This аction for personal injuries arose out of an accident which occurred on March 23, 1956, when plaintiff fell from a scaffold while engaged in his employment as a welder and steel worker. The sole defendant in the case is Russell and Russell, Inc., a corporation, engaged in the business of renting, leasing, erecting and supplying scaffolding in the construction industry. Plaintiff’s employer, Structural Engineering Company, was a subcontractor on a building project on which Diversified Builders was the general contractor.
Defendant Russell and Russell, Inc., supplied to plaintiff’s employer the swinging stage scaffold from which plaintiff fell. *580 Plaintiff charged defendant with negligence in the supplying of the scaffold, and at the trial advanced three theories: (1) that defendant was guilty of negligence as a matter of lаw in that the scaffold which it supplied to plaintiff’s employer failed to conform to the requirements of a safety order promulgated by the Division of Industrial Safety of the State of California; that is to say, that defendant’s violation of said safety order constituted negligence'per se; (2) that in supplying a scaffold which did not meet the specifications of said safety order defendant negligently failed to conform to the reasonable and customary standard of care required of suppliers of suspended scaffolding; and (3) that defendant negligently failed to supply, with the leased equipment, certain clamps which were designed to hold in place the safety baekrail of the scaffold.
The verdict of the jury was in favor of defendant, and plaintiff appeals from the judgmеnt entered thereon. The major contention advanced on this appeal is that the trial court erred in its instructions with reference to the applicability and effect of the safety order. The facts essential to an understanding of the determinative issues may be summarized briefly.
Plaintiff’s employer needed two swinging scaffolds for use in connection with the steel work called for in its subcontrаct. The classified pages of the telephone book were consulted and defendant’s name was found listed as a licensed purveyor of scaffolding equipment. An officer of plaintiff’s employer telephoned defendant’s office and talked with defendant’s president and general manager who took the rental order for the two scaffolds. Although defendant’s principal business related to the supplying of upright scaffolding which is built up from the ground on tubular steel framework, it also held itself out as a dealer in suspended scaffolding.
In filling this order, defendant delivered to the job site two swinging stages equipped with stirrups with side brackets designed for a safety baekrail of 2-ineh by 4-inch dimensions. The baekrails actually delivered, however, were not of 2-inch by 4-inch material but were made of rоund steel tubing with an outside diameter of 1.69 inches. The cables attached to the stirrups were such that the scaffolds could be suspended at heights of 70 to 75 feet from the ground. It appears to be clear from the record that the rectangular brackets attached to the stirrups were not designed to hold a baekrail made of tubular material of the kind actually supplied in this case. *581 Thеre is a conflict in the evidence as to whether or not defendant supplied certain clamps designed to secure the tubular rail in the brackets at the two ends of the stage.
The scaffold from which plaintiff fell had been assembled and suspended from the building by a fellow employee, who testified that when he was unable to find any suitable device for securing the backrail to the stirrup braсkets, he used some Number 9 wire for that purpose. Shortly before the accident, plaintiff requested another fellow employee, a Mr. Miley, to come up on the scaffold to assist him in performing a welding operation. As the two men were changing positions on the scaffold, the left end of the tubular safety rail slipped out of the bracket which previously had held it and plaintiff fell ovеr backward to the ground 10 to 12 feet below.
Plaintiff testified that he had never paid any particular attention to the safety rail and that he had not been conscious of touching it as he exchanged places with his coworker. Another witness testified that he observed the left end of the pipe “fly out of the bracket.” Mr. Brownyard, the general manager of Structural Engineering Company, arrived shortly after the accident. He noticed the safety rail dangling from the stage and testified that he would have expected to see a 2-inch by 4-inch wood backrail and that he had never before seen tubing used as a safety rail for this type of suspended scaffolding. Mr. Jepson, a safety engineer for the State of California, testified that the custom and practice in the industry was to use a 2-ineh by 3-inch back safety rail of select structural Douglas fir and that it was not the custom and practice to use a tubular metal. The witness said that a rectangular safety rail would develop more friction than a round pipe and that there would be less likelihood of side slippage with the rectangular rail. During the course of Mr. Jepson’s testimony, plaintiff offered in evidence a booklet containing the Construction Safety Orders promulgated by the Division of Industrial Safety and requested the court to take judicial notice of one of said orders, to wit, section 1611 (m) of the California Administrative Code 1 reading as follows:
“All scaffolds or staging referred to in this order, suspended more than ten feet (10') from the ground or floor, shall have a safety rail of wood or other equally rigid material of sufficient strength, to prevеnt workmen from falling, and said *582 rail shall be not less than forty-two inches (42") or more than forty-five (45") above the platform of such scaffold or staging. The safety rail shall be made of two inch by three inch (2"x3") material in one piece. ’ ’
The foregoing safety order was promulgated pursuant to the specific authority of Labor Code, section 7151, which reads in part as follows :
“If the working platform of any scaffolding swung or suspended from an overhead support is more than 10 feet above the ground, floor or area to which an employee on the scaffolding might fall, it shall have a safety rail of wood or other equally rigid material of adequate strength. Suck rail shall be in compliance with the applicable orders of the Division of Industrial Safety. ...” (Emphasis added.)
Plaintiff requested the trial court to instruct thе jury to the effect that if defendant violated the above quoted safety order in supplying the scaffold in question, such violation constituted negligence as a matter of law. The court refused so to instruct the jury, but on its own motion gave the following instruction:
“You are instructed that the provisions of California Administrative Code, Title 8, Subchapter 4, Section 1611 (m), and the provisions of Labor Code, section 7151, concerning scaffolds, which have been referred to from time to time during this trial, operate directly to place a duty to provide a safe place to work upon an employer, general contractor or owner of premises upon which equipment is being used, and the provisions of these statutes do not operate directly to place the same duty upоn the defendant.
“I instruct you, however, that it was the duty of the Defendant, Russell & Russell, Incorporated, to use ordinary care and skill as to the condition and manner of supplying the scaffold involved in this ease. One issue in this case is whether the scaffold furnished by said defendant was negligently made or supplied, and if so was reasonably certain to place life and limb in danger. It is your province to deсide this issue by a full consideration of all the evidence in this case. I remind you that you heard the testimony of John Jepson, safety engineer for the State. I instruct you to disregard all of his testimony relating to the safety regulations concerning scaffold. But I also instruct you to weigh and consider his testimony regarding the custom and practice of the condition and manner of supplying scaffolds. ”
We conclude that the trial court erred in giving the *583 foregоing instruction and in refusing the instruction requested by plaintiff.
Labor Code, sections 6312 and 6500, constitute a broad delegation by the Legislature to the Division of Industrial Safety of power to supervise places of employment and promulgate safety orders, rules and regulations reasonably related to the protection of employees in places of employment. These statutes рrovide in relevant part as follows:
‘ ‘ § 6312. Enforcement and administrative powers of division. The division has the power, jurisdiction, and supervision over every employment and place of employment in this State, which is necessary adequately to enforce and administer all laws and lawful orders requiring such employment and place of employment to be safe, and requiring the protection of the life and safety of every employee in such employment or place of employment. ’ ’
‘ ‘ § 6500. Safety orders, rules, and regulations. The divisions, ... by general or special orders, rules or regulations, ... may:
“ (a) Declare and prescribe what safety devices, safeguards, or other means or methods of protection are well adapted to render the employees of every employment and place of employment safe as requirеd by law or lawful order.
“(b) Fix reasonable standards and prescribe, modify, and enforce reasonable orders for the adoption, installation, use, maintenance, and operation of reasonably uniform safety devices, safeguards, and other means or methods of protection, which are necessary to carry out all laws and lawful orders relative to the protectiоn of the life and safety of employees in employments and places of employment.
“(c) Fix and order reasonable standards for the construction, repair and maintenance of places of employment necessary to make them safe.
“ (d) Require the performance of any other act which the protection of the life and safety of the employees in employments and places of employment reasonably demands . . .”
There is a discernible tendency in the California decisions to give these statutes a broad and liberal interpretation in order to effect the clear intent of the Legislature, which was to provide for the safety of workmen; such a tendency is clearly indicated by recent holdings that violations of safety orders by fellow employees, general contractors (where the injured workman was an employee of a subcontractor) and owners and occupiers of land constituted negligence
per se.
*584
(Armenta
v.
Churchill,
In
Armenta
v.
Churchill, supra,
In
Porter
v.
Montgomery Ward & Co., Inc., supra,
In its opinion affirming the judgment, the Supreme Court rejected defendant’s contentions, using the following language: “The cases of
Pierson
v.
Holly Sugar Corp.,
Thus, in Porter v. Montgomery Ward & Co., Inc., supra, we have a cleareut holding that a safety order, issued under the authority of .the same constitutional and statutory provisions which authorized the issuance of the safety order involved in the case at bar, affected the rights and duties of parties between whom there was no rеlationship of employer and employee.
In its brief, respondent offers the following comment: “Bespondent has no quarrel with the contention that the Legislature may empower the Division of Industrial Safety to issue orders affecting a relationship other than that existing between employer and employee (Porter v. Montgomery Ward & Co., Inc., supra). Bespondent does quarrel with the contention that where a person is injured in the field of construction that any party closely or remotely connected therewith is responsible for complying with any and all Industrial Safety Orders which might conceivably apply to the job. There must be some reasonable limitation. ’'
We think that any ‘‘reasonable limitation” upon the reach of the safety order in question would include within its ambit *587 the defendant as a professional supplier of scаffolding equipment. We are unable to comprehend defendant’s contention that it lacked “control” over the scaffolding in any sense essential to its ability to comply with the safety order. Indeed, if the salutary requirements of the safety order for the providing of safe guard rails on this type of equipment deserve effective enforcement, it is difficult to understand why a professional supplier of such equipment should be exempted from the duty of compliance.
Both parties to this appeal have cited
Hard
v.
Hollywood Turf Club,
In reversing the judgment this court emphasized the following fаcts: (1) the scaffold was constructed by plaintiff’s employer, the painting subcontractor; (2) there was no evidence that the defendant general contractor directly controlled the movements of any of the painters, or any of the employees of any of the subcontractors, or in any way directed the details of the painting work; (3) the painting subcontractor had its own supеrintendent and two foremen on the job, who supervised the rigging of scaffolds and directed the course of the painters’ work; (4) the general contractor had nothing to do with the construction of the scaffold; and (5) there was no evidence that the general contractor supplied the scaffold, or any part of it.
On the foregoing factual basis it was held that the general contractor was not plaintiff’s employer within the definition of section 6304 of the Labor Code, and that sections 6401, 7151 and 7152 did not apply so as to prescribe a standard of care which the general contractor owed to plaintiff as the employee of a subcontractor. It is manifest that the Hard case is factually distinguishable from the case at bar.
(Cf. Johnson
v.
A. Schilling <& Co.,
There is merit also in plaintiff’s contention that the trial court erred in refusing to admit testimony concerning a telephone conversation in which knowledge of the accident was allegedly communicated to defendant shortly after its occurrence. This matter of notice was relevant and material to a factual issue as to whether certain clamps which were essential parts of the scaffold were delivеred by defendant before or *588 after the accident. Other assignments of error advanced by-plaintiff relate to matters which are not likely to be presented upon a retrial, and, therefore, need not be considered here.
The judgment is reversed.
Fox, P. J., and Ashburn, J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied February 17, 1960.
Notes
Titie 8, subehapter 4, section 1611 (m), in effect at the time of the events here in issue. The section was amended, effective September 28, 1957, and now appears as section 1660 (k).
