delivered the opinion of the court.
Pursuant to authority of an act of the legislature of the. State, the City of New York, in 1890, began the construction of an elevated viaduct in 155th Street, which was completed in-1893. Before and during the construction of thе viaduct George W. Sauer, the intestate of the plaintiff in error, was the owner of property fronting upon the part of the street improved and in due time instituted suit to recover damages, which he clаimed he had suffered. After many vicissitudes, sufficiently indicated in
Sauer
v.
City of New York,
With the right to damages thus established, the plaintiff in error in due time filed her claim with the .Board of Assessors and was awarded a substantial sum as compensation. While her claim for damаges was pending with the Board of Assessors “ The Greater New York Charter ” was amended in many respects affecting the powers and *144 duties of the Board of Assessors and of the Board of Revision of Assessments (Lаws of New York, 1918, c. 619). The Comptroller, Corporation Counsel and President of the Department of Taxes and Assessments of the City, had constituted the Board of Revision of Assessments since 1901, and as such were given рower to review any award of damages made by the Board of - Assessors, and the only essential change made by the amendment of 1918 consisted in'the provision that:
“ The confirmation of any such award by thе board of revision of assessments shall be final and conclusive upon all parties and persons whomsoever with respect to the amount of damage sustained.”
The plaintiff in error, not being satisfied with the amount of the award in her favor by the Board of Assessors, -filed objections thereto, which were overruled, and thereupon, pursuant to law, the proposed award with the objections was presented to the Board of Revision of Assessments and was by it confirmed.
The plaintiff in error, continuing dissatisfied, thereupon appealed to the Supreme Court of New York for, and procured-, a writ of certiоrari to review the determination of the award by the Board of'Assessors and the confirmation of it by the Board of Revision of Assessments, The ground of this application was that the quoted provision of the-act of the New York Legislature of 1918, making the confirmation of the award by the Board of Revision of Assessments final and conclusive “ with respect to the amount of damage sustained,” was repugnant to the. Cоnstitution of the United States and void, and that the right to such review by certiorari, theretofore existing, was not affected by it.
•A motion by the city to dismiss the writ on the, ground that plaintiff in error’s right to it was cut off by the amendment to the statute was denied by the Supreme Court and by the Appellate Division of the Supreme *145 Court, but this decision was reversed by the Court of Appeals in the judgment which is now under review.
■ It is conceded that at the time thе viaduct was erected and until the Act of 1918, under the practice of New York, the plaintiff in error had the right to a general review in the Supreme Court, a court of general jurisdiction, of the procеedings before the Board of Assessors until 1901 and of the Board of Revision of Assessments until the amendment in 1918. The holding of the Court of Appeals in this case (
Thus the contention "of the plаintiff in error, pursued through all the state courts and now presented in this court, is, that the modification by the Act of 1918 of the remedy available to her intestate when the viaduct was constructed and his right to damages became complete, offends: (1) Against the contract impairment clause (Art. I, § 10); (2) against the equal protection clause; and (3) against the due process of law clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the. Federal Constitution.
As to the first of these contentions.
While, under the holdings in
People ex
rel.
Crane
v.
Ormond,
*146
It has long been settled by decisions of this court that the word “ contracts ” in § 10 of Article I of the- Constitution is used in its usual or popular sensé as signifying an agreement of two or more minds, upon sufficient consideration, to do or not to do certain acts. “ Mutual assent ” [express or implied] “ to its terms is of its very essence.”
State of Louisiana ex rel. Folsom
v.
Mayor and Administrators of New Orleans,
The Court of Appeals held that at common .law the intestate of the plaintiff m error did not have any right of action for the damage done to his property
(Sauer
v.
City of New York,
The statement of the case shows that, stripped of non-essentials, the second contention of the plaintiff in error is that the cutting down by thе amendment of 1918 of her remedy from a general review in the State Supreme Court to a review limited to “ questions of jurisdiction, fraud and willful misconduct on the part of the officials composing the boards,” dеprived her of her property without due process of law.
*147
In determining whether or not due process of law has been denied regard must always be had to the character of the proceеding involved for the purpose of determining what the practice at common law was and what the practice in this country has been in like cases.
Twining
v.
New Jersey,
.The right ot the plaintiff in error to damages having been established by the decision in
No one has a vested right in any given .mode of procedure
(Railroad Co.
v.
Grant,
The amendment of 1918, following an earlier amendment in 1901, gave to the plaintiff in error the right to have the award of the B.o&rd of Assessors reviewed by the Board of Revision .of Assessments, which her intestate did not have when the viaduct was constructed, and while the
*148
amendment of 1918 made the finding of the latter conclusive as to the “ amount of damage sustained,” it retained' the right to review in the courts the entire finding, whenever lack of jurisdiction, or fraud, or wilful misconduct on the part of the members of the Board should be asserted. This afforded ample protection for the fundamental rights of the plaintiff in error, and the taking away of the right to have examined mere claims of honest erre in the conduct of the proceeding by the Board did not invade any federal constitutional right. Even courts have been known to make rulings thought by counsel to be errоneous.
McGovern
v.
City of New
York,
The Court of Appeals declares that the theory of the amendment is well understood to be “ the policy that the greater'good is sometimes served by making certain classes of decisions final and ending litigation, even though in a particular case the individual is prevented by review from correcting some error which has injured him. ”
It may not be an undiluted evil to- the real parties in interest to this litigation, whiсh has been pending in various forms for nearly thirty years, to have it brought to an end and to have the large award allowed in 1918 divided among them.
Plainly this second claim of the plaintiff in error must be denied.
The final contention is that the amendment of 1918 to the act denies to the plaintiff in error the equal protection of the laws.
It is argued, far from confidently, that this invasion of constitutional right arises from the fact that the Board of Revision of Assessments, having final jurisdiction over the amount of the damages suffered by the intestate of the plaintiff in error, is composed of three city officials, appointed by the mayor, with pоwer to pass on claims against it and that this denies to her an impartial tribunal. This membership of the Board had existed since 1901.
*149 The disposition of this contention by the Court of Appeals is quite sufficient, saying:
“ The offiсials who heard her claim were not disqualified bécause selected by the city. Her claim was not against the city but if allowed was collected by assessment. Officials acting really as an auditing board arе not condemned because they have been selected by the municipality or other division against which the claim is made. If it were ■otherwise a great many bodies passing in a judicial capaсity on claims from the Board of Claims down, would be disqualified. ”
The judgment of the Supreme Court, Appellate Division, First Judicial Department of the State of New York, entered on remittitur from the Court of Appeals is
Affirmed.
