Sire v. Rumbold

14 N.Y.S. 925 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1891

Bischoff, J.

From the record before us we can perceive no valid ground for disturbing the judgment or order appealed from. The agreement set up in the answer, and which defendants established by sufficient evidence upon the trial, is hot in conflict with the provisions of the lease. The seventeenth paragraph of the lease recites that it is the intention of the lessor to build upon the demised and adjoining premises, and he reserves to himself the right of entry for the purposes of such building and repairing. It also provides that, ■during the progress of such building, the lessees shall have a deduction from the rent reserved of $25 per month. The agreement established, and upon which defendants relied on the trial, was that the plaintiff, in consideration ■of defendants’ execution of the lease in evidence, promised to change the attic floor of the demised premises, then consisting of one large room, into five separate rooms, and that until such change had been effected defendants were ■to pay $100 per month rent instead of $125, as provided for in the lease. This last-mentioned agreement, though resting wholly in paroi, was contemporaneous with and collateral to the written lease, the consideration therefor being the defendants’ assumption of the covenants and conditions on their part >to be performed, and contained in the written lease. Such an agreement is ■operative, and evidence thereof was properly received. Clenigham v. McFarland, (common pleas, general term,) 11 N. Y. Supp. 719; Chapins. Dobson, 78 N. Y. 74; Lanphire v. Slaughter, 61 How. Pr. 36. This disposes of all •of plaintiff’s exceptions to the admission of evidence for the defendants tending to prove the paroi agreement. When both sides rested, plaintiff’s counsel moved the court for judgment for plaintiff upon the pleadings and proofs. This was equivalent to a motion to direct a verdict for plaintiff, and implied -a concession that there were no facts in dispute. It was not thereafter obli•gatory upon the court to submit the facts to the jury, in the absence of a specific request of the plaintiff to'that effect. No such request was made, and an ■exception only to the court’s direction of a verdict for defendants is unavailing, as plaintiff will not after moving for a direction in his favor, and without requesting to go to the jury after the motion is denied, be permitted to urge, «on appeal, that there were questions of fact which ought properly to have been submitted to the jury. Dillon v. Cockroft, 90 N. Y. 649; Ormes v. Dauchy, 82 N. Y. 443; Yale v. Dart, 13 N. Y. Supp. 277. The remaining ■exceptions referred to in appellant’s brief, and not hereinbefore noticed, refer to the admission and exclusion of evidence, but none of them, upon examination, appear to be of sufficient force to call for reversal or merit discussion. The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.

All concur.