The court treated the train dispatcher as a vice principal of the defendant, and no question was or is made as to> the correctness of this view. The court definitely instructed the jury that Cowee, the engineer of the extra train, was a fellow servant of plaintiffs decedent, and in connection therewith explained the rules applicable to that relation. The case was submitted upon grounds which assumed that Tynan, the telegraph operator at the Burlington freightyard, was also a fellow servant of the deceased. The only questions left to the jury regarding Tynan were whether he was a competent operator; and if not, whether his incompetency caused the collision; and if it did, whether the defendant was negligent in employing him. If there was a failure in this connection to distinguish sufficiently between a mere act of neglect and the result of incompetency, no< exception was taken to' it.
The only other question submitted was whether the dispatcher was negligent in not taking further action after completing the order which allowed Cowee to run south from Burlingtom; and the only bearing given to the question of Tynan’s competency was upon his failure to report Cowee’s departure, and the effect of that failure on the action and responsibility of the dispatcher. The order was received by Tynan at five o’clock, and was thereupon made known to Cowee and repeated to the dispatcher, but was not made complete and effective by the dispatcher’s reply until 5 :o6. The *249north bound train known as the “Flyer” was due to leave Shelburne at 5 :i8. Cowee entered his time of leaving as S"io, in a register that lay close by Tynan. The rules of the defendant required its operators to- promptly record and report to the train dispatcher the time of departure of all trains. Tynan did not attempt to report Cowee’s departure before 5 :i8.
The plaintiff contends that' the dispatcher’s delay of nearly six minutes ini completing the order, in connection with the Flyer’s time of leaving Shelburne, produced a situation which made it his duty to give further instructions; that it was at least his duty, when he failed to receive a speedy report of Cowee’s departure, to inquire in regard to it; and that in any event, if Tynan had promptly reported Cowee’s time of leaving as registered, the dispatcher could have held the Flyer at Shelburne and prevented the collision. The court gave no definite construction to this order, and no instruction as to what it gave Cowee the fight to- do, but left it for the jury to say whether the dispatcher ought to have anticipated that Cowee would leave when the order was made effective, and have held the Flyer at Shelburne.
The defendant contends that Cowee’s departure was in direct violation of the order when' read in connection with the rules, and that there was nothing in the situation that called for further action on the part of the dispatcher. The order received by Cowee was as follows: “Engine 192 will run extra Burlington to Rutland; will meet train- 21 at Vergennes and .27 at New Haven Junction.” This order is in the form which the rules prescribe for extra trains, and under the form as embodied in the rules is the following direction: “A train receiving this order * * must keep clear of all regular trains, as required by rule.” Rule 86 provides that an inferior train must keep out of the way of a superior train; and Cowee’s *250train was inferior to the Flyer. ,So- this was not an order for Cowee to leave Burlington at once, or at any particular time. It operated merely as a clearance, which permitted him to leave subject to the rule. It authorized him to run from Burlington to Rutland, going from station to station as he might be able to without getting upon the schedule time of regular trains. The dispatcher had a right' to assume that the train would be run in this manner, unless there was something in the situation as known b> him which ought to- have led him to expect the contrary.
We find nothing in the circumstances disclosed by the evidence that tends to charge the dispatcher with a further duty. The fact that the order was sent six minutes before it was put in force could not have been- expected to- confuse a competent engineer. The dispatcher could properly assume that the engineer would determine his action with reference to the time left available by the completed order. The distance from the Burlington freightyard to Shelburne is not less than six and one-half miles. An extra is not only required to keep off the time of regular trains, but is required to allow five minutes at the place of meeting for taking- the siding and closing the switch. This required that Cowee be at Shelburne at 5:13, and making the least possible allowance for getting started after the order was made complete, it would require a run.of over a mile a minute; and if a use of three of the five minutes allowed for side-tracking had been contemplated, it would then have required a speed of over forty miles an hour. But the dispatcher was not bound to anticipate such a gross violation of the five minute rule, and without this it is clear that ordinary caution could not have anticipated a departure. Moreover, the question whether a train of this character can get off in season to1 reach another station within the time al*251lowed by the rules will often depend upon local conditions which are known to the trainman in charge, but cannot be known to the dispatcher. These may include the location of the train in the yard, the'number of switches to be passed in reaching the main track, and the condition of the yard as regards other movements. Inasmuch as an extra is required to protect itself against regular trains, it is evident that the starting of such a train must be left, within proper limits, to the judgment of the one in charge of it. In these circumstances, there was nothing in the failure to receive a report of Cowee’s departure to excite the dispatcher’s apprehension. So we find nothing in 'the evidence that tends^ to show negligence on the part of the dispatcher.
It remains ü> consider the bearing of Tynan’s conduct upon the question of liability. There was evidence tending to show that Tynan was ignorant of what the rules required of him in regard to reporting the departure of trains, and that the defendant was negligent in failing to ascertain it. This required the submission of the case to .the jury, if there was evidence tending to show that the accident was due to Tynan’s omission operating concurrently with Cowee’s negligence. So it is necessary to inquire as to the results that would probably have flowed from a prompt report of Cowee’s departure as registered.
If Tynan had acted at 5 :o8, this would have given ten minutes in which to stop the Flyer at Shelburne; an allowance which would probably have covered all chances of delay in the dispatcher’s office and at Shelburne. There was evidence tending to show that one ’purpose of the rule requiring a prompt report of departures is to keep the dispatcher constantly advised of the actual condition of the main line, and that one benefit contemplated from the requirement of prompt trans*252mission is the additional protection thus afforded. It is clear that if the dispatcher had received information which indicated that C'owee was actually leaving for Shelburne on the Flyer’s time, it would have been his duty to take measures to prevent the threatened collision. The rules governing the movement of the train would not justify his failure to act, if .he had knowledge that the rules were being ignored. So the question will be,y what would the dispatcher have understood from the re-' port, if it had been made? It seems that it is customary for trainmen acting in these circumstances to enter their time of departure somewhat in advance of the time of registering, to give them time to get to their trains and work out to- the main line; and that unexpected delays sometimes prevent their getting off within the time they allow. But if Cowee was intending to wait for the Flyer, his time of departure depended upon a certainty and not a contingency. The time he set for leaving was 5 :io. The Flyer was due at Burlington station, about one-fourth of a mile north of the freightyard, at 5 :3o. So the time given for leaving was at least 18 minutes before he could leave, if he was to- wait for the Flyer. It is to be presumed that on receiving such a report, the dispatcher would have acted prudently and have done his duty. Ought he to have understood that Cowee had entered this time for leaving expecting to wait for the Flyer? Or ought he to have understood that he was leaving for Shelburne in disregard of the rules? This was a‘ matter for the jury, and justified the submission of the case, unless it be held that the negligence of Cowee was the sole proximate cause of the accident and that of Tynan only a -remote cause.
We think that upon the case which the plaintiff’s evidence tended to establish, Tynan’s failure to report was one of two causes which concurred directly in producing the accident. ' It *253is true that the defendant had no. part in creating the dangerous situation from which the accident resulted. That situation was developed by the negligent act of Cowee. But it was the defendant’s duty to exercise; through some system of rules and service, a reasonably efficient supervision of its track and trains, with a view to lessening the perils incident to the operation of a complicated organization by fallible agencies. The first neglect consisted in Cowee’s leaving, but the neglect of Cowee and the neglect of the defendant afterwards came into a concurrent operation whi'ch continued until the injury was received, — Cowee running on the Flyer’s time, and the dispatcher improperly left in ignorance of it when a knowledge of it would have enabled him to prevent the accident. Into the situation which existed at the time of the collision there had come the further element of the dispatcher’s failure to hold the Flyer at Shelburne when he ought to have had information that an opposing train was on the track. So Tynan’s failure was a proximate cause of the accident.
The motion to direct a verdict for the defendant was properly overruled, but the court erred in its submission of the questions touching the dispatcher’s duty.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.