Appellant engaged Knobloch & Company to perform work on a flare stack at its-refinery. Wilson, an employee of the contractor, was killed while engaged in welding work atop the stack. His beneficiaries-sued Humble, alleging the latter’s negligence caused the death. Humble, alleging negligence, impleaded the contractor, from whom it claimed indemnity under provisions of the written contract for the work.
The jury found deceased was not negligent, and that negligence of both Humble- and the contractor proximately caused the-death. Judgment was rendered for appel-lees against appellant. Recovery by appel- *955 1 ant against Knobloch, the contractor, was denied.
The sole question presented as between appellant and the contractor is whether the following agreement by Knobloch entitles Humble to indemnity against him, since the jury has found concurrent negligence of indemnitor and indemnitee:
“Contractor further agrees to protect, indemnify and save Humble harmless from and against all claims, demands and causes of action of every kind and character arising in favor of contractor’s employees * * * or third parties on account of * * * death * * * in any way resulting from the wilful or negligent acts or omissions of Contractor’s agents, employees, representatives or subcontractors.”
Although not involving analogous provisions; or, in our opinion, solving the present problem, the cases of Mitchell’s, Inc. v. Friedman,
Where the indemnity is from loss resulting from the indemnitor’s “negligent acts or omissions,” the dominant weight of authority establishes that the agreement does not cover loss where the indemni-tee’s negligence concurs in causing the injury.
Appellant’s position as to plaintiffs is that it owed no duty to deceased. This contention is based on alleged violation of the provisions of the contract between Humble and Wilson’s employer which required the contractor to observe refinery safety regulations. Among the latter was one prohibiting “hot work,” such as welding, without a written permit and daily authorization from Humble. Appellant says that since Wilson’s employer directed him to do such work without obtaining a permit, deceased was not an invitee,. because his status as such terminated when the safety regulation was violated.
The jury found appellant waived the contractual requirement that written permission and daily authorization be obtained from it before the contractor performed *956 “hot work”. These and certain other findings that appellant had knowledge the contractor was performing “hot work”; and negligence findings necessarily involving such knowledge, are attacked on the grounds there is no evidence to support them.
Analysis of the record shows there is ample evidence to support the findings. We are also unable to sustain appellant’s points that these findings are against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence. Consequently it may not be said the invitee status of deceased was destroyed or restricted by the contract. There are eleven findings of negligence and proximate cause against appellant as to which it does not challenge sufficiency of the evidence. These are sufficient under the whole record to sustain the judgment.
Affirmed.
