Plaintiff is the administrator of the estate of James. Dillon, deceased, and he brought this action upon an accident insurance policy for one thousand dollars. The judgment in the trial court -was for the plaintiff for the full amount.
By the terms of the policy it was agreed to pay to Dillon’s estate one thousand dollars in the event that he “should receive personal or bodily injury through external and purely accidental means, resulting in the loss of life.” . It was further provided by the policy that “where the accidental injury results from voluntary exposure to unnecessary danger or obvious risk of injury, or the intentional act of the insured,” the liability was to be reduced to one hundred dollars.
Deceased was engaged in the service of a railway company as a car repairer. On the night of April 27, 1906, he rode on a switch engine through the yards of the railway, at a place called Franklin Junction, for *506the purpose of inspecting a freight car. After discharging this duty he was riding back through the yards by standing .of a step on the side of a car and holding onto a handhold, when he came in contact with a car standing on a near-by track. He was knocked from his place and killed. It appears that the standing car was what is known as a “flat car” with a brake rod and wheel extending up on the side above the platform of the car. This rod was bent over towards the track upon which deceased was returning, so as to leave a space of about nine inches between it and a passing car, and it was the rod or wheel with which he came in contact. The tracks were numbered 3 and 4, the standing flat car being on No. 4. It was standing there when deceased rode down to inspect the car and could have been seen by deceased, as there were lights on each end of the engine upon which he rode by; and, if seen, could have been observed to be too close to the other track for one to ride on the side of the car in manner deceased did on his return. There was no affirmative evidence that he noticed the close proximity of the flat car, or that he noticed the brake rod was bent.
The case was tried without a jury and the trial court was asked to'give a declaration of law which declared that “standing on the side of, or hanging to, a car in a moving train in a railroad yard at night, where there are other cars standing on another track so close to the track upon which said train was moving as not to permit the body of a person so riding to clear said stationary cars (with knowledge of these facts), is a voluntary exposure to unnecessary danger or obvious risk of injury which prevents a recovery in this case except as to one tenth of the amount of the policy.” The court refused the declaration as asked, but gave it with the qualification that deceased had “knowledge of these facts,” which words we have placed in brackets.
The trial court likewise refused a declaration of*507fered by defendant, putting tbe hypothesis if “Dillon knew (or might have known by the exercise of ordinary diligence and care) that said car was too close” to permit his passing without striking it. But gave it with the words in brackets stricken out.
The court, among other instructions, given for defendant, gave one which declared that plaintiff could not recover to exceed one-tenth the policy if deceased’s position on the moving car “was obviously dangerous and that said Dillon voluntarily assumed such position.”
The foregoing acts of the court can well be considered together. The terms of the policy show that the amount to be paid was to be reduced nine-tenths if the accident happened by either of three acts of deceased, viz.: by his voluntary exposure to unnecessary danger or by his voluntary taking an obvious risk of injury, or by his intentional act. Each of these three are affirmative acts of his; they imply knowledge on his part and exclude mere negligence. In an action on a similar policy it was held by the St. Louis Court of Appeals that voluntary exposure meant conscious exposure. [Bateman v. Insurance Co., 110 Mo. App. 443.] And so it was held in Burkhard v. Insurance Co., 102 Pa. St. 262. A voluntary act means an intentional act. So when we state that one voluntarily exposed himself to unnecessary danger, it is the same as to say that he knew there was danger to which it was unnecessary for him to expose himself, but nevertheless did expose himself. [Collins v. Insurance Co., 96 Iowa 216; Insurance Co. v. Hubbell, 56 Ohio St. 516.] ’ So if one takes an obvious risk, he must necessarily know that there is a risk and intentionally accept it. [Ashenfelter v. Insurance Co., 87 Fed. 682.] In these statements it will, of course, be understood that the insurance company would not be concluded by the mere claim of the insured (or his representative) that he did not know there was *508danger, and that he did not know it was unnecessary for him to expose himself to it, or that he did not know there was a risk. He will be held to have known that which an ordinarily prudent man, of ordinary intelligence, in the same situation, would have known. [Insurance Co. v. Sittig, 181 Ill. 111.]
These remarks make plain that we approve of the trial court’s amendment to defendant’s declaration requiring knowledge of the facts.
The propriety of the court striking out the words in the other instruction submitting whether deceased might have known by the exercise of ordinary care, that the standing car was too close for him to get by, calls for additional consideration. We think those words would have had the effect of introducing a condition in the policy which the parties did not see fit to insert. If the insured is to be held to the exercise of ordinary care to become aware of danger, or risk, we cut him out of all insurance on account of his negligence; when, in point of fact, negligence implies want of intention, and it is one of the principal objects of the insurance. [Wilson v. Insurance Co., 53 Minn. 470; Keene v. Insurance Co., 161 Mass. 149.] This was held in the latter case, even though the policy there had the additional requirement that the assured should use due diligence for his personal safety. Acts of negligence which would excuse the railroad company in an action by an employee, will not relieve an insurance company in a action on a policy to such employee. The fact that negligence on the part of the employee will leave him without remedy against the railway company may well form a. chief motive in taking out accident insurance.
Defendant rightly states that the custom of deceased and others should not be permitted to alter the plain terms of a contract. But the custom and practice of such employees in the manner of performance of *509tbeir duties was no more, in this instance, than showing what those duties were and their manner of performance. And in showing the necessity for going from one part of the yards to another and the custom and practice to ride upon the cars in getting to different parts of the premises was a proper method of showing the duties and the manner of their performance. Defendant’s .refused declaration required the court not to consider such usage. It was properly refused. [Insurance Co. v. Snowden, 58 Fed. 342.]
It is a part of defendant’s objection to the judgment, as stated here, that no case was made by the plaintiff. To sustain this objection we would be required to hold, as a matter of law, that deceased knew of the dangerous proximity of the flat car to the track upon which he was riding. It is true he passed by the car shortly before in riding on the lighted engine in going “to the work he was to perform. But we would not be at all justified in saying that he thereby observed the danger. [Charlton v. Railroad, 200 Mo. 413, 435.]
Other points of objection have been examined and not found sufficient to call for a reversal and the judgment will' therefore be affirmed.
All concur.