The work for the expenses of which the assessment was made, was authorized by a resolution of the common council, adopted by a vote of three-fourths of all the members elected to each board.
It was approved on the 5th of October, 1872, and authorized the commissioner of public works to have the Telford MacAdam roadway, laid from the east side of Eighth avenue to ihe North river, in accordance with specifications for such pavement by which the Boulevard and other avenues were paved, and it directed' the work to be done by the day. There was no illegality in this direction inasmuch as the ordinance, or resolution, authorizing it was adopted by the three-fourths vote given for it in each board of the common council. (Vol. 1, Laws of 1870, 391, chap. 137, § 104.)
It was shown that the resolution had not been published in the newspaper selected for such purposes under the authority and *562requirement of section 1, chapter 574 of the Laws of 1871. And for that reason it has been urged that it conferred no legal authority for making the improvement^ because the curbing and guttering had been previously set upon the street, and the expenses of that work assessed upon and paid for by the owner of the property now affected. The evidence given in support of the application, resulting in the making of the order appealed from, established those facts, and also showed that the curbing and guttering had been reset in constructing the pavement provided for, and the expenses of that work included in the assessment which was the subject of complaint. In, the Matter of Burmeister (16 N. Y. Sup. Court Repts., 613) the point was considered whether the work of curbing and guttering constituted a portion of the pavement in such a sense as to entitle the owner of property assessed for the expenses of doing it a second time, to relief under chapters 312 and 313, of the Laws of 1874. A very decided intimation wa<? given that it was not, but as the point was not essential to the disposition of the appeal in that case, it was not decided.
In particularizing the different descriptions of pavements, a distinction will be clearly indicated between a pavement of the carriageway, and the curbing and guttering of a street, and the flagging of the walks used only by pedestrians. But the act under which this application was made, attempted to give no such definition or distinction. It used the term in its broadest and most comprehensive sense and allowed the assessment for repaving any street, or public place, to be vacated for the want of publication of the resolutions or ordinance, as that had been required by law. In that sense it seems to include every sjoecies and descrij)tion of pavement, appropriate for any part of the streets and public places of the city. And the term was so defined by the Court of Appeals in the case of Phillips (60 N. Y., 16). The propriety of that decision was questioned upon the occasion already referred to, but it was reaffirmed in the case of Burke (62 N. Y., 224, 229), and •the point considered to have been settled by the preceding determination ; to the same effect see, also, Williams v. Mayor, etc. (2 Mich., 500). And that certainly should -be accepted as controlling-in the disposition of this case, if it were strictly essential to its determination. Fpr even if the work of resetting the flagging. *563curbing and guttering is to be done at tbe expense of tbe land owner, it must be as important for the protection of his interests, that he should have the statutory notice of the contemplated improvement, and in that way afforded an opportunity of showing it to be unrequired, as it is that the notice should be given of an ordinance or resolution for repairing the carriageway of a street. The policy which would entitle him to notice of the latter would clearly include also the former. But as this case will not depend upon that point, it need not on the present occasion be decided.
In making the improvement in controversy, an excavation was made mostly between Eighth and Ninth avenues, by which the grade of Seventy-second street was reduced below the line at which it had been in the first instance established and graded. And as that reduction was neither asked for by the application of the owners of two-tliirds of the lineal feet of land fronting upon the street, as a preceding statute had required (vol. 2, Laws of 1867, p. 1751, chap. 607, § 5); nor in terms provided for by the resolution, or ordinance authorizing the pavement; for those reasons, also, it was insisted that the assessment was unlawful because it included the expenses of making that change of grade. But for the purpose of changing the grade of this street, as it had been at first established, no such application of the property owners was necessary. The change was required because of a reduction of 'two feet in the grade of Eighth avenue at the point whei’e it intersected Seventy second street. And it was expressly authorized by chapter 593 of the Laws of 1870, in order to conform the grade of this street to that of the avenue. All that was required for that purpose was, that the commissioner of public works should make the change within six months after the passage of the act. That took place on the 3d of May, 1870, and the change was shown to have been made by him on the second of the following November, which was within the time the legislature had prescribed. The proceedings taken in laying down the pavement were not for those reasons subject to the imputation that they effected any unlawful or unwarranted change in the grade of Seventy-second street.
This work was authorized after the change made in the grade had been fully provided for, and it must, therefore, have been intended, although not in terms expressed, that in performing it *564the lawful grade of the street should be followed. The resolution required the MacAdam pavement to be laid, and a reasonable understanding and construction of that authority would include whatever should prove necessary to accomplish that result. And the excavation made was clearly one of those acts. "Without it the pavement could not be laid, and it must have been intended it should be upon the legally established grade of the street. And though that was not expressly directed by the resolution or ordinance, it was clearly to be inferred for the end provided for could be obtained in no other way. (2 Dillon on Municipal Corporations, 736, § 636; Schenley v. Com., 36 Penn., 29, 60; Allegheny City v. Blair, 74 id., 225, 230; State v. Council of Elizabeth, 1 Vroom, 365 ; Williams v. Mayor of Detroit, 2 Mich., 560.)
It is clear that the taking up and resetting of the curbing and guttering were also necessary for the purpose of effecting this change in the grade. It could not be accomplished without that. And, consequently, the power to do it was conferred by the statute allowing the grade of the street to be conformed to that of the avenue. Against that the owner could present no valid or reliable objection. The specific thing which included it was provided for by the express terms of the law. No ordinance or resolution of the common council was, for that reason, required to provide for the change. But as its necessity had been created by the change in, the grade of the avenue, an absolute right to make that of the street correspond with it, was given unqualifiedly by the statute to the commissioner of public works. As to that no publication was necessary, for the act including it prescribed all that should be done for that purpose, and that excluded the obligation to make any publication of notice whatsoever.
What the ordinance or resolution providing for the work directed, was the laying of a MacAdam pavement upon a street which had never been paved upon its carriageway in any form before. And as that was the original pavement on that portion of it, and it could not be properly laid without reducing and resetting the curbing and guttering, the failure to publish the ordinance or resolution, did not justify the order vacating the assessment which was made for the expenses. (Laws of 1874, chapter 313.) Neither the failure to give the notice, according to *565tbe terms of that act, nor tbe resetting of tbe curbing and guttering, which was necessarily included in the power created by tbe statute of 1870, to change tbe grade, rendered tbe assessment invalid.
For these reasons, and also for tbe additional one that tbe work had been completed, and tbe liability to pay tbe expense of it created before 1875, chapter 476 of tbe Laws of that year, can have no application whatever to this case.
Tbe order appealed from should be reversed with ten dollars costs, besides tbe disbursements on tbe appeal, and an order entered denying tbe application.
I agree to tbe result in this case upon tbe gronnd on wbicb it is put by my brother Daniels, but I dissent from what is said by him indicating, that curbing and guttering a street, is either in fact or in law, a paving of tbe street itself. Technically, it is no part of tbe “ paving,” but it is something wbicb has its own distinctive name and use; and it is often, and, indeed, in new streets in tbe city almost always done wholly independently of tbe paving, and long before tbe street itself is required to be paved. There is no authority either in tbe ordinances of tbe city, or in usage, or in any of tbe decisions, recognizing the idea that tbe mere fact that a street was years ago curbed and guttered at tbe expense of tbe owners of tbe adjoining lands, relieves them from the expense of pctming tbe same whenever that is adjudged necessary. It is only when a street has once been completely paved, and paid for by tbe owners, that the future burden of repctming is thrown upon tbe city.
And tbe word “ repaving ” or repavement as used in tbe acts of 1872 (chap. 580), and 1874 (chap. 313), relate only to a street wbicb has once been completely paved. In the Matter of Burmeister (9 Hun, 613) I took occasion to refer to various ordinances regulating this subject and showing tbe established distinction between tbe “ curbing and guttering ” of a street, and its pavement.
To say that a street is prned when it is simply curbed and guttered, seems to me to be an abuse of terms; and even if curbing and guttering be part of tbe pavement, to say that completing tbe pavement by paving the carriageway, which is all of tbe street *566lying between gutters, is a “repa/oement” where no paving of the carriageway had ever been made at all, is to make the less include the greater in a manner inconsistent with law, and the general understanding of men.
Brady, J., also concurred in the result.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements. Order to be entered denying application.