If the hole or depression presented a question of fact, the other proof at the close of plaintiff’s case as to defendant’s negligence required submission to the jury. The street was paved with asphalt. Several witnesses for the plaintiff testified tó the size of the -depression. The plaintiff described - it as 5 feet long, 3 feet wide and 5 inches deep. One witness could not estimate its length or width, but said that it' was 5 inches deep. Another testified that it was 5 by 2% feet and 5 inches deep. Still another said that it was 4 or 5 feet long, 16 or 18 inches wide and from 4 to 6 inches ieep. And he also testified that it slanted down on each end all around.
In Hamilton v. City of Buffalo (113 N. Y. 12) it was decided that the depression in that case was so slight as not to suggest to an ordinarily careful and prudent man that it was dangerous. It is an authority so far as a depression in any given case is so slight as not to suggest to any ordinarily, careful and prudent man danger therefrom, and it presents a concrete example of a negligible defect. In Terry v. Village of Perry (199 N. Y. 79) the court say: “This court has frequently stated the rules of law governing municipalities in the care of their streets and sidewalks. Each case must stand upon its own peculiar facts and the application of such well-known rules of law to such facts.” If the depression in a given ease is of such a character that ordinarily careful and prudent men might differ as to the danger thereof, this presents a question of fact. (Durr v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 184 N. Y. 324.). But the Hamilton case does not control this case upon the facts. That case .involved a rounded depression in flagstones extending from the first tier of flagging for a distance of 8 ór 9 inches, which then extended back into the pavement, making a depression 34 inches long, about 12 inches wide in a V form, and 4 inches deep; while the jury in the case at bar could have found that the depression in the roadway was 5 feet long, 3 feet wide and 5 inches deep. . I think that the court in the case at bar could not decide that there could not be a difference of opipion among triers of fact as to whether the existence of such a depression might suggest danger to an ordinarily careful and prudent man, and that, therefore, a question was presented for the jury. In Durr v. *693N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (supra), where the depression was from 4 to 6 inches deep, about 18 inches wide and of an extent from 10 to 12 inches and sloping, it was decided that the case required a submission to the jury.
I think that the question of contributory negligence presented at the close of the plaintiff’s case could not be disposed of as matter of law. The wagon was a platform truck loaded with timber piled about as high as the rungs of the truck, bound together “good and hard so that the load would not shift;” and the plaintiff sat upon the top of the load. There is no proof that his place was insecure or became so, and no proof that points to any omission of due care by the plaintiff. The horses were walking at the time. The plaintiff had just received a signal from a surface street car to clear its right of way, and as he turned out the wagon “ dropped ” into the depression which he knew not of and which he did not see.
The exceptions were well taken. A new trial is granted, costs to abide the event.
Burr, Thomas, Carr and Woodward, JJ., concurred.
Plaintiff’s exceptions sustained, and new trial granted, costs to abide the event.