From the record it appears that respondent, Norbeck & Nicholson Company, is a corporation engaged in the business of constructing and repairing Artesian wells; that appellant was employed by respondent as a laborer to assist in the prosecution of such business; that a well crew consists of a foreman or boss and some three or four assistants or helpers; that the managing officers, or agents of respondent instructed the foreman as to what particular work was to be done, and the helpers received their instructions from .the foreman-; that dynamite was used in the prosecution of such business in -stopping the flow of and in removing rocks and other obstacles from such wells; that *83appellant was injured by an explosion of dynamite used in the endeavor to stop the flow of a well on the 9th day of May, 19x0; that Nicholson, one of the managing agents of 'respondent instructed one Vognild, the foreman of the crew with which appellant worked, to stop the flow of a certain well in the city of Red-field; that Vognild directed apellant to assist in said work; that under the directon of Vognild, who also' assisted in the work, a two and one-half inch iron pipe, eighteen or twenty feet long, lying upon a hillside, was filled from the upper end with stick dynamite, about fifty pounds, the same being tamped and pushed into said pipe with a bamboo fish pole; when filled a small amount of gun powder was placed upon the dynamite, and the pipe thus filled was lowered into the casing of the well down to a depth of about 700 feet under ground and then exploded by dropping thereon a redhot iron bolt; the particular part of said work assigned to apellant was to assist in carrying and placing said pipes when so loaded and filled to said well, ready to be lowered by machinery; the process of so loading and firing off these pipes of dynamite had proceeded to the afternoon of the fifth day; Vog-nild was loading a certain pipe, personally placing the dynamite therein, and tamping the same down with the fish pole, the pipe was nearly filled, some forty-five pounds of dynamite having been placed therein; portions of the dynamite in being placed in and pushed down the pipe had stuck and adhered to the sides of the pipe so as to clog and interfere to some extent with the further placing of dynamite therein; Vognild, in the presence of appellant, for the purpose of scratching off and loosening from the inside of the pipe the portions of dynamite adhered thereto, drove into the end of said fishpole a nail; immediately after, while Vog-nild was using such fishpole with the nail in it for such purpose, the explosion occurred which injured appellant, who was standing near by Vognild waiting to carry said pipe to be lowered into the well; appellant testified that at the time Vognild was driving the nail into the pole he asked him if it was dangerous, and that Vognild replied that it -was all right; appellant ateo testified that he knew dynamite was a dangerous thing to handle,— that it was necessary to be careful with it, — that it might possibly explode, but “I did not know that dynamite would explode by pounding it with a fishpole with a nail in it;” appellant also testified that no one *84restrained him from going away from the place where 'such pipe was being filled. • . . . .
[1] On the trial appellant w-as asked the question if .he knew at,.the time,this pipe was being tamped with dynamite with a fish, pole with a nail in -it that it was more dangerous to. have the nail in the pole than, not to', have it. Objection was made to this question on the ground that it was incompetent, immaterial, leading, and called for a conclusion. The objection was sustained and appellant excepted ¡and1 n'ow urges such ruling as error. We are of the opinion that it was prejudicial error to 'sustain such objection. One of the crucial and vital questions in this class of cases is whether or not the injured party, knowing the dangers to which he was exposed, ¡assumed the risk of being injured by remaining in close proximity to the dangerous objects. Whether or not he assumed such risk depended in a large measure upon whether or ndt he fully appreciated and understood that the use of the nail in the fish pole was more dangerous than the use of the pole without it. The knowledge and understanding of the injured party as to the danger to which he was exposed is always a circumstance the jury have a right -to take into' consideration in such cases. Brotski v. Wis. Granite Co., 142 Wis. 380, 125 N. W. 916, 27 L. R.A. (N. S.) 982 and note. King v. Morgan, 48 C. C. A. 507. O’Brien v. Buffalo Furnace Co., 183 N. Y. 317, 76 N. E. 161. Cinkovitch v. Thistle Coal Co. (Iowa) 121 N. W. 1036. Holman v. Kemp, 73 N. W. 186. Pinney v. King, 107 N. W. 1127; Lafrano v. Water Co., 55 Hun 482, 8 N. Y. Supp, 717; Perreault v. Wis. Granite Co., 144 N. W. 110; Iverson v. Look, 143 N. W. 332.
[2] At the close of the plaintiff’s testimony a verdict was directed for defendant, to which ruling plaintiff excepted, and now urges the same as error. We are of the view that the case should have been submitted to the jury. It is contended by respondent that there is no evidence showing that the explosion which injured plaintiff was caused by placing the nail in the fishpole. The jury had the right to take info consideration all the surrounding facts and circumstances and apply thereto their own knowledge of natural laws, and deduce therefrom such conclusions as were warranted thereby. From the circumstance that Vognild had been tamping dynamite into similar pipes for five days with the fish *85pole without the n'ail and there had been no explosion, and that an explosion did occur at the very first use of the pole with the nail in it, the jury might have been warranted- in finding that -the nail was the cause of the explosion. Courts and juries take judicial notice of the nature and propensities of dynamite and the high degree of care required of .those who handle it. Fitzsimmons Co. v. Braun & Fitts, 199 Ill. 390; 59 L,. R. A. 421. Murdock v. Chicago (Ill.) 72 N. E. 46. Warren v. Electric Co. (Minn.) 104 N. W. 613. Laine v. Con. Ver. Co. (Minn.) 143 N. W. 783. Fazie v. Corey Bros. Co. 134 Pac. 747. Ongaro v. Toohey, 94 Pac. 916. Dynamite is of such a nature and propensity that most any minute concussion, created by friction or jarring will explode it. It i's a matter of common knowledge that wood coming into contact with iron or rock is not likely to produce by friction sufficient concussion; and it is also a matter of common knowledge that the striking, or scratching, or any sharp, quick contact, or friction, of iron Or steel against iron or steel or rock will create sufficient concussion to cause an explosion. These were matters that the jurymen of their own knowledge might have taken into consideration in determining the probabilities as to what caused the explosion that injured plaintiff. The jury were in possession of the physical facts and circumstances under which the explosion occurred, and had ¡the right to apply their own knowledge of the laws’ of nature in determining what probably caused such explosion.
[3] It is also contended by respondent that no matter how negligent the foreman, Vognild, might have been, under the provisions of section 1449, Civil Code, defendant would not be liable in the absence of some showing that defendant was negligent in the selection of Vognil as foreman. This section of the Code provides that “An employer is not bound to indemnify his employe for losses suffered 'by the latter in consequence of the ordinary risks of the business in which he is employed, nor in consequence of the negligence of another person employed by the same employer in the same general business, unless ¡he has neglected to use ordinary care in the 'selection of the culpable employe.” This section of our code is declaratory of the common-law fellow-servant rule. We are of the view that the fellow -servant rule is not applicable to the circumstances oif this case. Vognild, as *86foreman of (the crew, in driving the nail into the bamboo pole was not acting- as a fellow-servant within the meaning of the rule, but was performing- a duty, as a vice-principal, of the defendant corporation, and whose negligence, under such 'oircunnstances, by implication, was the negligence of defendant. It does not always follow that because one is a vice-principal, or, as some say, a superior servant, that he may not also be a fellow servant within the rule embodied in said section 1449.
[4] The one who represents the master whether he be termed vice-principal or superior servant, may act in a dual capacity, (x) as vice-principal or superior servant; (2) as a fellow-servant; and whether or not the master will be held to be liable for the negligence act of such servant will depend upon whether the act, which is alleged to' constitute the negligence was performed by such person in his capacity as vice-principal or in his capacity as fellow-servant. If the act was done in the performance of a duty resting upon the master, then the master would -be liable for the negligent performance of such duty by the vice-principal; but if the act was done in the performance of a duty resting upon a fellow-servanlt then the master would not be liable. In other words an employe assumes the risk of the negligent acts of a foreman or boss in performing some act which properly belongs to the duty of a fellow-servant, but does nolfc assume the risk of the negligent acts of such foreman when performing some act of principalship in relation to some duty imposed upon the master.
[5] One of the duties of the defendant company, and a duty from which it cannot escape by delegating such duty to another, was the furnishing of safe tools. This foreman, Vognild, exercised the .power of determining the nature of the tool to be used in this particular work. In doing so he was performing a duty which belonged to> the master, and not to a fellow servant. Therefore, if the jury should have determined,— and it seems there was ample evidence (to warrant it in SO' determining — that the bamboo pole with the nail driven therein was an improper tool, then the defendant was liable for the act of its foreman in furnishing such improper tool, the furnishing of such tool not belonging to the duties of a fellow-servant. This improper tool having been furnished (by the foreman it mattered *87not by which one of the employes, whether the foreman or one of the helpers, it chanced afterwards to have been used a't the time of the explosion which injured plaintiff, 1 Sherman & Red field on Negdigence, Sec. 232 6th Ed; Maloney v. Winston Bros, 47 L. R. A. (N. S.) 634; 111 Pac. 1080. Carlson v. N. W. Tel. Ex. (Minn.) 65 N. W. 914. Panzer v. Mining Co. 99 N. Y. 368; 2 N. E. 24. O’Brien v. Buffalo Furnace Co., supra. Engleking v. Spokane, 29 L. R. A. (N. S.) 481. Ongaro v. Toohey, supra. LaBatt’s Master and Servant, Secs. 899 and 1052. 4 Thompson on Negligence Secs. 3986 and 3988. Perrault v. Wis. Granite Co., 144 N. W. 110.
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed and the cause remanded for new trial.