The defendant contends: (1) that the evidence does not sustain the jury’s findings of actionable negligence; (2) that the facts and circumstances show that plaintiff and the driver were guilty of contributory negligence; (3) that the court committed prejudicial error in its instructions; (4) that the damages awarded for the injuries plaintiff received are excessive.
As above indicated, the jury found the defendant guilty of actionable negligence in conducting its street railway business at the time of the accident in these several respects: (1) in operating the car at an excessive and dangerous rate of speed; (2) in failing to give proper warning of its approach at the Twelfth-street crossing; (3) in failing to give warning of approaching plaintiff’s vehicle from the rear on Wisconsin street immediately preceding the collision; (4) by the motorman’s negligent omission to keep a proper lookout for plaintiff'as a traveler on the street; and (5) by defendant’s failure to exercise ordinary care in operating its car at the time of collision:
The jury found in answer to question 2 that the street car at the time of collision was traveling at a rate of eighteen miles per hour. This finding of the actual speed of the car establishes the groundwork upon which the jury’s findings of actionable negligence may rest, and renders breach of the city ordinance limiting the speed of street cars to twelve miles per hour wholly immaterial as a criterion for determining *480whether or not defendant negligently operated the car in question. Since the car was traveling at a speed of eighteen miles, the negligence of the motorman in the several respects found by the jury must be considered in the light of the actual speed of the car without reference to the speed limit fixed by the ordinance, and the court’s instruction to the effect that it was negligent operation if the car traveled in excess of the speed prescribed by the ordinance is thus rendered wholly immaterial.
The verdict finds, and the evidence sustains the conclusion, that while the car actually traveled at the rate of eighteen miles per hour, the motorman failed to give any warning of his approach at the Twelfth-street crossing and while running on Wisconsin street, in following up plaintiff’s automobile, which obviously he must have seen in front of him traveling in the same direction, and with which he collided. The fact that the car ran into the rear of the automobile leaves no ground for dispute but that the car exceeded the automobile in speed immediately before the collision. Under these conditions the motorman, had he exercised ordinary care, would have seen the automobile before the collision, and the facts and circumstances well nigh conclusively show that the car was being operated at so dangerous a rate of speed that it could not be safely controlled for the protection of plaintiff and her automobile, or that the motorman failed to exercise reasonable care in operating the car to prevent the collision which he must have observed to be imminent if he kept a proper lookout. Failure by the motorman to exercise reasonable care and precaution in either of these several respects was a breach of duty to the plaintiff as a traveler on the street and constituted actionable negligence.
We are satisfied that the evidence bearing on the issues presented questions for determination by the jury and that their findings must stand as verities in the case. It is strenuously insisted that the evidence in the case shows as a matter of law that the plaintiff and her chauffeur were guilty of contributory negligence. This claim is based on evidentiary *481facts tending to establish the fate of speed plaintiff’s automobile traveled at the time of crossing on Twelfth street and while driving south from this crossing on the west side of Wisconsin street to the point of collision.
The argument is made that if the evidence in the case be viewed in the most favorable light in. plaintiff’s favor respecting the course of the automobile on the street crossing and on Wisconsin street, and respecting the opportunity plaintiff and her driver had to see the street car before crossing on Twelfth street and after entering the crossing and driving southward on Wisconsin street, then it conclusively shows that the plaintiff and the driver were guilty of negligence in failing to see the approaching car or in carelessly driving into the zone of danger or in negligently driving onto the street-car track and turning to the left to cross it in face of the approaching car. We do not find this claim well founded. The facts showing the speed of the automobile, the course of its travel, and the Opportunity of seeing and hearing the street car, under the facts and circumstances, permit of different inferences as to whether or not plaintiff and her driver were guilty of any want of ordinary care. The judgment of witnesses as to the time spent in driving over this course and of the distances traveled in a given period of time is not of such a nature as to negative conclusively the positive statements of the witnesses that they looked and listened for the car while so traveling on. the streets. The jury was warranted in relying on the positive testimony of the witnesses tending to show that the plaintiff .and her driver were not guilty of a want of ordinary care which proximately contributed to cause the collision.
The exception that the damages 'are excessive is not well taken. The amount awarded is clearly reasonable in view of the evidence on the subject.
The claim is made that a new trial should be granted because the court erred in its instruction to-the effect that the operation of the street car immediately preceding the accident at a speed exceeding the twelve-mile limit fixed by the *482city ordinance is negligence in itself. We do not find it necessary to consider this question in the view we take of the case. As above indicated, the jury found defendant guilty of actionable negligence in failing to give the required signals of its approach at the crossing, in failing to keep a proper lookout for plaintiff as a traveler rightfully on the street, and in failing to exercise ordinary care in operating the car in the light of the surrounding circumstances. These findings, in connection with the express finding that the car ran at a speed of eighteen miles, sustain the judgment regardless of the question of the violation of the city ordinance. It is considered that the instruction complained of had no effect on the jury in determining the questions of actionable negligence, and the reasonableness of such an ordinance need not be considered on this appeal.
By the Court. — The judgment is affirmed.