Opinion op the Court by
Judge SettleAffirming.
About 1 o’clock a. ra., October 30, 1916, on a public railroad crossing in the east end of the city of Catlettsburg, George W. Bevins was run over and injured by the tender of an engine belonging to tbe appellee, Chesapeake & Ohio Bailway Company and operated by its servants. Bevins died from the injuries sustained in the accident an hour or two after they were received. Thereafter this action was brought against the appellee railway company and the appellee, Floyd Schump, the locomotive engineer in charge of the engine at the time of the accident, by the administrator of the decedent’s estate seeking the recovery of damages for the latter’s death, alleging that it was caused by the joint and concurring negligence of the appellees. The latter by joint and separate answer denied the negligence charged to them and alleged that in the matter of receiving the injuries which caused his death the appellant’s decedent was himself, guilty of negiig’ence which so contributed to his injuries and death, that but for same he would not have been injured or killed. The latter plea was controverted by reply and upon the issues thus made the case went to trial, which resulted in a verdict in favor of appellees, returnee! by the jury in obedience to a peremptory instruction from the court directing them to so find. The appellant was refused a new trial, complaining of which and of the judgment entered upon the verdict he has appealed.
The facts appearing from the evidence were as follows: appellee’s railroad ripis in an easterly and westerly direction at the crossing where the accident occurred and where it crosses the street or highway there are two tracks, one a main track, the other a switch. The train *503of which the engine and tender by which Bevins was killed were a part, was an east bound freight, running from Ashland by way of Oatlettsburg up the Big Sandy Biver Branch. Just prior to the accident the train had been brought to a stop near the crossing. The engine and tender were then uncoupled and moved on to the side track to take up several cars thereon to be attached to the train. The engine and tender in backing on the side track and over the crossing there struck and ran over the decedent, causing the injuries of which he died. The engine and tender were at the time moving’ at a speed of between two and four miles an hour, and the engine bell all the time ringing. The engineer and a brakeman were aboard, the f ormer in the cah of the e,ngine, and the latter on the rear of the tender with a lantern in his hand maintaining a constant lookout in front of the backing tender, as was the 'engineer from his position. The decedent was lying prostrate on the crossing and across the side track; why he had thus placed himself, whether from intoxication or some other cause, was wholly unexplained. It, however, appears that it was a very dark night and the atmosphere foggy. The brakeman testified that he did not see the decedent until the tender practically reached the crossing and was upon him and could not sooner have seen him. He then discovered a dark object on the track and at once signaled the engineer to stop, which the latter immediately obeyed, but the stop could not be effected until the tender ran upon the decedent’s body. At the conclusion of the appellant’s evidence the trial court gave the instruction directing a verdict for appellees. This action of the court was inevitable, as the facts related above furnished by the evidence of the engineer and brakeman were uncontradicted. It is true there was an attempt to prove by the physician who attended the decedent after the accident, that the later said he was standing and not lying on the side track when struck, waiting for a train to pass on the main (track. But as this statement was made at a place removed from that of the accident and more than an hour after the accident, it could not be regarded as a. part of the res gestae and was incompetent for-any purpose whatever. Mathews’ Admr. v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 130 Ky. 551.
It will readily be seen that the evidence was all one way and all to the effect that the. injuries to and death of the decedent could not have been prevented by any kind qí precaution or care on the part of the engineer or brake*504man, and that they were wholly due to his own. negligence. In the following cases we held that one who sits or prostrates himself upon a railroad track, though it be a place where persons are licensed to use the track, is in no better position than a mere trespasser; and in such case the servants of a railroad company in charg'e of a train are only required to use ordinary care to protect him from injury, after discovering his peril. Louisville and Nashville R. Co. v. Smith’s Admr., 216 S. W. 1063; C. N. O. & T. P. R. Co. v. Mayfield’s Admr., 145 Ky. 395, 140 S. W. 310; Cornett’s Admr. v. L. & N. R. Co., 181 Ky. 132, 203 S. W. 1054; Lyons, Admr. v. I. C. R. R. Co., 59 S. W. 507, 22 Ky. Law Rep. 1032; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Bay’s Admr., 142 Ky. 407, 134 S. W. 450, 34 L. R. A. (N. S.) 678.
As no cause whatever is shown for disturbing the verdict, the judgment is affirmed.