The board of assessors .was created by the act of 1859 (chap. 302, sec. 15). Their duties are to make “ estimates and assessments required by law for building wells, erecting pumps, pitching, paving, regulating and repairing *408streets, constructing sewers, fencing vacant lots and public slips, and all other improvements directed by corporation ordinance, for which an assessment is to be made.” Before the creation of this permanent board by the act of 1859, all such estimates and assessments were made by assessors, specially appointed by the common council, when each improvement, for which estimate and assessment was to be made, had been ordered by the common council {act of 1813, chap. 86, sec. 175), and the object of the creation of this board was to institute a permanent body to perform all the duties for which assessors were specially appointed before the act of 1859.
The general authority to the board to make the estimates and assessments “ for all improvements directed by corporation ordinances for which an assessment is to be made,” would include the making of assessments of expense and loss in the changing of the grade of streets, under the act of 1852 (chap. 52), because the changing of grade is an improvement within the power of the common council to order, and the making of the assessment of the expense would be by assessors appointed for the purpose by the common council, if the subsequent act of 1859 had not created a board of assessors to perform that duty.
The act of 1852, therefore, should be read as if amended by the act of 1859, by the substitution of the board of assessors to make the estimates and assessments required, and when the act of 1867 {chap. 697, sec. 3), relative to the closing of certain streets, roads, &e., provided that the damages caused by the closing of any road under the provisions of that act,» should be ascertained in the manner provided by the third and fourth sections of the act of 1852 above mentioned, it was in effect a direction to the board of assessors to make such estimates and assessments as might be required. The act of 1867, by direct implication, conferred new and further powers upon the board of assessors, adequate to the performance of the new duties thus imposed for this particular purpose. It is *409only by such a construction of the acts in question that effect can be given to an express provision by the legislature, intended for the benefit of persons injured or affected by the exercise of the sovereign power in the act of 1867.
William Barnes & E. Delafield Smith, counsel to the corporation, for appellants. I. Mandamus is not the appropriate remedy (Ex parte Ostrander, 1 Denio, 682; Board of Health agt. Heister, 37 N. Y., 672; Darlington agt. Mayor, 31 id., 164; People agt. Kerr, 27 id., 188; People agt. Dowling, 55 Barb., 197; 26 Wend., 658 ; 2 Cow., 438; 18 Wend., 78; People ex rel. Opdyke agt. Brennan, 39 Barb., 651; People agt. Croton Aq. Board, 49 id., 261). The power of the court is discretionary (1 Cow., 501; 13 Barb., 432; 15 id., 607; 49 id., 259; 2 Abb. Pr. [N. S.], 78; 1 Wend., 318). II. A mandamus should not be granted where a party has allowed sufficient time to pass before he makes his application (People ex rel. Olmstead agt. Supervisor, 12 Barb., 446; People agt. Delaware C. P., 2 Wend., 256; Beach agt. Seneca C. P., 2 id., 264). III. The board of assessors are not by any act expressly authorized to estimate damages resulting from the closing of a street or road (Chap. 302, Laws 1859, § 15; § 175, chap. 86, Laws 1813).*409Although the proceedings in- the case of assessments for, and estimates of damage upon the closing of the roads under the act of 1867, do not closely resemble those upon the change of grade, the provisions in the acts of 1852 and 1813 must be followed as far as may be. The damage sustained by the adjoining owners, by the closing of the Bloomingdale road, can be ascertained (and although there is no estimate of expenses of such closing, to which they can be added, as in the case of changing grade), they can be assessed and paid alone, and the estimate of damage may be made with reference *to the benefit received by the adjoining owners, by the reversion to them of the road so closed.
Application granted.
IY. Under the act of 1813, 1852 and 1867, a single assessment only can be made covering all the owners entitled to damages; the order of special term directing a separate estimate of the relator’s damages, is, therefore, irregular. Y. Under section 3, chapter 697, Laws 1867, and sections 2 and 3, chapter 52,- Laws 1852, the board of assessors are not authorized to make any separate assessment (Folger, J., in Brooklyn agt. Armstrong, 45 N. Y., 245; Smith agt. Boston, 7 Cush., 254; Gould agt. H. R. R. R. Co., 6 N. Y., 522; Radcliff agt. Mayor, 4 id., 195; Wilson agt. Mayor, 1 Denio, 595 ; Lansing agt. Smith, 8 Cow., 149; Laws 1818, chap. 213; § 175, chap. 86, Laws 1813). YI. Bloomingdale road was not laid out on the map of the city of Yew York (Chap. 115, Laws 1807; Report of Com., March 22, 1811; Valentine's Laws, pp. 809, 810; Fearing agt. Irving, 4 Daly Rep., 386; Chap. 160, Laws 1816; Chap. 213, Laws 1818; Chap. 52, Laws 1852; Chap. 565, Laws 1865; Chap. 367, Laws 1867). James A. Deering, for relator, respondent. I. Mandamus is the appropriate remedy to enforce the right of the relator (Thompson, J., in Commonwealth agt. Allegany, 37 Pa. St., 277; Denio, J., People agt. Mead, 24 N. Y., 119; Taney, C. J., Commonwealth agt. Dennison, 24 How. [U. S.], 66; Commonwealth agt. Pittsburgh, 34 Pa. St., 496; Stephens' Nisi Prius, 2292; Dillon on Mun. Corp., § 666; People agt. Mayor, 10 Wend., 393; Rex agt. Railway Co., 2 B. & A., 646 ; Ex parte Robins, 7 Dowl., 566; Buck agt. Lockport, 6 Lans., 251; McCullough agt. Mayor, 23 Wend., 458; Ex parte Lynch, 2 Hill, 45; People agt. Judges, 20 Wend., 658). It is conceded that the relator has no remedy by suit or action (Dillon on Mun. Corp., 782; Callender agt. Marsh. [leading case], 1 Pick., 418; Radcliff's Ex'rs agt. Mayor, 4 Comst., 195; Graves agt. Otis, 2 Hill, 466; Wilson agt. Mayor, 1 Denio, 595; Mills agt. Brooklyn, 32 N. Y., 489; Roeck agt. Newark, 33 N. J. Law, 129; Coster agt. Mayor, 43 N. Y., 399; Waddell agt. Mayor, 8 Barb., 95). II. The authority and power given to the board of assessors by chapter 697, Laws 1867, is full and ample. The right of the relator is clear beyond doubt (Chap. 697, Laws 1867, sec. 3; Chap. 302, Laws 1859, secs. 15 and 17; Chap. 52, Laws 1852, sec. 3; Chap. 508, Laws 1853, sec. 2; Laws 1851, chap. 430; Charter 1849, ch. 12; Ordinance, 1839, c. v., title 7; Chap. 86, Laws 1813, sec. 175; Laws 1801, chap. 129; Laws 1787, chap. 88; Dongan & Montgomery charters, Valentines Laws,p. 320). III. It is no objection to granting the writ that but one person interested applies. It is not necessary that all interested should join (Chap. 52, Laws 1852; People agt. Common Council, 20 How. Pr. Rep., 491; Roeck agt. Newark, 33 N. J. Law, 129; Ex parte Jennings, 6 Cow., 518, 579; People agt. Supervisors, 5 Cow., 592; Matter of Trustees, 1 Barb., 34). IY. A peremptory writ is proper where, there is no disputed question of fact (People agt. Contracting Board, 27 N. Y., 378; Crary's Practice, 286; Tapping on Mamdamus). ' Y. The order of the special term should he affirmed. Daly, C. J.The act of 1867 declares that all damages to any land or building by reason of the closing of any street referred to in the act, shall be ascertained and paid in the manner specified in the third and fourth sections of the act of 1852.
These sections in the act of 1852 do not provide for the ascertaining and paying any damage from the closing of a street but for such as may arise thereafter from altering or *412changing in whole or in part the grade of any street. What is referred to evidently, therefore, in the act of 1867, is the mode of ascertaining and paying damage in the act of 1852, which was by estimating the loss or damage of each owner of land by the assessors appointed to estimate the expense of the change of grade. And to ascertain who these assessors were when the act of 1852 was passed, and who they were when this act of 1867 was passed, it will be necessary to review the state of the statutory law upon this subject when the act of 1852 was passed, and the changes made in it afterward, down to the time of the passage of the act of 1867. By the Dongan and Montgomery charters, the corporation had the power to direct the “ laying out of streets,” and also the power of altering, amending or repairing streets, words comprehensive enough to include any change or alteration in the grade (Kent’s charter, pp. 15, 100, 235, 237). By the act of 1787 {chap. 88) this power was further recognized, and the common council were authorized to appoint two persons to be the surveyors of buildings, streets, wharfs, <fcc., and to see that they were laid out, altered, &e., so as to be regulated with uniformity, according to the ordinances of the corporation; and the corporation were authorized to take the ground of any private person for such purposes, whose damage was to be assessed by a jury. By the act of 1801 {chap. 129) the corporation were further empowered to make by-laws or orders for regulating and altering the streets, as well as other matters, and to appoint five freeholders to estimate the expense and make a just and equitable assessment of it upon the owner or occupants of houses benefited. And by the act of 1813 {sec. 175), the assessment for the “ altering or amending” of streets, instead of being made by five freeholders, was to be made by such skillful, competent and disinterested persons as the com. mon council might think proper to appoint. Under this latter authority, the common council generally appointed three persons; and by the ordinances of 1839 {chap. 5, title 7) the street commissioner and the assistant street commissioner *413and the first clerk in the street commissioner’s office were required to perform the duties of assessors, in estimating, among other matters therein specified, the expense of reopening streets, and, as such assessors, were required to take an oath that they would make an estimate and the assessment fairly and impartially. After the adoption of the amended charter of 1849 (chap. 12), a bureau of assessment was created in the street department, the regulation of streets being continued, first by the ordinances of 1839 (chap. 6), afterward by the amended charter of 1849, to the “ street department.” After 1849, and before the enactment of the statute of 1852, officers of the bureau of assessments were known by the name of the “ assessors of the street department,” and are referred to by that name in the statute of 1851 (chap. 430) and 1853 (chap. 508), who were authorized and who did both make and collect the assessments connected with the regulation of streets. When the act of 1852, therefore, refers to the assessors appointed to estimate and assess the expense of conforming to any change of grade that might thereafter be established, it means the officers now referred to and then known by the statutory designation of the “ assessors of the street department.”
The act of 1852 restricted the common council from making any change of grade south of Sixty-third street, except with the written consent of at least two-thirds of the owners of the land, and it required what had never been required before, except where the change of grade had become necessary by the opening of the street, that an estimate should be made of the loss and damage sustained by each owner of the land fronting on the street the grade of which was to be changed, which additional duty it imposed upon the assessors who were to estimate the expense of the improvement, by requiring them to make a just and equitable award of the amount of the damage to each owner.
By the act of 1816 (chap. 160), provision was made for ascertaining the damage sustained by the owners of land where a *414new regulation in the elevation or depression of the street had become necessary in consequence of the opening and improvement of a street in the compactly built part of the city, under which act the damages were to be ascertained by “the commissioners of estimate and assessment,” appointed by the supreme court under the act of 1813 {chap. 176), for the opening and laying out of any street, avenue, square or public place in the city. It is very clear that these are not the persons referred to in the act of 1852, for they were not known by the name of “ assessors,” but by that of “ commissioners,” the name by which they are still designated, and they assessed damage for a change of grade only in the case where it became necessary in consequence of an opening of a street.
By the act of 1818 (chap. 213), provision was made for ascertaining and paying the damage to the owners of land caused by the closing of streets, which is to be ascertained ly three commissioners of estimate to be appointed by the supreme court. It is equally evident that they are not the persons referred to, for they are not denominated “assessors,” but “ commissioners of estimate,” and they could not have been intended by the act of 1867, for the act does not refer to the act under which they were appointed, but declares the damage shall be ascertained and paid in the manner specified in the third and fourth sections of the act of 1852, and those sections, as I have said, specified the assessors appointed to estimate and assess the expense of conforming to a change of grade. This was the state of the statutory law when the act of 1852 was passed. At the time, by the amended charter of 1849 (sec. 12), there was an executive department called the street department, which, by the provisions of the amended charter, had cognizance of the opening, regulating and paving streets; “ when done by assessment,” terms which embrace any change or alteration in the grade, and the bureau for the collection of assessments, attached by that amended charter to the street department, made the assessment list, as appears by the acts of 1851 and 1853, as before referred to; *415for in the act of 1858 (chap. 508, sec. 2), a specific compensation is given to them for their services for making such assessment on the confirmation of the assessment list. And this state of things lasted until the passage of the act of 1859 (chap. 302, sec. 15), which created a board of assessors to be appointed by the commissioners of taxes and assessments, which board was thereafter charged with the duty of making estimates and assessments required by law for building wells, erecting pumps, pitching, paving, regulating and repairing streets, fencing vacant lots and public slips, and all other improvements directed by corporation ordinance, for which an assessment may be made, and all previous statutes inconsistent with this act were repealed.
This repealed so much of the act of 1813 (chap. 86), as authorized the common council to appoint persons to estimate and assess the expense for regulating or altering any street, or the pitching or paving of it, or any of the improvements provided for by the 175th section of that act, the “ board of assessors ” being thereafter substituted for the assessors who were up to that time either appointed by the common council or by the ordinance of 1839, or existed as a bureau in the street department under the act of 1819. This board of assessors, under the act of 1859, are, in addition to what are enumerated, to assess “ all other improvements ” directed by a corporation ordinance.” A change in the grade of a street is an improvement within the meaning of these words, and an improvement which can be directed to be made by a corporation ordinance; so that they have in this respect the same power which the assessors formerly had who were appointed by the common council or who acted as a bureau of the street department.
That the officers designated in -the act of 1851 as the “ assessors of the street department ” did make the assessments for the change of grade or for any alteration in the regulation of a street, I infer, not only from the provision in the act of 1853, giving them compensation for their services in making *416assessments, but from the fact that three officials attached to the street department, the street commissioner, his assistant, and the first clerk in the department, were required by the ordinance of 1839, before referred to, to perform the duties of assessors in making, among other things, the estimates for the expense of repairing streets when done b} the order of the common council, and to make the assessment for such expense among the owners and occupants of houses to be benefited thereby, which by the ordinance they were to do without charge; but for which they were compensated by the acts of 1851 and 1853, before referred to. I infer that they continued in the exercise of this duty down to the passage of the act of 1859, creating the. board of assessors, as I find nothing showing that the ordinance of 1839 was repealed until the revision of the ordinance in May, 1859, one month after the passage of the act of 1859, in which revised ordinances this provision of the ordinance of 1839 was omitted, for the reason that the act of 1859 had created a new body, the board of assessors, who were thereafter to make all the estimates and assessments for improvements directed by a corporation ordinance.
The legislature, when they passed the act of 1867, must be assumed to have known all the prior legislation and the state of the statutory laws relating to streets in the city of Mew York as it existed when the act of 1867 was passed; that is, they must be assumed to have known that under the act of 1813, there were assessors for ascertaining the expense of such improvements directed by the corporation as the regulation or altering of streets; commissioners for ascertaining the damage to land owners by elevating or. depressing the grade of a street in consequence of the opening of a new street, and that they were the commissioners appointed by the supreme court for the opening of the street; that when a street was closed the damages t.o landholders were ascertained by commissioners of estimate'appointed by the supreme court; that under the amended charter of 1849, a bureau for the col*417lection of assessments was created; that by the act of 1851, an organization was recognized as existing in the street department known as the “ assessors of the street department; ” that the street department had, under the amended charter of 1857 (chap. 187), cognizance of “ altering, grading and regulating ” of streets, and that by the act of 1859, the board of assessors, which was then created, succeeded to all the powers in respect to assessments for altering, grading and regulating of streets under corporation ordinances which the assessors appointed by the common council had under the act of 1813, or the assessors of the street department under the amended charters of 1849 or 1857.
There are certain maxims in the interpretation of statutes to be applied to this case which I will briefly enumerate:
I. That statutes are to be interpreted according to the intent and not necessarily according to the letter’.
II. That when the words are obscure, so that the intent does not clearly appear, it may be inferred from the cause or necessity of the statute.
III. That it is the duty of the courts to construe a statute so as to meet the mischief and advance the remedy.
IV. That where the provision of a statute is general, every thing which is necessary to make the provision effectual is supplied by the common law.
V. That all statutes in pa/ri materia are to be read and construed together as if they formed parts of the same statute and were enacted at the same time.
VI. That where the intent, or the mischief intended to be remedied, is plain, but the remedy from the words used is somewhat obscure, that .construction is to be given, if it I^e possible, which will give full effect to the intent, and not that which will render it void and inoperative (Potter's Dwarris and the authorities there cited, chap. 5).
The intent of the act of 1867 is very plain. It is, that the damage to any land, building or structure by reason of the closing of a street or the altering the grade of a street within *418the district specified, shall be ascertained and paid. The manner in which it is to be ascertained and paid is the only thing in respect to which there can be any doubt. It is to be in the manner specified in the third and fourth sections of - the act of 1852, that is, that the damages are to be ascertained by the assessors appointed to estimate the expense of a change of grade, and if there were no persons known by that name when the act of 1867 was passed, then it must mean the official persons who have succeeded to and who then performed that duty by whatever name they were known. If there were such officials when this act of 1867 was passed, then there is no difficulty in giving effect to and carrying out the intent of the act. The board of assessors created in 1859 have authority to estimate the expense of improvements ordered by the corporation other than specifically enumerated in the act creating that board and defining its powers. A change in a grade of a street is not among the matters specifically enumerated, .but it is embraced by the language at the close of the section, “ and all other improvements directed by corporation ordinances for which an assessment may be made.” Upon this point I have mot the slightest doubt.
It is not only within the-powers but it is the duty of this board to estimate and assess the expenses if a change in the grade of a street is directed by the coiporation in a part of the city where they have the power to do so. This being the case the board of assessors is the body to ascertain the damage arising from the closing of a street or the changing of a grade of one, in pursuance of the authority conferred by the act of 1867; within the district specified in that act, and they are to do it in the manner required by the act of 1852 by making a just and equitable award of the amount of the loss and damage to the owners of the land upon the street heretofore known as the Bloomingdale road, which has been closed under the act of 1867.
It is objected to this mandamus that they are required to ascertain the plaintiff’s loss and damage, and that under all *419the acts there is to be but one general proceeding in which the loss and damage of each person is to be ascertained. Let them then go on and do this, and, when they have done so, the specific amount to be awarded to the plaintiff will be ascertained. I apprehend that this is not the difficulty, that it haa been the doubt as to the authority, in respect to which they very properly applied to the corporation counsel, and that officer, instead of giving any opinion as to how the positive provision of the statute that the damage to the land owners from the closing of the street is to be ascertained and paid was to be complied with, told the bffard of assessors that he had no doubt that that was the intent of the act, but that he doubted whether the object had been accomplished by the enactment, and that, in view of the doubt he entertained as to their jurisdiction, that he could not advise them to act. He has set forth in his opinion the grounds upon which the doubt is founded, and, in my judgment, it has no bearing whatever upon the question.
It is substantially this: That the expense of the surveys and maps, by the filing of which the street is closed, is not paid by assessment, but by money to be ultimately raised by taxation; that when, under the act of 1852, the assessors, who, under the act of 1813, were to estimate the expenses of a change of grade, are, in addition to that to estimate the loss and damages of owners affected by the change of grade, to make a just and equitable award to each of such owners; that the amount so awarded is to be included in the expense of such proceeding; that an assessment of such expense, including the amount awarded for loss and damage, is to be assessed upon- the owners or occupants of houses and lots intended to be benefited by the improvement, and that four months after the ratification of such assessment by the common council, the amount awarded to such owner is to be paid by the corporation (Laws of 1813, chap. 86 to 175 ; of 1852, chap. 53, secs. 3 and 4; and of 1867, chap. 697 to 3); that, as there is no occasion for assessors, nor is there any *420assessment, under the act of 1867, for the expense incurred by the commissioners of the Central park in making surveys, and the preparation of maps, there is not, in the language of the act of 1852, “ assessors appointed to. estimate and assess the expense,” and, therefore, the doubt whether this provision for ascertaining and paying the loss and damage to owners by the closing of the street is not only ineffectual, inoperative and void. I utterly fail to see the sequence in this reasoning. It by no means follows that the provisions in the act of 1867 cannot be carried out, because there is to be no assessment upon the owners of land» benefited for the expense incurred by the commissioners of the Central park, in having surveys made and maps prepared and filed, to enable them to close the street. This provision is itself an assessment; an assessment, in its general signification, is to ascertain, settle and fix an amount to which a party is subject, as his proportionate part in a tax, or which he is to pay as damages, and where the corporation are by statute, to pay any part of the value of buildings taken for public improvement, it is, in respect to them, called in the statute an assessment (Laws of 1813, chap. 86, sec. 178 ; Laws of 1813, chap, 213, sec. 10).
This provision contemplates that damage will or may accrue to land, or the building or structures upon it, by the closing of the street, and that it is to be ascertained and paid. When it declares that it shall be ascertained and paid in the manner specified in the act of 1852, it means that it shall be estimated as the loss and damage to the .owners of land fronting upon a street is estimated under the act of 1852, when a change is made in the grade of a street; that is, by making a just and equitable award of the amount of loss and damage which each owner of land fronting on the street will sustain by reason of the change; that it is to be made by the officials who, when the act of 1867 was passed, had succeeded to and exercised the same powers as the officials referred to in the act of 1852; that it is and was to be an assessment fixing the amount to be awarded to each owner who will sustain loss *421and injury by the change; that, as such assessment, it is to be certified to the board of revision and correction, by the act of 1861 (chap. 308), which, in this respect, has succeeded to the powers of the common council, and, when ratified by them, is binding and conclusive'; and that, four months after the ratification, the amount of the respective awards are to be paid by the corporation (Laws of 1852, chap. 52, secs. 3, 4; of 1813, chap. 86, sec. 175).
In this way, in my judgment, the act can be fully carried out without doing violence to, setting at nought, or in any way impairing any statutory provisions existing when the act of 1867 was passed.
The order appealed from should be affirmed.
I concur, F. W. L.
I concur, E. L. L.
Filed in open court 12th March, 1875.
. Affirmed in court of appeals, June, 1875, on opinion of Daly, C. J., at general term.