delivered the opinion of the court.
The liability of appellant in this case is predicated upon its negligence in failing to furnish appellee’s intestate a place on its car where he could ride in safety. The law imposed the duty on appellant to use the utmost diligence consistent with'the practical operation of its road to carry its passengers safely and to do all necessary things and provide all appliances essential to that end. This is its duty to its passengers. The primary inquiry is, therefore, was appellee’s intestate a passenger? That he had not paid his fare is admitted. That he had not been asked for his fare is conceded. That the point where, by the custom of the conductors, collection of fares is commenced had not been reached prior to the time when deceased was knocked from the car is gathered from the testimony of appellant’s conductor in charge of its car. That the deceased was not ready and willing to pay his fare upon request, there is not the slightest suspicion arising from the proof. There is nothing in the proof impugning the bona fides of the deceased’s intention to become a passenger on appellant’s car when he boarded it, or showing that he intended to avoid payment of the fare, according to the company’s schedule of charges. It was not essential to the creation of the contract of carrier and passenger that deceased should have paid his fare. It is common knowledge that fares are not collected of passengers immediately upon their boarding a street car, and if it was not so, the proof of appellant establishes the fact that the point of collecting fares had not been reached according to the custom of appellant’s conductors at the time of the accident, and that no demand for a fare had been made. The proof affirmatively establishes that deceased was by implication of law a passenger on the car of appellant at the time he received his mortal injuries. North Chicago Street Ry. Co. v. Williams, 140 Ill. 275.
The authorities cited by appellant’s counsel in cases where the injured party was attempting to steal a ride or indulging in what is commonly known as “flipping” cars, have no application to the case at bar.
The four vestibule doors of the car were open, inviting people to enter the car through them and become passengers. The proof shows that deceased was a stranger in Aurora, never having been there before, and was, we must assume from this fact, unacquainted with the construction of the tracks of appellant’s road and with the lurking dangers to-be confronted, if any there were. Neither was he chargeable with notice of appellant’s regulations in relation to the management of its traffic, but had a right to act upon conditions as he saw them and enter the car through the doors which the servants of appellant had left open, impliedly for such purposes. The day of the accident was one given over to a holiday by working people, many of whom observed the day by traveling, to one place and another upon electric and other cars. Appellant had recognized that there would be an increased demand for its passenger cars and provided additional cars to meet it, and the evidence shows that the car in question was filled to overflowing. True it is that deceased might have reached a place of safety within the car by crowding, and not have been left to risk his life upon the step; and we think the observations in C. & A. R. R. Co. v. Fisher, 141 Ill. 614, peculiarly pertinent to the condition of deceased, where the court says: “A passenger in a railway train does not owe a duty to the company to push and crowd his way in order to get an advantage over other passengers in securing a place within the cars, and it does not follow as a matter of law that he will be guilty of negligence in not so doing. Nor will his duty to the company require that he shall wholly disregard the usual and ordinary courtesies and amenities of life. In fact, it is not necessary and as a matter of law negligence to stand aside and allow ladies to occupy the safest and most desirable positions in a public conveyance.” But it is urged that the servants of the company did not know of the presence of the deceased upon the step of its ear, and that consequently he was not accepted as a passenger, and that he voluntarily assumed the risk of so dangerous a riding place. We say that it was the duty of the servants of the company to have known of the deceased’s presence upon the step of the car, and knowing that the place was fraught with danger, to have furnished him a safe place or warned him to retire from his perilous one. It stands to reason that in the physical condition of the parallel tracks of appellant, it was chargeable with knowledge of the dangers attendant upon the passing of cars going in opposite directions to persons on the step of the vestibules of such cars on the side of the bar next to the passing car. Regardless of whether the company had a rule or not so providing, its servants should have closed the vestibule doors on the side nearest the tracks on which cars were run in an opposite direction, and have seen to it that no passengers were riding upon the step of the car, before starting on the trip, and if any persons were found upon such steps, to either provide a place for them upon the inside of the car, or, not being able so to do, to warn them off and refuse to suffer them to ride in such a position of danger. Failure so to do is negligence, for, as said in Booth on Street Railways, sec. 355, “If the company permits its cars to become so crowded that passengers • are compelled to ride on the footboards, and attempts to run them in that condition by other cars which cannot be passed without a collision and injury to passengers, it is guilty of culpable negligence, for the result of which the risk assumed by the passengers will constitute no defense.”
The law requires a carrier of passengers like appellant “to see and know, before putting a car in motion, that'no passenger is in a position which would be rendered perilous.” Miller v. St.Paul City Ry. Co., 66 Minn. 192.
Nelson, after the car started, realized the perilous position he and deceased were in and mentioned it to the deceased, but how the deceased regarded the situation we can never know, for he made no reply. But however perilous the position at that time, deceased was powerless to avoid such perils. The servants of the company were inside the car, which was speeding-on its way, and there is nothing in the evidence from which it can be said that any effort of deceased or Nelson, if made, would have resulted in stopping- the car before the accident happened.
The four counts under which the cause was submitted to the jury are sufficient to charge appellant as guilty of the negligence shown by the proofs to have been the proximate cause of the injury tb appellee’s intestate. The léarned trial judge therefore did not err in refusing to instruct the jury to find a verdict for appellant at any of the three times he was moved to do so by counsel for appellant. A careful examination of all the evidence found in this record satisfies us that the verdict of the jury was warranted from such proofs, and that the manifest weight of the evidence supports the verdict.
We think that it is immaterial whether appellant had any rule requiring the vestibule doors of cars on double tracks in Aurora, nearest adjoining ear tracks, to be closed or not; or, if it had, that it was error to prove it by the oral statement of Boy Green, its assistant superintendent. In the first place, it was negligence, regardless of there being any rule upon the subject, to run the. car without closing- the vestibule door next to the track on which cars were run in an opposite direction. But if there was anything- in the objection, appellant waived it when it permitted the existence of the rule to be proven on cross-examination of its own witness, Baynor Benton, the conductor of the car, without objection.
While the evidence may be in such a condition as to leave it in donbt whether the deceased was knocked off the step by the passing car or pushed against the passing car by the act of some other passenger, induced by the overcrowded condition of the car, still whichever cause operated to bring about the accident, they are equally imputable to the negligence of appellant charged in the declaration; for, as said in Booth on Street Railways, supra, “Nor will the wrongful act of passengers, who throw another to the ground and injure him while rushing past to leave the car with reckless haste, relieve the company from the consequences of overcrowding its car and failing to control its passengers.”
Whether the deceased was in the exercise of due and ordinary care for his own safety at the time he was injured, was a question for the jury to determine from the evidence; for, as said in C. & A. R. R. Co. v. Fisher, supra, “We know from common sense and ordinary observation and experience that under some circumstances it is culpable negligence to stand or sit upon the platform or steps of a moving car, and that under other circumstances it is not, and unless the case be one where the implication of negligence necessarily arises, it follows that what in a given set of circumstances would be negiigence, and what would he the exercise of ordinary care, are conclusions of fact to be deduced from the circumstances of the particular case. It would seem that a jury of twelve men of ordinary judgment and experience is particularly well equipped to determine whether under a set of circumstances detailed before them by witnesses, a particular line of conduct was ordinary care—in other words, such care as an ordinarily prudent and cautious man would exercise under the circumstances.”
It was the province of the jury to determine from the surroundings of the deceased at the time he boarded the car, his lack of knowledge of the dangers to be encountered from his position on the step of the car, and the action of appellant in impliedly inviting him to take passage on the car and to ride upon its step, whether he was at the time of the accident in the exercise of due care for his own safety. Under the proofs in the record, we are unable to say that the finding of the jury on this element of the case is so manifestly contrary to the probative force of the evidence as to call for our interference.
Complaint is made of certain instructions given by the court to the jury at the instance of appellee. We have critically examined all of the instructions given to the jury, and are of the opinion that they were sufficiently instructed on the law applicable to every theory upon which the case was tried. All the instructions requested by appellant were given, and they are numerous and comprehensive, and submit to the jury the law applicable to the proofs of appellant on every phase of its defense.
The following instruction is said to be erroneous, because it ignored the question of whether or not deceased was a passenger:
“The court instructs the jury that if they find from the evidence that the plaintiff has made out her case by a preponderance of the evidence, as alleged in the first, third, fourth and sixth counts of the declaration, or in either of said first, third, fourth or sixth counts, then the jury should find the defendant guilty.”
From the reading of the instructions it is clear .that the contention of appellee was that her intestate was a passenger at the time of the accident, and the jury were plainly told a person becomes in law a passenger by implication arising from his acts and that of the carrier; so that the jury squarely had the question of whether or not the deceased was a passenger before them. The instruction referred to the counts of the declaration under which the cause was submitted to the jury, and was so worded as to relate back not only to the questions of due care of deceased and negligence of appellant, but to the averment that deceased was a passenger. Traction Co. v. Lowenrosen, 222 Ill. 506.
A similar instruction has been frequently approved by the Supreme Court. By a number of instructions prepared by appellant the question of deceased being a passenger was submitted to the jury, and in one instruction they were told that if they believed deceased was a trespasser and not a passenger, they should find in favor of appellant. If the deceased was not a passenger, he was a trespasser, and appellant owed him no duty except not to wilfully injure him. Had deceased been a trespasser, he would have assumed the risk of any accident happening, to him while such trespasser. The instructions must be regarded as a whole and so read. Following this rule, we find the jury were informed upon every point and theory about which appellant now complains.
We think the trial was a fair one; that no material right or interest of appellant was curtailed or injuriously affected by any rulings of the trial court on the questions before him, and that there is in this record no error calling for a disturbance of the judgment of the Circuit Court, and it is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.