In 1888 the Legislature enacted chapter 311 of the laws of that year, entitled “An act to provide for the construction of a system of -sewerage for the village of Hew Rochelle.” This act provided (§ 1) dor the election of nine commissioners of sewers and drainage, who were (§ 7) to employ an engineer, who was to “ prepare maps, profiles, plans and specifications for a pipe system of sewers for the entire village of Hew Rochelle, which system shall be used for the purpose of sanitary sewerage and cellar drainage.” It was also provided that plans and specifications should be provided for surface drainage, • but this is only of incidental importance. The statute provided that the village should be laid off into sewer districts, to be indicated on maps to be properly filed, and the sewer commissioners were charged with the duty of determining which of the districts should be sewered, to procure estimates of the cost of sewering such districts or parts thereof, the plans for which should be approved by the State Board jof Health, and to exhibit the estimates to the taxpayers of said village. Then the proposition was to be submitted to the taxpayers of such village to be voted upon, and, if approved, the work was to be undertaken. By section 15 of the act, it was provided that “For the purpose of defraying the cost of the construction of said sewers and drains and all expenditures authorized-by this act, including the compensation to be paid and expenses incurred in proceedings to acquire title to lands, or a right of way under and across any property, or for damages to private property, bonds and certificates of indebtedness •of the village of Hew Rochelle to such an amount as shall be necessary, not, however, exceeding the' estimated cost as voted for as hereinbefore provided, shall be issued by the board of'trustees of the village of Hew Rochelle,” etc. The succeeding section (§ 16) provided that “To meet the payment of the above named certificates of indebtedness, there shall be levied and assessed by the commissioners •of sewers and drainage: 1. By direct assessment per lineal foot upon property fronting on the street through which any sewer may be built, a sum not to exceed the average cost of providing and laying -each lineal foot of an eight-inch pipe, to be assessed one-half on each •side of the street, exempting, however, such property as cannot drain into said sewer. In cases where property may be situated on a -corner, or may have a frontage on two sewer lines, or where there *318may be an inequality in other respects regarding the advantage to-be derived from said sewer the commissioners shall determine the "'amount of the assessment.” The next section (§ 17) provided that . “ on the completion by the commission of any area of assessment, and the assessment thereof,” the commissioners were to' give-notice of the fact and to appoint a grievance day, etc.
Section 21 of the act provided that “ All expenditures made and indebtedness incurred in the construction of the sewers and drains hereunder, or in any manner connected therewith, not. covered by the direct and benefit assessment and paid out of the proceeds of the sales of the certificates of indebtedness, shall be a general tax upon the village of New Rochelle, and paid out of the proceeds of the sale • of the bonds herein provided for.”
. It is evident from the provisions of the statute that it contemplated the construction of what is known as a separate sewer system, calculated to take care of the sewage proper, leaving the drainage system to be separately provided for; and the provision for determining the amount of the direct assessment by the average cost of putting in an eight-inch sewer, would indicate that the main or trunk-sewer was intended to be at least twenty-four inches. It, is. also evident that the scheme contemplated a special - benefit upon the ad jacent properties of approximately one-half of the cost of the system as a whole,, whether the pipe in front of any given premises should be four inches or twenty-four inches, which is manifestly an equitable method of distributing the burden of. sewer construction, if it be conceded that the premises immediately fronting upon the sewered street are specially benefit-ted; and it seems too late to raise this question, as it" is deeply imbedded in the municipal policy of the State, and has long» "had judicial sanction. (Conde v. City of Schenectady, 164 N. Y. 258, 262.)
■ ■ Acting under the provisions of this statute, the salient features of which we have pointed out by way of introduction to the question -here presented, the village of New Rochelle, through its sewer ■commissioners, devised a system of sewers “ for the entire village of New Rochelle” (Laws of 1888, chap. 311, § 7), “ which scheme, system, map and plan of such sewer was'submitted, to and approved by the State Board -of Health of the State of New York on the 18th day of December, 1888, and contemplated, comprised and contained *319twenty-six and miles of such sewer through various of the streets and other places in the then village of Hew Rochelle, including the said part of said .Main street in front of and abutting upon petitioner’s said property.” Twenty-four and sixty-eight one-hundredths miles of the sewer contemplated by such scheme or system have thus far been constructed, and are now being used by the inhabitants of the city of Hew Rochelle, the major portion, having been constructed by the village of Hew Rochelle. In aid of payment for the sewer so constructed, direct taxes or assessments to the amount of $331,051.86 have been levied upon the property abutting upon the streets so sewered, of which sum there has been collected from the owners of the said abutting property so assessed the sum of $265,517.90, and the bonds of the village and city of Hew Rochelle have been issued to the amount of $318,000, this latter sum representing the cost of the construction of the sewers thus far put in, over and above the total amount represented by the direct tax levied upon the abutting property. These bonds have been sold and the money has been applied to the payment of the cost of construction of the system of sewers as originally contemplated by the plans drawn by the engineer for the village of Hew Rochelle, and which had been completed with the exception of about two miles when the city of Hew Rochelle became the successor of the village of Hew Rochelle under the provisions of chapter 128 of the Law§ of 1899.
The charter of the city of Hew Rochelle provides for the appoint.ment of commissioners of sewers, the creation of a board of sewer commissioners, etc., thereof, and section 203 of chapter 128 of the Laws of 1899 provides: “ Before taking any proceedings for the construction of a sewer in any additional sewer system in any part or district of said city not included in any existing sewer system in said city, the board shall cause a map and plan of a permanent addition to the sewer system of said city to be made,” etc. Section 204 then provides that “ The common council may authorize and direct the said commissioners to sewer any street or section of said city within the bounds of any existing sewer district or system in said city for which an outlet or disposal-works is now provided and built, or a connection with a main sewer can be made whenever the same'is petitioned for by a majority of the property *320■owners on such street or in such section, or when the city board of health declares the same to be necessary for the public health, and the said commissioners shall, after being so authorized and directed, proceed to construct, such sewers in the manner provided by this •act.”
On the 29th day of November, 1899, the commissioners of health of the city of New Rochelle, comprising the board of health, at a regular meeting, declared and resolved “ That it is hereby declared necessary for the public health that the following named streets and avenues of the city of New Rochelle (including the street in front ■of the premises of the relator) be sewered, an outlet, or disposal works being now provided and built therefor, and that the interest •of the public health demands the construction or laying of the public sewer in the said streets and avenues, or. that portion thereof hereinabove set forth.” Subsequently, and on the 5th day of December, 1899, the common council directed that these sewers be •constructed, “ the parts of said streets so ordered sewered were and are within the bounds of the previously established and existing sewer district or system of the said city of New Rochelle for which an outlet or disposal works was provided, built and, maintained.”
The sewer was duly constructed under the provisions of the ■charter, pursuant to the above action, and on the 26th' day of Sep^ ber, i960, the board of sewer commissioners met and
“ Besolved, That in accordance with the provisions of section 208 ■of the charter of the city of New Rochelle, the commissioners of ■sewers hereby declare that for the construction of the sewers as recently laid * * * . there is hereby assessed and levied the sum' ■of one and dollars on each foot of property located or fronting ■on each side of the aforesaid streets, roads and avenues,, or on property drained by said sewers.”
At the time the secretary was directed to give notice “ as required by law that said assessment roll for the tax aforesaid is open for the inspection of the taxpayers at the office of the commissioners of sewers for the required numbers of days, and that the commissioners will meet on the 26th day of October, 1900, at 8 o’clock p.,m. of that •day, to hear such persons as may consider themselves aggrieved in relation to said assessment, as provided by section 210 of the charter ■of the city of New Rochelle,” etc. The notice was duly published *321in the official newspapers, the commissioners met and adjourned from day to day, heard those who felt themselves aggrieved, and made such corrections in the assessment roll containing such assessments as in their judgment were just and equitable, and on the 16th day of Hovember, 1900, confirmed and adopted the corrected assessment roll and subsequently attached their warrant for the collection of the same and delivered it to the proper officials for collection.
The relator urges that the provisions of section 208 of chapter 128 of the Laws of 1899 are unconstitutional and void, in that said section arbitrarily fixes an assessment on the petitioner’s property without allowing the petitioner any opportunity to be heard as to the cost or value of said improvement provided for by said assessment or the fairness or justness of said assessment, and that said assessment levied herein under that section is levied without due process of law. We are unable to agree with the relator in this position. There is no suggestion in his moving papers that he is not benefitted by the construction of these, sewers, or that he will sustain any injustice by reason of the same, and his whole contention is based upon the proposition that the fixing of a specific sum per front foot is an arbitrary taking of his property (the amount of the tax) without due process of law. If" we look to the scheme of the statute under consideration, however, we shall find that there has been no arbitrary fixing of this amount. The original statute provided for a system of sewers for the entire village of Hew Rochelle, and the abutting property owners were to pay the average cost of laying an eight-inch sewer pipe in front of their premises.
It is a well-known fact that in the practical work of laying sewers it costs in some instances two or three times as much to lay a foot of sewer pipe, even of the same dimensions, as in other cases. This is due to the difference in the formation of the earth, quicksands, hard rock, etc., all entering into the problem. It is also obvious that the expense of main sewers is much larger than that of laterals, and that the cost of disposing of the sewage is an important consid eration, often involving the purchase of rights, easements, e.tc. The plan developed by the village of Hew Rochelle was to equalize this by making the average cost of laying an eight-inch pipe the basis of *322calculation, leaving the village as a whole to take care of the extra cost for main sewers, disposal works, rights of way, easements, etc.
Acting under this plan the village had laid out a general sewer system, embracing something over twenty-six miles of streets and avenues, and a large portion of this work had been done and paid for by the abutting owners and the village when the city charter came into effect, and it had been ascertained that the average cost of laying an eight-inch sewer pipe in the streets of New Rochelle was three dollars and forty cents per linear foot, one-half of which was paid by the abutting owner on either side of the street, for we find it recited in section 208 of the city charter that “ any property exempt from the direct tax assessed aforesaid, either wholly or partially, or which may have hitherto been exempt that shall subset quently be improved or so situated that it can be connected with the sewers wholly or partially, the owner shall, before any connection of any such property be made with the sewers^, pay to the city treasurer the amount of the direct tax or assessment per linear foot that was assessed against other property similarly situated, in other words, one dollar and seventy cents per linear foot.”
The property of the relator was embraced within the limits of the original sewer system of the village of New Rochelle, and the statute puts him upon the exact basis with the other, residents and tax^ payers of the city, by requiring him to pay the same average price per foot front which has heretofore been paid by his'neighbors. Whatever is lacking in the cost of construction of the sewer system is paid by a general tax, and it would be most unjust and inequitable for this court to hold that the relator, who has stood by and seen this sewer constructed to the benefit of his premises, is entitled to relief in this proceeding. Over $300,000 has been paid upon the samé basis as that prescribed by the statute for the relator, and $318,000 has been ¡expended, to be paid for by a general tax, and now that 'the relator has received the benefit of tins public improvement, it is' only fair and just that he should participate in the burden equally with all others similarly situated.
If the entire expense of constructing the sewer system were placed upon the abutting owner, and the Legislature had arbitrarily fixed a figure to be pkid regardless of the cost of the improvement, there might 'be something in the contention that the relator was being *323deprived of his property without due process of law, but this is not the case. A fixed portion of the cost of construction, based upon the average cost of laying one foot of sewer of eight inches, and which has been paid in common by all property owners abutting upon the sewer system, is provided for by the statute, and the city pays by a general tax for all in excess of this amount, the proportion being, as appears from the figures given by the respondents, about one-half. The relator was not entitled to any hearing upon the question of the cost of construction in front of his premises; this could not determine the equitable portion of the expense of the system as a whole, and the respondents show that the cost of construction in front of - his premises, if this were permitted, was $4,087.20, while the portion of direct tax which he seeks to escape is less than $600.
The relator had a full opportunity to be heard before the assessment was confirmed; he had notice of the meeting for the hearing of grievances, and he, in company with others, filed a protest against the assessment, not on the ground that the assessment was not in accordance with due process of law, but on the ground that the sewer “has been constructed without legal authority on part of your board, and without legal right and without the consent of the undersigned, and that the said assessment is illegal and void, and that we object and protest against the levying of said assessment and to the confirming of the assessment roll for the said assessment.’ The relator contends, however, that this notice was not effectual, because, the amount of the assessment being fixed by the statute, it was of no avail to him to have notice of the grievance day. If the construction of the sewer was illegal; if the board had no power under the law to act, then the relator, as a taxpayer in the city, had a right of action to prevent waste (Code Civ. Proc. § 1925) which would have protected his own special rights in the premises. Having neglected to take any steps to prevent the construction, and being in a position to receive the benefits, he is not in a strong equitable position, and we are of opinion that section 208 of the charter of the city of Hew Rochelle gave him some very substantia] rights which might have" been presented on the grievance day, and that it meets the requirements of due process of law under the facts now before ns. The section provides: “ There shall be assessed and *324levied by the board of sewer commissioners by diiiect tax or assessment on the property located or fronting on the street, road, lane or alley, through which any sewer may be laid or built, or-on property draining therein, for each linear foot of sewers built within said street, road, lane or alley, three dollars and forty cents per linear, foot of sewers laid ¡or built under the provisions of this article, and when any sewer shall be completed in any street, road, lane or alléy the commissioners may levy and assess such tax on the property thereon fronting as aforesaid or draining therein; the tax to be assessed one-half on property fronting on each side of such streets, roads, lanes or alleys per linear foot of. said frontage, or on property draining therein ; exempting from such tax or assessment property so situated that it cannot connect with or use the sewers for any of the purposes for which said sewers were built. The commissioners shall have power to assess a proportionate amount of such direct tax as aforesaid upon property that can: connect with and use the- sewers partially for the purpose for which- the sewers were built,- and determine the proportion of -the tax to be aassessed for such particular benefit or use. Any property exempt from the. direct tax assessed aforesaid, either wholly or partially, or which may have hitherto been exempt, that shall subsequently be improved or so situated that it- can be connected with the sewers wholly or partially, the owner shall, before any connection of any such property be made with the sewers, pay to the city treasurer the amount of the direct tax or assessment per linear foot that was assessed against other property similarly situated, in other words, one dollar and seventy cents: per linear foot. Property situated on street corners shall be exempt from such direct' tax or assessment on one side of the same not' to exceed seventy-five feet on such side; the commissioners of sewers shall have power to determine and decide upon which-side of said property aforesaid the exemption shall be made, and shall not in any event exempt more than one side of such property so situated.” '
By section 210 of the charter it is provided that -upon the hearing which is directed to be given to those interested, the commissioners “ shall make such corrections in the assessment-roll as will, in their judgment, render the said assessment-roll just and equitable,” só that it will be seen that the statute contemplates that all of the rights of the *325parties shall be determined after a hearing, in the same sense that the rights of parties are adjudged in any assessment roll. In the ordinary assessment roll it is the duty of assessors to fix upon the value of the premises ; in the one now before us the number of feet of frontage, subject to such equities as the law points out, and in both cases the final judgment of the assessors, after a hearing, is conclusive, provided they have acted within the law. In the one case the rate per cent to be levied upon such assessment is fixed by the amount of money to be raised, while in the case at bar the rate is fixed by the average cost of laying one foot of eight-inch sewer pipe, which has been determined by experience, based upon an almost complete system of sewers, to be three dollars and forty cents, one-half to be levied against the property on either side of the street.
The Legislature in prescribing this action exercised the same power that it annually exerts in providing for the levying of a certain rate per cent upon the taxable property of the State for general purposes. The proceeding is purely in the exercise of the power of taxation (Conde v. City of Schenectady, 164 N. Y. 258, 262), and there is no provision of the Constitution with which we are familiar which makes it necessary that the relator should have an opportunity to be heard upon the question of the cost of laying sewers in front of his premises under the circumstances in this case. It would hardly be questioned that the Legislature had the constitutional right to say that in the construction of sewers the abutting owners of property should pay one-half of the expense of the sewer system, which was practically the result obtained in the application of the rule laid down in the act creating the sewer commissioners for the village of Hew Rochelle; and it does not appear that the case is presented in a different light because, after determining the average cost of laying one foot of eight-inch sewer pipe, the Legislature has made such cost the rate to be exacted for each foot of frontage.
To illustrate, if the Legislature should enact that highway taxes should be levied and assessed at the rate of one mill for each foot of frontage, such tax would be as free from constitutional objection as though it were based upon the property value, and the only question open to review would be the number of feet of frontage, while in the case of a property value tax, the only question open is that of valuation, and upon this point the final judgment of the assessors, *326acting within the law, is conclusive. Of course, all taxation finds its justification and constitutional sanction in the fact that it is raised for public purposes, and it might be that an arbitrary assessmfent of one dollar and seventy cents per foot of frontage for a sewer system which would cost less than this amount, would be objectionable, but when it is remembered that this special assessment is sufficient only for á portion of the cost, the remainder, equal to approximately one-lialf, to be made up by a generaLtax upon the property of the community, it cannot be said that the tax is not levied and assessed for a public purpose, and the amount of' the cost of construction is not one which, under any system of taxation, is open to the taxpayer upon the review day. A certain amount of money is to be raised for a public purpose. The question of how the burden is to be distributed, and the purposes for which it is to be used, are for legislative determination. All of the rights of the taxpayer have been regarded when he. has been given notice of the assessment and has had an opportunity to be heard, and to show in what respect, if in any, the assessment operates unjustly upon himself as compared with his neighbors or others under the same of similar circumstances, or in what particular he- may be exempt from the general rule. All of these opportunities were presented to the relator, and these opportunities, in the contemplation of taxing laws, constitute due process of law.
The rules applicable to the question here presented .were fully discussed and applied in the case of People v. Mayor of Brooklyn (4 N. Y. 419) and have been since followed and approvfed in a long line of cases, and it seems hardly necessary to refer to them in detail at this, time. It is sufficient to say, in the language of the court, “ that the power of taxation and of • apportioning taxation, or of assigning to each individual his share of the burthen^ is vested . exclusively in the1 Legislature, . unless this power is limited or restrained by somei constitutional provision. The power of taxing and the,power of apportioning taxation are identical and inseparable. Taxes cannot be laid without apportionment; and the power of apportionment is, therefore, unlimited, unless it be restrained as a part of the power of taxation. There is not, and since the original organization of the State goyernment there has not been any such constitutional limitation or restraint.”
*327The certiorari proceeding should be dismissed, and the assessment as made confirmed.
Goodrich, P. J., Hirschberg and Sewell, JJ., concurred; Jenks, J., absent.
Writ of certiorari dismissed and assessment confirmed, with fifty dollars costs and disbursements.