This is an action for damages for wrongful death. The plaintiff is a resident of the state of Oklahoma; tho defendant corporation, it is alleged, is a resident of tho state of Delaware, and there are three individual defendants, alleged to be residents of Oklahoma. The case was removed to this court from the District Court of Tulsa, county, Old., upon the petition of the nonresident corporate defendant. A motion to remand the canse to the state court is before the court for determination.
An áction by tho same plaintiff, against the corporate defendant and the individual defendant, Smith, was instituted some time ago. It was removed to this court, and, upon denial of the plaintiff’s motion to remand the cause to the state district court, plaintiff took a nonsuit, and subsequently instituted this action. See
Plaintiff in this action alleges, in addition to the allegations in the reported ease, that J. E. Prichard did all of the things charged to Smith, and further that Smith and Prichard were in complete and absolute control as employees of the Mid-Continent Petroleum Corporation, of the gas engine and pump, with authority to construct, reconstruct, and change it, and that, by reason of their authority, they removed certain boards from tho building housing the engine, as well as built the building' so near the gas engine as to make it unsafe; that snow and ice covered the ground around the unguarded and unprotected gas engine and pump, and that Smith and Prichard permitted the deceased to be employed about the gas engine and pump without warning him of the dan-
The corporate defendant is charged with negligence in failing to furnish the deceased a safe place in which to work, as well as being charged as the employer of the individual defendants and the deceased.
It is to be observed that plaintiff has attempted to plead a cause of action against the individual defendants, but does not charge them with any misfeasance. Unless they are liable under the Factory Act of Oklahoma (Comp. St. 1921, § 7229), the petition does not state a cause of action against them, as acts of nonfeasance, or omissions, only are charged. Such allegations do not render them liable to plaintiff, unless the Factory Act is applicable. It must be noted that it is not alleged by plaintiff that the removal of boards from the building housing the gas engine and pump were done at the time, or during the time, of the alleged injury, or that any affirmative act was done by the individual defendants which contributed to the injury. '
The Factory Act was considered at length in the case filed prior to this action, and which is referred to above. An obvious attempt has been made by the plaintiff to plead a case under the Factory Act, and to set forth allegations taking this action outside the rulings made before. It is specifically alleged in this action that the deceased as well as the individual defendants were employees of the corporate defendant at the time of the alleged injury, and that the corporate defendant was the owner of the lease, engine, and pump. The Factory Act renders liable only the owner or person in charge, and, as pointed out in the opinion referred to above, does not impose liability upon both the owner and person in charge. The statute speaks in the disjunctive, rather than in the conjunctive, and, as construed, renders liable the owner, unless the person in charge is a lessee or an independent contractor, as distinguished from an employee having charge of the operations, even with authority to alter or ehange the engine. Plaintiff’s petition falls far short of Allegations imposing liability upon Smith find Prichard as lessees or contractors, but merely charges that they were employees of the corporate defendant, having authority to construct or ehange the engine and pump. It is therefore apparent that no cause of action is pleaded against these defendants, as they are not liable under the Factory Act, and are not liable to a coemployee for acts of omission or nonfeasance. See Morefield v. Ozark Pipe Line Corp. (D. C.)
No cause of action is alleged against the defendant Forrest, as a fellow servant is not liable to his eoworker for acts of omission.
It may well be observed that, even if the petition of plaintiff stated a cause of action against the resident individual defendants by reason of a statutory liability, which it does not, the cause would be removable, as the liability sought to be imposed upon the nonresident defendant is upon the ground of its failure to furnish the deceased a safe place in which to work. This is separable liability from statutory liability. The duty of furnishing a safe place to work rests upon the master, and is a nondelegable duty. However, this is unimportant because in faet no liability arises under the Factory Act against the resident defendants.
It is urged by the corporate defendant that, although summons were issued to all of the defendants, only it has been served, and that the resident individual defendants have not as yet been served with process. The transcript filed in this court discloses this to be the fact. It is insisted that only parties to the action who have been served with process are before the court, and are the only ones who may be considered in removal proceedings. The authorities do not sustain the removing defendant’s contention. My' attention has been directed to the cases of Hunt v. Pearce (C. C. A.)
In Berry v. St. Louis & S. F. R. Co. (C. C.)
But the last-considered proposition is not -controlling in tho instant case. If plaintiff’s petition had slated a cause of action against the resident defendants, tho cause would not have been removable, even though the resident defendants had not been served with summons, but, as pointed out herein, the petition does not state a ease against the resident defendants, so the cause is properly removable to this court.
Plaintiff’s motion to remand the cause to the state distiict court is overruled and denied.
