On October 9, 1900, the defendants were operating a double-track street railroad in Lafayette avenue' in St. Louis lying east and west. At that date defendants’ cars were drawn by cable power. Its trains were composed of what was called a grip-car, and a closed car called a trailer. The grip-car was open at the sides, the seats arranged crosswise, with a closed aisle in the middle for the gripman to occupy, and the roof was supported by stanchions on both sides at the outer ends of the seats. The seats were reached by the passengers by a board running lengthwise along each *422side of the car forming a step and called a running-board or footboard. There was a front and a back platform. The gripman stood near the center of the car in the closed aisle. The only way for a passenger to go from one side of the car to a seat on the other was across the front or the rear platform, thence along the running-board to the seat desired.
The two tracks lay parallel, with a space about four feet in width between them, the south track for the east-bound trains, the north track for the trains west-bound.
On the day above named the plaintiff boarded the grip-car of an east-bound train to be carried'down town to his place of business. Pie got on the running-board on the south side of the car; seeing a vacant seat on the other side which he desired to take, he walked along the running-board to' the front platform, crossed the platform, and taking hold of a stanchion with his left hand and of a handhold on the dashboard with his right, stepped down on the running-board on the north side, then letting go the hold of his right hand turned his body to the west, aiming to catch the nest stanchion with that hand. While in that act he was struck by a west-bound car, knocked off and received very severe injuries. This suit is to recover damages for those injuries. The petition alleges in general terms that the accident was “caused by the negligence, carelessness and recklessness of defendants and their officers, agents, servants and employees. ’ ’
The answer was a general denial and a plea of contributory negligence. The acts specified as negligence ■ on the part of the plaintiff are :
“1. Unnecessarily going upon the inner running-board or footboard on the car when he might have taken a seat on the side of the car on which he first entered and thereby avoided all chance of injury.
“2. In going upon the inner running- or footboard of the car at a time and place where a car was likely to *423pass on the other track, without either looking or listening to see or hear whether another car was likely to pass on said other track or not, while he was on said inner or running footboard; when by looking or listening, he might have seen and heard the said car upon said other track, and remained off said running-hoard until said other car had passed, and thereby have avoided being struck by said passing car.
“3. In leaning outwardly from the ear upon the foot- or running-board on which he was standing, so far as to come in contact with the passing car, when, had he exercised a reasonable care for his own safety, and stood perpendicularly upon the running- or footboard upon which he was standing, said passing car would not have struck him; and that the collision between the passing car and the plaintiff was caused by his leaning • outwardly in the direction of the passing car.”
The reply was a general denial.
The trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for $15,000 and judgment accordingly, from which the defendants appeal. The assignments of error relate to the rulings of the court on the introduction of evidence, and to the instructions given and refused. So much of the evidence as is necessary to an understanding of these assignments will be referred to hereinafter, as will be also the instructions.'
I. In the brief for respondent it is contended that the statements in the answer amount to a confession of the plaintiff’s right to recover and that the only question left open is as to the amount of damages. The idea advanced is that the statements in the plea of contributory negligence assume that the arrangement or plan of the car was a dangerous contrivance and, therefore, the defendants were guilty of negligence in putting it into public service. It would seem op, reason that any plea of contributory negligence must be a plea of confession and avoidance. If the facts stated in the plea only go to show that it was the plaintiff’s own *424negligence and nothing more that caused the accident those facts could be proven under the general denial, because if it was the plaintiff’s negligence only, it was in no part defendant’s negligence. Under a general denial the defendant may prove any fact which shows that the plaintiff never had any cause of action. But where an affirmative defense is offered' it logically carries the idea that a cause of action once existed, but has ceased because of the facts pleaded in the answer or that a cause of action would! have arisen out of the facts set out in the petition but for the additional co-temporaneous facts pleaded in the answer. Perhaps under the provision of our code (sec. 626, R. S. 1899), authorizing a party to plead alternatively, it would be proper for a defendant in his answer to deny the cause of action and yet say that because of certain other facts if the plaintiff ever had a cause of action it has ceased, or that he would have had a cause of action but for the facts stated in the answer.
The rules of pleading as they relate to the defense of contributory negligence are not very definite on the particular point here referred to. [1 Thompson on Neg., sec. 367.] It is the rule in this State that contributory negligence is an affirmative defense and to enable a defendant to introduce proof of it he must plead it, but if the plaintiff in his effort to prove his own case shows that he was guilty of negligence that contributed to the injury complained of, the defendant may avail himself of that showing, although no plea of contributory negligence has been filed.
The answer, in this ease does not go to the extent of admitting that the arrangement of the car was in itself, or when used with proper care, a dangerous contrivance, but that the danger arose from the manner in which the plaintiff used it. The idea is that, in the first place, there was no necessity for his going on that side of the car; second, that he incurred danger by attempting to use the footboard in the face of a car coming *425from the opposite direction, and, third that instead of using reasonable care to hold himself erect when on the, footboard he leaned outward toward the danger.
The answer is not susceptible of the construction that the appliance was dangerous if used with ordinary care; it only means that the plaintiff did not use it with ordinary care.
II. At the close of the plaintiff’s case the defendants demurred to the evidence, the'court-overruled the demurrer and an exception was taken. ■ Appellants now insist on that demurrer.
There is not a great deal of conflict in the testimony, the point, on which the difference is most serious is the distance between the two passing cars. The evidence showed that on the stanchions were brass handholds standing out three inches, for the use of persons passing along the footboard. There was evidence for the plain-, tiff tending to show that when two cars were side by side on the two tracks the space from the outside of the handhold on one car to that on the other car, was thirteen inches, and measuring from the outer end of the seat of one car to that of the other was eighteen inches. The evidence for defendant tended to prove that the footboards were each nine inches wide, that they were set one inch from the body of the car and the space between the footboards of the two cars was ten inches.
The plaintiff’s evidence showed that he was a man of intelligence and learning, city-reared, and was accustomed to using cars of this kind. The gripman on the west-bound car that struck the plaintiff was a witness in his behalf. He testified that as he approached the east-bound car he saw the plaintiff on the front platform; “the east-bound train had not stopped; it slowed up and I kept watching the train all the way until I thought that everything was safe, and ran up pretty close. I noticed Mr. Allen had his back to me; I thought to myself, everything is clear; he seemed to be stopped; I was going at full speed of the rope; all at once I heard *426the remark, ‘Lord have mercy; he has killed him.’ I stopped my train in about fifteen feet of him. ’ ’ He said he had no recollection whether or not on approaching the east-hound train he rang the gong, hut “I do not think I rang it. ’ ’ On cross-examination he said: ‘ ‘ He (Mr. Allen) stepped down just about the time the front end of the car met that one; he stepped right down; the second roof-post of my car struck him; it broke the brass handrail off.” On further cross-examination he said that as he approached he was watching the plaintiff to see if he was going to get down on the running-board, and was prepared to give the signal and stop the car, but plaintiff’s acts indicated that he was going to remain where he 'was and witness went on. This was not an unfriendly witness to plaintiff; there was nothing either of bias or prejudice appearing in his testimony.
The plaintiff as a witness in his own behalf testified that he did not see the west-bound train coming towards him, that he did not look, that if he had looked he would have seen it.
Defendants insist that the demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained on the ground that the plaintiff’s own evidence showed that he was guilty of negligence which contributed to the accident.
The evidence did tend to show that the plaintiff was guilty of negligence, but unless it was of a character so clear that there was no reasonable ground for two opinions about it the court could not pronounce it contributory negligence as a matter of law, but it should have been submitted to the jury to decide as a matter of fact.
There was evidence from which the jury might conclude that whatever danger there was in the use of the car and its appliances as described by the witnesses was known to the plaintiff. It was a car of the plan in ordinary use and had been so for years, and ,the plaintiff was a city man accustomed to seeing such cars. If the cars were of such a character that they could be used *427with safety by passengers who exercised ordinary care in using them, then the triers of fact might conclude that this plaintiff did not exercise ordinary care when this accident occurred. But if the distance between them was so little that a passenger even though he exercised ordinary care was liable to be knocked off by a passing car, then the question of fact would arise, what opportunity did the plaintiff have of knowing the danger? and in answering that question the jury would consider the extent of the plaintiff’s familiarity with the subject and to what extent the danger was discernible to one in the plaintiff’s situation. ’ In passing on those questions the jury might conclude that the more dangerous was the plan of the cars, if it was known, or was obvious, the greater should have been the care of the plaintiff to look in the direction from which a car was to-be expected before stepping on the running-board. • And on the other hand if there was a distance of from twenty-eight to thirty inches between the cars, as defendants’ evidence tended to prove, a less degree of caution might become necessary to keep the passenger within the limits of reasonable care. These points are suggested only for the purpose of illustrating the proposition that the evidence in this case was such as to fairly raise the question whether or not the plaintiff was guilty of negligence that contributed to his injury, but it was not such as to justify the court in taking the case from the jury.
Defendants also think that the case should have been taken from the jury on the ground that there was no evidence tending to prove negligence on the part of the defendants. If the space between the ears was as narrow as the plaintiff’s testimony tended to show that it was, it became a question for the jury whether or not the operating of cars of that kind within that distance of each other was compatible with the duty defendants owed its passengers. There was no error in overruling the demurrer to the evidence.
*428III. The instructions given are quite voluminous and for that reason we will not copy them here in full hut state their substance as briefly as possible.
The first instruction given for the plaintiff was to the effect that after the plaintiff boarded the car 11 then it was the duty of said defendant or defendants to provide plaintiff, not only a safe track, roadbed and car, but also as safe an access to the seats on said cars as a high degree of care and foresight' could provide” as described in another instruction. “And if the jury further find from the evidence that immediately thereafter (that is, after he had boarded the car) the plaintiff was going along the inner footboard to a seat, and was exercising such care as ordinarily prudent men would exercise under similar circumstances, and that while doing so, he was stricken from the car he was riding on, by a west-bound train on the north track of-said railway, and run over by one or both of said cars, and thereby injured, and that such striking and running over of plaintiff, and the injuries he sustained thereby, were caused by the failure on the part of said defendant or defendants, their servants, agents or employees,'to exercise the high degree of care and foresight incumbent upon the carriers of passengers, as described in another instruction, then plaintiff is entitled to recover.”
In the second instruction for plaintiff the jury were informed “that the law requires a carrier of passengers to exercise the highest practicable care, diligence and skill for the safety of his passengers, which a prudent and cautious person would observe in a like business and under similar circumstances.” And that the care required of a passenger is ordinary caré, “by which is meant such care as a person of ordinary prudence would ordinarily exercise under the same or similar circumstances.”
*429There was no- other instruction given for the plaintiff indicating what facts the jury should find in order to authorize them to find the defendants guilty of negligence.
At the request of the defendants the court gave numerous instructions numbered 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13,14,15,18, and 19, to the effect as follows:
4. Referring to the terms of a stipulation of the parties which gave a history of the construction and former ownership of the street railroad tracks and cars, the changes in its motive power, the final transfer of the franchises and property to the defendants, the one as owner and the other as lessee and concluding as follows: “then the defendants had the lawful right to continue the operation of said cars and tracks so provided and operated by the Peoples Railway and its receiver, and the continuance of such operation was not such negligence as will entitle the plaintiff to recover in this action and the plaintiff is not entitled to recover on that ground. ’ ’
5. The defendant had a right to run as many trains as it deemed necessary and the fact that this west-hound train was an extra, called a “tripper,” did not make the defendant’s act negligence.
7. There was no duty devolved on either the grip-man or the conductor to prevent the plaintiff going on the inner footboard, and their failure to do so was not negligence.
8. The defendants were under no duty to erect bars or other obstructions to prevent persons old enough and intelligent enough to take care of themselves from going on the inner footboard while the car was under way, and a failure’to do so was not negligence.
9. There being no evidence of any derailment, or collision of the cars with each other or failure of the means or appliances for transportation, or of any improper handling of either car, no presumption of negligence can arise from the happening of the accident.
*43010. If the gripman* on the west-bound car saw the plaintiff on the front platform and his actions were such as to indicate that he was going to remain there or not step down until the cars passed each other and if he did not in fact step down on the footboard until the front end of the car had passed or was passing him, and it was then too late for the gripman to give warning or stop the car, the gripman was not guilty of negligence. *
11. Although the gripman of the car on which the plaintiff was, saw him on the front platform, yet if the conditions were such that by looking or listening he could have seen or heard the approaching train, the gripman had a right to assume that he would see or hear it and would not go on the footboard until the danger had passed, and if after he did step down on the footboard it was too late for the gripman to stop the car, he was not guilty of negligence.
12. There was no duty imposed by statute or ordinance on either one of the gripmen to sound his gong under the circumstances given in evidence, and before plaintiff is entitled to recover for failure to sound the gong he must show by a preponderance of evidence that such failure was the direct, immediate and proximate cause of his injuries, and if,- notwithstanding the failure to sound the gong, the plaintiff by looking or listening could have seen or heard the west-bound train hut failed to look or listen, then the plaintiff was not entitled to recover for failure to ring the gong.
13. No presumption of negligence on the part of the defendants or their employees is to he assumed under the circumstances in evidence in this ease, and before the plaintiff can recover he must show by a preponderance of the evidence and not mere speculation.that the defendants’ negligence caused his injuries; and if the plaintiff’s own negligence contributed to the result the verdict should he for the defendants, notwithstanding *431the jury should believe that the defendants were also negligent.
14. If the plaintiff, without direction or suggestion of defendants’ servants, went upon the inner footboard when he knew, or by the exercise of reasonable care would have known, that he was liable to be struck by a passing car on the other track, then it was his duty before stepping on the running-board to have looked and listened for an approaching ear, and if he failed to do so and that failure on his part contributed to his injuries, he was not entitled to recover.
15. The law requires a passenger to use reasonable care for his own safety, and while he is in a vehicle of the carrier he has no right to move into a position of danger unless under some existing necessity to do so and if he does and is injured in consequence he cannot recover. If, therefore, the jury should find that a position on the inner footboard was a position of danger and the plaintiff voluntarily took that p o sition when he could have taken a seat elsewhere in the car until the other train had passed and that when he did so he knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care would have known, the danger, then he assumed the risk and cannot recover.
18. While the defendant carrier was under the duty of exercising a high degree of care to carry the plaintiff safely yet that did not absolve him from the exercise of such reasonable care for his own protection from the danger, if any, to' which his own act in going upon the footboard exposed him, and if he failed to exercise that care and his failure in that respect contributed to the accident, then he is not entitled to recover even if the carrier failed to exercise the high degree of care required of him.
19. The parties having voluntarily withdrawn the evidence contained in the city ordinance relating to the speed at which a ear was authorized to run, there is no evidence authorizing the jury to find that either car was run at an unlawful rate of speed.
*432If the jury had given obedience to those instructions they could not have rendered a verdict for the plaintiff.
The instructions given at the request of the plaintiff do not specify any facts which, if found by the jury, would require a verdict for the plaintiff, but they leave the jury at liberty to find for the plaintiff if his injuries “were caused by the failure on the part of said defendant or defendants, their servants, agents or employees, to exercise the high degree of care and foresight incumbent upon the carriers of passengers, as described in another instruction.” The only other instruction on the subject merely defines the degree of care required of a carrier. So the plaintiff’s instructions are equivalent to authorizing the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff under any theory of negligence which they could construct or evolve out of their own minds.
But the instructions given at the request of the defendants take up every phase of the defendants’ acts and of the acts of their servants upon which a possible charge of negligence could be predicated, one by one, and instruct the jury that there is no negligence in it.
Respondent says that those instructions, some of them at least, are erroneous, and that appellants have no right to complain that the verdict is contrary to erroneous instructions of their own asking.
But what confidence can be put in the verdict of a jury that disregards all the instructions given?
"When several issues of fact are submitted to the jury and upon either or all of them they might base a verdict, we defer to their judgment; but when there are no issues framed for them, how can we know that the verdict is founded on an issue that was rightfully in the case?
The petition is as indefinite as the plaintiff’s instructions, merely charging that the plaintiff was a passenger and received injuries through the negligence *433of the defendants. A motion to require the plaintiff to make his petition more definite was overruled. The court in overruling the motion doubtless considered that when a passenger sues a carrier to recover damages for personal injuries received while he was in the care and keeping of the carrier, he has only to state in his petition the facts going to establish the relationship of carrier and passenger, that he received certain injuries, and that they were caused by the negligence of the carrier, without specifying in what that negligence consisted.
If facts are alleged from which the law will draw a presumption of negligence on the part of the carrier, it is sufficient to follow the allegations of such facts with a charge of negligence in general terms; but the facts that the plaintiff was a passenger in the care of the defendant as a carrier and the plaintiff, while that relation existed, received injuries, are not facts sufficient in themselves to create the presumption of negligence. Whilst the plaintiff is not required to specify (for the reason that he generally does not know) the particular in which the defendant’s conduct was'negligent, yet he must in his statement refer the accident to the failure or breaking of some of the defendant’s equipment or the conduct of the agents in charge of the business.
If a collision occurs between two trains of the defendant, or a train is derailed, or a car breaks down, the passenger is not expected to know, and, therefore, not required to state the cause of the occurrence; it is sufficient for him to allege the break-down, the collision, or other such accident, and state generally that it resulted' from the defendant’s negligence and that the passenger was injured.
Judge ThompsoN states the doctrine thus: “The general rule may be said to be- that where an injury happens to the passenger in consequence of the breaking or failure of the vehicle, roadway or other appliance owned or controlled by the carrier, and used by him in making the transit, or in consequence of the act,
*434omission or mistake of Ms servants, the person entitled to sne for the injury makes out a prima facie case for damages against the carrier, by proving the contract of carriage, that the accident happened in consequence of such breaking or failure, or such act, omission or mistake of his servants, and that in consequence of the accident, the plaintiff sustained damage.” [3 Thompson on Neg., sec. 2754.] It is upon this doctrine of prima facie presumption of negligence arising when certain facts are proved, that the rule of pleading above referred to is founded. One need not plead more than it is necessary to prove. The author above quoted in further discussion of the subject says that this presumption arises not from, the happening of the accident, but from a consideration of the cause of the accident, and in section 2757, Id., he says: £ ‘ The conclusion then is that in order to throw upon the carrier of passengers the burden of disproving his negligence, in case of an in-' jury to a passenger, it must first be shown that the injury complained of resulted from the breaking of the carrier’s machinery, from a collision, from a derailment of his cars, or prove sometMng otherwise improper and unsafe in his appliances of transportation, or in the conduct of his business. ’ ’ That is the doctrine of this court and it is as far as any of our decisions have gone in the direction of relieving the plaintiff in such case from the necessity of specifying the act of . the defendant complained of as neglect. [Coudy v. Railroad, 85 Mo. 79; Seymour v. Railroad, 114 Mo. 275 ; Clark v. Railroad, 127 Mo. 197; Hite v. Railroad, 130 Mo. 132; Bertram v. Railroad, 154 Mo. 639; Feary v. Railroad, 162 Mo. 75; Johnson v. Railroad, 173 Mo. 307.]
In the plaintiff’s first instruction the jury are told that it was the duty of the defendants ‘ to provide for plaintiff, not only a safe track, roadbed and car, but also as safé an access to the seats on the cars as a high degree of care and foresight could provide.” The petition does not allege that the defendants failed to furnish *435either a safe track, roadbed, car or access to the seats in the car, nor does the instruction submit to the jury the question whether or not there was a safe track, roadbed, car or access to the seats in the car. The question which the instruction propounds to the jury is, was the plaintiff’s injury caused by the negligence of the defendants or their servants, not in respect to the condition of the track, roadbed, car or access to seats in the ear, but in any respect whatsoever? ■ The instructions for the defendants having practically withdrawn from the consideration of the jury every phase of the case on which it could be said that there was any evidence tending to show negligence, there was no definite issue submitted to the jury and their verdict is responsive to nothing.
Whatever may be said' concerning the sufficiency of the petition, when the time came to submit the case to the jury, the instructions should have defined the issues that the jury were to try. The plaintiff’s instructions failed in this respect and were erroneous.
IY. Instructions 16 and 17 asked by defendants were refused. They were to the effect that when the plaintiff stepped on the inner footboard, it became his duty to exercise such degree of care as the position he was in rendered reasonably necessary to' prevent his being struck by a passing car and if by standing upright and not leaning out he would have avoided being struck, yet failed to observe that care, he was not entitled to recover.
Respondent contends that these instructions were properly refused because the same subject was covered by other instructions and because there was no evidence that the plaintiff leaned outward.
The other instructions referred to as covering the point are instruction 1 for plaintiff and instruction 18 for defendants.
The part of the plaintiff’s instruction indicated is: “And if the jury further find from the evidence that *436immediately thereafter the plaintiff was going along-the inner footboard to a seat and was exercising such care as ordinarily prudent men would exercise under similar circumstances, and that while so doing, he was stricken from the car on which he was riding by a westbound train, ’ ’ etc., then he was entitled to recover.
That mere reference to the care that plaintiff was observing was not all that the defendants were entitled to in the way of an instruction on the question of contributory negligence, nor did defendants’ instruction 18 entirely cover the point. Instruction 18 was designed to inform the jury that even if the carrier had failed to observe the high degree of care devolving on him, yer. that fact did not absolve the passenger from the duty of exercising the care devolving on him and that if he was negligent “in the respect set out in the other instructions” and such neglect contributed to-Ms injury, he could not recover.
The “other instruqtions” to. which the jury were then referred were these two refused instructions 16 and 17 which specified what would constitute negligence in the plaintiff.
The evidence, for the defendants, upon which these instructions were predicated, tended to show that the space between the passing cars in which it was available for a man to stand, was from twenty-eight to thirty inches. If that testimony was true, then it was a legitimate inference for the jury to draw that the plaintiff would not have been struck if he had stood erect on the footboard and not leaned outward. The defendants were entitled to those instructions and it was error to refuse them.
Y. There was evidence tending to show that there were no notices posted in the car warning people to keep off the inner footboard.' The defendants asked this instruction: “6. The fact that no notices were posted in the cars warning passengers to keep off the inner footboard was not of itself such negligence as authorizes *437the plaintiff to recover in this action.” That instruction the court refused, hut added to it the following, and gave it: “but the jury are to consider such fact in connection with all the other facts in the case in determining whether the defendants or their servants negligently operated the car upon which plaintiff was a passenger when he received the injuries complained of. ’ ’ The instruction as given meant that the absence of notices was not negligence, hut it was evidence of negligence. It was error to have refused the instruction as asked and it was error to have given it as changed. There was no duty devolving as to the defendants to post such notices, and, therefore, the omission to do SO' was neither negligence, nor evidence of negligence.
VI. Over the Objection of the defendants, plaintiff was permitted to introduce as evidence the opinions of two of his witnesses that it was not safe for a person to stand on the inner footboard of a going car. The objection to that testimony should have been sustained. When the evidence showed the plan of the ear, dimensions, distances, etc., as it did, the jury were as competent to form an opinion as to whether a man could safely stand on the footboard as the witness. It was •not a case for expert testimony. The jury heard the' evidence of the plaintiff and that of the defendants as to the standing room, they saw the plaintiff and could, judge as well as anyone whether a man of his size could stand there in safety, using proper care.
VII. Over the defendants’ objection evidence was admitted tending to show that previous to this accident reports had been made to an officer of the company of other accidents to persons riding on the inner foot-board. Defendants offered to prove by this officer that upon the reports being made to him, he investigated the cases and found that they occurred by reason of the persons leaning outward towards the passing car. The court sustained plaintiff’s objection to that evidence on the ground that it was hearsay. It was undoubtedly *438hearsay, but so also was the evidence of the reports made to the officer. If the plaintiff was entitled to prove what someone told the officer, the defendants were entitled to prove what other persons told him when he was investigating the cases. But it was all incompetent. The court should have sustained the defendants’ objection.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court to be retried according to the law as herein expressed.
All concur.