This is an action for damages for negligently killing plaintiff’s intestate, S. T. Stewart, a locomotive engineer in defendant’s service. On 23 June, 1903, be was ordered to take engine No. 200 and tender and run “extra” from Raleigb to Hamlet, on tbe main line, over probably tbe busiest part of tbe system. No.t running on any schedule be was necessarily subject in bis movements to telegraphic orders. He bad such telegraphic orders to 'páss tbe regular freight, No. 8, ,at Yass and notice that regular passenger train No. 66 was running forty minutes late, but no order that be would pass No. 6 at Yass. At Yass be passed regular freight No. 8. He then went into tbe telegraph office and asked if there were further orders, but tbe agent told him no and gave him a “clearance card.” He accordingly proceeded towards Southern Pines, tbe next telegraphic station, and within two miles of that station be collided with train No. 6 and, with three other men, was killed. There were three stations between Yass and Southern Pines, a distance of eight miles, but no telegraphic office was maintained at either of these, though one had been formerly.
*689Upon tbis evidence his Honor intimated that upon all the evidence the plaintiff could not recover, whereupon the plaintiff submitted to a nonsuit and appealed.
The intimation of the Court was erroneous. This cause should have been submitted to the jury, who alone are empowered to find what was the proximate negligence which caused the death.
This case, arising out of a collision, is one of those in which the law raises a presumption of negligence on the part of the carrier. Wright v. Railroad, 127 N. C., 229; Marcom v. Railroad, 126 N. C., 200; Kinney v. Railroad, 122 N. C., 961; Grant v. Railroad, 108 N. C., 470; 2 S. & R. Neg., sec. 516, and numerous cases cited. In Wright’s case it is said: “It is true that a common carrier is not an insurer of the safety of an employee, neither does it insure the safety of a passenger; but when there is a collision or a derailment, and in like cases, the presumption of negligence arises. It is a rule of evidence, which in nowise springs out of the contract for carriage, but which arises from the fact that such things do not ordinarily happen unless there is negligence on the part of the carrier, and therefore it arises equally whether the injured party is a passenger or an employee.” In Mar-corn s case it is said: “Where the derailment of the engine resulted in the death of the intestate, a fireman in the employ of the defendant company, a prima facie case of negligence is to be inferred and the burden is thrown upon the defendant to disprove negligence on its part.” In Kinney’s case, which was a case of collision, the Court says: “If the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur ever applies, it would certainly do so in such a case. * * * This was particularly a case for the jury.”
“Where the Court is asked to withdraw the case, or one or more questions of fact involved, from the jury, it is not the province of the Court to weigh the evidence and determine *690what are the proper inferences to be drawn therefrom, but the only question is whether there is any testimony tending to establish the fact or facts against which the Court is asked as a matter of law to find.” 23 Am. & Eng. Enc. (2 Ed.), 561. The rule as announced in Russell v. Railroad, 118 N. C., 1098, and ever since followed, is that “where the testimony is conflicting upon any material point, or more than one inference may be drawn from it, it is the province of the jury to find the facts and make the deductions.” Here, the facts were in dispute and the inferences to be drawn from them.
If there were facts consistent with the absence of negligence on the part of the defendant, still there would be a conflict with the presumption of negligence on the part of the defendant arising from the fact of collision, which presumption is itself evidence. “A presumption of law * * * is evidence. In all systems of law, legal presumptions are treated as evidence. The presumption * * * is one of the instruments of proof.” Coffin v. U. S., 156 U. S., 459, 460. “The burden is thrown upon the defendant to disprove negligence on its part,” Marcom v. Railroad, supra, and show that the injury was due to the negligence of the plaintiff’s intestate' — a question for the jury.
“Even when there is no conflict in the evidence or when the facts are not disputed, if different minds might honestly draw different conclusions from the evidence or from the undisputed facts, a question of fact is presented which should be left to the jury for its determination.” 23 A. & E. Enc. (2 Ed.), 565, citing a vast number of cases, many of them from this Court.
The statute (1887, chap. 33) requires the defendant to both plead and to prove contributory negligence, and there being a presumption of negligence in the defendant, the case must go to the jury. “It was error to put upon the plaintiff *691tbe burden of proving tbat ber intestate was. not negligent.” Peoples v. Railroad, 137 N. C., 96; Fulp v. Railroad, 120 N. C., 525. Tbe Court cannot adjudge tbat a defense is fully proved, nor can it bold tbat there is no evidence of negligence when proof of tbe collision raises a presumption of negligence.
Besides, there was this evidence, besides other, tending to show negligence, independent of tbe presumption, which, as above, has been held to arise from the fact of tbe collision. It was, according to tbe evidence, tbe duty of tbe agent at Yass to notify tbe engineer of train No. 6 of tbe departure of “extra 200” (Stewart) from Yass, which be did not do, and as tbe collision was six miles from Yass and two miles from Southern Pines, this negligence would seem to have caused tbe collision. Tbe witness further stated tbat if tbe operator at Yass bad wired tbe train dispatcher of tbe departure of No. 200, tbat in bis opinion No. 6 could have been prevented from going beyond Manly. Tbe train dispatcher, who was at Raleigh, while giving Stewart orders to pass No. 8 at Yass, apparently from tbe evidence, overlooked making any meeting place for tbe “extra, 200” and No. 6, though be knew that No. 6 had no knowledge of No. 200 being on tbe road. If be was to pass No. 6 as well as No. 8 at Yass, why was No. 8 alone mentioned in bis order? When tbe agent at Yass gave Stewart a “clearance card” tbat was notice to him tbat tbe way was clear, “to go ahead” to tbe next point where there was a telegraph office to get further orders — as be was running under such orders and not under any schedule. Piad tbe operator at Yass promptly notified tbe dispatcher at Raleigh, he could have notified and held No. 6 at Southern Pines or directed it to take tbe siding at Manly, for tbe collision occurred only two miles from Southern Pines, near Manly, and six miles from Yass. It was also tbe duty of the operator at Southern Pines to notify tbe *692train dispatcher at Raleigh of the departure of No. 6, but the train dispatcher at Raleigh had to ask. The latter’s uneasiness, after actually receiving notice ,of the departure of “200 extra” from Vass, and his efforts to stop the trains, tend to show that he had failed to notify No. 6 as well as “extra 200” where they must pass. Had he done so, he would have had no uneasiness, as there were three side-tracks between Vass and Southern Pines. Stewart, having received orders to pass No. 8, but no orders as to passing No. 6, upon receiving “clearance card” from the agent at Vass, proceeded in accordance with his only other order to go “from Raleigh to Hamlet,” expecting of course to get other orders, if any, at Southern Pines. The company’s rule 174a, which Stewart had in his pocket when killed, provides “Receipt of train order does not give a train the right to leave until signal is set to safety or clearance card is given.” It was in evidence that “meeting orders were always given to extra trains”; that Stewart had such orders as to No. 8 at Vass, and there was told there were no other orders for him and was given the .clearance card (found on his dead body) which under the above-quoted rule gave his train “the right to leave.” He could get no further orders till he got to Southern Pines. There was negligence in the train dispatcher in giving neither Stewart nor No. 6 notice of meeting point, and in the agent at Vass giving Stewart a clearance card, which could only mean “go ahead, the way is clear.”
There was much said in the argument as to the provisions as to “superior” and “inferior” rights of way in the rules and regulations of the company, but Rule 455 expressly provides: “The terms ‘superior right’ and ‘inferior right’ in these rules refer to the right of trains under time-table and train rules, and not to rights under special orders.” This “extra” No. 200 was running solely under special orders “to go to Hamlet” and with orders to pass No. 8 at Vass, and a “clearance card” at *693tbe latter place, wbicb authorized the engineer to go on to the next point where he could get orders. If it did not give him that authority, for what purpose was it given him ? He could not know what trains were late, and after his “clearance card” he had a right to presume that if there was any other train in his way it had been or would be notified not to leave Southern Pines.
If there is evidence, or inferences, to be drawn contrary to the above, it was a matter solely for the jury. The plaintiff insists that besides the presumption of negligence arising from the fact of collision, there were nine particulars as to which there was negligence, which should have been submitted to the jury, to-wit:
1. In sending the plaintiff’s intestate on the road without a sufficient and proper train crew. Arrowood v. Railroad, 126 N. C., 629.
2. In failing to arrange a meeting place for “extra 200” and train No. 6.
3. In the failure of the operator at Yass to notify the engineman of No. 6 of the departure of “extra 200” from Yass.
4. In the failure of the telegraph operator at Yass to promptly report to the train dispatcher at Raleigh the arrival and departure of “extra. 200.”
5. In the failure of the operator at Southern Pines to . notify the train dispatcher at Raleigh of the arrival and departure of No. 6 from Southern Pines.
6. In violation of Rule 389 by the crew of No. 6 in leaving Southern Pines in less than twenty minutes after the departure of No. 8.
I. In violation of Rule No. 405 by the engineer and crew of No. 6 in leaving Southern Pines before the arrival of No. 66.
*6948. In failing to establish and maintain telegraph offices at Lake View, Niagara and Manly so as to insure the safe operation of its trains between Southern Pines and Vass.
9. In failing to adopt and use the safer system known as “block system,” which was in general use, and referred to in the rules of defendant.
But as we have held that enough has been shown to require the facts to be submitted to the jury, it is unnecessary to consider the other grounds of negligence presented. As to the eighth ground, if there had been no telegraph office between Raleigh and Hamlet, or such offices only fifty or twenty miles apart, it would certainly be negligence as a matter of law to risk the lives of employees and passengers without such necessary adjuncts in operating the defendant’s trains. Whether it was negligence to fail to have a telegraph office between Vass and Southern Pines, a distance of eight miles, when the single track was so crowded as to require three stations, or sidings, between these two points, and when (as on this occasion) such intermediate telegraph office would have saved the lives of four men and the crippling of others, is probably a mixed question of fact and law, which should be submitted to the jury. The question whether the receipts of such telegraphic office would be enough to make it profitable to the company to maintain it, is an entirely secondary consideration, if it was reasonably necessary for the safe-guarding of the lives of employees and passengers.
Nor is it necessary to hold now that the failure of this great through line, crowded with business, to adopt the “block system” is negligence which, as this Court in the Greenlee and Troxler cases, 122 N. C., 979, and 124 N. C., 191, held in regard to the failure to adopt automatic couplers, would render the --common carrier liable per se for any death or injury caused by the failure to adopt them. The evidence in this case is that the “block system/” is in very general *695use, and, that if it bad been in use on tbis system this catastrophe could not have occurred. The ruling of the Court in Witsell v. Railroad, 120 N. C., 557, is that it is culpable negligence, making the carrier responsible for all injuries resulting therefrom, to fail to use “any approved appliance which is in general use and necessary for safety.” .This rule has been reiterated and adhered to in every case since, including Bottoms v. Railroad, 136 N. C., 413. The writer, however, is free to say now, speaking for himself, that it is culpable negligence when any employee or passenger loses his life or sustains injury in a “head-end” collision from a failure to provide tire “block system,” which would prevent the possibility of that class of collisions. The obtaining of higher dividends is entirely a secondary matter to the safety of employees and passengers, as it is also to the convenience and comfort of the public, for which end alone charters to railroads, with the power to condemn rights of way under the power of eminent domain, are granted. Eor the guarantee of that safety and convenience, the sole resort is to the courts and juries of the land.
The plaintiff had a constitutional right to have the question of negligence, upon this evidence, submitted to a jury, and in denying her that right there was error.
Error.
Hoke, J., concurs in result. Brown, J., did not sit in this case.