The plaintiffs, as husband and wife, commenced an action against the defendants to recover dam *605 ages for injuries sustained by being struck by an automobile which one of the defendants was driving. The defendants answered and a trial was had by the court sitting with, a jury. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs; the defendants moved for a new trial; the motion was denied on condition that the plaintiffs would remit one thousand dollars, which they did, and from the judgment as modified the defendants have appealed, bringing up the judgment-roll and a bill of exceptions.
“Q. You went out—as you went out toward the street-car there was an automobile or more to your left? A. I don’t remember that.
“Q. Would you say there was not? A. I would not say because I don’t remember.”
In another place she testified as follows:
“Q. You say you went out into the roadbed with a view of getting this car and at that time you had not seen the automobile? A. No, sir.
“Q. You did not see it at all, but the first you knew was the gush of wind and the bump? A. Yes, sir. The ear was stopped at the time. I do not know how long it had been stopped.”
The defendant J. A. Martin testified:
“Q. When did you first see Mrs. Sommer? A. When she first emerged from in front of an automobile standing at the curb approximately opposite the telegraph pole indicated on the drawing. . . .
“Q. What did she do after emerging from behind the automobile? A. She ran or was in haste to hail this streetcar. She ran out there with her hand up like this, looking at the car, never stopping to look right or left.”
Mrs. Hallie Barker, one of the defendants’ witnesses testified:
“Q. How close was she to the ear when you first passed her ? A. She was coming to it; she was about middle way; just came in front of this automobile. She was still out in *606 front of it in the street. . . . She was coming across in front of this ear when I first seen her. I didn't see her leave the sidewalk at all.”
Mrs. Nettie Sheoff, a witness called by the defendants, testified: “As the car was slowing down, I saw through the open door, through the open door of the car, the back part of the car, a lady standing there, and as the ear passed her she stepped back, I don’t know what for, I thought she was going back to the sidewalk. Just at that instant when the car had passed and she was about the steps, I saw an automobile and she hit the fender of the auto.” Mr. Overpeck, a witness called by the defendants, testified that he was employed in Ralph’s grocery-store. That store was located directly back of the plaintiff. The witness was, at the time of the accident, dressing a window of the store. He was facing the back of the plaintiff. Referring to the plaintiff, he testified: “She left the curb and went out with her hand in the air. I think it was her right hand. She held her hand up to the height of her face. At that time she was looking directly at the electric car. I did not see her look to the right or left.” The plea of contributory negligence is an element that must be pleaded and proved by the defendants unless the evidence appears from the testimony given in the plaintiff’s ease. The foregoing testimony shows to some extent what the plaintiff did while she was out in the street, but it does not show what she did before leaving the sidewalk in reference to looking up or down the street. We cannot say that, as a matter of law, respondent was guilty of contributory negligence—that is, that all the facts plainly and inevitably point to such negligence, leaving no room for argument or doubt.
(Mann
v.
Scott,
2. We are not clear that the appellants are contending that the evidence was not sufficient to show that the defendant J. A. Martin was guilty of negligence. If such is their contention, it will suffice to state that on that element of the case the most that can be said is that the evidence was conflicting. There was an abundance of testimony which, if the jury believed it, would readily support a verdict in favor of the plaintiff.
6. The court gave an instruction to the jury that follows very closely the rule stated in the Motor Vehicle Act approved May 10, 1915. (Stats. 1915, c. 188, sec. 12.) The appellants attack the instruction on the ground that it assumes that the plaintiff was in the act of entering a street *609 car at the time of the collision. The attack is wholly without merit. It could equally be claimed that the instruction assumed that she was leaving the street-car or that she was neither entering nor leaving, but was a pedestrian in the street.
8. The defendants requested and the trial court refused to give two instructions; the appellants assign each refusal as error. The first proposed instruction purported to define ordinary care. The instruction was of doubtful soundness *611 because of the use of the word “only.” That word tended to belittle the duty resting on the defendant J. A. Martin. But, whether the instruction was correct or incorrect, the subject matter was fully covered by an instruction which appears in the transcript, folios 371 and 372. The other instruction picked out a portion of the evidence and purported to be an instruction on the subject of contributory negligence. The court had covered that subject fully by giving the instructions which it did give and which are set forth in the transcript, folios 392-394, 430, 431.
An examination of the record shows that the trial court committed no error whatsoever. The judgment is affirmed.-
Nourse, J., and Langdon, P. J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on February 9, 1922.
All the Justices concurred.
Lennon, J., was absent and Richards, J., pro tern., was acting.
