delivered the opinion of the court.
Thе above actions arose out of a collision between a Nash truck and a locomotive engine hauling a west-bound freight train of the defendant company, which occurred at what is known as the Main Street crossing in Baker, Montana. The truck in question belonged to the plaintiff Stroud. It had а four-wheel drive, four-wheel brakes, the front wheels equipped with chains, and was used by the plaintiff Stroud in trucking and hauling timbers. At the time in question he was employed about the business of the plaintiff Harris. Stroud brought this action for damages to the truck, and Harris brought his action to recover for personal injuries sustained by him.
Except as to the damages claimed, the issues in the two cases were the same, and by stipulation they were tried together in the lower court. In each case the negligence charged against the defendant was the failure to blow the whistle or sound the bell of the locomоtive in accordance with the provisions of section 6521, Revised Codes of 1921, as the train approached the crossing.
The answers denied generally the negligence alleged in the complaints, and set up, as affirmative defenses, contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff in each case. The cases *390 were tried to a jury. At the close of all the evidence, defendant moved for a directed verdict in each case, which was denied. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in each case, upon which judgments were entered. After defendant’s motions for new trials had been overruled, it appealed from the judgments, and the appeals have' been consolidated.
Stated in the light most favorable to plaintiffs’ contentions where they are in dispute, the facts disclosed in .the record are: Main Street of the city of Bаker runs north and south, and is 100 feet in width between the sidewalks which extend along either side. The main line track of defendant’s railway crosses this street, running approximately east and west. Immediately north of the main line track, and parallel therewith, are three other tracks which are designated, suсcessively, the passing track, the team track and the house track. The distance from center to center of these tracks is as follows: Main line track to passing track 15' 2", passing track to team track 16' 7", team track to house track 2' 1". The portion of Main Street across thesе tracks, used as a driveway, is planked. Just north of the house track and east from Main Street there are numerous buildings and structures which cut off a view of the tracks from one approaching Main Street from the east, until he reaches a point near the sidewalk. At the time in question there were some box-cars standing on the house track about - feet east of the crossing, and also a string of box-cars standing on the team track, extending east for a considerable distance, the first one. of which whs about six or eight feet east of the Main Street sidewalk. These cars further obstructеd the view of the main track from one crossing from the north until he had gone far enough south to permit his line of vision to pass the southwest corner of the box-car nearest the sidewalk. Plaintiff Harris lived one-half block north of the tracks and one block east of Main Street.
*391 Shortly after 8 o’clock on the morning of January 12, 1924, the two plaintiffs riding on the truck, with Stroud driving, started from the Harris home to cross over to the south side of defendant’s tracks. In doing so they proceeded southwesterly until they reached the east line of Main Street, when they turned to the south, and, entering upon the planked portion thereof, continued in a southerly direction. Both plaintiffs were possessed of good eyesight and hearing. At all times after starting from the Harris house they were both diligent in looking and listening for approaching trains. Neither of them heard a whistle blow or a bell ring, and did not see the west-bound freight train аpproaching until they reached a point about the middle of the team track. At about this time Harris saw the train and shouted to Stroud, “Hold ’er!” whereupon both plaintiffs reached for the emergency brake, which Stroud set, locking the wheels. At that time the clear distance between the front еnd of the truck and the point of impact with the locomotive was seventeen feet. When the train came into view, the truck was traveling at the rate of two or three miles per hour, according to Stroud, and at four and one-half miles per hour, according to Harris. The speed of the train was estimated by different witnesses at ten, twelve and twenty-five miles per hour. Harris testified that under normal conditions, setting the brakes so as to lock the wheels would stop the truck “right now,” and Stroud said it would have stopped it within a foot or two. The planking was icy and slippery. When the brakes were applied so as to lock its wheels, instead of stopping “right now” or “within a foot or two,” the truck skidded forward for a distance of seven to ten and one-half feet, and, when it was “practically at a complete stop,” collided with the side of the locomotive near its front end, causing the injuries complained of. Both plaintiffs were familiar with the crossing and knew of its condition. Stroud had driven the truck over it within half an hour before the accident. As the train approached the crossing, it was running down a slight grade; the loco *392 motive was making little noise, and was not emitting smoke or steam.
Defendant’s first specification of error is that the court erred in overruling its motion for a directed verdict in each case, and specifications 3 and 4 are to the effect that the court erred in overruling its motions for new trials on the ground that the evidence was insufficient to justify the verdict, and that it was against the law. These specifications will all be considered together, and may be disposed of in determining (1) whether the testimony showed that the plaintiffs themselves were guilty of negligence which contributed to bringing about the collision and resultant damage, and (2) whether the testimony showеd that the injuries and damages sustained hy plaintiffs were proximately caused by the negligence alleged in the complaint.
1. An examination of the testimony fails to convince us that it shows the plaintiffs were guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. They were on a public highway, where thеy had a right to be. The testimony tends to show that they were proceeding with due caution and circumspection; that they were diligently looking and listening for approaching danger; that the truck was traveling at such a low rate of speed that it could be brought to a stop almost instantly; and that they did everything essential to have saved themselves from injury under ordinary normal conditions.
The length of the truck was twenty-one and one-half feet. A mere mathematical computation demonstrates that, from the time plaintiffs crossed the north rail of the house track, which was about thirty-eight feet frоm the point where their line of vision would pass the line of box-cars on the team track, there was no place where they could have stopped the truck to go ahead and see whether a train was approaching on the main track from the east, without leaving the truck in а position where it would be struck by moving cars on either the home track or the team track.
*393 The testimony was sufficient to warrant a finding that plaintiffs had not been advised of the oncoming train in the manner in which the law requires that they should be warned.
The weakness of the plaintiffs’ case is that they failed to introduce testimony which would have warranted a finding that, if they had been warned, they would have taken earlier steps to have avoided the collision by sooner applying the brakes,_ or not entering upon the crossing until after the train had passed. Instead of making this essential showing, the testimony in the record leads inevitably to the conclusion that the proximate cause of the collision was the icy and slippery condition of the planking on the crossing, which caused the truck to skid forward until it collided with the locomotive. The defendant was not responsible for the condition of the crossing; it did not know of its condition, and was not chargeable with knowledge thereof.
Failure of the defendant to comply with the statute requiring the blowing of the whistle and sounding of the bell on approaching the crossing was negligence
per se. (Hunter
v.
Montana C. Ry. Co.,
These rules are so elementary that no citation of authorities should be required to support them; for, as said by Mr. Justice Sanner in
Westlake
v.
Keating Gold Min. Co.,
48
*394
Mont. 120,
The rules defining the duty of one traveling on a highway and approaching a railroad crossing have been cоnsidered and declared by this court in a large number of cases, from
Hunter
v.
Montana C. Ry. Co., supra,
down to
West
v.
Davis,
In
Barrett
v.
United States R. R. Adm.,
Another case of similar import is Hickey v. Missouri Pac. R. R. (C. C. A.), 8 Fed. (2d.) 128, wherein it was held that the railroad company’s negligent failure to give statutory crossing signals was not the proximate cause of a collision with an automobile at a highway crossing, when the driver of the machine was unable to stop the same in time to avoid a collision by reason of ice on the highway, and that there was no liability on the part of the railway company, where there was no testimony showing how far from the place of collision the driver of the automobile would have tried to stop if he hаd heard any signals from the approaching train.
*395 Under the reasoning of the foregoing cases, which appeals to us as being correct, and upon the record before us, the conclusion seems inevitable that the evidence fails to show a causal connection between the defendant’s failure to give the crossing signals and the collision of the truck with the locomotive, for which reason the plaintiffs failed to prove the negligence alleged in their complaint, and the court should have sustained defendant’s motions for directed verdicts, and erred ip not granting the motions for new trials on that ground.
While counsel for plaintiffs concede that the collision was occasioned by the icy and slippery condition of the crossing which caused the truck to skid, he contends that there was nothing about the icy crossing which would have made it dangerous in the absence of the defendant’s negligence, that it was a condition for which neither party was responsible, and he invokes the rule laid down in
Meisner
v.
City of Dillon,
Defendant specifies as error the rulings of the court in re- fusing to give to the jury certain instructions offered by it, designated as D-l, D-4, D-6 and D-9. Offered instruсtion D-l, after stating that the burden was upon the plaintiffs to prove the negligence alleged in their complaints, and that such negligence resulted in damage to them, continued: “The happening of the accident is no evidence of *396 negligence, and shall not be considered by you as indiсating negligence.” The court struck out the portion quoted, and gave the instruction as thus modified. The action of the court was right. The portion stricken was not at all applicable to the facts, since plaintiffs had not claimed any presumption of negligence from the mere haрpening of the accident. While defendant’s exception only went to the action of the court in striking from the offered instruction the Vpart above quoted, the instruction as given was objectionable, in that it failed to point out that the negligence proved must have been the proximаte cause of the damage sustained, in order to entitle plaintiff to recover.
Offered instruction D-6 was sufficiently covered by the court’s instruction No. X; while offered instructions D-7 and D-9 were in effect peremptory directions to the jury to return verdicts in favor of the defendant on the ground that plaintiffs were guilty of contributory negligence. There was no error in the court’s refusal to give these instructions.
Offered instruction D-4 was objectionable by reason of the uncertainty as to the antecedent of the pronoun “this” as used therein. However, the jury should have been given the substance thereof. This could have been accomplished by inserting, after the sentence, “It is not always sufficient if he looks and listens,” in the court’s instruction IX, the following, “If the circumstances require it, it is his duty to stop in order to make such looking and listening effective.”
The judgments are reversed and the causes remanded to the district court, with directions to grant the defendant’s motions for new trials.
Reversed and remanded.
