after stating the case as above reported, delivered the opinion of the court.
*94
. The Circuit Court proceeded upon the ground that contributory negligence upon the part of the plaintiff was so conclusively established, that it would have been compelled, in the exercise of a sound judicial discretion, to set aside any verdict returned in his favor. If the evidence, giving the plaintiff the benefit of every inference to be fairly .drawn from it, sustained this view, then the direction to find for the defendant was proper.
Phoenix Insurance Co.
v. Doster,
But we are of opinion that the question of contributory negligence should have been submitted to the jury. It cannot be said that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in staying upon the train, in the capacity of brakeman, after observing that a step was missing from one of the cars over which he might pass while discharging his duties. An employé upon a railroad train, likely' to meet other trains, owes it to the public, as well as to his employer, not to abandon his post unnecessarily. Besides, the danger arising from the, defective car was not so imminent -as to subject him to the charge of recklessness in remaining at his post under the conductor’s assurance that the car should be removed from'the train when it reached the coal yard or junction, if, upon examining his manifests, he found that it did not contain perishable freight.
Hough
v.
Railroad Co.,
But it, is said that the efficient, proximate cause of the injury to the plaintiff was his use of the defective appliances at the endmf the car from which he fell, when he knew, and, at the moment of letting himself down from that car, should not have forgotten, as he said he did, that one of its steps was missing. It is undoubtedly the law that an employé is guilty of contributory negligence, which will defeat his right to recover for injuries sustained in the course of his employment, where such injuries substantially resulted from dangers so obvious- and threatening that a reasonably prudent man, under similar circumstances, would have avoided them if m his power
*95
to do so. He will be deemed, in such case, to have assumed the risks involved in such heedless exposure of himself to danger.
Hough
v.
Railroad
Co.,
District of Columbia
v.
McElligott,
and
Goodlet v. Louisville & Nashville Railroad
above cited;
Northern Pacific Railroad
v. Herbert,
*96 Without further discussion of the evidence, and without intimating what ought to be the verdict upon the issue of contributory negligence, we are of -opinion that the court erred in not submitting to the jury to determine whether the plaintiff in forgetting, or not recalling, at the precise moment, the fact that the car from which he attempted to let himself down was the one from which a step was missing, was in the exercise of the degree of care and caution which was incumbent upon a man of ordinary prudence in the same calling, and under the circumstances in which he was placed.If he was,'then he was not guilty of contributory negligence that would defeat his right of recovery.
Judgment is reversed cmd'the case remanded, with directions to grcmt a new trial.
