Action for damages resulting from personal injuries alleged to have been sustained in consequence of the negligence of defendant. Plaintiff recovered judgment in the sum of five hundred dollars and defendant appealed.
On the date of injury April 9, 1904, defendant was the owner of certain residence property in the city of Boonville situated on the south side of High street, one of the public streets in said city, and was having a granitoid sidewalk laid in front of the premises. Materials for use in this construction, such as stone, sand, *50cinders, etc., were piled in the macadamized roadway, the several piles being four or five feet from the curb line and extending six or seven feet towards the middle of the street. The entire space between the curb lines was paved and in use by the public. Plaintiff, a clerk in a grocery store,'was sent by his employer at about 7:30 o’clock in the evening to deliver a package of butter to a customer and rode a bicycle in performing his errand. His route took him along High street past defendant’s property and, on account of darkness, he was proceeding slowly when he ran into a pile of cinders placed in the street by defendant and was overthrown and seriously injured. The negligence charged in the petition, upon which the cause of action is founded, is “that the defendant negligently failed to maintain at night at said piles of building material an artificial light, and negligently failed to take any steps, or use any means whatsoever, to give notice to and warn plaintiff and others passing over and along said street of the existence and location of said piles of building material.”
Among other defenses, defendant in his answer pleaded contributory negligence and insists that, under the evidence of plaintiff, his negligence should be assumed as a necessary conclusion of law. Defendant further contends that no negilgence on the part of defendant appears from the evidence. Both of these issues of law were fairly presented to the trial court under defendant’s request for a peremptory instruction, which the learned judge refused, and have been properly preserved for our consideration.
It appears from the evidence introduced by plaintiff that the streets were not lighted at the time. Electricity was used by the city for that purpose, but the company in charge of the public lighting under contract with the city did not turn on the light until about dark, and sometimes even later. On this particular evening, the sky was overclouded and, as the streets *51were not illuminated, it was so dark that plaintiff could see only four or five feet ahead of his wheel as he traveled along High street. He was looking ahead for possible danger, but did not know of the obstructions placed in the street by defendant and on account of the blackness of the cinders did not see the pile. Defendant had not placed any lights or other signals to warn the public of the presence of the material in the street. Plaintiff carried no headlight on his vehicle. The presence of the obstructions in the street, the failure to place signals upon them, the darkness of the night, the absence of public lights and the condition of the weather are all facts conceded by defendant, but, under the evidence offered by him, it appears that except on rare occasions the streets were lighted before it became quite dark, that defendant was not at the premises that evening and therefore did not know the street was dark and that plaintiff had actual knowledge of the presence of the obstructions.
It is not denied that a property-owner has the right to use the' street in front of his premises as a place to deposit and temporarily keep material and tools for use in the construction of improvements upon the premises. This right springs not from title to any portion of the street, but from necessity. The reasonable use of the street for that purpose is just as legitimate as that for the purposes of travel and, therefore, people traveling the street must expect to encounter such obstructions and should be on the lookout for them. [Hesselbach v. City, 179 Mo. l. c. 522; Gerdes v. Foundry Co., 124 Mo. 354; Elliott on Roads & Streets, sec. 693; Pueschell v. Iron Works, 79 Mo. App. 462.]
The right, however, must be exercised in a reasonable manner and with due regard for the safety of travelers. Thus, the obstruction must not be maintained for a longer time than is necessary for the construction of the improvement and reasonable expedition must be employed in the prosecution of the work. No more of *52the street may be used than is required for the material when piled in an orderly and compact form and due care demands of the owner the exercise of reasonable diligence in providing warning signals for the protection of the public during periods of darkness. [Raymond v. Keseberg, 84 Wis. 302; King v. City, 28 Fed. 835; City v. Parks, 43 Ia. 119; Stuart v. Havens, 17 Neb. 211; Elliott on Roads and Streets, sec. 717.]
The gist of the complaint is that defendant failed to act with the degree of care imposed by law upon him, because he failed to place lights on the obstructions during a time of darkness. Defendant admits the fact charged, but says he acted with reasonable care because he had the right to presume that the lighting company would perform its duty and, if it did, the lights in the vicinity of the material would clearly disclose its presence. Defendant cannot thus shift his duty to the shoulders of another. It devolved upon him to use reasonable care to ascertain whether or not the obstructions should be guarded by lights in order to prevent them from becoming a menace to people rightfully upon the street. The likelihood of the whole lighting plant to be put out of service under certain conditions, such as the breaking of machinery and the like, or of individual lamps to become out of order, and thus throw a particular locality into darkness, were facts, known to defendant, that made it incumbent upon him to keep himself informed of existing conditions. His general duty to safeguard the place involved the special duty of acting with reasonable diligence to ascertain if the public lights were in operation and sufficiently disclosed the obstructions to view. The classification of defendant’s conduct, therefore, was essentially, under the evidence, a question of fact and not of law.
Passing to the question of contributory negligence, it is suggested that plaintiff was out of his proper course in riding along one side of the paved roadway instead of in the middle. It may be conceded that a city *53is not required to pave the entire width of a street, and that it is required to maintain in a reasonably safe condition for travel no more than the paved portion thereof, but that principle has no bearing here, for the entire space between the sidewalks was in fact paved and the public had the right to use any portion of the pavement for travel because of the implied invitation of the city so to use it.
Further, defendant contends that it was negligence in law for plaintiff to ride in the dark without a headlight attached to his vehicle and the case of Cook v. Fogarty, 103 Iowa 500, is relied upon to support the contention. That was a case where a cyclist collided in the dark with a moving buggy and the court observed that “a person, who rides a bicycle without a light or signal of warning in a public thoroughfare where he is liable to meet moving vehicles or pedestrians at a time when objects can be discerned readily at a distance of but a few feet, is guilty of negligence.” It will be noticed that, if the principle stated in that opinion is sound, the law imposes a duty upon a cyclist that does not rest upon the driver of a vehicle drawn by horses, and the only reason appearing for this distinction lies in the fact that a moving bicycle is practically noiseless, whilst a carriage or wagon and the animals attached to it give warning of their approach in the noise they make when in motion, and therefore, it is argued collisions are more apt to occur in riding a bicycle through the dark without signal or light than in driving or riding a horse. This view of the law has been criticised in Elliott on Roads and Streets, page 927, but we express no opinion upon it, for the reason that it has no application to a case such as the one before us, where a cyclist collides with an inanimate object in the street, for in that situation warnings have no effect upon the obstruction and, therefore, the noiselessness of a bicycle cannot add to the danger of its use and, in other respects, we cannot dogmatically assume that a bicycle is *54so much more dangerous than a buggy or wagon as to make the carrying of a headlight an indispensable requisite to the exercise of due care. That, essentially, is a question of fact for the jury to determine. It may be argued with show of reason that the advantages in point of safety in a bicycle as compared with other vehicles counterbalance its disadvantages. What it lacks in stability, it may make up in superior mobility; while it may be overthrown by an obstacle that would be innocuous to a buggy, some obstructions that would block the way of the latter would not impede its narrow course and it is under quick and complete subjection to the will of the rider, while animals are more or less unresponsive to control. These are some of the arguments advanced by its advocates and, though we do not give them sanction (deeming them to be beyond the pale of judicial knowledge), they are plausible enough to raise an issue of fact to be solved by the triers of fact in determining whether or not, in the circumstances of the particular case, the cyclist should be held culpable for not using a headlight. Plaintiff was riding at a moderate rate of speed and says he was watching his course and we see no reason for holding him guilty of negligence in law for failing to provide himself with a light that would not apply with equal logic, had he been riding or driving a horse or walking. It was right for the court to submit his conduct to the jury and the demurrer to the evidence was properly overruled.
Plaintiff introduced in evidence over the objection of defendant an ordinance of the city, in part as follows:
“Any person or persons may use the squares, streets, alleys or sidewalks in the construction of any new building, or in the removal, repair or alteration of any building, or for the purpose of piling thereon of building material and tools, provided that such person or persons shall first have obtained the written permission of the mayor, or person acting as mayor, to use *55such, squares, streets, alleys or sidewalks for such purposes and shall maintain at such pile at night an artificial light sufficient to warn travelers,” etc. It is argued that the ordinance was inadmissable because the words building material used therein refer to materials for use in the erection of a building and the evidence shows the cinders piled in the street were not intended for such purpose, but for use in the construction of a sidewalk, which, it is said, is not a building. Under the general law, the abutting property-owner has no right to pile material in the street for any other purpose than for use in the construction of some improvement upon the premises, such as a building, fences, or walks, and the like, and the construction of a sidewalk in front of the premises, being in part for the betterment of the property as well as for public use, is an improvement falling within the class finder consideration. It is evident that it was not intended by the city in this ordinance to restrict the purposes for which material might be deposited in the street by the property owner. Manifestly, the right afforded by the general law is recognized and the purpose of the enactment is the regulation of the exercise of that right to prevent its abuse. Therefore, the words “building material,” as employed in the ordinance, should be construed liberally. They were intended to cover materials for the construction of any kind of an improvement of the premises. The objection cannot be sustained on this ground. Nor can Ave agree with defendant that, in admitting the ordinance in evidence, the jury was permitted to find a verdict against defendant upon the assumption that defendant did not procure a permit from the mayor to pile the material in the street. That fact was not referred to in the evidence, nor in any instruction given or asked. If the ordinance was admissable on account of any of its provisions, it would have been error for the court to refuse to receive it in evidence, because it contained some other provision not material to the issues and *56which, might be misapplied by the jury. In such case, the party, who fears a possible misconstruction, has the right to have the objectionable provision removed by an instruction from the consideration of the jury. Defendant asked no such instruction and the point raised here for the first time comes too late. The provision requiring the placing at night of lights upon the piles of material left in the street made the ordinance admissible in evidence as bearing upon the question of negligence, notwithstanding the cause of action pleaded is not founded upon the ordinance. [Hirst v. Co., 169 Mo. 200; Robertson v. Railroad, 84 Mo. 119; Judd v. Railroad, 28 Mo. App. 61.]
We find the issues were fully and fairly submitted to the jury in the instructions given and therefore refrain from making special mention of the questions relating to defendant’s refused instructions! presented by him. The record is free from substantial error and the judgment accordingly is affirmed.
All concur.