delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action of damages brought by defendant in error against the plaintiff in error for the killing of her husband by an engine drawing a train of cars along the line of the road. There was a verdict in favor of the plaintiff below, and on this a judgment was rendered for $750. On appeal to the court of civil appeals the judgment was affirmed. The case was then brought here by the writ of certiorari.
The facts are these: The engineer was .at his rightful place on the engine, and on the lookout ahead, as required by our statutes. The fireman was, at the time the accident occurred, engaged in the performance of his duty of replenishing the fire in the engine. The party injured was not visible to the engineer, although he was on the track, because the train was rounding a curve and the engineer was on the outside of the curve. If the fireman had been in his usual place on the left-hand side of the engine, which was, as the road ran at that place, on the inside of the curve, he could have seen the man; but, as stated, he was busy, in the performance of his duty of replenishing the fire of the en*302gine. The conrt of civil appeals held that, if the fireman conld not look ont on the left-hand side of the engine, it was the duty of the engineer to occupy that place, since he could not see the track from his own place because of the curve; or, if this could not be done (that is, if the engineer could not leave his place), it was the duty of the railroad company to have some other person on the engine in addition to the engineer and fireman, who could at all times see the whole road; that is, changing his position from side to side to accommodate his vision to the curves of the road. This is not the exact language used in the opinion of the court, but it is the substance and effect of its holding. That court refers to Railroad v. White, 5 Lea (73 Tenn), 540, and Railroad v. Nowlin, 1 Lea (69 Tenn.), 523 for support of the proposition. These cases are not subject to that meaning when carefully examined. In Railroad v. White, both the engineer and fireman were on the lookout, and the- man on the track could have been seen by the fireman, who was on the inside of the curve, if- he had watched the track with sufficient diligence, but through his failure in this regard he did not see the man until it was too late to warn the engineer; hence the injury. The language of the court must be considered as applied to these facts. In the Nowlin Case the facts are not stated very fully. It was stated, however, that at the time of the collision the engineer was on the lookout, but, owing to the particular surroundings, could not see ahead from his side, “although,” as the opinion proceeds, *303“some one on the other side of the engine conld have seen Nowlin in time to have prevented the accident.” On this state of facts it was insisted, by the railroad company, that inasmuch as the engineer was on the lookout from his side the law was fully complied with. The court, commenting on these facts and this contention, said:
“We do not so understand the law. The statutes evidently mean that some person shall he so situated, on the lookout, that he can see ahead. If the engineer cannot see, the fireman must; if the fireman cannot, the engineer must.”
It is not stated, in the opinion, that the fireman was engaged in the performance of any other necessary duty. So the-case is authority, as to this matter, only on the point that, where both the engineer and the fireman are sufficiently disengaged from other necessary duties that both can be on the lookout, they must so accommodate their vision to the curves of the road as that one or the other must he able to keep the whole track in view; if the engineer cannot see the track, because he is on the outside of the curve, the fireman, on the inside of the curve, must watch, and vice versa. It would not do to hold, as we think, that either of these men who work the engine must leave a necessary duty in order to compass this double lookout. The engine must have coal or it cannot run, and the fireman must supply this coal. The engineer must he where he can put his hand on the throttle, the brake, the hell cord, and the lever of the whistle, because he may have *304to use them at any moment. It could not be expected of him that be sbonld leave bis place of control of tbe movements of tbe engine, and step to tbe other side, and leave tbe engine without guidance or restraint. It could not be expected that tbe fireman should abandon bis necessary duty of furnishing motive power. Tbe only other alternative would be tbe furnishing of a third man, but this necessity has been held not to exist. In Railroad v. Dean, 5 Sneed (37 Tenn.), 293, tbe original act was under construction. That act read:
“That all railroad companies in this state shall be required to keep some one upon tbe locomotive always on tbe lookout ahead.”
This was held to mean, in the ease referred to, that tbe companies were “required by law to have a special agent always on the lookout ahead, and performing that undivided duty.” Tbe original act was amended in 1857-58 (chapter 44, section 3), so as to read, as carried into tbe Code:
“Every railroad company shall keep tbe engineer, fireman, or some other person upon tbe locomotive, always upon tbe lookout ahead.” Shan. Code section 1574, subsec. 4.
See Railroad v. Stone, 7 Heisk. (54 Tenn.), 470.
Tbe difference in tbe two acts is plain. Tbe change was intended to dispense with tbe necessity of keeping a special agent always on tbe lookout ahead, and performing that undivided duty.
Tbe same question has been decided in other states as we are now deciding it. In Rogers v. Georgia R. R., *305100 Ga., 699, 28 S. E., 457, 62 Am. St. Rep., 351, it was held that, where the animal that was injured could not he seen by the engineer, the fact that the fireman was coaling the engine, and the company did not provide a third person to keep a lookout, did not constitute negligence. In Kentucky the court held that, while it was negligence for the engineer momentarily to withdraw his attention from the track while passing along a city street, it was not negligence for the fireman to he engaged in putting coal into the engine, although the child injured could be seen only from the fireman’s side. L. & N. R. R. v. Creighton, 106 Ky., 42, 50 S. W., 227, In a case where it appeared that a child was killed at a crossing where it could not he seen by the engineer, but might have been seen by the fireman, the supreme court of Wisconsin held that it was not negligence for the fireman to descend from his seat, in the performance of other duties, to a point where he could not look ahead. O’Brien v. R. R., 119 Wis., 7, 10, 96 N. W., 424, 425. In that case the court said:
“We cannot say that there was any error in refusing to submit to the jury the question whether the defendant was negligent in failing to keep a lookout in the direction the train was going at the time. . ■ . . The engineer was on the lookout on his side of the train all the time as [the train] approached Seventh avenue. The mere fact that the fireman, in pursuance of the requirements of his duties, just before reaching that avenue, got down on the deck, where he could not look ahead, cannot be regarded as neglienee, under the circumstances stated.”
*306To the' same effect, see Howard v. Louisville, New Orleans & Texas Ry. Co., 67 Miss., 247, 7 South., 216, 19 Am. St. Rep., 302; East Tenn., Va. & Ga. Railroad Co. v. Bayliss, 77 Ala., 429, 54 Am. Rep., 69, 71.
It is difficult to make any train service, or any other service in any business, absolutely perfect. The legislature was within-the due exercise of its powers when it took into consideration the enormous expense that would he required to furnish a third man on every engine, and refused to impose this burden in order to safeguard the occasional reckless trespasser who might be walking, or lying, on one side or the other of a curve of a nailway track, or an animal that its master had permitted to stray. The possibility of such occasional danger to a trespassing man, or to a wandering animal, or to persons or goods on a train, from collision therewith, was not deemed sufficiently imminent to require the imposition of the additional expense referred to. If we should so hold we should, as we believe be running counter to the declared legislative policy, which in 1857-58 dictated the change in the previously existing statute. Our present holding is fully in accord with that in Railroad v. Wyrick, 99 Tenn. (15 Pick.), 500, 505, 42 S W., 434.
It results that the trial judge committed error in refusing to sustain plaintiff in error’s motion for peremptory instructions, and the court of civil appeals committed error in refusing to reverse the judgment of the trial court. Both judgments are now reversed, the motion for peremptory instructions is sustained, and the suit dismissed, at defendant in error’s cost.