[198]*198OPINION
By the Court,
Ducker, C. J.:
Plaintiff brought this action as administrator of the estate of his deceased wife to recover damages for her death alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendants. The court, sitting without a jury, rendered judgment in his favor for the sum of $12,500. The defendants moved for a new trial, which was denied. This appeal is taken from the order of the court refusing a new trial and from the judgment.
In the early morning of February 12, 1932, in Clark County, John M. Lytle, Jr., the son of the plaintiff, accompanied by his mother, Vilate Lytle, was traveling in an automobile northerly along Federal aid highway No. 91, a state highway commonly .known as the Arrowhead Trail. He was driving. They had come from Los Angeles during the night and were on their way to Overton, the home of the parents. When they reached a point on the highway where it crosses the St. Thomas branch railroad of the defendant railroad company, the automobile ran into a gondola car which was standing on the branch line across the highway and Mrs. Lytle was fatally injured. The gondola car was a part of a train which the defendants were running westerly from St. Thomas to Moapa. Shortly before the automobile reached the intersection the train had arrived there and the crew was engaged in switching an empty car from a spur track just west of the crossing onto the branch line to attach it to the train. The switching operation could not have been accomplished' if the train had pulled to the west so as to clear the crossing because the distance from there to where the spur .joined the branch line was not great enough to accommodate all the cars of the [199]*199train. If the train had stopped clear of the highway-east of the crossing, then in order to accomplish the transfer of the empty car to the train two additional trips over the crossing would have been necessary, one forward by the engine and tender, and one back by the engine tender and empty car.
It was still dark when John Lytle, Jr., and his mother met with the accident. The highway on either side of the crossing was oiled and dark in color. The gondola car was painted black. By reason of the fact that- the approach to the crossing from the south was located in a cut with high embankments and hills on each side extending to within a few feet of the railroad, the crossing was a hazardous one under any conditions. From a point several hundred feet to the south of the railroad to the crossing the highway was on a descending grade. There were no lights there and no flagman or employee of the railroad company to warn travelers on the highway that the crossing was blocked. There were two railroad warning signs along the highway to notify travelers of the crossing, one being an upright cross-arm sign about 20 feet south of the crossing, and one an upright post with a round sign on top of the post with bullseye reflectors marked “R. R.,” located about 600 feet south of the crossing. It is a matter of common knowledge that the highway is a transcontinental highway and is used quite extensively both day and night. The regular schedule on the branch line was one train each way per day.
From about 1,200 feet south of the crossing to it, the highway was straight. John M. Lytle, Jr., testified in plaintiff’s behalf, in substance, as follows: He was 23 years of age in February, 1932. He used a 1929 Ford roadster on the trip. He knew how to drive and had driven a car a number of years before January 21, 1932. He drove a truck prior to that time quite a while. His business was driving trucks. The return, trip to Overton from Los Angeles was started on the evening of February 11, 1932. On the night of February 10 he retired about 11 o’clock and had about 8 -or [200]*2009 hours of sleep that night. He was never accustomed to getting any more sleep before he went on other trips. The automobile was in good condition and ran fine. It was equipped with good lights — standard equipment Ford headlights. The lights were sufficient.to reveal an object 75 feet ahead of the lamps under normal conditions. The brakes were in good condition. They had been tried out before leaving town. He did not get off the road at any place and did not go to sleep. He was talking to his mother about a half or three-quarters of a mile from the crossing — told her they were almost home, or something to that effect. While he was driving down towards the crossing he was looking straight ahead watching the road. He had slowed down on the curve and as he approached the railroad he' lessened his speed. The night was very dark and the highway was a black oiled road. He did not look for any train to be there because he did not see any lights to show that there was anything in the road. He was almost on the car before he saw it — about 20 feet away, or something like that. His best judgment was that he was traveling about 25 miles an hour at the time, and not more than 30. He tried to stop when he saw the gondola car across the road but could not. When he regained consciousness after the crash he was in the Las Vegas hospital. The driver of the automobile was the only eyewitness to the accident, the mother having died shortly after the crash. None of the train crew saw it, but the conductor of the train heard the sound of the automobile striking the car.
John Williamson, a witness in behalf of plaintiff, testified in part as follows: He was present soon after the accident occurred at the intersection of the Arrowhead Trail and St. Thomas branch of the Los Angeles & Salt Lake Railroad. The black gondola car was across the highway. There were cars between the black gondola car and the caboose, possibly two. There is considerable elevation there, and it is a rough country. There are hills and rocks which obstructed the view as [201]*201to other cars and caboose. It was very dark that morning. He had to have a flashlight to work down there. The road had been oiled, and was dark in color, and the gondola car was dark in color. The hills on each side come pretty close to the road there. There is quite a cut there for several hundred feet approaching the railroad! The hills are not so dark in color. The road and the car naturally look dark at night. The hills are gray and brown, and they extend pretty well up on each side. On the one side they are about 15 feet, and possibly 10 or 12 feet on the other. There is more of a cut as you go down towards the railroad, and that cut runs about 400 feet.
Mr. Hitchcock, a witness for plaintiff, who lived near the scene of the accident, testified as to the environment. It was very dark that morning. He had to have a flashlight to walk down there. The road had been oiled and was dark in color, and the gondola car was dark in color. The hills on each side come very close. The road and car naturally looked dark at night. The hills are gray and brown and they extend pretty well up on each side. On the one side they are about 15 feet, and possibly 10 or 12 feet on the other. There is more of a cut as you go down towards the railroad, and the cut there runs down about 400 feet.
Albert Laub, a witness for plaintiff, who arrived at the scene, testified in part: It had been raining and the sky was very cloudy. When he got down there, there was a part of the train across the track — one car, and one car on each side of it. There is a deep cut there. The car that was across the highway was painted black. The highway was oiled, and it was really darker than a natural oiled road on account of being-wet. It absorbed the light. The crossing is extremely dangerous.
Lamond Laub, a witness for plaintiff, testified in part as follows: He was there about 4: 30. The road was wet. It was an oiled road and dark in color. It was very dark.
[202]*202There was evidence that it had not been raining and that the highway there was wet with gasoline which had escaped from the wrecked automobile.
On this evidence and other evidence introduced by defendants, which we will mention later, the trial court made a number of findings, which included findings that the time consumed in switching was not more than five minutes; that during this time defendants had left a black gondola car attached to other cars directly across the intersection of the highway with the railroad; that the highway was oiled on both sides of the intersection and was of a black color; that the highway west of the intersection was constructed in a cut, which left high embankments on each side of the highway and which extended to within a few feet of the railroad crossing; that there were two railroad crossing signs along the highway, one being'an upright crossarm sign about 20 feet south of the crossing, and the other an upright post with a round sign on top of the post with bulls-eye reflectors marked “R. R.” located 600 feet south of the crossing; that there were no lights at the crossing and no flagman or employee of the railroad company to warn travelers on the highway of the existence of the gondola car at the crossing; that said crossing was an extrahazardous one when approached on said highway from a southerly, direction, on account of the cut and the high embankments on each side thereof, and its hazardous condition was enhanced by leaving such black gondola car across said highway without lights; that it is a matter of common knowledge that the highway in question is a transcontinental highway, and is used very extensively, both day and night; that the railroad, being a branch line, was not used as extensively as the highway; that defendants must necessarily be charged with knowledge of the existence of the high.way, and that many travelers pass over the crossing at night; that John M. Lytle, Jr., would be chargeable with knowledge that trains pass over the crossing, but not that they would be allowed to block the crossing unnecessarily; that there was no necessity to block the [203]*203crossing with the gondola car while the switching was being done, as there was plenty of room to leave the unused portion of the train east of, and entirely off the crossing during the switching process, and the danger would have been lessened thereby to a great degree; that John M. Lytle, Jr., was driving at a rate of speed of 25 to 30 miles an hour down through the cut towards the railroad crossing; that the night was dark, the road appeared black, and the gondola car was black; that the lights on the automobile were burning and were good lights; that Lytle, Jr., did not see the gondola car on the crossing until he was within a few feet of the same; that he had applied the brakes on the car, but could not stop in time to avoid running into and under the side of the gondola car, which he did; that as a result of this collision Vilate Lytle was injured to such an extent that she died shortly thereafter, to wit, on the 12th day of February, 1932; that the defendants did not use the measure of care and diligence required of a railroad company under the circumstances, while it appears from the evidence that John M. Lytle, Jr., and his mother, Vilate Lytle, did use reasonable care under all circumstances.
From these findings the trial court concluded that the defendants were negligent in leaving said black gondola car standing across said highway, and that such negligence was the proximate cause of the accident and injury and death of Mrs. Vilate Lytle. The contentions of the defendants are just the reverse. They contend that defendants were not negligent, but if so, the driver of the automobile was guilty of contributory negligence, which was the proximate cause of the injury complained of; and that such contributory negligence is imputable to the deceased and bars recovery.
It may be stated as a general principle of law that a railroad company, in the absence of a statute requiring lights or other precautions, may not be chargeable with actionable negligence merely because its train is at rest on a crossing at a public highway, or in motion, and is run into by an auto traveling on [204]*204the highway. Certainly it cannot be so chargeable if the accident happens in the daytime, nor in the nighttime on account of darkness alone.
The case infra is one holding that a railroad company is not negligent in the absence of such a statute if the accident happens in the nighttime and there are no other elements of hazard than darkness. St. Louis-S. F. R. Co. v. Guthrie, 216 Ala. 613, 114 So. 215, 56 A. L. R. 1110.
The question of the negligence of the defendants hinges on whether there were such other elements of hazard as to charge the conductor who had charge of the train, with the knowledge that the driver of an automobile whose machine was properly equipped with lights, and who was exercising reasonable care, would likely not see the obstruction on the crossing in time to avoid striking it. We think the circumstances on the night of the accident were sufficient to charge the conductor with such knowledge. He was familiar with the environment which prevailed at the scene of the accident. He knew that the highway was a transcontinental highway and used extensively by travelers in automobiles day and night. He knew, for he so testified, that the crossing was dangerous even in the daytime, that is, he said, to automobiles from approaching trains. He knew that the highway was dark, that the car was black; that the sky was black and the hills were brown; that there were high hills on each side of the crossing and a deep cut through the hills on a descending grade to the crossing which obstructed the vision as to cars or lights on the east or west until one was quite near the crossing. He knew, or ought to have known, that placing the gondola car across the highway under such circumstances would increase the dangerous nature of the crossing. The conductor testified that the car was there for three minutes and that the switching and recoupling and pulling the train over the crossing took á minute. So the crossing was blocked unnecessarily for at least two minutes. The argument that this was safer than to leave the entire train on the [205]*205east side, which could have been done, and consumed a minute in going forward with the engine and tender and back with the car from the spur track, and then forward with the entire train, does not appeal to us. The movement and noise of the train, the likelihood of the headlight on the engine, or other lights on the moving train attracting the attention of a driver, and the much lesser time that the crossing would be occupied by the train, or engine and tender, are elements opposed to the idea that the blocking of the crossing for a much longer period of time under the attendant circumstances, was safest for travelers on the highway. The testimony of the other trainmen coincided generally with the conductor, particularly as to his opinion that it was safer to block the highway, as was done, than to leave the train east of the crossing. Testimony as to conflicting statements of some of the witnesses for plaintiff was introduced by the defendants, but the weight of this was determined against them by the trial court.
We have not set out all of the evidence, either of the plaintiff or the defendants, but only such as we think is necessary to show the reason of our ruling, that the evidence is sufficient to sustain the findings of the court. The true rule, and which' fits the circumstances of this case, is stated in 22 R. C. L. p. 994, and is as follows: “In the absence of statute, the mere fact that a railroad company obstructs a street or highway at a public crossing, by letting a train or cars remain thereon for a reasonable length of time, and for proper purposes, is not negligence, and the company is not responsible for injuries caused thereby. But a railroad company is liable for injuries caused by reason of such obstruction, when it amounts to negligence as where it allows its trains or cars to remain on the crossing unnecessarily, or for an unreasonable length of time, by reason of which injuries are received by one who attempts, with due care, to cross or go around the obstruction.”
As to the care of a railroad company at a crossing, it is stated in 52 C. J. 210, 211, as follows: “The degree [206]*206of care required is only what, under the circumstances of the particular case, is ordinary care; or in other words, such care as an ordinary prudent person would exercise under like circumstances. It varies as peculiar and unusual conditions are presented. Where the crossing is especially dangerous, it is incumbent on the company to use increased care commensurate with the danger, even though the crossing is not a much traveled and used one, and the traveler upon it knows of its extrahazardous condition.”
In the instant case the court found that the crossing at the time of the accident was extrahazardous. The evidence, in our opinion, is without conflict on this point. It shows an environment and use of the highway at that time which made the crossing unusually dangerous. A duty was therefore cast upon the defendants to exercise care commensurate with the condition existing. Instead of discharging this duty they increased the hazard of the situation. They placed a black car entirely across the highway, which, according to plaintiff’s theory (and the evidence will bear such implication) so blended with the darkness, highway, and adjacent embankments as to practically camouflage the crossing. This act was unnecessary. In the daytime the car itself would have been sufficient warning to travelers on the highway that the crossing was blocked, but under the existing condition the placing of it on the crossing and leaving it without taking adequate precautions to warn approaching motorists of the danger, amounted to negligence.
In Prescott v. Hines, 114 S. C. 262, 103 S. E. 543, the action was for personal injury from collision of an automobile with a train standing across the street. There was evidence that the train was blocking one of the most traveled streets in the city of Columbia, and that the cars had no light of any kind upon them, or near them, or any guard or watchman to give warning; that on the night in question, there was a fog or smoke that made the place where the cars were standing dark and obscured the same. This. evidence was held sufficient [207]*207to go to the jury on the question of negligence. True, there was no fog or smoke in the instant case, but the evidence tends to show that a condition prevailed at the crossing of a more dangerous kind. The average automobilist, when he encounters fog or smoke obscuring his way, instinctively acts with caution. Whereas an obstruction in his road under such conditions that the lights of his car cannot reveal it may become a trap despite his vigilance. The extent to which a black surface will absorb the light of an automobile is known to every motorist.
In Chicago & N. W. Ry. Co. v. Prescott (C. C. A.), 59 P. 237, 23 L. R. A. 654, the court held: “The mere grant of a license to lay a railroad track across a public street gives no authority to stand cars thereon, so as to obstruct the crossing, for such periods as may suit the company’s convenience; and whether it had a right to do so, in any particular instance, is a question for the jury, if the circumstances are such that reasonable persons might entertain different views as to whether the blockade was justifiable.”
Was the driver of the auto guilty of contributory negligence? As previously stated, he was the only eyewitness surviving the accident. The substance of his testimony has been heretofore set out. Considering it in the light of the environment presented by the evidence, we think that at least it discloses a case where reasonable men might honestly differ in opinion, and was therefore a question for the trial judge to determine. Bunting v. C. P. R. R. Co., 14 Nev. 351; Orange & N. W. R. Co. v. Harris et al. (Tex. Civ. App.) 57 S. W. (2d) 931. The question of contributory negligence on the part of a motorist is generally for the jury. 4 Berry Automobiles (7th ed,), page 156; Elliott v. Missouri Pac. R. Co., 227 Mo. App. 225, 52 S. W. (2d) 448, 451.
In the case last cited it appeared from the complaint that the street paving was a concrete slab, and on the crossing a train of dark coal cars was permitted by the defendant to remain standing for thirty minutes [208]*208or more across the street, completely blocking all traffic on said street, which was extensively used at all hours of the day or night; by all kinds of motor and other vehicles. It was dark, and the weather was misty and foggy. With matters in this condition, the plaintiff’s automobile coming along the street violently crashed against the cars of said train standing on the crossing. The court’s remarks in passing on the question of contributory negligence are pertinent to the situation in the instant case. The court said: “Nor can such contributory negligence so appear unless we must say that, regardless of the circumstances, the mere driving of the automobile down the street and into a silent, invisible, unexpected, and waiting line of dark coal cars, is negligence, as a matter of law. * * * But the atmospheric conditions were not normal. And before it can be said as a legal conclusion that plaintiff was negligent in not seeing the cars, it must be. assumed that, under the conditions and circumstances of that particular occasion, the cars could have been seen in time to have stopped. But it is well known to every motorist, of more than mere infantile experience, that with an obstruction of the color here shown, motionless and without noise, blending perfectly with the moist pavement beyond and the dark sky above, and the automobile lights filtering through the particles of mist, the coal cars would not be visible until almost upon them, and it then is everlastingly too late. It is a well-known fact that under such conditions the paved roadway ahead will present a uniform appearance looking entirely like the open roadway until within a few feet of an object when it will suddenly, for the first time, unexpectedly flash into view, and not appear until then in spite of the most intense.and penetrating gaze bent to the front. The motorist knew a line of railway was there, it is true, but so far as appearances went, the street seemed to be open and unobstructed. It is not a case of failure or neglect to see that which was visible, but of inability to see what was in fact an obstructed, but appeared to be an- open, roadway. And [209]*209this situation and appearance will arise under such circumstances notwithstanding the motor lights may be of the best, and shining brightly.”
And again the court said: “We do not controvert for a moment the idea that if plaintiff drove his automobile in the dark onto the crossing knowing that he could not see what, if anything, was there, he would be guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law. But the situation here is that, under the circumstances given, he drove his car into what appeared to be the open roadway at the crossing but which was in fact wrongfully and unlawfully obstructed by defendant without taking the least precaution to guard against injury caused by such silent, noiseless, and undiscernible obstruction.”
So we say, if the crossing in the instant case had been shrouded in smoke or fog, and the driver of the automobile, observing this, had undertaken to drive over the crossing, he would have been guilty of contributory negligence. But no such case is before us.
In the case just quoted from it is true the cars were permitted to remain standing on the crossing for thirty minutes or more while in the instant case the gondola car had been blocking the highway for a much shorter period, but the matter of time can have no bearing on the question of contributory negligence.
Concerning authorities dealing with approaching trains or trains moving over a crossing, we think they are not applicable to the facts of this case. As stated in Elliott v. Missouri Pac. R. Co., supra: “If the cars had been moving as plaintiff approached, the movement itself might have been sufficient to disclose their obstructing presence.”
There are other elements which render such cases inapposite.
We have examined the other errors assigned by defendants and find them to be without merit.
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Taber, J.: I concur.