—Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Edward Lehner, J.), entered March 20, 2000, which granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint, unanimously reversed, on the law, without costs, the motion denied and the complaint reinstated.
On November 18, 1997, at 8:20 a.m., plaintiff Sandra Argenio, then 61 years old, fell inside Grand Central Terminal, shortly after alighting from a commuter train. She testified that, as she traversed a walkway that she had taken many times over the past 10 years on her way to work, her toe became caught in a depression in the floor, causing her to fall forward. Plaintiff sustained fractures of the right wrist, radius and ulna, requiring several surgeries, and subsequently developed reflex sympathetic dystrophy, a chronic nerve disorder precipitated by the fall. In this action, plaintiff alleges that defendants, owners of the property, were negligent in failing to properly maintain the area in which she fell.
Defendants sought summary judgment dismissing the complaint. The moving papers contended that the depression that allegedly caused plaintiff to fall was trivial and did not constitute a dangerous condition, trap or snare so as to be actionable as a matter of law. In opposition, plaintiff submitted the affidavit of an expert witness stating that the defect — 2 inches wide, 2 inches long, and one-quarter inch deep — was of sufficient size to entrap the toe of the sneaker worn by plaintiff; that the depression was larger than most defects in the area that had been repaired; and that defendants’ failure to maintain the floor in good repair was the sole cause of plaintiff’s injury.
In granting the motion, Supreme Court acknowledged that the question of whether a condition upon premises under the control of a defendant is sufficiently hazardous to create liability is generally a question to be resolved by the jury on the facts particular to the case (citing Trincere v County of Suffolk,
There is no per se rule with respect to the dimensions of a defect that will give rise to liability on the part of a landowner or other party in control of premises (Herrera v City of New York,
This matter raises factual questions and is not amenable to summary resolution. In addition to the affidavit of plaintiffs expert witness, stating that the defect constitutes a tripping hazard, plaintiff testified that she was looking straight ahead as she walked and that “ftjhere were many people around me.” The location of the depression in a heavily traveled pedestrian walkway renders observation of the defect less likely (Slate v Fredonia Cent. School Disk.,
