This is an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by the appellant while engaged as a servant in the work of constructing a building owned and being built for appellee Lafayette Loan and Trust Company by the general contractor, appellee Alva E. Kemmer.
The appellant filed his complaint in two paragraphs making as defendants thereto Mesker Brothers and the Griffith Iron Works, and appellees Lafayette *61Loan and Trust Company and Alva E. Kemmer. Afterward the appellant filed a written dismissal as to defendants Mesker Brothers and the Griffith Iron Works.
The appellees each filed separate demurrers to each paragraph of the appellant’s complaint, citing as cause that neither paragraph of the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The trial court sustained each of the demurrers to each paragraph of the appellant’s complaint. The appellant .thereupon elected to stand upon his complaint and each paragraph thereof and the ruling of the court on the demurrers thereto.
Judgment was rendered for the appellees on said demurrer, and that the appellees have and recover from appellant their costs. , From this judgment the appellant appeals.
1. The record presents no question as to the first paragraph of the complaint for the reason that such first paragraph is not in the record, but only “a full, true and complete copy of the first paragraph of the complaint * * * as the same
appears from office copy of the counsel in the case.” If such first paragraph was lost, the trial court might have authorized a copy thereof to be filed and used instead of the original; but such substitution must be in the trial court and by proper proceedings in accordance with the method given by the statute. §388 Burns 1914, §379 R. S. 1881; Elliott, App. Proc. §596; Davis v. Talbot (1897), 149 Ind. 80, 47 N. E. 829; Ross v. Stockwell (1897), 17 Ind. App. 77, 46 N. E. 360; State, ex rel. v. McGill (1895), 15 Ind. App. 289, 40 N. E. 1115, 43 N. E. 1016. As appears from the record, there was ho order of substitution in this case.
*62It is averred in the second paragraph of the complaint, in substance, that the appellant was on September 1, 1914, in the employ of the defendant Griffith Iron Works, and engaged in the work of assisting in the erection of a certain building located in the city of Lafayette, Indiana; that appellee Lafayette Loan and Trust Company was the owner of and was causing said building to.be erected on which appellant was at the time at work; that the Mesker Brothers Iron Works was a subcontractor engaged in the work on said building; that appellee Kemmer was a general contractor employed by the owner of said building to erect and complete the same, and that the appellant was on said September 1,1914, in the direct employ of the said defendant Griffith Iron Works; that the said defendant Griffith Iron Works was a subcontractor in the employ of the defendant Mesker Brothers Iron Works, and that the said Mesker Brothers Iron Works was a subcontractor under the general contractor, the appellee Kemmer; that on said date the appellant and one Morris, while employed on the work of said building as aforesaid, were working between the second and third floors of the building on a scaffold which had been built by one Wittworth, a working man and an employe of the said defendant Griffith Iron Works, and by one Miller who was in charge of the work for the defendant Griffith Iron Works; that said appellee Kemmer, on August 18,1913, entered into a written'contract with appellee Lafayette Loan and Trust Company for the erection of said building, by virtue of which appellee Kemmer agreed to provide all the materials and perform all work for the complete erection of said building; that appellees knew at the time the contract *63was entered into that it would he necessary for the prosecution of said work of erecting and constructing said building, and the various parts thereof, to build and erect, or cause to be built and erected, certain scaffolding upon and about which workmen and employes working and employed in the building and in the construction of said building would be compelled to work in the necessary prosecution of said work; that it was the duty of appellees to see that whatsoever material was used in the construction of any scaffolding was carefully selected, inspected and tested so as to exclude defects and dangerous conditions arising from the failure so to do, and to see that all such scaffolding was accurately constructed to bear all weight, and to meet the requirements for which it was being used, with safety to the persons required to use the same, and to inspect and know that any scaffold erected for the purpose of constructing the building should be a proper and safe one. That the appellees, disregarding their duty in that behalf, permitted scaffolding to be erected in a negligent and unsafe manner and of improper and unsafe materials; that the appellant had no part in the erection of such scaffolding and that he was told by the said Miller, the foreman as aforesaid, that said scaffolding was safe and secure. The defendants well knew that said scaffolding was unsafe, insufficient and unsecure, or might have known the same by exercising due care as imposed by law upon said defendants in this regard; that on said September 1, 1914, while engaged to assist in the construction of ,said building, he was ordered and directed by the foreman in charge of said work to go upon said scaffold, and while he was *64standing upon the same, without any negligence on his part, but solely on account of the negligence and carelessness of said defendants in permitting said scaffold to be so negligently constructed as aforesaid, the scaffold broke and gave way, and the appellant fell a great distance to the ground below, by reason of which he was injured, for which he seeks damages.
The court is informed by appellant’s brief that the second paragraph of complaint is expressly based upon the violation of the “Dangerous Occupation Act” of 1911, and that it is drawn upon that theory. (Acts 1911 p. 597, §3862a et seq. Burns 1914.) . Section 4 of this act, being the section involved in this suit, provides as follows: “It is hereby made the duty of all owners, contractors, subcontractors, * * * engaged in the * * * construction * * * of any building, * * * to see and to require that all * * # rope, * * * appliances, # * * contrivances * * * are carefully selected, inspected and tested, so as to detect and exclude defects and dangerous conditions, and that all scaffolding, * * * and all contrivances used, are amply, adequately and properly constructed * * *; and, generally, it shall be the duty of all owners, * * * contractor, subcontractor, and all other persons having charge of, or responsible for any work, * * * involving risk or danger to any employees, * * * to use every device, care and precaution which it is practicable * * * to use for the protection and safety of life, limb and health, * * , * without regard to additional cost, * * * the first concern being safety to life, limb and health.”
*652. *64It will be noted that the provisions of this section *65apply only to owners, contractors and subcontractors engaged in the construction of any building, and to the owners, contractors and subcontractors and all other persons having charge of, or responsible for, any work involving risk or danger to employes. The act has been construed by the Supreme Court of Indiana in the case of Leet v. Block (1914), 182 Ind. 271, 106 N. E. 373. From this decision we quote as follows: “Does the act of 1911 impose on the owner and contractor such duties of testing and inspecting as to deprive each of them of the independent contractor defense? We are of the opinion that the question must be answered in the negative. The act evinces no legislative intent to impose a duty of testing and inspecting appliances except on the particular owner, contractor, or subcontractor who has ‘charge of’ or is ‘responsible for’ the work, etc., in question. While the act does materially change the common-law duties of the employer and impose on him greater obligations in relation to the safety of employes, it was not the legislative purpose to make the owner liable for an injury occurring to an employe of a contractor or subcontractor because of the latter’s negligence, in cases where the owner lets a contract for the particular work, without reserving any control over the manner of the work or the character of the appliances used.”
3. Following this construction of the section in question, it is evident that unless the appellees had charge of, or were responsible for, that part of the work, in the construction of said building in which the appellant was employed at the time of his injury, there was no duty incumbent upon them or either of them to inspect and know that the scaf*66fold in question was a prope'r and safe scaffold and on which the appellant might perform his work in safety.
Does it appear by the complaint that either of the appellees had charge of, or were in any way responsible for, that part of the work of construction in which the appellant was at the time of his injury employed? We think not. On the contrary, it is averred in the complaint that appellee Lafayette Loan and Trust Company was the owner, and as such had entered into a contract of construction with appellee Kemmer, and it does not appear by the contract that such owner ’reserved to itself any right or control over the manner in which the work should be prosecuted; nor is there any allegation in the complaint that the said owner did in any manner supervise the work of construction. Further, it is averred in the complaint that Mesker Brothers Company was a subcontractor of appellee Kemmer, and that the Griffith Iron Works was a subcontractor of Mesker Brothers Iron Company, and that the scaffold, the faulty construction of which caused .appellant’s injury, was constructed by one Wittworth, a working man, and by one Miller, foreman, both in the employ of the Griffith Iron Works. There is no averment in the complaint that either of the appellees in any manner directed or assumed charge of the work in which the Griffith Iron Works was engaged, or that either of the appellees directed as to the construction of the defective scaffold. It was the foreman of the Griffith Iron Works that told appellant that the scaffold was safe, and it was this same foreman, while in charge of said work, that ordered appellant to go upon it. From these facts, it affirmatively appears *67that the Griffith Iron Works was an independent contractor as to each and both of the appellees, for whose acts of negligence the appellees are not liable.
4, 5. In order to make appellees liable to appellant, there must have been some act or acts of personal negligence on. their part, as a result of which appellant received his injuries. We find no such , averment in the complaint. It is averred in the complaint that it was the duty of appellees to see that whatsoever material that was used in the construction of any scaffolding was carefully selected, inspected and tested, so as to exclude defects and dangerous conditions arising from a failure so to do, and • to see that such scaffolding was amply, adequately and properly constructed; but there are no facts stated from which such duty arose, and therefore the averment becomes a mere conclusion of law, and without force. 12 Ency. PL and Pr. 1044. It is averred in the complaint that appellees knew that in the construction of the building it would be necessary to erect scaffolding, and that they permitted the defective scaffold to be erected in a negligent and unsafe manner, and of unsafe and improper materials. But mere knowledge and permission are not sufficient to make the' appellees liable, unless it further appears from the facts pleaded that they owed a duty to appellant to inspect and test the material used, and to direct the manner of constructing the scaffold, and no such facts are pleaded. Maenner v. Carroll (1876), 46 Md. 193.
The ruling of the trial court in sustaining of demurrers to the second paragraph of the complaint was not error.
Judgment affirmed.