The plaintiffs instituted this action for the cost of erecting an addition to a building on defendants’ lot. The trial of the case resulted in a verdict and judgment for the amount of plaintiffs’ claim.
At the time defendants purchased the property, the plaintiffs held a lease thereon, covering a term of one year from June 15, 1924, at a monthly rental of $75.00, the written contract of lease providing that the lessees were “to have the refusal of a new lease on the said above described premises, at whatever price is offered to the said party of the second part by them or any other parties at the time, at the expiration of the.original lease.” Plaintiffs were assignees of this lease.
The plaintiff Gray testified that shortly after they acquired the lease, he and his partner Wayman found that they would not have enough room for their business of running a gasoline filling station and battery service, which they communicated to the defendant Powell, and that he said: “I can build you one, and I will put up a building for approximately five or six hundred dollars, but I will have to raise the rent;” that he told Powell it would not cost that much, and Powell said: “If you can build it cheaper than that, go ahead and put the building up;” that Wayman said: “If we put the building up will we get enough out of it? We don’t want to lose anything on the building;” to which Powell answered: “Go ahead and put the building up, and I will pay you back for the building, less the depreciation, and so that was agreeable to us, and we had Mr. Smithey to put the building up.”
Wayman testified: “Well, we went to him and asked him about the building, and he told us he would build it for us, and it would cost $500.00, or something like that, and we decided that we would build it cheaper than that, or have it done cheaper than that, and so then he told us to go ahead and build it, and I asked him about getting my money back. We wanted to get our money back for the building, and he said he would pay us back whatever the building cost, less
The defendant Powell testified that plaintiffs came to him, “and said they wanted another building in which to do battery work, and also a little repair work, and wanted to know if I would build it for them, and I told them I would not let them have the same lease next year unless they could raise what I asked for it, and I finally told them I would build the additional building, and it would cost approximately around five hundred dollars, and they would pay fifty dollars additional rent for it. They seemed to think that they could build it a good deal cheaper than that, and then asked me if I would let them build the building, and I did, with the understanding that if they could erect this building and use it for the first year without any rent, that would pay them for the building, and they were to be charged fifty dollars a month after that.”
On December 17, 1924, defendant Powell wrote plaintiffs: “This is to inform you that beginning Jan. 1st, 1925, the rent on the East End Filling Station leased by you from us will be $125.00 per month. This raise in rent is caused on account of the additional building being built on this property. If we understand it correctly this building cost you $400.00. We will pay you this $400.00 for the building after deducting $50.00 per month from said price from the time you have been using the building, which is six months counting December. This would make $300.00. You may deduct $100.00 from your check when you pay your December rent, sending us check for $25.00. This will-pay for the building and pay your rent up for the month of December.”
However, plaintiffs paid $75.00 rent for the month of December, and the same amount thereafter each month until
To the declaration defendants pleaded non assumpsit, and filed their special plea of set-off, claiming additional rent for ten months, at $50.00 per month. .
The only ground assigned by defendants’ motion for a new trial in the court below was alleged after discovered evidence. With their own affidavit in support of their motion, defendants filed the affidavit of one J. T. Eddins, who said that he had gone to plaintiffs some time in May, 1925, with a view of buying their lease, and that Gray told him “that he was paying $75.00 per month rent, but had been notified that he would have to pay $125.00 next year, at the expiration of his lease, and that he had-put up all of this building where his storage battery was in the shed to the building, up at his own expense, that he had asked the owners, had asked Bob Powell, he said to add on to it for him, and Bob told him that if he wanted anything built there, he would have to build it himself at his own expense, and now he had put this up at his own expense and they had raised the rent to $125.00 at the expiration of the lease, and if he wanted it next year he would have to pay $125.00, and in order to get any use of it an additional year, that is in addition to the use that he had already had of it, he would have to pay $125.00.”
Evidently it was proposed by the facts stated in Eddins’ affidavit to corroborate the defendant Powell and to discredit the defendants ’ testimony. But if not cumulative, would this evidence have added weight to defendants’ case? While the defendant Powell testified that he agreed to let plaintiffs erect the additional building with the understanding that they might use it for the first year without paying rent, after which they were to be charged fifty dollars per month, on December 17, 1924, about the middle of the term of the original lease, and before the bill for the cost of erection had been presented to him, he wrote them that the rent would be increased to $125.00 after the first of the year, and in addition asked for an increase of fifty dollars per month from July 1, 1924, from which he offered to permit plaintiffs to deduct the amount expended by them on the building. And defendants’ plea of set-off claims the increase of $50.00 per month for ten months. Plaintiffs on the trial only claimed $384.63, the amount expended by them less depreciation in the building during the term of the original lease.'
Whatever materiality Eddins’ proposed testimony might have in respect to the issues of fact in controversy, it must either discredit plaintiffs’ testimony that they were to be reimbursed for the money expended in erecting .the building
The judgment will be affirmed.