Plaintiff’s husband was killed by a locomotive on defendant’s road at a street cross*348ing in Sedalia, and this suit is to recover damages for the injury.
The petition alleges several acts of negligence, viz.: the failure to ring -a hell, running at a rate of speed prohibited by city ordinance, running at a dangerous and reckless speed without warning by bell or whistle, omitting to have an engineer on the engine, or fireman at his place of duty, or any one on the lookout at the end of the tender while backing. It was also alleged that the men in charge of the engine, after they saw or by the exercise of ordinary care would have seen, the peril in which the plaintiff’s husband was, could by the exercise of ordinary care have avoided the accident if they had not been running faster than ten miles an hour in violation of the city ordinance. The answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence.
There was in evidence an ordinance of the city which prohibited the running of a locomotive faster than ten miles an hour, requiring the bell of the engine to be rung on the approaching of crossings, and requiring, when the engine was backing, a man stationed on the end of the tender farthest from the engine as a lookout to avoid accidents.
There was evidence on the part of plaintiff tending to show that those requirements of that ordinance were neglected in this case. The plaintiff’s evidence .also showed that her husband drove on the railroad track at the street crossing when the defendant’s engine was approaching in plain view and when it was obvious that the engine would strike him as it did.
Plaintiff and defendant asked a number of instructions ; among those of the latter was one at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence-, to the effect that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. The court refused all the instructions asked and submitted the case to the jury under an instruction of its own, designed to cover the whole case. In that instruction the jury were in*349structed that the act of the plaintiff’s husband in driving on the railroad track was negligence and would preclude a recovery unless the engine was far enough away for the person in charge of it by the exercise of ordinary care to have discovered the peril of the plaintiff’s husband and to have stopped the engine in time to avoid the injury; then the jury were instructed that if they found from the evidence that such was the case they should find for the plaintiff, otherwise for the defendant.
There was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for $5,000, and the defendant appealed.
The case should not have been submitted to the jury on that theory, for the reason that there was no evidence to sustain it.
According to the plaintiff’s evidence, her husband was in the service of the city in the work of street construction. He and other workmen were returning from their work near the close of the day; he was driving a team that was drawing a heavy street roller, sitting on an improvised seat above the roller. There were other teams following in procession, he was leading. They were traveling on Mill street from north to south. The defendant’s railroad tracks, running east and west, cross this street at right angles. It was a well-known and much-used railroad crossing. Going south, as these men were, the street was level until they reached a point eighty feet from the crossing, then the grade begins to ascend and so continues up to the crossing which is four feet higher than the point from which the ascending grade begins. There are several railroad tracks at that crossing but the evidence deals with only two of them, one called the mill track, which is the first one reached, the other the main track, which is the one on which the collision occurred. The space between these two tracks is seven and one half feet. Going up that grade one passes a small watch shanty about six feet square, on the left or east side of the *350street; hear it on the south and -some ten feet east is an electric light pole. Except the shanty and pole there is nothing to obstruct the view of the railroad tracks in every direction from the point above mentioned eighty feet north. From the south side of the shanty to the north of the mill track is fourteen feet; from the same point to the north rail of the main track is twenty-six feet. After the plaintiff’s husband passed the south line of the shanty and the electric light pole, there was a space of twenty-four feet between him and the north rail of the main track in which he had a clear view of the railroad tracks to the east and to the west, and could have seen this engine as it came seven hundred or a thousand feet away;
Attached to the roller, behind, was an empty wagon; following was a team drawing a street grader, and as they moved along the road the roller, wagon and the grader made considerable noise. Drawing the heavy roller with 'the wagon attached up the grade was such a burden on the team that it was all they could do to move it. Thus driving, the plaintiff’s husband approached the railroad crossing very slowly; plaintiff’s counsel think the team was not going faster than one mile an hour, a witness describes them as “just creeping.”
Moving in that manner, laboring with their heavy draft, there is no doubt but they could have been stopped in- a space of time too short to estimate. The theory of the plaintiff is that the man running the engine saw, -or ought to have seen, her husband as he was thus approaching the tracks. Suppose the engineer saw him; what did he have a right to presume ? It was daylight, the engine coming was in as plain view to the man on the roller as he was to the engineer. There was nothing to - suggest to the engineer that the other was oblivious to the situation, or that he had failed to use his eyes and see what every one else there saw. Any reasonable man in the engineer’s position would pre*351sume that the man on the roller would stop before crossing and let the engine pass. But the plaintiff’s husband drove straight on, the horses got across the track, but the roller was still on the north rail when the engine struck it.
An ingenious calculation is made by learned counsel to show that there was sufficient time after the horses had passed over the mill track and before the accident for the engineer to have stopped his engine if he had used the means at hand. But when a witness, who is a casual on-looker, comes to guess during the excitement of a shocking catastrophe at the rate of speed an engine was going and that is made the basis •of a calculation to show what could have been accomplished in two seconds by the energetic use of all appliances, the 'calculation is not reliable. Besides, the argument based on that calculation assumes that the engineer, if he had been watchful, would have realized as soon as the team crossed the mill track that the driver was not going to stop. But the engineer can not be charged with such knowledge. Even though he saw the driver of the team approach dangerously near the crossing, yet he had a right to presume that the driver had used his eyes and would act as a reasonable man under the circumstances would for his own preservation. If the team had been approaching rapidly, there might have been in that fact some suggestion that the driver intended to try to cross in front of the engine. But approaching, as he was, at a very slow pace there was nothing to indicate that he would not or that he'could not stop before going on the main track.
This case does not fall within the doctrine laid down in Kellny v. Railroad, 101 Mo. 67, and Morgan v. Railroad, 159 Mo. 262.
The court should have given the instruction asked by the defendant in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence.
The judgment is reversed.
All concur.