Opinion by
Head, J.,It cannot be successfully denied the law imposes upon a master or employer certain obligations which he may not delegate to another without making that other a vice-principal for whose negligent act he continues to remain responsible. Among the duties of that character which the master or employer must perform are those requiring him to provide a reasonably safe place wherein his employees may work; another to see that young, ignorant or inexperienced employees are properly instructed and advised as to the dangers that may be incident to the work assigned them. The nature of the obligation on the employer in such matters is well stated by Mr. Justice Mitchell in Prevost v. Citizens’ Ice Co., 185 Pa. 617. In describing the duties or obligations, the performance of which would make one a vice-principal, he says: “or secondly, one to whom he delegates a duty of his own which is a direct, personal, and absolute obligation, from which nothing but performance can relieve him”: (Cases cited).
It is well known that under the laws of the Commonwealth a coal mining company is obliged, by statutory regulations, to employ one or more persons called “certified mine foremen.” The statutes on this subject require that certain duties be performed by these persons. Naturally and necessarily there is a long line of decisions declaring that where an injury results from the negligence of such mine foreman, in the discharge of the duties imposed upon him by the statute, he, and not the employer, is the person liable. This results from the situation thus briefly but forcibly expressed by Mr. Justice Mestkezat in Bogdanovicz v. Susquehanna Coal Co., 240 Pa. 124: “These duties are imposed upon him (the mine foreman) *30by the statute which subjects him to punishment if he fail or neglect to properly discharge them. A neglect of such duties resulting in injury to any one renders him, and not the mine owner, liable. To this extent the State assumes charge of the internal working of the mine and for that reason it has been held that for injuries resulting from the mine foreman’s negligence the owner is not responsible.”
The single question with which we have to deal in this appeal may be thus stated. A fall of the roof occurred in a gangway of the mine. It was the duty of the mine foreman to make that roof safe and open up the gangway. In the performance of this duty he called to his aid the plaintiff, who had been working in the mine for a considerable time but whose work consisted in loading coal wagons from places free from danger. He was not a coal miner. He had no knowledge of the dangers that might attend work in a gangway where the roof was bad. In the fall from the roof there was a large mass of rock which the mine foreman ordered to be crushed by a charge of powder or dynamite. There is ample evidence to warrant the conclusion that such an explosion would have a tendency to further weaken or damage the roof from which the fall had already occurred. The plaintiff was not instructed by the mine foreman, or by anybody else, of such danger. Following his orders, he assisted in blowing up the rock and this resulted in what the testimony declared would likely follow it, to wit, a further fall from the roof by which the plaintiff was injured.
Unless we can say, with the learned counsel for the appellant, that the failure to instruct this ignorant plaintiff of the danger of the new duty to which he had been called, was the negligence of the mine foreman alone and not of the employer, this judgment cannot be reversed. We are of opinion the case is ruled by Bogdanovicz v. Coal Company, supra, and the later case of Smiers v. Ford Collieries Company, 252 Pa. 415. In both of these pases the exact point before us was before the Supreme *31Court. In the first one cited Mr. Justice Mestrezat said: “The duty to instruct a minor or other inexperienced workman in the discharge of his duties is one to be performed by the mine owner or operator,' and is not a statutory duty imposed upon the mine foreman. The defendant can only be relieved by pointing to a provision of the statute which imposes such duty on the mine foreman and relieves the owner or operator. The statute must be strictly construed in this respect. Primarily the owner or operator would be responsible for an injury to an employee resulting from the failure to instruct, and to relieve himself he must show some specific provision of a statute.” In the other case cited, Mr. Justice Stewart, speaking for the court in a case where the same question was raised, declares, “As to the first contention the learned trial judge very correctly held that the Bituminous Coal Act of May 15, 1893, indicates no purpose to impose on the mine foreman the duty of giving adequate instruction to inexperienced miners, but leaves this responsibility resting where it did before, on the shoulders of the employer. On this point the case is ruled by Bogdanovicz v. Susquehanna Coal Co., 240 Pa. 124.”
It appears to us, if we apply to the facts of this case the doctrine so clearly announced in the decisions we have quoted, there remains for us nothing to do but overrule the assignments of error. We accordingly overrule them.
The judgment is affirmed.