Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
O. O. Sinclair was the fireman on train No. 193 on the Illinois Central Railroad going south; and he was killed in a head-on collision with train No. 152, going north. The collision was due to the fact that
The rule requiring the orders to be read by the fireman and requiring him to remind the engineer of them is a reasonable rule. The traveling public have a right to demand that all reasonable precautions shall be taken for their safety, and the rule is a safeguard against mistakes by the engineman which might imperil other lives. On the former appeal of this case we said: “If the evidence disclosed that this order was shown by the engineer to Sinclair, or that he read or heard it read, he would be charged with the duty of understanding it if it was in the usual form prescribed by the company for such orders, or was written in such language as would convey to a person of ordinary intelligence in Sinclair’s position its meaning. Hence it would follow that, if Sinclair went out on the engine in disobedience of the order, he might be guilty of such contributory negligence as would defeat a recovery in an action for damages resulting from his violation of the
The opinion on the former appeal is the law of the case, and there can be no recovery by the plaintiff if the testimony of the conductor is true. But it is insisted that the court erred in not submitting this question to the jury. It is said that the jury might not have believed' the testimony of the conductor, and .might have found for the plaintiff notwithstanding his evidence. The conductor was not before the jury. His testimony was given by deposition taken in St. Louis. He was not in the service of the defendant, and had no interest in the controversy. His testimony is consistent, and there is nothing on the face of it in any way to weaken it. It was in no way impeached, except by the-proof of the statement made by him at Cecilia that the collision
Judgment affirmed.