— The defendant (appellant) was engaged at the time of plaintiff’s injury in the construction of a building, and to facilitate the raising of material therefor operated an elevator or hoist in a skeleton shaft parallel with and within about 3 feet of "the wall of the building. McDaniels was foreman of the stone work and Rogers was foreman of the concrete work on the structure. The plaintiff was under the supervision and orders of McDániels, who directed plaintiff to ascend the shaft and from a rest oh the lateral timbers of the shaft and next the wall to assist in setting a large stone. The elevator appears'to have occupied in its operation practically the full space-with*637in the shaft. Just before the injury in question the plaintiff was sitting on the lateral supports of the shaft, facing the Avail, Avitli his back to the shaft space. The timbers used in the construction of the shaft Avere not of sufficient size to obstruct a vieAv of the appellee as thus situated. The elevator Avas driven by an engine stationed about 50 feet from the foot of the shaft, and the engineer, or operator, one Torbett, Avas, from his place at the engine, favored Avith an unobstructed vieAv of the entire shaft. Bogers signaled or called to Torbett to loAver it, and in the process of doing so the plaintiff Avas struck and Avounded by reason of the fact that a part of his body Avas, in his sitting posture, Avithin the sAveep of the descending hoist.
The complaint, as noAv important to be stated, sought to fix liability on the appellant by the application of subdivisions 2, 3, and 4 of the liability act (Acts 1907, p. 595, 596, c. 80, § 3910), and Avould predicate that liability only upon the alleged negligence of Bogers in giving the order to the elevator operator to loAver it while plaintiff aaus thus exposed to injury if the order AA’as obeyed. There is no count in the complaint as-scribing, as disclosed by the evidence, the proximate cause of the injury to any source other than to Bogers’ alleged negligence in directing the elevator to be lOAvered, though of course this basic idea, is undertaken to. be brought in averment Avithin the subdivisions stated. Negligence must arise out of a breach of duty, and hence .the obligation assumed by the plaintiff, on his present .pleading, Avas to shoAv'a duty on Bogers, and which- was •breached by him to plaintiff’s injury as a proximate consequence, ás and when Bogers gave Torbett the signal to loAver the hoist. Necessarily the duty relied bn is that. Borers should have, before signaling to Torbett, taken the precaution to seé that no employe was in or on *638the shaft of the hoist liable to injury by obedience by Torbett to the signal. The existence of this duty was possible of proof by testimony tending either to show that it was a positive requirement of Rogers in the performance of his duties as foreman, or as arising and being imposed by reason of a general practice on the part of those engaged in the construction of this building to employ the shaft as a means, apart from the hoist itself, to perform their services to the common master, whose safety would probably be endangered by the movement of the hoist. There is an entire absence of any such proof in this record. Indeed, the only evidence having an immediate bearing on the existence vel non of this duty was disallowed on objections from the plaintiff.
Can the existence of the duty on Rogers be found in the character of the mechanism and its general purpose and use in the construction of this building? We think not. The testimony rather minutely describes the character of the shaft. It was composed of four posts or uprights, and these were braced by lateral pieces, parallel with the ground, at intervals of 8 or 10 feet; the square spaces between these laterals being twice cut by pieces running from opposite corners and crossing in the middle at an approximate distance of 4 or 5 feet from the laterals mentioned. These bracings appear to havi been made of 2x4 or 4x6 inch timbers. It is apparent that the shaft was not suited or designed for use as a means of ascent or descent by climbing. In fact, the evidence shows that the shaft was not at all adapted to scaffold purposes for work on the exterior of the nearby wall as appears to have been undertaken to be done when plaintiff was sent, by his superior to a place on it 8 or 10 feet from the ground. Furthermore, the evidence indicates a very constant use of the hoist in the shaft, which, in passing, cleared by only a few inches the *639braces described. Besides, the proof shows sharp differences of opinion between those familiar with this shaft, Avhether one could stand on those braces and render any service or Avhether he could sit thereon without encroaching on the actual track of the hoist. From this condition, which Ave have undertaken to describe, we have no hesitancy in affirming that in absence of knowledge of one’s presence stated, no measure of prudence Avould suggest even the possibility of an employe being on or in the shaft. In short, such a use of this shaft was not to be anticipated by a foreman signaling the movement of the hoist by the engineer. If, on this record, we should hold that Rogers’ duty was to see that the shaft ivas clear before giving the signal to lower it, the result would be to create as a. condition precedent, to the performance of the master’s service, a requirement of precaution not reasonably or naturally to be anticipated, of necessity, to avert injury to a servant of the common master.
It follows that, no duty being breached in giving the order or signal to lower the hoist, there was no culpable negligence on the part of Rogers. The affirmative charge for the defendant should have been given. The judgment is therefore reAmrsed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Tyson, C. J., and Dowdell and Anderson,, JJ., concur.