The complaint charges that the defendant’s agents wantonly and wilfully ran the deceased down, with such gross negligence as to amount to an intention on their part to inflict injury on the deceased. The action was tried on the theory that these facts must be shown. The trial court directed a verdict because it deemed that there was no credible evidence tending to show such facts, and the question now presented is whether this direction was right. We are convinced that this question must be answered in the negative. There were ten or more passenger in the car as it approached the place of accident. It is admitted that it was running at a speed of from twenty to twenty-five miles an hour. It is an unquestioned fact that, as the car approached the crossing from the northeast, the deceased, in his sleigh, was approaching the crossing from the east, and that both car and sleigh reached the crossing at the same instant of time, and that at that time the speed of the car had *639been only slightly diminislied, if diminished at all. It is admitted also by tbe motorman that be.saw tbe team of tbe •deceased coming from tbe east just as it approached tbe Wisconsin Central track, being something over 230 feet from tbe crossing in question, though be says they were then trotting, and did not commence to run until they bad crossed tbe Omaha track, when be at once shut off tbe current, set tbe brake, and put on the reverse current. Doubtless, if tbe evidence stopped here, we should be obliged to affirm tbe ruling •of tbe trial court, for it could not be said from these facts that there was anything which showed either intentional injury on tbe part of tbe motorman, or that degree of reckless disregard of consequences indicating a willingness to injure which is equivalent in tbe law to an intent to injure. A motorman is not obliged to check bis speed or stop bis car every time be sees a team approaching which is under control. Eastwood v. La Cosse C. R. Co. 94 Wis. 163, 68 N. W. 651. But there is other testimony in tbe case which must be considered. A young man named Peck was one of tbe passengers on tbe car, and was sitting toward tbe rear end, on tbe east side. He testifies that as tbe car approached tbe -crossing, and was about 350 feet distant therefrom, be looked over his shoulder out of tbe window ef tbe ear, and saw the deceased and bis team at a point just, opposite tbe bicycle arch (a structure on tbe south side of tbe highway), being by measurement eighty feet east of tbe Central crossing, and 313 feet east of tbe defendant’s crossing; that tbe team was then frightened, and running west toward tbe crossing; that everything indicated that they were running away; they were running too fast to be running for tbe fun of it; that be (witness) got right up and started for tbe front end of tbe car; that be looked at tbe motorman as be was walking to tbe front, but tbe motorman made no effort to stop tbe car; that,"as be got to tbe front end of tbe car, be looked out again at tbe team, and they were just coming- over tbe Omaha *640track, still running; that he turned, and looked at the motorman again, and he was doing nothing to stop the car; then in an instant came the collision, and he looked out of the window on the other side of the car, and saw the team running down the street with the pole and whiffletrees alone. There was evidence hj other witnesses to the effect that the motorman did nothing to stop the car until almost the moment of collision, or the moment after the collision. If these were indeed the facts, they furnish ample basis for the conclusion that the motorman was guilty of a gross and wanton recklessness in operating his car, which amounted to an utter disregard of human life and limb,- and thus was within the rule of gross negligence, as recently laid down in the case of Bolin v. C., St. P., M. & O. R. Co. 108 Wis. 333, 84 N. W. 446. The motorman admits that he actually saw the team just as they were coming onto the Central track, about 230 feet east of the fatal crossing, but he also testifies that they were then under control. It certainly will be admitted by all that if the motorman in charge of an electric car going at a high rate of speed sees a runaway team approaching a crossing under such circumstances as must suggest to any mind that a collision is probable, and makes no effort to control or stop his car, but allows it to run down the team and driver, he is guilty of that wanton and reckless disregard of human life which amounts in the law to intentional wrong. On this proposition there is no room for two opinions.
It seems to have been the idea of the trial court in this case that because the witness Peck admittedly did not see the team from the point 313 feet east of the crossing until it reached the Omaha crossing (a distance of 211 feet), and because another witness testified that he saw the team between these points, and that they Were not running, but going at a trot, the fact that the team was running away at any point during the progress of the 21Y feet is disproven. We cannot agree with this contention. If Peck’s story is to be"believed *641(and bis testimony is certainly not intrinsically incredible, nor is it conclusively disproven), then tbe facts were that both team and car were approaching this crossing at about tbe same speed, namely, between twenty and twenty-five miles an hour; that when tbe team was 313 feet distant it was running away; that when ninety-six feet distant it was running away; that it reached tbe crossing at tbe identical moment that tbe car reached tbe crossing. _ These facts certainly would justify tbe inference that tbe team was running away during tbe whole 313 feet, because it must have kept up its speed,' and testimony that it was walking or only slowly trotting for a part of tbe time would not necessarily overcome tbe inference. So we arrive at tbe conclusion that tbe ease was one for the jury, and that tbe direction of a verdict for tbe defendant was erroneous.
Another contention made by tbe plaintiff is that in any event there was testimony in tbe case showing a want of ordinary care on tbe part of tbe motorman, and that there might be a recovery on this ground, even though gross negligence or intentional wrong was not proven. It is true that some courts have held that, notwithstanding gross negligence is charged, there may be a recovery on tbe ground of want of ordinary care only. Keating v. D., B. C. & A. R. Co. 104 Mich. 418, 62 N. W. 575; Hays v. G. St. R. Co. 70 Tex. 602, 8 S. W. 491; Claxton's Adm'r v. L. & B. S. R. Co. 13 Bush, 636; Rockford, R. I. & St. L. R. Co. v. Phillips, 66 Ill. 548. On tbe other band, a number of courts have arrived at tbe opposite conclusion. Highland Ave. & B. R. Co. v. Winn, 93 Ala. 306, 9 South. 509; Louisville, N. A. & C. R. Co. v. Bryan, 107 Ind. 51, 7 N. E. 807. This court has held that, where tbe complaint simply charges negligence or want of ordinary care, there can be no recovery on tbe ground of wilful injury, or that reckless and wanton disregard of' another’s rights equivalent to wilful injury, which has been termed “gross negligence,” because this is a different cause *642of action. McClellan v. C. V. E. R. Co. 110 Wis. 326, 85 N. W. 1018. Is the converse of tbe proposition true ? We think it must logically be so held. In the case of Bolin v. C., St. P., M. & O. R. Co. supra, this court very carefully examined the doctrine of gross negligence, and reviewed the authorities on the subject. The conclusion there reached was that there had been inaccuracy at times in the decisions in the use of the term “gross negligence;” that whenever negligence, properly so called, was the foundation of the action, contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiff would defeat a recovery, no matter how great the negligence of the defendant; that, in order to- constitute “gross negligence,” as it has been called (i. e., that degree of misconduct for which a recovery may be had notwithstanding contributory negligence), there must be charged and shown either a wilful intent to injure, or that reckless and wanton disregard of another’s rights and safety, and that willingness to inflict injury, which the law deems equivalent to an intent to injure-. It was shown that in a wrong of this nature there is really no element of inadvertence, which is a necessary element of negligence, and hence that the term “gross negligence,” as applicable to this class of wrongs, is inaccurate. The conclusion is that when this kind of a wrong is charged, as in the present case, though it be called “gross negligence,” it does not logically include ordinary negligence, any more than a charge of ordinary negligence includes intentional wrong, and hence the appellant’s contention in this regard must fail.
It is not deemed necessary to discuss any other questions.
By the Court. — Judgment reversed, and action remanded for a new trial.