—Action for personal injury. There was a verdict and a judgment for appellee.
The principal question in the case is whether the evidence shows that appellee was guilty of contributory negligence. Upon some points there was a sharp, conflict in the testimony, but assuming, as we must, that the jury followed the evidence which was most favorable to appellee, the following may be said to be the facts: About 8 o’clock a. m. of a day in August, appellee was driving in a single buggy to the southeast, down one of the approaches of the Virginia avenue viaduct, in the city of Indianapolis. The driveway at that place is fifty feet wide, and there is a street car track on either side of the center of the street. Four lines of cars used these’ tracks. Virginia avenue, Louisiana street and New Jersey street intersect on said approach, about a block and a half from the crown of the viaduct. Appellee was driving on the southwest side of the street. Her horse was going at an ordinary trot. She knew that cars frequently passed along said tracks. At a point about two hundred feet from said street intersection she turned toward the track nearest her, for the purpose of passing a heavy wagon that was slowly moving in the direction in which she was going. Appellee knew that the southeast-bound electric cars used said track, and as she" turned in that direction she glanced back up the track, and also listened. She did not hear a gong, nor did she hear a car moving on the viaduct. She continued to drive near the southwest rail of said track until she was opposite the wagon, and at about the center of the intersection of said streets, when the running-board of appellant’s street car, which had approached her from the rear, came into contact with the left hind wheel of her buggy, throwing her out and injuring her. The car was running, according to the testimony of some of the witnesses, at the rate of about twenty miles per hour, and there was no gong sounded.
5. While we recognize that the right of the company is superior in point of precedence, that the driver should not obstruct the operation of the cars, and that a person who without care drives along the track may subject himself to the charge of contributory negligence, yet where, as here, there was an excuse for driving near the track, and some degree of care exercised in respect to looking and listening a short time before the injury, and with the burden resting on appellant to show contributory negligence, we hold that it is not error to submit the question to the jury. It must not be forgotten that a person driving along a street railroad track in broad daylight has a right, at least in some degree, to indulge in the supposition that if a car is approaching from the rear a proper lookout is being maintained thereon, and that ordinary care not to injure him will be exercised. Greene v. Louisville R. Co., supra; Ablard v. Detroit United Railway (1905), 139 Mich. 248, 102 N. W. 741; Memphis St. R. Co. v. Haynes (1904), 112 Tenn. 712, 81 S. W. 374. And see
Judgment affirmed.