Appeal from a judgment on a verdict of a jury in the sum of $12,500, for damages claimed to have been sustained by plaintiff by reason of defendant’s negligence. The action is brought under the Employers’ Liability Law. (See Labor Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 31; Laws of 1909, chap. 36], art. 14, as amd. by Laws of 1910, chap. 352.)
On December 15, 1910, the plaintiff was employed by the defendant as a carpenter, and had been so engaged for two years and five months. On that day it was sought to change from a vertical to a horizontal position a certain exhibit consisting of a reproduction of carvings from a temple in G-uatemala, then in position in the Mexican room of defendant’s building. The exhibit consisted of an upright frame carrying wire mesh to which was attached the plaster cast. The wooden screen was four inches thick, eleven feet one inch high and one foot in thickness at the base, which was made of mahogany. The tablet itself varied in thickness up to a maximum of seven inches. The total weight of the exhibit was from 1,800 to 2,000 pounds. Of this, the plaster cast weighed about 1,300 pounds, and the frame from 600 to 700 pounds. In preparation for the work of lowering the screen it had been moved out upon the floor, and it had been placed upon two planks twelve to fourteen feet long. Eopes had been carried from the upper part of the screen to columns north and south of the exhibit, and some three columns, or fifty-two feet away. These posts were of iron, from eighteen to twenty inches thick, perfectly firm and square. The flooring of the *639room, was laid in mosaic, the tiles being about one inch square and polished from ordinary traffic.
John D. Foulke was administrative assistant, discharging the duties of superintendent for the defendant at the time in question, and he had charge of all the men and was general superintendent of the buildings. John Samm was the foreman in charge of the gang of men assigned to do this work. The moving and lowering of casts and exhibits was an ordinary feature of the work of the defendant, and five of them had been lowered within a day or two preceding the one in question. The frames of all these casts were of the same size, but none of them had been as heavy as this particular one, the greatest weight theretofore lowered being 900 pounds and the lightest 10 pounds. As this exhibit had shown a tendency to sag, it was braced before the work of lowering commenced. Ordinarily the gang of men used to move these exhibits consisted of from eight to ten men, but in view of the unusual size of this specimen the party was increased to twenty-eight. Of these, three men held the ends of the ropes, which were slackened as the cast was being lowered; these ropes were in the same direction as the base of the exhibit; that is, passing from the top over the screen and away from it. Three men supplied with poles engaged them in a notch or cornice in the upper frame of the exhibit, and two or three men were stationed with their hands against the base thereof to prevent it from slipping or from traveling too fast.. The purpose of the planks beneath the exhibit was not only to save the base, but also to prevent slipping upon the tiled floor. The remaining twenty men were stationed around the exhibit and were supposed to .bear the weight thereof as it gradually was lowered. Two horses had been placed beneath the cast to receive it and break its force as it gradually came down. These horses stood three and one-half feet high. The exhibit had been lowered to an angle of from thirty-five to forty-five degrees without incident or accident when, without warning, it suddenly skidded, and while apparently the men did not run away, but still kept hold of it, it continued sliding to such a degree that it passed the horses placed to receive it and fell to the ground. In its fall it struck plaintiff, who sustained severe and perma*640nent injuries. The plaintiff, who says he had not theretofore assisted in the lowering of any exhibits, had, however, been called upon at different times to assist in moving them. He says that at no time did he have his hand upon the frame or any part of the exhibit. In this he is contradicted by witnesses for the defense. There is no claim, however, that he contributed in any way to the occurrence complained of, or that he was negligent in his conduct at the time. The defendant’s liability has been predicated upon the theory of a failure to provide sufficient, proper and safe appliances for the doing of this work. As the court charged, without exception, “ The test of actionable negligence is not what might have prevented the particular accident, but what reasonably prudent and careful men would have done in the discharge of their duties under the circumstances as they existed at the time of the accident. If the danger was not one to be reasonably anticipated, it is not the duty of the defendant to provide safeguards which since the accident are suggested. The master does not guarantee the safety of his servants; he is not obliged to furnish a servant with an absolutely safe place in which to work, nor is he obliged to furnish the best known appliances. All he is obliged to do is to furnish appliances that are reasonably fit and safe. He satisfies the requirements of the law if, in the selection of appliances, he uses that degree of care which a man of ordinary prudence would use, having regard to his own safety if he were supplying them for his own personal use. Summing it up in a few words, it means that the master must under the circumstances do what an ordinarily prudent person would do, having due regard to the safety of his servant. So much, then, for the duties resting on the master.” The sole testimony directed to the master’s liability under this charge is that of a rigger, Richard Doughty, called as an expert to testify that there was a common practice among riggers in the city of New York in the month of December, 1910, in the lowering of heavy bodies, and that that method was by the erection of a pair of gin poles, bolted together at the head with a barrel in bearings at the bottom. To the top of these tackle is fastened and they are then secured at the top to a column. By the use of a block and fall the weights are then lowered. On cross-*641examination, however, this witness admitted that except for the skidding this exhibit would have gone down in the proper way if there were men enough to hold it, but he undertook to say that 28 men were not sufficient to handle a body weighing 1,800 pounds. We do not think that this was a case calling for the introduction of expert testimony, for the operation was a simple and usual one which had been repeatedly used by the defendant without accident of any kind, and the handling of a body such as the one in question is not such an operation as requires the aid of expert testimony either to elucidate it to a jury or to inform them of the various methods by which it can be performed.
The defendant produced some nine witnesses who were present when the accident occurred, and it seems plain from their testimony, as well as from that of the plaintiff’s witnesses, that the method adopted for the lowering of the exhibit was such as any prudent man, in the exercise of reasonable care, would adopt, and that the sole cause of the accident was the skidding of the exhibit — an event which had not occurred with any previous lowering of other exhibits, and which the defendant could neither have been reasonably expected to foresee, nor is there any suggestion of any means by which that skidding could have been guarded against in the method followed for the lowering. There is no testimony of any kind in this record upon which the jury could have found that under the method pursued, which defendant had every reason to believe was a safe one, any further precaution could or should have been taken to guard against skidding.
In Ozogar v. Pierce, Butter & Pierce Mfg. Co. (134 App. Div. 800) the accident had occurred while men were lowering a casting known as a “ flask ” upon a car. It affirmatively appeared that theretofore castings had been moved by the defendant by means of a crane, but as was said in that case: “If a master engaged in erecting a building moves practically all the beams or timbers by means of a crane, he is not chargeable with actionable negligence because he may direct his employees to move one of such beams or timbers by hand and without the use of a crane, provided a sufficient number of employees are furnished *642for the work and they are given a safe and suitable place in which to work, and if, under such circumstances, one lets go and thereby places a greater weight upon the others than they can sustain, and injury results to one or all, the master is not liable.” In this case there is no positive proof that any of the men released their hold upon the exhibit and thereby placed an additional stress upon the others, but it does appear beyond dispute that a sufficient number of men had been provided to handle it. The method used was one which had been tested and found safe and practical by experience, and there was nothing to suggest the need for any further precaution save that of providing more men than usual, which was done. As was said in Ryan v. Cortland Carriage Goods Co. (133 App. Div. 467): “Failure to guard against that which has never occurred and which is very unlikely to occur, and which does not naturally suggest itself to prudent men as something which should be guarded against, is not negligence.”
The judgment and order appealed from will, therefore, be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, Olarke and Hotchkiss, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event. Order to be settled on notice.