The opinion of the court was delivered by .
Allen, J.: The facts of this case, as presented by the evidence offered on behalf of the plaintiff in error in the trial court, are substantially as follows : The plaintiff, a child two years old, resided with her parents in Butler county, on a farm about three-and a half miles northeast from Augusta. The track of the defendant’s railroad passed through the lands on which Johnston lived, and within a short distance from the house. There were five children in the family, the oldest being nine years old at that time. Johnston’s corral was situated across the track of the railroad, and he and the members of his family were accustomed to go to it by a path leading from the house -across the railroad. On the evening of the 27th of October, 1889, which was a bright, clear day, some time between sundown and dark, the older children and an aunt of theirs were over at the corral feeding the stock. The plaintiff wandered away from the house and went upon the track of the railroad at a little distance from the place where the path crossed *265it. She had on a dress of light brown and white checked gingham. A freight-train, consisting of about nine cars, partly loaded, came from the northeast, running at the rate of about 25 miles an hour. Northeast from the house in which the Johnstons lived, and at a distance of about 315 feet from the point where the plaintiff was injured, there is a railroad crossing. When the train reached this crossing the whistle was sounded. The mother of the child had started from the house in search of it, and saw it standing on the track. She ran to get it, but before she could get to it, it was struck by the engine and thrown into the ditch. Although it was severely bruised, and four of its teeth knocked out, no bones were broken. The father of the plaintiff testified that there was a whistling-post about 1,000 feet northeast from the crossing, but that the first whistle that he heard was when the train reached the crossing, and again, after it had passed the crossing, three or four short blasts were given. He was in such a position that the house prevented him from seeing the accident, but he saw a man on the step of the engine before it reached the child. No effort appears to have been made to stop the train. There is no direct statement of any witness showing that the engineer or fireman saw^ the plaintiff before she was struck, but witnesses testified that she could have been seen for a distance of 1,600 or 1,700 feet from the track northeast of where she was. A demurrer to the plaintiff's evidence was sustained by the court, and judgment entered in favor of the defendant.
It is not contended in support of the ruling of the court that the plaintiff was of sufficient age to be chargeable with negligence contributing to her injury, but it is claimed that she was a trespasser to whom *266the company owed no duty, unless her presence in a position of danger was known to some employee of the company on the train who could have prevented injury to her. Whether the engineer and fireman, in the discharge of their duties, could and ought to have kept such a lookout along the track ahead of the train as would necessarily have discovered the plaintiff in time to stop the train and avoid injury to her, is a question we do not feel warranted in answering, as a matter of law. It does appear in this case that between the approaching train and the child there was a public crossing, where people passing along the public highway had a right to go across the track. In approaching such crossings it is clearly the duty of the engineer to be on the alert, not merely for the purpose of avoiding injury to persons and property crossing the track, but also for the protection of his train and all that is upon it. The child was but a short distance from this crossing. We cannot say that there is absolutely no evidence tending to show that the engineer or fireman, or both of them, did-actually see the plaintiff in her position of danger in time to have stopped the train, or, at least, to have slackened its speed to such a degree that the mother running toward it might not have rescued it from danger. It was the duty of the engineer to be looking toward the crossing, and in the direction of the plaintiff. Did he look, and did he see her? These questions we think were for the jury, and that it was not imperatively required of the plaintiff to prove by the direct statement of a witness that the engineer or the fireman actually saw her. There were circumstances, possibly quite slight and unconvincing, tending to show that he did actually see her. If so, it is quite clear that it was his duty to avoid injuring her.
*267It is argued tliat the parents of the plaintiff were negligent, and that, while the plaintiff herself was too young to be guilty of contributory negligence, yet that the negligence of the parents should be imputed to her. We do not think the facts disclosed by the testimony render it necessary now to pass on the question of imputed negligence. The child had escaped from the house but a very few minutes before it was injured, and the mother was already in search of it, and running to get it, before it was injured. The testimony of botli father and mother tended to show that they were very careful to keep their children away from the track. Though the proof of negligence was not strong, we think the case ought to have been submitted to the jury.
The judgment is reversed, and a new trial ordered.
All the Justices concurring.