Statement This is an action by the plaintiff against the defendant, a manufacturing corporation, to recover damages for personal injuries resulting to the former in consequence of the negligence of the latter. The defenses pleaded were: (1) that of contributory negligence; and (2) that the injury resulted from the negligence of the servants of an independent contractor over whom the defendant exercised no control and to whom it gave no orders or directions. There was a trial in the court below where plaintiff had judgment and defendant appealed.
The defendant questions the judgment on the ground that the denial by the court of its demurrer to the evidence was error. It is contended by the defendant that the facts which the evidence tends to prove and the inferences to be drawn therefrom are insufficient to establish a prima facie case, entitling the plaintiff to a submission to the jury. In support of this contention it is argued that it is not disclosed by the evidence that the plaintiff was injured by the negligence of the defendant.
*150It will be seen by reference to the evidence that it is quite conflicting and contradictory in respect to many material facts. That adduced by the plaintiff tends to prove about these facts, viz: that plaintiff was employed in the defendant’s factory in the work of packing crackers in boxes for the market and worked with other girls in what was known as the packing room. Mains, who was foreman in charge of this room, directed the plaintiff to take a certain place to work at a table upon which crackers were loosely placed for packing. The floors of the factory building, which were supported by posts, had sagged, and one Bovard had entered into a written contract with defendant to shore up the posts and raise the floor. The former’s men were engaged in this work in the packing room on the day the plaintiff was injured. In carrying on the work these men used what they termed “drums,” which were pieces of pine timber eight by eight and of the length of seven feet. In one end of such timbers a hole had been bored in which was inserted an iron jack. The projecting end of the jack consisted of an iron ball two inches in diameter. When in use the ball rested in the socket of an iron plate which was kept oiled so that it would easily turn. Some time in the evening, after the plaintiff had taken her place at the packing table, as directed by the defendant’s foreman, and while she was engaged in the performance of the work to which she had been assigned, one of the men in Bovard’s employ leaned a drum, not then in use, against another drum which had been placed in an upright position with several others around one of the posts, supporting the floor of the next story above. This took place behind the plaintiff and at a place she could not see without turning around. The end of the unused drum, resting on the smooth hard-wood floor of the factory, was the oiled iron ball previously mentioned. While the plaintiff was engaged in her work, with her back to the leaning drum, it fell and struck her in the small of the back severely injuring her.
*151Master and servant: place of work: presumption of negligence: burden of proof. It seems clear to us that on the principle of the well recognized maxim of res ipsa loquitur, the happening of the accident, which resulted in plaintiff’s injury, alone was prima facie evidence of negligence. The circumstances under which the plaintiff was injured were Such as 'creafce a presumption of negligence, piece of timber, like a drum, with one end made to rest on a wooden floor and the other properly and carefully leaned against others occupying an immovable upright position would not fall without some adequate cause. The burden of proof was cast upon the defendant to prove that the accident was due to some cause consistent with the careful handling of the drums used in raising the floors of the defendant’s factory. The plaintiff having adduced evidence tending to prove the facts to be as we have stated them, was not required to go further, but had a right to rest on the presumption of negligence created by such facts. She had thus made out her prima facie case and was entitled to recover the damages sustained unless the defendant could, by evidence of the kind we have just indicated, rebut such presumption. The application of the principle of the maxim quoted will be found variously illustrated in the many cases cited in Webb’s Pollock on Torts, pp. 635-681, and in Dougherty v. Railway, 9 Mo. App. 478; also, see Turner v. Haar, 114 Mo. 335. But aside from presumptive negligence it seems to us that the evidence was quite ample to-carry the case to the jury on the issue.
The defendant further objects that there is a substantial variance between the negligence alleged and that proved. The petition alleges the negligence of the defendant in this way:
*152-: allegata et probata: variance: instruction. *151“That on February 11, 1896, plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant in their said factory as a servant for hire and reward, and at the time of receiving the injury *152hereinafter complained of, was working in the said factory in the place assigned her by de.£e;a(ja;at_ That on said day, defendant was engaged in strengthening the pillars on the floor on which plaintiff was working, which pillars supported the floor above, and for that purpose defendant had erected large temporary wooden pillars underneath which jack-screws were placed for the purpose of raising the floor, which had sagged, and that one of the pillars so erected by the defendant was near the place where plaintiff was working. Plaintiff states that said pillar was so negligently, carelessly, insecurely and improperly erected and set up by defendant for the purpose aforesaid, that about the hour of 2:80 p. m. on the said day, it fell, striking the plaintiff a violent blow in the small of the back.”
The relation of the plaintiff to the defendant at the time of injury is sufficiently alleged in the petition. The law did not require the plaintiff to plead the defendant’s legal duty to her. The facts pleaded and proved showed a breach on the part of defendant of a legal duty. It is distinctly alleged that while the plaintiff was in the employment of the defendant she was required by him to work in a place that was rendered unsafe and dangerous by reason of the negligent acts and doings of the men engaged in repairing the defendant’s factory building, in consequence of which she was injured. But whether this constituted a breach of defendant’s duty was a conclusion of law which plaintiff was not required to plead. Abbott’s Plead., p. 258; Pier v. Heinrichoffen, 52 Mo. 333; McNees v. Ins. Co., 61 Mo. App. 335; Field v. Railway, 76 Mo. 614. It seems to us that there was a sufficient correspondence between the allegation and proof to meet the requirements of our practice act.
*153-: contributory negligence: jury *152As to whether the plaintiff knew that Bovard’s men had leaned the drum against the other upright drums in *153such a position that it was likely to fall, or whether she knew of the danger to be apprehended therefrom, or whether the defendant’s foreman had ordered her to leave the place he had directed her to work and go to another, were controverted questions of fact to which it was proper for the jury and not the court to respond. On the issue of contributory negligence the evidence was quite conflicting. It was therefore entirely proper, as was done, to leave it to the jury to determine. Grove v. Kansas City, 75 Mo. 672; Eswin v. Railroad, 96 Mo. 290.
-: independent contractor: scienter: place of safety: assumption of risk. The defendant further contends that the place where the plaintiff was injured was rendered unsafe by the acts of Bovard, and the men under him, and that since Bovard was an independent contractor the defendant was not liable to plaintiff for the negligence of the men in the employ of such independent contractor, or, in other words, that the defendant was guilty of no breach of duty to the plaintiff. The character of the work which defendant had employed Bovard to perform was, as we have already stated, notice to the former of the danger attending its performance. No notice of the manner in which the drum, that fell, had been placed was required to be proven. The law imposes upon the master the duty of provicting frig servant a reasonably safe place in which to do the work assigned to him. It would indeed be but a perfunctory discharge of his duty to provide the servant in the first instance a safe place to work and later on, while the latter’s attention is engrossed with the work so assigned to him for the former, by his acts to render such place unsafe. The dpty is a continuing one and can not be avoided in that way. This duty is a personal one cast upon the master which he can not delegate to an independent contractor, and thereby relieve himself of the responsibility for an injury to the servant resulting from the negligence of such contractor. He is liable for the *154safety of the place in which he requires the work to be done. "While for many purposes the relation of independent contractor will be recognized, it can not be sustained to shield the master from those positive personal obligations cast upon him by his relation to his servant. The rule requiring the servant to show as a condition of recovery the unsafety of the place, or defectiveness of the machinery, and that the master knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known the same, can not apply to a case like this where liability is shown to exist upon the principle of res ipsa loquitur. There is an implied or constructive notice in such case. This is knowledge in so far as the rights of the servant are involved. These views of- the law, we think, will be found supported by the authorities. Herdler v. Range Co., 136 Mo. 3; Burnes v. Railway, 129 Mo. 41; Hess v. Rosenthal, 160 Ill. 621; Trainer v. Railway, 137 Pa. St. 148, and other cases cited in briefs of counsel.
But aside from this it is to be observed that the defendant’s foreman Mains was present during the progress of the work. The defendant was, in the eye of the law, present itself and can not, under such circumstances, be heard to say it did not know that the place had been rendered unsafe. On the other hand, the evidence does not tend to show that the plaintiff had the same knowledge that the defendant had of the unsafety of the place. The drum had been placed in the dangerous position but a few minutes before it fell and injured plaintiff. The plaintiff was during the intervening time occupied with her work, sitting with her back to the drums, and unconscious of her peril. Her opportunity and means of acquiring knowledge of the danger was by no means equal to that of defendant. There is nothing in the evidence to charge her with knowledge that the place had become more unsafe. It is true that Mains testified that he ordered the plaintiff to remove to another place to work, but this was contradicted by the testimony of *155other witnesses so that it was a question of fact which was properly left for the jury, under an instruction, to determine. "We are unable therefore to discover that the doctrine of the assumption of the risk has any application to a case like this, or that there is any analogy between it and that of Marshall v. Hay Co., 69 Mo. App. 261, and the other eases of which it is a type.
The defendant objects that the first instruction given for the plaintiff is erroneous; it told the jury that if they believed from the evidence that plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant on or about February 11, 1896, that on said day while working in defendant’s building in the place assigned her by the foreman of defendant in charge of the department in which she was employed, a pillar, which was being used by workmen employed by a contractor, who had a contract with defendant to shore up said building, fell and struck plaintiff, thereby injuring her, and if you further find that the fall of said pillar was owing to its being insecurely and improperly erected and that said workmen did not use ordinary care and caution in erecting said pillar, and you further believe that plaintiff might reasonably have supposed that she could safely work at the place where she was required to work, and that defendant knew or by the exercise of reasonable care could have known that it was not safe for plaintiff to work there, then they should find for the plaintiff. The first ground of defendant’s objection to this instruction is that it permits a recovery on a cause of action other than that stated in the petition. This objection is perhaps sufficiently answered by Avhat has already been said in respect to the correspondence between the allegata and the probata. The defendant’s contention, it seems to us, is founded on a misconception of the language of the petition. The actionable facts are all there. The instruction in theory is not variant from that of the petition.
*156—: contributory negligence instruction. The second objection urged is that it permits a recovery if plaintiff “might reasonably have supposed that she could safely work at the place where she was required to work,” without any reference to her assumption of the risk or contributory negligence. It is well settled that an instruction for plaintiff in an action for negligence is not erroneous which authorizes a recovery on facts hypothesized therein without reference to plaintiff’s contributory negligence where the latter is submitted to the jury, as here, in a separate instruction. Ephland v. Railway, 57 Mo. App. 160; Owens v. Railway, 95 Mo. 70. And the same rule is of course applicable when the assumption of the risk is relied on as a defense.
-: negligence instructions. An examination of the language of the plaintiff’s second instruction has not convinced us that it is fairly subject to defendant’s criticism. It does not, as we think, assume any essential fact. The words which court on its own motion interpolated tlie defendant’s eighth instruction did not have the effect to in any way alter or change the meaning it expressed in the form in which it was requested. The effect of the alteration was to render it somewhat clumsy and less perspicuous.
The defendant further objects that the court erred in its action refusing its instructions 18 and 21. These two instructions but express the rule relating to the assumption of the risk which had been sufficiently expressed in other instructions given for defendant.
There were twenty-six instructions requested — twenty-two of these by defendant. Of these the court gave two with and nine without modification. These presented every conceivable phase of the case for the defendant. Some of them were liberal to a fault. It would be strange if one or more of these were not subject to some slight verbal criti*157cism. As far as we are able to see there is no serions inconsistency between any of them.
Appellate practice: misconduct of counsel: judgment for right party. The defendant’s final complaint is that the plaintiff’s attorney in his concluding argument before the .jury was guilty of gross misconduct. "Whether or not offensive remarks of plaintiff’s attorney were properly preserved by the bill of exceptions is a question into which we shall not stop to inquire since we think the judgment is so manifestly for the right party that it should be upheld, even though such remarks were improper. The judgment will be affirmed.
All concur.