The plaintiff received the injury for which he seeks recovery within the corporation limits of the town of Yalley Junction. The road of the defendant company runs due east and west through said town, and is paralleled for some distance by the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific road, the tracks at the point of the injury and for some distance both east and west thereof being about eight feet apart. The Rock Island road maintains shops at a point some distance southwest of the joint depot, and southwest of the point where the plaintiff’s injury was received. The plaintiff was an employe of the Rock Island company, whose duty' took' him to their shops, and while passing from said
Two questions are presented for our determination: First, the question of the negligence of the defendant; and, second, the question of contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff. The petition alleges that the plaintiff was struck by the train when the same was running from twenty to thirty miles per hour; “ that the engineer or fireman neglected or failed to ring the bell or blow the whistle or give any warning or sign to indicate the approach of said train; that employes of both companies used the footpath heretofore mentioned in crossing said tracks, which use was well known to defendant as herein alleged; that the defendant was grossly negligent and careless in running its train at a speed of from twenty-five to thirty miles per hour through said yards that were being so constantly used, without blowing a whistle or ringing a bell, or giving some warning of the approach of said train.”
In Clampit v. C., St. P. & K. C. Ry. Co., 84 Iowa, 11, the facts were that, where the accident occurred, the track was daily used by a number of persons, whose employment required them to cross the defendant’s track in going to and returning from their work. This was shown to have been known by the company, and we held that the company having, through their employes and officers, knowledge of the use of the footpath crossing, and having made no objection thereto, were presumed to assent to it, and, by so doing, to give to those who used the crossing a license therefor; and it was held that the plaintiff was not a trespasser upon the railroad track, but, on the contrary, was entitled to all the rights and protections of one rightfully thereon, and that he could recover for injuries resulting from the defendant’s want of care. It is true that in that case the evidence showed that a stairway had been erected on one side of the track for the passage of those who used the footpath, and, because of this circumstance, the defendant herein attempts to distinguish this case from the Glampit case; but, as we shall hereafter endeavor to show, the distinction cannot avail it.
In Thomas v. C., M. & St. P. Ry. Co.,
The language just quoted is applicable to the case at bar. Here the testimony shows that there was a well-defined footpath across the defendant’s track. It was in the defendant’s yard at Valley Junction, and was used by hundreds of people, whose duty or pleasure took them from the town to the shops of the Rock Island road, and there can be no question but what the defendant’s officers and employes had full knowledge of the use being made of its track, and under such circumstances, and under the rule of the cases which we have cited, there can be no question that there was an implied license to so use its track. If this be true, it follows that the company, in the operation of its trains, owed to the users of this way the same care that it would owe the public at any highway or street crossing. See cases, supra, and Booth v. Union Ter. Co.,
The appellee contends, however, that this case falls within the rule announced in Heiss v. Railway Co.,
The ease is an extremely close one on the question of the plaintiff’s contributory negligence, but we think there
