The plaintiff was injured, both in person and in property, while driving a horse and wagon over a grade crossing of the Pennsylvania Railroad near the town of Rahway. The case was taken from the jury on the ground that his own negligence had contributed to the accident, and the correctness of this instruction is the only question now presented.
[1] We have therefore examined all the evidence and have no difficulty in agreeing with the statement of the trial.judge that, if the jury should find for the plaintiff, the verdict could not be sustained. This justified his instruction, as many cases decide. Railroad v. Bank, 123 U. S. 733, 8 Sup. Ct. 266, 31 L. Ed. 287; Cattle Co. v. Railway, 210 U. S. 10, 28 Sup. Ct. 607, 52 L. Ed. 931, 15 Ann. Cas. 70; Re Iron Clad Co. (C. C. A.) 197 Fed. 281, 116 C. C. A. 642.
[2] The declaration and the plaintiff’s own testimony narrow the issue to one question, namely, Did the watchman at the crossing give *281the proper warning? The plaintiff went no further than to say that he “did not see the watchman.” Obviously this ambiguous statement is not inconsistent with the direct and positive testimony of the other witnesses that swore to the watchman’s presence on the crossing arid to his zealous discharge of duty. And when we also take into account the undoubted physical facts that the watchman was Jkilled by the same train that struck the plaintiff’s wagon, and that his body was found at the very place of the collision, it is manifest that a situation is presented different from the ordinary conflict among witnesses, where some of them testify in one way and some in the other. Such a conflict was referred to by this court in McLaughlin v. Horne (C. C. A.) 206 Red. 246, and we do not qualify what was said in that case.
The judgment is affirmed.