delivered the opinion of the court.
It is insisted that the trial court erred in taking the case from the jury and directing a verdict for the defendant, because it was a question for the jury to determine whether the conductor or foreman was guilty of negligence in ordering the engine and caboose run at the rate of speed and under the circumstances shown by the evidence, and in ordering the plaintiff to board the caboose as it is alleged was done; that it was for the jury to determine whether plaintiff exercised ordinary care for his own safety, and whether the defendant was liable for wrongful or negligent exercise of his powers and authority by the conductor or foreman of the switching crew with which plaintiff was working.
It was at the close of the plaintiff’s testimony on motion of defendant’s attorneys, that the court instructed the jury to find for the defendant. There is no conflict of evidence therefore, and the propriety of the ruling depends wholly upon the plaintiff’s story. It appears from his statement that he was a member of a switching crew working in railroad yards of the defendant. He accompanied the switching engine used by his crew and was performing the duties of a field switchman, “ throwing switches ” under the direction of the foreman. This crew consisted of a foreman, the plaintiff, another switchman and the engineer who ran the switch engine. The accident occurred about four p. m. in the Brighton Park yard. Having attached the engine to a caboose, the.rest of the crew started eastward with the *449caboose., going about a hundred feet, when the foreman got off and threw a switch to enable the engine and car to go over on the mainline of track. He then signaled the engineer to back up, giving the “ hard back up sign,” walked toward the caboose and got up on its lower step leading up to the platform at the rear end of the car which was nearest plaintiff then “ about 75 or 100 feet ” away. Standing there he gave the engineer two more “ back up ” signals “ harder ” than before, looked back and “ started to laugh ” and look at plaintiff. These signals to the engineer “ meant for the engine to back up rapidly in the direction where” plaintiff was standing. According to plaintiff’s testimony, he and the foreman had been in the habit of playing jokes on each other, and both the engineer and the foreman were laughing as the caboose approached the place where plaintiff was standing beside the track, the speed of the engine and car meanwhile constantly increasing. After giving these “ha.rd back up ” signals to the engineer, the foreman still looking at plaintiff and laughing, and when about thirty to forty feet away, “ made a little motion with his left hand,” which the plaintiff interpreted as an invitation to board the rapidly moving -caboose, and as plaintiff states “ got up to make room for ” plaintiff on the platform. The foreman said nothing to plaintiff, however, and there was no other invitation nor order. Plaintiff made up his mind he could get on notwithstanding the speed of the car, and made the attempt. In some way he missed his hold or footing and was thrown down, his arm going under the wheels. This is the whole story so far as material. We deem it apparent from this evidence given by plaintiff himself that the speed of the car was increased by the foreman and engineer as a joke, which plaintiff perfectly understood and appreciated; that the alleged invitation or “command”, as plaintiff’s counsel desires it to be considered, was a part of the joke and could not reasonably have been otherwise interpreted. Plaintiff estimates the speed of the car “ about ten or eleven miles an hour.” He states that he had “ been in the habit of.jumping on and off moving trains ever since I was a *450boy.” He had often done so during the seven weeks preceding the accident, and when the trains were moving, as he says, “ from eight to eleven miles an hour.” He testifies that “ in breaking up trains the engineer would take signals from me or Savage or Moran (the foreman) just as the signal was given, and if an emergency arose when it was necessary to stop the engine I gave the signal to the engineer and he obeyed such signal in any work I was doing.” If plaintiff- did not wish on the occasion in controversy to signal the engineer to slow up so as to enable him to get on with greater safety, he was at liberty, so far as appears, to let the car pass him. Ho emergency existed requiring him to get on at that time and place. He states what had been his habit, if the engine came faster than would enable him to couple a car with safety; “ I would let it go; would wait until it came back. I often gave signals to the engineer to slow down so I could make a coupling and often gave a signal for him to stop or slow down so I could make a switch, and in the performance of any work if I wanted the' engine to slow down I would give the signal.” He thought he could board the car in safety and, as he says, he “ certainly guessed wrong.” If he had supposed the speed such as to make it unsafe for him to attempt to get on, he would, as he says, have stood and let it pass.
We are of opinion that this evidence, with all the inferences which can be justifiably drawn from it, shows with clearness, such that reasonable minds must so agree without hesitation or dissent, that the injury was caused by plaintiff’s negligently taking the chances of accident; and this he did of his own volition and upon his own responsibility. Failing to exercise ordinary care -for his own safety, he cannot recover for consequences of his own negligence, severe as those consequences are.'
We find no evidence justifying the conclusion of negligence contributing to the injury on the part of appellee. Playing games on each other or joking of the kind here shown is not within the scope of the duties for which switching crews are presumed to be employed. Even an *451order jokingly given by a foreman and so understood, as the sign alleged to have been given in this case evidently must have been by the employee, is not a command such as would justify an employee in taking the risk and unnecessarily encountering a danger to life or limb, and when injury results permit him to recover from the superior. In giving such joking order, if order it may be called, the foreman cannot be regarded as the representative of the master where the circumstances are such as the evidence in this case discloses.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment of the Superior Court must be affirmed.
Affirmed.