Plaintiff was made totally blind by an explosion of dynamite or of a cap used in blasting in defendant’s mine. Plaintiff was in defendant’s employ as a laborer under orders from Frank Valent, a certified miner, in charge of a breast in mine No. 11. Plaintiff was also a certified miner, but he had never worked as such. A certified miner is one who has “ obtained a certificate of competency and qualification # '* * from the miners’examining board of the proper district and duly registered under the laws of Pennsylvania, enacted to protect the lives and limbs of miners,” etc. By the terms of the act no person whatsoever can be employed or engaged in the anthracite coal region as a miner unless so certified. Statutory rule 34 of the Anthracite Law provides: “ Before commencing work and also after the firing of every blast the miner working a breast or any other place in a mine shall enter such breast or place to examine and ascertain its condition, and his laborer and assistant shall not go to the face of such breast or place until the miner has examined the same and found it safe.”. Frank Valent was such miner and plaintiff was such laborer. No person can be employed to blast unless the miner foreman is satisfied that he is qualified by experience and judgment to do it with ordinary safety. Rule 35. No person can act as a miner foreman unless registered as a holder of a certificate of qualification granted by the secretary of internal affairs to every applicant reported by the examiners as provided in the act. Rule 1 of said act required the defendant to place the “ underground workings of the *187mine and all that related to the same under the charge and daily supervision of .a miner foreman,” who is specifically charged by the terms of said act with supervision and examination. So far as the miner foreman acts in obedience to his statutory duties the owner or operator is not liable for his acts, inasmuch as the rule respondeat superior does not apply, for the employer is not his superior in those mattérs, the statute controlling. Nothing in the act prevents the employment of a certified miner foreman as general foreman or superintendent, intrusted with powers and duties beyond those prescribed by statute, and for his acts without the statute manifestly the master would be answerable. The miner foreman was John Obrey. It was not a part of his duty to hire or discharge men. He could not, as certified miner foreman, compel the defendant to hire Valent or any particular certified miner. The defendant was free to choose and hire any it chose, subject to the approval of the miner foreman. ° This approval, as well as the certification, were for greater certainty that the master should, as was his duty, independent of the statute, employ competent miners. Neither reason, natural justice nor authority requires exemption from liability of the master beyond the restriction of the statute clearly expressed therein. Indeed, the language of the act enjoins upon him greater care than did the common law. It says (Rule 1, art. 12): ‘ The owner, operator or superintendent of a mine or colliery shall use every precaution to insure the safety of the workman, whether provided for in this act of not.” The purpose of the law was not to relieve the master of responsibility, but to save the workmen from injury. In Bogdanovicz v. Coal Co., 240 Penn. St. 124, it is said: “ The owner can be relieved only by pointing to a provision of the statute which imposes such duty upon the miner foreman and re*188lieves the owner or operator.” In Pittsburgh-Buffalo Co, v. Cheko, 204 Fed. Rep. 353, 356, it is said: “And in each instance the court has held that, so far as the statute has committed the operation of the mine to foreman, the owner has been relieved from liability for his negligence.” See, also, D’Jorko v. BerwindWhite Coal M. Co., 231 Penn. St. 164; Collins v. Northern A. Coal Co., 241 id. 55; Golden v. Mount Jessup Coal Co., 225 id. 164; Durkin v. Kingston Coal Co., 171 id. 193; Bigus v. Lehigh & Wilkesbarre Coal Co., 160 App. Div. 838. General expressions in these cases must be construed in reference to the facts of the case. It is but a poor service to carry a statute by construction beyond the import of its language to the deprivation of a remedy otherwise available. Statutes in derogation of private right should be construed strictly. No negligence of the miner foreman is complained of; only that, if any, of the miner gives a cause of action. It is claimed that he is likewise within the Pennsylvania act, so that the master is not liable for his acts upon the principle of the Pennsylvania cases cited, as well as 160 App. Div. supra, construing and applying the act and the Pennsylvania cases. The acts of the miner were in blasting and inspection thereafter, and in preparing foundations for posts to carry roof supports. Valent fired the blasts. The evidence permitted the jury to find that Valent thereafter inspected the place, told plaintiff that the shots were fired and directed him to go in, break up a large stone thrown out, and hasten, as the roof needed support. The plaintiff obeyed, struck the stone a few times, and by so doing exploded dynamite or a cap whereby plaintiff was blinded. Also that careful inspection would have disclosed the presence of the explosive. It was the duty of the miner to make the. inspection and of the plaintiff not to go until that was *189done. Plaintiff is entitled to that presumption supporting his testimony. Reasonable caution would require that no one be set to work pounding with steel tools where dynamite was liable to be without care to see there was none there. If suitable skill in examining would disclose its presence, then its not being found was evidence of neglect in inspecting. Care must be commensurate with the danger. The testimony of the plaintiff’s expert that the presence of a large piece of rock blown off, the very one in fact which plaintiff says Valent told him to break off, to one experienced in the effect of dynamite in crushing rock, was indication that only one blast was discharged and called for special examination to find if that were so, seems reasonable and probable. I think that the presence of dynamite or a cap which, like dynamite, would explode from concussion in a place where a workman is directed to strike with a steel tool, pick or hammer, is evidence of negligence in setting him at work there in that way. Therefore the explosion is evidence of negligence and the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur applies. Defendant contends that the work being done to shore up or support the roof was so exclusively in charge of the miner foreman as to relieve the owner from responsibility. But rule 14 says: “Any person having charge of a working place in any mine shall keep the roof and sides thereof properly secured by timber or otherwise so as to prevent such roof and sides from falling.” Valent was such person in charge, and he represented the defendant, or the plaintiff was subject to his orders, and in obeying them was injured. The owner, operator, superintendent or miner foreman, as the case may be, is made liable for accidents resulting from insufficient propping or failure to furnish necessary timbers by article II of the Mining Act. True, the construction of the act by the *190courts of Pennsylvania makes the law of the case to be respected here. Jessup v. Carnegie, 80 N. Y. 441, 446. No case per se adjudging the status of a certified miner under the act has been found in Pennsylvania. The case of Míngak v. Vesta Coal Co., 51 Penn. Super. 584, is instructive. The case of Andriuszis v. Philadelphia & R. Co., 143 App. Div. 607; 149 id. 924; N. Y. L. J., Nov. 13,1914, involves the negligence of a certified miner. It has been three times tried by jury with verdict always for plaintiff; twice reversed by the Appellate Division. The last pronouncement is the order and opinion of Justice Crane upholding the verdict. Section 8, article 17, provides “ that for any injury to person or property occasioned by any violation of this act or any failure to comply with its provisions by any owner, operator, superintendent or miner foreman or fire boss, a right of action shall accrue against said owner or operator for any direct damages he may have sustained thereby.” It seems by section 9, article 9, “ a fire boss must be a miner of five years’ practical experience,” otherwise the section is silent as to a certified miner. True, as defendant contends, this section is inoperative as authorizing a recovery against a mine owner for acts of a miner foreman commanded by the statute, but it is an authority that beyond that he may be liable, and seems to me at least an argument for defendant’s liability in this case. I conclude that the verdict is not against the law of the case and also that it is not against the weight of evidence so as to compel action on my part; therefore the motions are denied.
Motions denied.