delivered the opinion of the Court:
The appellant, Theodore Hurdle, instituted suit at common law in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him in a collision with one of the cars of the appellee, the' Washington and Georgetown Railroad Company. At the trial in the court below the case was taken from the jury, who were directed, at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testi*122mony and without any testimony having been adduced on the part of the defendant, to return their verdict for the defendant. The question of law in the case, therefore, is whether there was sufficient testimony on the part of the plaintiff to entitle him to go to the jury. The trial court held that, under his own testimony, the accident which befell the plaintiff was due entirely to his own negligence, and that he was not entitled to recover anything from the defendant. He has appealed from the decision ; and it becomes incumbent on us, therefore, to review the testimony as it appears in the record, in order to determine whether, as -matter of law, he had made a prima facie case for the jury.
The testimony is to the effect that, about 8 o’clock in the evening of February 21, 1890, he was on the east side of P'ourteenth street, in the city of Washington, about the intersection of that street with P street, and started to cross Fourteenth street to the west side about on the south line of P street; that, when he had gone about eight or ten feet from the curb he looked up and down the street, and saw two cars approaching, one from each direction ; that the north bound car, moving on the eastern track, was the nearer of the two ; that the other car, the one coming south, was about twenty feet north of the north line of P street, that is, about 110 feet away; 1hat this south bound car was coming down the street w’ith great noise of the horses’ hoofs and at a great rate of speed, estimated by some of the witnesses to be about ten or twelve miles an hour, when the speed prescribed by the police regulations of the. Dis■trict of Columbia was at the rate of from five to eight miles an hour ; that the plaintiff, however, did not notice the speed of this car; that his attention rvas fixed on the north bound car, which he thought would reach the line of P street first, and he paid no attention to the south bound car after his first observation of it; that he was walking at about his usual gait, directing his course southwestwardly, and had calculated that he had ample time to cross the *123tracks before either car could come ; that he passed directly in front of the north bound car, and when he was about to step on the east side of the western track, he heard some one cry out, and he threw his head up, and as he did so, he was struck by one 'of the horses of the south bound car, knocked down and injured ; and that he then lost consciousness. When he recovered consciousness, he found himself in a store at the southwest corner of Fourteenth and P streets, with a doctor dressing his leg, which next day had to be amputated. The car was stopped within a few feet after it' had passed over the plaintiff, and about twenty or twenty-five feet south of the south line of P street.
Upon cross-examination, the plaintiff, testified that he •was alone that evening : that the gas lamps were burning ; that he was familiar with the locality of the accident, having worked there for two years, and having had occasion to cross the street frequently ; that his sight and hearing were good; that' when he started to cross, he saw- the south bound car about twenty feet north of P street with the horses going at a trot; that he walked under the horses, according to his own expression, and made a miscalculation.
There was also testimony to the effect that at the time the car struck Plurdie, the driver had his hand on the brake and his face turned to the east, talking to some one on his left; and that the speed of the car was not slackened as it crossed P street.
This is the substance of all the testimony' in the case'; and upon consideration of it, we cannot avoid the conclusion that the plaintiff’s misfortune was the immediate result of his own carelessness, amounting almost to recklessness. It does not admit of any question that it was gross negligence on his part to take the risk of the danger to which he exposed himself. He attempted to pass between two cars coming from oppoisite directions, and in front of each, when one of those cars wras so near the line wdiich he was *124taking as that he barely evaded it, and the other, which he must necessarily have seen coming at the rapid rate of speed at which he and others testify that it was moving, was so near the intersection of the streets as that ordinary prudence would have dictated to let it páss, even if there had been no other car in sight, before he attempted to effect a crossing.
It is of no consequence here- that the car which caused the injury, was moving at an unlawful rate of speed, and that possibly the driver was otherwise negligent. The unusual noise and speed of that car, which were noticed by all the other- witnesses for the plaintiff, must have been equally palpable to himself, and only emphasize his own negligence.
The plaintiff obviously placed himself in a position of danger, without any excuse or just reason for so doing. He was not required to wait more than a moment for both cars-to pass, when he could have crossed the street in entire safety. And it is inconceivable why he should have attempted to cross as he did, unless he acted in a spirit of recklessness or of gross carelessness scarcely less culpable.
We are compelled to affirm the decision of the court below, with costs. And it is so ordered.