delivered the opinion of the court.
The controlling questions presented upon this appeal are, first, whether the evidence shows any negligence of appellants, and second, whether the evidence shows that Frank Havorka, by whom the alleged promise to improve the condition of the planer was made, was a vice-principal of appellants. There is also complaint of errors in procedure and it is urged that the damages are excessive.
The question of negligence of appellants was, upon the evidence presented, a question for the jury. It is true, as urged by counsel, that the appellants were not obliged to *337provide the best appliances, but only such as should be reasonably safe. If the planer, operated as here, by shifting the belt by means of a stick, was reasonably safe, then it was of no consequence in law that a shifter or tightener was a better and safer device than a stick. But it was for the jury to determine whether the planer, as operated, without the device known as a shifter or tightener, was or was not reasonably safe, and we are of opinion that the trial court properly submitted this question to them. Whether the verdict, finding as it did, that it was not reasonably safe, and that appellants were guilty of negligence in this behalf, is against the manifest weight of the evidence, is another question. There was considerable weight of evidence to the effect that the use of a tightener or shifter was not practicable upon this machine, but against this evidence there was the positive testimony of appellee that he had actually worked for nine weeks upon the machine in question when it was supplied with such a device, and that the device was only removed when the location of the planer was changed. We can not say that the jury might not have found, and with propriety, that this testimony overcame in weight all the evidence as to what could and could not be done. Therefore we are not prepared to hold that the verdict is against the manifest weight of the evidence as to negligence of appellants. If the new location of the machine made it impossible to provide it with such a device, it was still a question for the jury as to whether appellants were negligent in so placing the machine for the use of their employe.
The second question is as to the proof that Frank Ha~ vorlia, to whom the alleged complaint and by whom the alleged promises to better the condition of the machine were made, was a vice-principal of appellants. The question is controlling, for a preponderance of the evidence indicates that appellee fully understood the condition of the machine and its attendant dangers. The jury, by answer to special interrogatory, found that appellee continued in the employment by reason of relying upon what was said to him by Frank Havorka as to fixing the planer. The *338right of recovery in this behalf is based upon the complaint and promise. The evidence is that one Henry Bidd was the foreman over appellee, and that one David Wylie was the master mechanic. There is evidence that Frank Havorka, who was an employe of appellants under Wylie in the machine department, acted as interpreter to speak with and for the employes who did not speak English. There is no evidence that the complaint and promise testified to by appellee were ever communicated to any representative of the employers by Frank Havorka. The latter expressly negatives this, and denies that any complaint was made to him by appellee or any promise by him to appellee. The question is then simply, was Frank Havorka a vice-principal, whose promise to appellee should be held in law to be a promise of the employers. This was a question for the jury, if there was any evidence to warrant them in finding that he was such vice-principal. While we are not prepared to hold that there was no evidence whatever to support the contention of appellee that Havorka was a foreman, yet we are clearly of opinion that a finding to that effect by the jury was against the manifest weight of the evidence. That he was not a foreman is shown by the testimony of Wylie, the master mechanic, and H. B. Maxwell, one of appellants. No one testifies to contradict this testimony, except as appellee and others testify that complaints were made at times to Havorka. That he received such complaints as an interpreter only appears from the clear preponderance of the evidence. We are therefore of opinion that the verdict, depending as it does upon a finding that Frank Havorka was a vice-principal of appellants, is manifestly against the weight of the evidence.
It is complained that the trial court erred in refusing to give instructions numbered 17 and 31, tendered by appellants. Counsel for appellants requested the court to give-thirty-one separate instructions, of which the court did give all but six. The 17th instruction is inaccurate, and the court properly refused to give it. If it had not been informal its refusal would still have been- proper, for its *339substance was embodied in other instructions given. The first part of the 31st instruction consists of an abstract proposition of law, and all the other part of it, so far as applicable to this case, is embodied in substance in the 23d instruction given.
The special interrogatory complained of is not faulty, as set forth in the record, though its form, as given by the abstract, is open to objection. We have no occasion to discuss the evidence as to the amount of the damages, because of the conclusion reached as to the evidence upon the question of liability.
When it appears from the record, without measuring the credibility of contradicting witnesses, and upon a consideration of evidence which is practically uncontradicted, that a verdict is manifestly against the weight of the evidence, it is the duty of this court to reverse a judgment thereon, and if this court shall err by failing in such duty, the party thereby prejudiced in an action at law has no means of correcting such error by further proceeding.
We are of opinion that the verdict here is manifestly against the weight of the evidence. Therefore the judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded.