This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff. The answer denied that the defendant was in any way responsible for the injuries complained of, and alleged that they were caused by the plaintiff’s own negligence.
It was proved at the trial that the plaintiff was employed by the defendant to work in its horseshoe-shop in November, 1891, and that he continued to work there until he was injured, on June 13,1892, at which time he was sixteen years of age. When he was employed he was taken by the foreman, Ingram, to one of the machines for making horseshoes, and was told that the machinist would show him what to do, and to obey whatever the machinist told him. There were four machines in the shop, and three boys were employed on each machine: the furnace-boy, the bender-boy, and the press-boy. The machinist, Brunig, had general supervision of the boys and directed and ordered them about. He put the plaintiff to work as a press-boy, and directed him generally about his work until he was injured.
The machines were worked by belts which ran up over a large revolving shaft that extended through the building and was operated by steam-power. This shaft was about twenty feet above the floor, and to reach it one had to go up a ladder, the lower end of which rested on the floor, and upper end against one of the stringers of the building. Lying across the stringers were a few loose planks, which were not nailed down and were easily moved. One end of one of the planks rested on one of the uprights of the ladder, and was raised a little above the stringer.
The plank that turned over and caused plaintiff to fall was the one that rested at one end on one of the uprights of the ladder,' and over which he walked* in going first from the ladder to the shaft. He noticed how the plank was supported when he went up and got off the ladder, and also that it shook a little when he went along over it.
The case was being tried before a jury, and at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence the defendant moved for a nonsuit, and the court granted the motion.
We think the court erred in granting the nonsuit. The law is settled beyond controversy that it is the duty of an employer to furnish a suitable and safe place for his employee to work, and suitable and safe appliances and machinery for him to work with; and this duty cannot be delegated to another so as to exonerate the employer from liability to an employee who is injured in consequence of the omission to properly perform the act or duty, whether that other is a superior officer, agent, or servant, or a subordinate or inferior agent or servant. In either case, in respect to such act or duty, the person who undertakes or omits to perform it is the representative of the employer, and not a mere fellow-servant with the one who is injured. And when it is claimed that the injured employee was himself guilty of such negligence as to bar him from recovering damages for his injuries it must appear that he not only knew, or had the means of knowledge, of the unsafeness of the place, appliances, or machinery, but also that he knew, or ought to have known, of the danger to which he was himself personally exposed. (Sanborn v. Madera Flume etc. Co., 70 Cal. 261; Gisson v. Schwabacher, 99 Cal. 419; Elledge v. National City Ry. Co., 100 Cal. 282; 38 Am. St. Rep. 290; Nixon v. Selby Smelting etc. Co., 102 Cal. 458.)
Whether the plaintiff was guilty of such negligence as would prevent his recovery was, under the facts in this case, a question for the jury. (Sanborn v. Madera Flume etc. Co., 70 Cal. 261; Ingerman v. Moore, 90 Cal. 410; 25 Am. St. Rep. 138.)
Here it is evident that the place to which the plaintiff was sent to hold the belt was unsafe, and to show that the defendant knew of such unsafeness the plaintiff offered to prove that others had been injured in the same place and in the same way before, but the court excluded the evidence.
It follows that the judgment and order must be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial. So ordered.
Hearing in Bank denied.