delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff in a collision with one of the electric cars of the defendant railway company upon Higgins avenue bridge, in the city of Missoula, on January 7, 1911. The defendant Miner was the motorman in charge of and operating the car at the time of the accident. The bridge extends across the Missoula river at the foot of Higgins avenue, connecting the city proper with South Missoula. It is 1,023.6 feet in length, and consists of a roadway, 28.90 feet in width, with a footway on either side separated from it by railings. A single car track, four feet in width, lies in the middle of the roadway. Allowing for the overhang of a car when passing over the track, there is left between it and the footway railing on either side a clearance for vehicles, *223etc., of 10.6 feet. The south end of the bridge is 7.54 feet higher than the north end. From the south the roadway ascends on a grade of about one per cent for a distance of 174 feet, and then descends on substantially the same grade to the north. After a car passing in either direction reaches the highest point, the power is shut off, and it is allowed to drift down the incline, the motorman controlling the speed by means of air brakes. The plaintiff’s home is in South Missoula. On the day of the accident he started from Missoula to go to his home. He was riding a heavy draught horse, weighing about 1,500 pounds, which had on it a light single harness with a blind bridle. He did not have a saddle, but was using a piece of blanket instead. The different parts of the harness were so secured as not to interfere with the horse’s movements. When the plaintiff had reached a point on the bridge about 300 feet from the north end, he observed a car approaching from the opposite direction at a distance of about 300 feet. At the sight of the car, and presumably owing to the noise created by its movement, the horse became restive and attempted to turn and run. The plaintiff struggled to hold it under control, but was not able to subdue it. The result was that it got between the rails as the car was about to pass, and was killed by collision therewith, the plaintiff being thrown to the roadway and seriously injured.
The substantive issue made by the pleadings was whether defendant motorman was guilty of negligence in failing to stop the car in time to avoid the collision, and this negligence was the proximate cause of the injury, the defendants alleging that plaintiff’s own negligence was a contributing cause. The jury found for the plaintiff and assessed his damages at the sum of $4,390. The appeal is from the judgment.
The only question submitted for decision is whether there was any evidence justifying the submission of the case to the jury. The instructions submitted to the jury are not in the record. It is not, therefore, apparent what was the court’s view of the rule of law applicable. The theory of counsel for defendants, as presented in their brief, proceeds upon the assumption that the right of the railway company to the use of the *224bridge is so far superior to that of another person that when a car is passing over it such other person must give to it the exclusive right of way, or be subject to the imputation of negligence, which will preclude a recovery for any injury which he may sustain from a collision or other accident, unless he can show that the operator of the ear has discovered his presence and has failed, when a condition of peril has intervened, to use such means as are in his power to avoid the accident. They insist that the burden was upon the plaintiff to show (1) that his position of peril was discovered by the motorman, and (2) that the latter was able by the use of ordinary care to avoid the accident. In other words, the plaintiff, first by going upon [1] the bridge when a car was approaching him, and, second, by failing to retire from it when his horse became restive and unmanageable, put himself in the position of a trespasser upon the rights of the company, which, for this reason, owed him no duty other than to use ordinary care to avoid injuring him, after his position of peril was discovered. They thus invoke the rule of the last clear chance, and argue that there is no evidence tending to show, either that the motorman discovered the position of plaintiff, or that, if he did, he failed to use ordinary care to' avoid the collision. Whether the rule is technically applicable to a ease of this kind, we shall not undertake to determine. We do not think plaintiff was guilty of negligence, as a matter of law, either in going upon the bridge, or in remaining on it, though he saw a car approaching. But, accepting the theory of counsel as correct, we nevertheless think the evidence made a case for the jury. It may be summarized, in part, as follows:
The plaintiff had advanced from the north end of the bridge [2] a distance of 300 feet. The horse was a gentle work horse, accustomed to being on the streets when cars were passing. It began to exhibit fright when the car was at a distance of 300 feet away. Passengers upon the car noticed! this fact. At that time it did not appear to be under plaintiff’s control. It was then “prancing” back and forth across the track. From that point on there was no change in the speed of the car, the motor*225man making no effort to cheek or stop it. It proceeded at the same rate until it struck the horse. One witness, who was a passenger, stated: “I noticed at the time we were going fast across the bridge. * * * We went as fast as we go on Third street going out to the fort, * * * and on Third street they go as high as twenty and twenty-five miles an hour.” This last statement was made by a witness who had theretofore been employed as a motorman by the defendant company. Another witness stated that the plaintiff tried to keep the horse off the track, but that it backed upon it two or three times, and plaintiff could not hold it. This witness testified: “I saw the motor-, man at that time. He did not do anything at all until, I should say, ten seconds; then he threw the current off. He stood there practically paralyzed, it appeared to me, I should say for about ten seconds. I should not say how far the car had gone past the horse before he threw the current. As to my best judgment upon that, he may have gone thirty feet. Eight after he hit the horse he stood still, my recollection is. After he had gone about thirty feet, he threw the handle round like that. At that time he was going at full speed. * * * In my opinion, there was not any lessening of speed from the time I first saw the car at the south end of the bridge until the time that it hit the horse.” This witness observed the accident from the upper floor of a building at the north end of the bridge, 400 or 500 feet distant from the place of the accident, but had a clear view. He stated further that the car was 300 feet away when the horse began to be restive. “As the car drew nearer, the horse became more frightened. * * * The horse backed on the track two or three times, but Singer tried to keep him off. Singer could not hold him.” A rule of the company requires ears to be moved over the bridge, when teams are upon it, at a speed not to exceed six miles an hour, and at such times the ears must be under complete control. At the time of the accident there were four teams upon the bridge.
The motorman in charge of the car stated that he was drifting at the rate of five or six miles an hour, without power; that he had the car under control; that under such circumstances a *226car could be stopped in about forty feet or the length of the car; that he did not see the horse on the track at all; that he first saw it 300 or 400 feet away; that at a distance of thirty feet the horse began to dance toward the track; that he then used all the emergency appliances to bring the car to a stop; that the horse threw up its head and began to dance toward the track, and was struck by the corner of the car as it was about to pass; that he did not know of anything else he could have done to avoid the collision; that in observing the horse he supposed that when it got right to him it would do like lots of other horses and “shoot past” him. A car allowed to drift from the highest point of the bridge without restraint would go at the rate of twenty or twenty-five miles an hour when within 250 feet of the north end of the bridge. Sometimes, when the bridge was clear, the motorman would make up time in crossing. The ear was of an improved pattern and fitted, with the most approved appliances. The motorman in charge had had an experience of two months, having learned to operate a car within that time. The car struck the horse on the rump with force sufficient to turn it end for end, and threw it off the track into the roadway, killing it. The vestibule of the car was broken in. When the car was finally stopped, it was from 90 to 120 feet beyond the point of collision.
The evidence is voluminous. There is much conflict in the statements of the different witnesses as to the particulars of the incident; but the foregoing statement of it is sufficient to demonstrate that, upon the assumption that plaintiff negligently put himself in a position of peril and remained there, whereas by retreating from the bridge he could have avoided the accident and thus saved himself, there was presented a case for the jury upon the question whether the motorman took such precautions as he ought to avoid the collision, after he discovered plaintiff’s perilous position. The facts bring the case clearly within the rule as applied by this court in Neary v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co., 37 Mont. 461, 19 L. R. A., n. s., 446, 97 Pac. 944, and 41 Mont. 480, 110 Pac. 226. Of course, it was not incumbent upon the motorman to stop the car when he first observed the plaintiff *227approaching from the north, or even when he observed that the horse was becoming unmanageable. It was nevertheless his duty, when he observed that the horse was likely to carry the plaintiff in front of the car, and therefore into a perilous position, immediately to take such precautions as he could to avoid a collision. The evidence justified a finding that he failed to do so.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.
Mr. Justice Holloway and Mr. Justice Sanner concur.