in the instruction offered. "While instructions 7 and 8 may be abstractly correct and founded upon the facts adduced in evidence, they "are not sufficiently definite and certain to present to the jury the defendant’s side of the case. They do not impose upon plaintiff’s intestate the duty of exercising ordinary care to discover the red signal, if the same had been raised. That being the case, the instructions given were not sufficient to cover the question presented by the instruction offered. The instructions given were general in form, and left it to the jury to determine without any definite directions for their guidance what constituted contributory negligence. -The instruction refused brought clearly to the minds of the jury the exact facts which, if true, would constitute contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff.
It may be conceded that for a long time it was the practice to give instructions in a general or abstract form, just so the facts in evidence justified the giving of such instructions. The tendency of the modern decisions, however, is to give the instructions in as *356specific and concrete a form as possible. Lexington Ry. Co. v. Van Laden’s Adm’r, 107 S. W. 740, 32 Ky. Law Rep. 1047; Lexington Ry. Co. v. Woodward, 106 S. W. 853, 32 Ky. Law Rep. 653; Southern Ry. Co. v. Buckner (Ky.) 113 S. W. 90; Lou. Ry. Co. v. Gaar, (Ky.) 112 S. W. 1130; Julius Goldstein’s Adm’r v. Lou. Ry. Co. (opinion delivered January 13, 1909) 115 S. W. 194. As the purpose of pleadings is to lead to an issue, the purpose of instructions is to present that issue in the form most intelligible to the jury. It cannot be doubted that if the court embraces in one instruction the facts constituting the defendant’s negligence, and in another instruction facts which, if true, would constitute contributory negligence upon the part of the plaintiff, the jury can better determine the exact question to be decided. It has long been the settled rule that both the- plaintiff and the defendant have the right to have their side of the case properly presented to the jury. The instructions given by the court in this instance did not comply with this requirement. The facts constituting the defendant’s negligence were properly embraced in the instructions of the court, but the facts constituting contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff’s intestate — and therefore the defendant’s main defense — were not presented to the jury in a clear, concise, and specific manner. While the instruction offered by defendant was not technically correct, in that it did not require the jury to believe that plaintiff’s intestate saw the red signal, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have seen it in time to have stopped the train, yet it was the duty of the court, when such instruction was offered, to prepare and give a proper instruction on that point. L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Harrod, 115 Ky. 877, 75 S. W. 233. *357The failure of the court to do this is reversible error.' Upon the next trial of this case, in lieu of instruction “A” offered by defendant, the court will give the following instruction: “If the jury believe from the evidence that before plaintiff’s intestate approached the point where he received the injury which resulted in his death the signal had been given which required him to stop his train before reaching that point, and that said plJBitiff’s intestate saw said signal, or by' the exercise of ordinary care upon his part could have seen it in time to have stopped the train, and failed to obey same, and said failure resulted in the injury which caused his death, they should find for the defendant.”
Defendant further insists that the court erred in giving an instruction authorizing punitive damages. We are of opiniop, however, that, if plaintiff’s theory of the case be true, there can be no doubt of the propriety of permitting a recovery of punitive damages.
For the reasons given, the judgment is reversed for proceedings consistent herewith.
Nunn, J,, dissenting.