This suit was brought by the appellee, William Henry Ford, against the railway company tb recover damages for the death of his wife and for personal injuries to himself resulting from a collision at a crossing on a public street in the town of Gilmer. The appellee lived in the country, and, in company with his wife, was traveling in a wagon. After delivering some country produce at a house near appellant’s railway, Ford and his wife started home. The track of the railway company at that point runs north and south. The street on which Ford was traveling runs east and west. The locomotive of a south-bound train struck the *656 wagon, killed the appellee’s wife, and injured him. In a trial before a jury a verdict was rendered in Ford’s favor for $1,000.
The appellee alleged the usual grounds of negligence in such cases and discovered peril. The appellant relied upon a general denial- and contributory negligence. The case was submitted to a jury upon special issues covering the different phases of negligence and discovered peril. The jury found that appel-lee was guilty of contributory negligence, thereby eliminating all issues except that of discovered peril. The findings of the jury upon those issues were, in substance, as follows: (1) That the engineer in charge of the locomotive saw the plaintiff approaching the crossing, and discovered that he would likely go upon the track, in time to, have stopped or lessened the speed of the train and thereby prevent a collision had he exercised ordinary care to use every means at his command consistent with the safety of the train; (2) that the engineer saw the plaintiff approaching the crossing, and discovered that he would likely attempt to cross and not be able to do so with "safety, a sufficient distance from the crossing to have warned him of the approach of the train by blowing the whistle of ringing the bell, or by both, before the plaintiff went upon the track. The jury further found that the engineer failed to use ordinary care to warn the plaintiff by blowing the whistle or ringing the bell in time to have prevented the plaintiff from going on the crossing or into a place of danger.
The judgment will therefore be affirmed..
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