The finding made by the jury in response to the first and second questions is assailed as being contrary to the clearly established physical facts. A careful examination of the record fails to disclose any established physical facts inconsistent with the jury’s findings. Some statements made by the plaintiff in his testimony are inconsistent with the facts as found by the jury, but the statements made by the plaintiff are not physical facts. They are statements made by him of the facts as they appeared to him, and it may well be that the shock of the accident left his mind confused as to his exact position or as to the exact sequence of events immediately preceding the collision. The finding of the jury as to the negligence of the defendant is supported by at least a clear preponderance of the evidence.
It is next urged that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law in failing to observe the approach of the automobile at or before he entered the zone of danger. Upon this-point there is a conflict of evidence and the question was for the jury.
Exception is taken to the following instruction given by the trial court:
“It is the duty of a driver to consider all the circumstances present and observe the other provisions as to speed quoted as well as the one prohibiting travel faster than fifteen miles an hour. Consider all circumstances of this *152case — the fact that the auto was approaching a street intersection, that the street car ahead of the driver as he approached obstructed his view ahead of the car of the zone of danger to pedestrians crossing the street; the fact that the street car had stopped for accommodation of passengers and was only just starting up as he approached it; the distance the auto traveled after the application of brakes, but with regard in this connection to the testimony as to the condition of the street as to snow and ice, the condition of the brakes on the auto and the absence of chains on the wheels; consider all these and all other circumstances as well as the direct testimony as to the speed of the car, and answer the question as to speed in view of all the testimony.”
In the brief, a sentence used by the court in connection with the fourth question is taken out of its context and printed in connection with the instruction given in reference to the first question, as follows:
“The law requires that a driver of an automobile shall stop when a street car is actually discharging and taking on passengers at a street crossing until the passengers are discharged or taken on.”
The quoted instructions are then argued as if they were one instruction. No reference to either case or record is given in the brief to indicate that the last sentence was taken out of its. context and printed in connection with the instruction given in regard to the first question. This may be the result of inadvertence, but whether it is or not it is misleading and not in conformity with the rule and is a practice which should be carefully avoided. We do not charge there was any intention to mislead in this case. The instruction as given in regard to question 1 we think unexceptionable.
In instructing the jury in regard to the fourth question, relating to contributory negligence, the court said:
“The law requires that a driver of an automobile shall stop when a street car is actually discharging and taking on passengers at a street crossing until the passengers are discharged or taken on. The street car had started as the auto reached it, but the plaintiff might properly have this rule in *153mind as bearing upon the proposition of how fast an approaching auto would be likely to be moving if one were approaching.”
This instruction is based upon the provisions of sec. 163'6 — 49, Stats. 1919. The legislature, by ch. 537 of the Laws of 1921, amended the section by inserting after the words “street car” the words “proceeding in the same direction.” Prior to its amendment the section read:
“The operator or driver of any vehicle, yrhen any street car is actually taking on or discharging passengers at the crossings or intersections of any public streets or highways, shall stop such automobile, motorcycle or other similar motor vehicle, until such passengers shall have been taken on or discharged from such car.”
Certainly the statute before its amendment contained no exception and required motor vehicles to stop under the circumstances there described, whether they werq moving in the same direction that the street car was moving or in an opposite direction. The trial court correctly construed and applied the statute to the situation shown by the evidence in this case.
The trial court instructed the jury in regard to damages as follows:
“The items of allowance are compensation for the pain and suffering up to this time and in the future resulting from his injury; the expenses of surgeon’s attendance and hos-' pital care resulting from the injury, the expense of a future operation to remove the plate in his leg if you find it reasonably certain from the evidence that such operation will be necessary, and compensation for the suffering and loss of time incident to such operation; compensation' for the loss of time while wholly incapacitated for labor after the injury; compensation for the loss up to this time of earnings incident to his inability to go back to his former job, if you find such inability, and that he lost his former job on account thereof; and compensation' for such diminished earnings if any as he will suffer in the future as a result of his injury.”
*154The instruction is criticised on the- ground that it makes the loss of his former job a basis of damages, whereas the true measure of damages is such damage as he has sustained by reason of his diminished earning capacity, if any. The use of this language is unfortunate and might very well be misleading. It appears from the evidence that the plaintiff had for some time been in the employ of the Soo Railway Company. It is a matter of common knowledge that railway employees have, comparatively speaking, a secure tenure in their employment; that they obtain certain seniority rights and are customarily accorded privileges which are of substantial value, and the jury may take these facts into consideration in assessing the plaintiff’s damages; but when they take ifato consideration compensation during the period of total incapacity and compensation for diminished earnings during the period of partial incapacity, their consideration necessarily includes the kind and character of employment in which the plaintiff was engaged and the entire loss sustained by him by reason of his injuries so far as compensation is concerned, and he is not entitled to recover in addition to that a further element of damages due to the fact that he lost his job.
We are persuaded in this case that the jury were not misled to the prejudice of the defendant by this instruction. The amount of the damages recovered in view of the injuries sustained is not large. On a former trial another jury found substantially the same amount. While the instruction niay be technically subject to criticism, the rights of the defendant have not been substantially prejudiced thereby. The trial court undoubtedly meant to say, and the jury no. doubt understood him to say, that the plaintiff was entitled to compensation for such damages as he had sustained by reason of his incapacity to continue his former occupation. The fact that his employment was more or less secure in tenure was an element which might properly enter into their consideration of that question.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.