The theory of the appellant in support of her contention that she is entitled to a judgment directing the removal of the nuisance is that the action is one at law, and the court having directed' a verdict that the defendant was maintaining a nuisance, that she was entitled to the other relief demanded as a matter of course, that the court had no discretion in the matter, and, therefore, could not lawfully deny her that relief.
Whatever force there may have been in this contention under the common law or under the writ of nuisance as it was continued *132under the Revised Statutes it has no force under the Code of Civil Procedure.
The Revised Statutes contained the following, pro visions: “The common law remedy by writ of nuisance is retained as heretofore accustomed subject to the provisions herein contained.” (2 R. S. 332, § 1.) “ The judgment upon a writ of nuisance, in case the plaintiff shall prevail, shall be as heretofore accustomed, that the nuisance be removed, and that the plaintiff recover the damages occasioned thereby.” (Id. 333, § 7.)
But on the enactment of the Code of Procedure a radical change was wrought which abrogated the requirement that both classes of relief should be given in cases of this kind. By that Code it was provided in section 453 that “ the writ of nuisance is abolished,” and in section 454 that “ injuries heretofore remediable by writ of nuisance are subjects of action, as other injuries, and in such action there may be judgment for damages, or for the removal of the nuisance, or both.”
These provisions in substance are continued in the Code of Civil Procedure, where it is provided in section 1660 that “ an action for a nuisance may be maintained, in any case where such an action might have been maintained under the laws in force immediately before this act takes effect,” and, in section 1662, that “a final judgment in favor of the plaintiff may award him damages, or direct, the removal of the nuisance, or both.” .
In view of the fact that the writ of nuisance was never favored by the courts, and was regarded as antiquated and obsolete (Clark v. Storrs, 4 Barb. 562; Brown v. Woodworth, 5 id. 550; Ellsworth v. Putnam, 16 id. 568), the reasons for the change in the law, wrought by the Code of Procedure and continued by the Code of Civil Procedure, are apparent. The effect of this change is to give the court the power either to award damages, or to remove the nuisance, or to grant both classes of relief, and this power is given in express and unambiguous terms, leaving no room for construction.
We think, too, that the court, under the circumstances of this case, wisely refrained from granting the relief Contended for by the appellant upon this appeal, if either the court below nor this court could be blind to the fact that the defendant, which is polluting this stream with its sewage, is now and was at the time of the trial under *133a mandatory injunction to cease such pollution, nor to the fact that because it was confronted with a difficult sanitary and engineering problem, requiring a considerable time for its proper solution, the court had exercised its discretion to suspend the operation of such injunction for a reasonable time in order to enable the defendant to comply therewith. (Sammons v. City of Gloversville, 34 Misc. Rep. 459; affd., 67 App. Div. 628; affd., 175 N. Y. 346; Sammons v. City of Gloversville, 81 App. Div. 334; Warren v. City of Gloversville, Id. 291.)
Nothing appears in this record to show any lack of good faith on the part of the defendant in its endeavors to comply within a reasonable time with the injunction which has gone against it. Where a city of considerable size is confronted with such a problem, and where the immediate damming up of the sewers flowing into the Cayadutta creek would result in a great menace to the public health, and where the defendant alone is not the sole offender in polluting the stream, and in a case where an injunction has already run against the defendant to the same effect as the relief sought here, the court was fully justified, under the alternative power given to it by section 1662 of the Code of Civil Procedure, in denying so much of the relief as it .did to the plaintiff in this case.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Judgment unanimously affirmed, with costs,