SPARKS, Circuit Judge.
Viewed in the light most favorable to appellant, the evidence submitted supports the following facts: Tenth street in the city of Springfield runs north and south. It is intersected by Edwards street which runs east and west, and at this point the accident happened. Appellee’s railway tracks and station are located on Tenth street, and the station is five city blocks due north of Edwards street. At the intersection referred to appellee has. four tracks. East of and parallel with the main track is one switch track and .on the west of the main track there are two switches. On the north-east corner of the intersection of the streets there is located an ice plant. Its main building is flush with the west and south property lines and has a frontage of about eighty feet on Edwards street. The west property line of the ice company is parallel with the railroad tracks and is seventeen and a half feet east of the east rail of the east switch and thirty and a half feet east of the east rail of the main track. Thirty feet east of the main building, and seven and a half feet north of its south line is located the ice company’s service sta*167tion which has a frontage of thirty feet on Edwards street. Fifteen feet east of the service station is a public alley running north and south. Edwards street is eighty feet in width between property lines. The traveled portion is thirty feet in width and is paved with brick to the extended west property line of the ice company, and with macadam from that point to the first railroad track. The north line of the pavement is twenty-five feet south of the south property line of the ice company, and thirty-two feet south of the loading platform of the ice service station. At the intersection of the paved portion of Edwards street and the alley, which is about one hundred and seventy-five feet east of the first railroad track, a driveway runs northwestwardly to- the service station, and returns southwestwardly to the paved portion of Edwards street at about ninety feet east of the first track.
Appellant was engaged in the grocery and retail ice business and purchased Ms ice from the company referred to. On the morning of August 17, 1929, he left his home at 5:45 a. m. when it was daylight, and with his automobile truck drove to the ice plant for tlie purpose of securing ice. He decided to go across the tracks to another plant of the same company which was located at the southwest comer of Edwards and Tenth streets. A string of box ears was standing on the oast switch track at a point from forty-two to forty-eight feet north of the center of Edwards street. At that time the scoring macMne composed of eight saws (used for sawing ice) was running and caused a loud singing noise which could be heard for the distance of a city block. Before entering upon tlie tracks, appellant stopped his truck at a point from ten to fifteen feet east of the east switch. He remained in the truck and without stopping his engine looked north and south and listened for trains. Not hearing or seeing any, he drove across the switch track and upon the main track and was there struck by a south bound passenger train which had stopped at the station and was then traveling at an estimated speed of from twenty-five to thirty miles per hour without sounding the bell or whistle. Appellant’s witnesses are not in accord as to the location of the rear end of the train when it stopped. They place it at different points from barely south of Edwards street to- one hundred and fifty feet below that point.
Appellant had been in the habit of getting ice from both ice houses for the past ten years and was fully acquainted with the surroundings. lie usually went ani' time from six to seven thirty o’clock in the morning, and had crossed the tracks at that point for the purpose of getting a quicker delivery of ice very frequently. He knew that there was an early morning south bound train and had seen it pass that place on many other days. On the morning of the accident no one was in front of Mm at the crossing; the watchman was not there, and appellant knew that he did not come on duty until seven o’clock.
The trial court based its peremptory instruction upon the authority of Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v. Goodman, 275 U. S. 66, 48 S. Ct. 24, 72 L. Ed. 167, 56 A. L. R. 645, and Wabash R. Co. v. Zayac (C. C. A.) 30 F.(2d) 764. Appellant, however, seeks to distinguish those eases from the instant case by the fact that neither driver of those automobiles stopped his ear before driving- on the track, and by the further fact that in tlie Goodman ease the accident occurred at a country grade crossing’, and in the Zayac case it occurred throe blocks inside the limits of a small city whore nothing obstructed the driver’s view, while in the instant ease, the crossing was in a thickly settled portion of a large city where the driver was prevented from seeing tlie approaching train by the ice company’s building and the freight cars on the switch. It may bo said, however, that if appellant stopped his truck within ten to fifteen feet from the east switch, as he stated, the ice company’s building could not possibly have interfered with Ms vision of the train.
In the Goodman case, supra, the court said, at page 69 of 275 U. S., 48 S. Ct. 24, 25:
“We do not go into further details as to Goodman’s precise situation, beyond mentioning that it was daylight and that he was familiar with the crossing, for it appears to us plain that nothing is suggested by the evidence to relieve Goodman from responsibility for his own death. When a man goes upon a railroad track ho knows that he goes to a place where he will be killed if a train comes upon Mm before he is clear of the track. He knows that he must stop for the train not the train stop for him. In such circumstances it seems to ns that if a driver cannot be sure otherwise whether a train is dangerously near he must stop and get out of Ms vehicle, although obviously he will not often be required to do more than to stop and look. It seems to us that if he relies upon not hearing the train or any signal and takes no further precaution he does so at Ms own risk. * * s It is true as said in Flannelly v. Delaware & *168Hudson Co., 225 U. S. 507, 603, 32 S. Ct. 783, 56 L. Ed. 1221, 44 L. R. A. (N. S.) 154, that the question of due care very generally is left to the jury. But we are dealing with a standard of conduct, and when the standard is clear it should tie laid down once for all by the Courts. See Southern Pacific Co. v. Berkshire, 254 U. S. 415, 417, 419, 41 S. Ct. 162, 65, L.Ed. 335.”
It may be true that the crossing in that ease was in a country district, although the opinion does not so state, yet we are unable to understand why the rule there laid down does not apply to a crossing in a city as well as in the country; if it were otherwise a traveler would be required to exercise more care in crossing a railroad track in the country where his vision was less obstructed than in a congested city where it is more restricted. The railroad company and the traveler are each required to exercise ordinary care at all grade crossings. Ordinary care is a relative term and varies with audible and visual environment rather than with strict geographical location. The law interprets ordinary care to be that degree of care which a person of ordinary prudence, under the particular circumstances, is presumed to exercise to avoid injury. Such care is required to be in proportion to the danger to be avoided and the fatal consequences that may result from the neglect. Illinois Central R. Co. v. Cheek, 152 Ind. 663, 53 N. E. 641.
If appellant stopped his truck within ten to fifteen feet from the east switch, as he stated, the ice company’s building could not then have interfered with his vision of the train, and the box cars constituted the only obstruction of his vision to the station, which was five blocks away. He was then twenty-eight feet from the main track and about forty feet southeast of the box ears. He could then see the main track for a slight distance north of the south end of the first box ear, and that distance rapidly increased northwardly as he traveled west, so that when he reached the west rail of the switch, which was eight feet from the main track, his vision of that track was clear.
The charge of wilful injury is not supported by substantial evidence and we think the facts proven are well within the rule of the Goodman case. The fact that appellant stopped his car twenty-eight feet back of the main track is not sufficient to distinguish one case from the other, for if he could not see by reason of the box cars, and could not hear on account of the scoring machine and the noise of his own motor, it was his duty under the authority of the Goodman case to take further precautions.
Judgment affirmed.