The judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide event.
The action is one to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have resulted from defendant’s negligence. The appellant contends that the questions of negligence and contributory negligence were for the jury. There was evidence from which the jury might have found that South Division street, in the vicinity where the accident occurred, .was in a very bad condition. There were in it mounds of earth, cinders, stones, holes and depressions, manhole covers, etc., and it was fairly a question for the jury whether it was in a reasonably safe condition for public travel with teams and vehicles. It had been allowed by the defendant to remain in such condition for a long time prior to the accident.
The plaintiff was driving a team hitched to a wagon, on which he had a cable of rope coiled up and weighing 4,100' pounds. It was *175about five feet high and four feet through. There were stakes on the wagon, between which the rope lay, and the rope was also tied and blocked. In passing along the street the wagon rocked back and forth as it went over the mounds and stones and through the holes and depressions in the roadbed, and finally the wagon was overturned and the plaintiff was injured. The question as to defendant’s negligence, as the cause of the accident and injury, was clearly one of fact for the jury. If a city will allow a street to be in the condition the evidence showed this one to be, it must take the consequences so far as its negligence is concerned.
The plaintiff had driven teams with loads like the one in question over this street continuously for a year or two, and knew the condition of the roadbed. His wagon and load had never been overturned before. Ho had a right to use the street and could not, us matter of law, be held guilty of contributory negligence merely because he knew the condition of the roadbed, and yet drove over it. He testified that he was driving carefully at the time the accident occurred. Other drivers testified that in going over this roadbfed their wagons rolled back and forth so that they could hardly keep their seats. The plaintiff’s freedom from contributory negligence was a question of fact for the determination of the jury.
The complaint sufficiently alleged that the negligence of the defendant was the cause of the accident and injuries. All the evidence was taken, without objection by reason of any defect in the complaint, and this question was first suggested at the close of the evidence when the motion for a nonsuit was made. The objection to the complaint was not well taken. All the facts were alleged, from which the conclusion fairly followed that the defective condition of the roadbed caused the overturning of the wagon.
The notice served upon the defendant’s attorney of the time, place and cause of the injury, etc., under section 124 of the defendant’s charter (Laws of 1906, chap. 185), was sufficiently definite in describing the place where the accident occurred. The notice stated that the accident occurred in South Division street, north of the railroad crossing, and between that and Wright avenue, which was about 1,000 feet from the crossing. The notice further stated that the accident resulted from driving over the defective roadbed in that street, which extended from a point several rods north of *176the crossing for about ten rods northerly along the street. This was sufficiently definite to enable the defendant to prepare for trial and to remedy the defect, and this is the real purpose of the act. It would be too narrow a rule to hold that the precise location of the mound or stone, hole or depression that overturned the wagon should be pointed out.
The roadbed for ten rods was described in the notice, and it was said-that the accident occurred upon this roadbed, and by reason of the defects described in' the notice. This was sufficient. (Beyer v. City of North Tonawanda, 183 N. Y. 338, and cases therein referred to.)
In the Beyer case the proof on the trial showed the accident occurred on a sidewalk 80 to 100 feet away from the place indicated in the notice, and the notice was nevertheless held sufficient.
In Werner v. City of Rochester (77 Hun, 33; a ffd., 149 N. Y. 563) the accident was for an injury bn the roadbed, and the notice stated the place was about one-third of a mile east of a railroad crossing, and was held to be sufficiently definite.
All concurred, except McLennan, P. J., who dissented upon the ground that the plaintiff was not shown to have been freé from contributory negligence.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event upon questions of law and fact.