MR. JUSTICE SANNER
delivered the opinion of the court.
The respondent, plaintiff below, brought this action to recover damages for injuries received by him as the result of a fall of some scenery at the appellant’s Broadway Theater, in Butte, on December 9, 1910. The complaint is in two so-called causes of action, the first charging a failure on the part of appellant, as plaintiff’s employer, to exercise reasonable care to furnish him with a reasonably safe place in which to work, and the second charging a failure on the part of appellant to use ordinary care to employ reasonably competent fellow-servants. The answer joins issue upon all the matters alleged in the complaint which form the basis of recovery, but contains no affirmative pleas. The cause was tried to a jury which returned a general verdict for the respondent, and judgment was entered thereon. Motion for new trial was made and denied. The cause is now before us upon appeal from the judgment and from the order *142denying the motion for new trial. In its brief, appellant assigns forty-nine alleged errors; of these twenty-seven are argued under special heads presenting certain propositions which we shall consider in their order.
It is to be noted at the outset that although the complaint is in the form of two causes of action, but one actionable event is set forth, to-wit, a fall of the scenery resulting in plaintiff’s injuries. ■ The effect of the complaint, notwithstanding its form, [1] was to allege but one cause of action, arising out of the negligence of the appellant in the two particulars mentioned. These particulars are not pleaded as interdependent or concurring causes, as in the case of Forsell v. Pittsburgh & M. Copper Co., 38 Mont. 403, 100 Pac. 218, and in fact were not such; hence the respondent was not required to establish both, but it was sufficient to take the case to the jury if the evidence presented tended to establish that negligence in either of these particulars caused his injuries. (Westlake v. Keating Gold Min. Co., ante, p. 120, 136 Pac. 38; Beeler v. Butte & London Copper Dev. Co., 41 Mont. 465, 110 Pac. 528; Hoskins v. Northern Pac. R. Co., 39 Mont. 394, 102 Pac. 988.)
1. The appellant’s neglect to use reasonable care to furnish respondent with a reasonably safe place in which to work is [2] alleged to consist in these facts: that on the stage where the respondent was working “was a large amount of scenery necessary to be used and which was used” in presenting the performance then being given, “which said scenery was placed against the west wall of said building without any protection to prevent the said scenery from falling; that in order to hold said scenery and prevent same from falling, defendants in the exercise of ordinary care should have provided said stage with a stall or scenery-holder, or other proper or safe means of holding said scenery”; and because of its failure to do this, the scenery fell and injured him. Under this charge it became necessary for the respondent to maintain three propositions: that he was in the employ of the appellant at the time; that its failure to furnish means for holding the scenery was negligent; *143and that because of this negligence the injuries occurred. We cannot agree that the respondent has failed to sustain any of these propositions, because, though we may be unconvinced touching his claim of employment, that was a question of fact for the jury in the first instance and for the court on motion for new trial; both the jury and the court have said upon sufficient evidence, if believed, that the respondent was in the employ of appellant at the time. We do agree, however, that [3] respondent failed in the two other necessary respects, and for these reasons: According to the evidence presented by the respondent, the Broadway Theater was “a combination-house,” that is to say, a theater in which traveling companies carrying their own scenery are accommodated. In such houses the method in general use is to have a dock for all scenery not required in the production being staged, but to stack, or lean in packs, against the walls all the scenery required in the production and not actually in place upon the stage. In leaning such scenery against the wall it is pulled out at the bottom so as to give it good footing and prevent its falling. The scenery that fell upon respondent was so stacked or leaned against the wall of the theater, and it did not, and could not, fall upon him on account of that or because it was not kept in a holder. It fell upon him because other employees, while straightening the pack to the perpendicular in the effort to get out a piece from the middle, lost control of it. Quiescent, leaning against the wall, the pack was impotent for harm. Nor when being straightened was there any danger, save from incompetent handling. The reason it fell upon the respondent, as the witness Peiler stated, was that the men engaged in straightening it were drunk and did not have energy enough to hold it. The respondent himself says: “When the stage-hands axe straightening up these scenery packs, to get a piece out, it does not occur very often, if a man is competent, that the scenery gets away from him and falls down on the stage. * * * As to whether I knew if it got toppled over it would fall down on the stage—well, it would not fa.11 over if there was competent men there; there was no chance.” *144The inference from the foregoing is inevitable that the method employed by appellant in keeping the scenery used or to be used in the production being staged—the method in general use among play-houses of like character—was in itself reasonably safe, and that the accident was not primarily due to it but to the action of fellow-servants.
2. The failure to exercise reasonable care to furnish respondent with reasonably skillful and competent fellow-servants is alleged to have consisted in the following facts: That the appellant “carelessly and negligently employed one William Cary as a stage-hand to assist in setting up scenery and removing the same from said stage”; that he was incompetent because “at the time of his employment he was intoxicated,” and thereby rendered “incompetent and unfit to perform the services required of him”; that these facts were known to appellant, or in the exercise of ordinary care should have been known to it; that “by reason of his said incompetency and unfitness, as herein detailed,” said Cary performed his work so carelessly and unskillfully that a portion of the scenery was thrown upon the respondent. It is vigorously insisted by the appellant that the respondent has not sustained these allegations by the proof. The respondent’s narrative of the accident and the manner of its happening is substantially this: About a quarter past 9, while talking with the stage manager, Hi Leckie, their attention was called to Cary and one Petrucci, who were over at the pack of scenery on the west or back wall of the stage. Mr. Leckie saw Petrucci beckon, and turning to respondent said: “Go over there and see what they want.” Respondent went over, saw Petrucci and Cary holding the scenery pack and ascertained they were desiring to get out “a pair of curtains.” Respondent then turned around, started toward the stage manager to “tell him the condition of these men”; got about ten feet from the pack when it fell upon him. “Cary was then under the influence of liquor.” The witness Peiler testified that Petrucci and Cary were both handling the pack; that it fell on the respondent “because they did not have energy enough to hold it; there was no *145power back of them; they were drunk”; that the condition of Cary “was such that it could be noticed by anyone coming in contact with him, ’ ’ but the witness could not say whether Cary was intoxicated at the time he commenced work at the theater, because the witness did not see Cary come in. He had, however, seen Cary employed on the stage of the Broadway Theater, prior to the day of the accident, when Cary was intoxicated. Vic. McGrath testified to seeing Cary drink beer twice that day before the show and once during the show, half an hour before the accident. He says it was plainly noticeable at ten minutes to 8 that Cary had been drinking and was under the influence of liquor; that he had seen Leckie hire Cary for work on the Broadway stage as much as a dozen times before that, when Cary was [4] under the influence of liquor. It must be conceded that if we rigidly apply the proof to the allegations of the complaint, there is no evidence that Cary was intoxicated at the time he was hired, but he was noticeably in that condition for over an hour before the accident, during which time the appellant’s stage manager was present; and this does charge the appellant with keeping him employed when he was incompetent and unfit by reason of his condition. In this situation we have no reason to doubt that the court would, on proper motion, have granted the appellant all necessary relief on the ground of surprise, if such could be fairly claimed. But in view of the fact that no claim of surprise is urged; that Petrueei, Cary and others fully testified, denying Cary’s intoxicated condition at any time during the performance, we do not feel that at this' time the case [5] should be reversed because of a variance so unsubstantial. It was not only the duty of appellant to use ordinary care to employ, in the first instance, but to use like care to keep employed, competent fellow-servants for respondent. If certain witnesses are to be believed, it did not do this, and the accident happened as the result. The argument of counsel for appellant that these witnesses, particularly the respondent himself, were not entitled to full credit, is quite forcible and convincing, but *146that is not for us. They were believed apparently, and upon their testimony a case was made sufficient to go to the jury.
3. Under “Argument III, Errors XXI and XXII,” complaint is made because the court gave instructions numbered 11 and 12, which, it is said, were “prejudicially erroneous in failing to take into consideration the assumption of risk, the negligence of a fellow-servant, and the proximate cause of the injury.” Errors XXI and XXII assign the giving of instructions C and H, and we do not find that the court gave any in-[6] structions numbered 11 and 12. The only instructions 11 and 12 that appear in the record were requests of appellant which were refused, and properly so, because they do not at all advise the jury that the person sought to be charged with assumption of risk must have appreciated and realized the danger. Instructions C and H, however, to which the argument is really directed, do omit all mention of assumption of risk, and instruction H does fail to categorically charge that the incompeteney of Cary, by reason of intoxication, must have been the proximate cause of the injury. But we do not follow the argument that these instructions “should embody these elements (assumption of risk, negligence of fellow-servants, proximate cause), in order to assist the jury in determining the amount of damages,” or that either instruction is wrong, “because it fails to tell the jury that in arriving at the amount of damages it must take into consideration the assumption of risk and negligence of fellow-servants.” These things do not go to the amount of damages ■but to the utter defeat of plaintiff’s entire claim. Moreover, [7] assumption of risk, and the negligence of fellow-servants are matters of defense, unavailing if not pleaded—as they were not—unless affirmatively appearing from the plaintiff’s own [8] pleadings or proof. Some effort is made to show that assumption of risk does arise from respondent’s own testimony; but it cannot be inferred from anything he said that he at any time before going over to Cary, either knew that Cary was intoxicated or appreciated any danger from that fact; on the contrary, it does appear that when he got to the pack of scenery *147lie then noticed Cary’s condition, refused to assist on that account, and was making his way out of whatever danger there was, when the scenery fell. As to the fellow-servant doctrine, it is out of the case for the further reason that while the respondent pleads the injury to have been due to the act of a fellow-servant, it also charges that act to the negligence of appellant in furnishing a fellow-servant who was incompetent from intoxication. In passing, we add that the failure of the court in instruction H to specifically charge that the incompetency of Cary, because of intoxication, must have been the proximate cause of the injury, is entirely cured elsewhere in the charge, notably in instruction No. 10, offered by the appellant.
Instruction C is further attacked because it advises the jury [9] that the employer must in all cases indemnify his employee for the “losses” caused by the former’s want of ordinary care. Taking the instructions as a whole, we think it reasonably plain that the term “losses” was used in the sense of legal damages, and that its use did not make the instruction in question so meaningless as to confuse the jury.
4. It is ■ further urged that the verdict is contrary to law, as in defiance of instructions 5 and 6. These instructions were [10] to the effect that before the plaintiff could recover on his first cause of action, it must be established that the defendant, in the exercise of ordinary, care, should have provided the stage with a stall or scenery-holder to' hold the scenery, and that its failure to do so was the proximate cause of the injury. It is true, as stated above, that there was no evidence to support the allegation of negligence in this regard, but the verdict is a general one, and as there was sufficient evidence to support negligence in the other particular alleged, we cannot hold the verdict to be against the law on this account.
No argument is presented in the brief to the effect that the giving of these instructions, or the giving of any instructions based upon the so-called first cause of action, was error, and in fact the particular instructions 5 and 6 were given at the request of appellant.
*1485. The luminous discussion under the head “Argument VI,” [11] in appellant’s brief, amounts to nothing more than to a claim "that the jury should have discredited the plaintiff and his witnesses and should have received as the truth of the matter the narrative of events given by the witnesses for the defendant. If the case were before us upon appeal from an order granting a motion for' new trial, as in Mullen v. City of Butte, 37 Mont. 183, 95 Pac. 597, or from a judgment based upon an order of nonsuit, as in Escallier v. Great Northern Ry. Co., 46 Mont. 238, 127 Pac. 458, the consideration urged might be pertinent. As it is, we are powerless to interfere.
The other assignments of error argued in the brief are disposed of by what we have said above. We find nothing in the record to warrant a reversal. The judgment and order appealed from are therefore affirmed.
'Affirmed.
Mr. Chief Justice Brantly and Mr. Justice Holloway concur.