268 Pa. 384 | Pa. | 1920
Opinion by
Emanuel Specbt, the decedent, was owner of a farm situated in Shade Township, Somerset County, on which he resided with his daughter and her husband, Joseph Wagner, who was employed to work the farm. In 1897 Wagner, becoming dissatisfied with the terms of his employment, announced an intention of removing to a farm he owned in Indiana County, unless other and more satisfactory arrangements were made for his services. Upon receipt of this notice a family conference was called which was attended by decedent and his wife, Wagner and his wife and the son and other two daughters of decedent; as the result of the conference a written agreement, dated April 6, 1897, was entered into by all parties in which it was provided that “Emanuel Specht has rented to Joseph Wagner his farm situated in Shade Township, Somerset County, Pa., upon the following terms, Joseph Wagner to pay all taxes and to board and bed Emanuel Specht and his wife as long as the life of Emanuel Specht for the use of the farm, all repairs and all expenses in the way of repairs and the running of the farm to be borne by Joseph Wagner. In addition to this we the undersigned agree to sell to Joseph Wagner the same farm at the death of Emanuel Specht for the sum of Thirty-six hundred dollars, this being done in order that Joseph Wagner may make such repairs and improvements as he may wish and thát such repairs and improvements made will be made for himself.”
Pursuant to the provisions of the agreement, Wagner remained on and operated the farm and provided a home for decedent and his wife during their lives, paid the taxes and all expenses of conducting the farm, made necessary repairs, also permanent and substantial improvements, including the erection of a barn, the planting of a sugar camp and orchard and laying cement walks. Decedent stated to uninterested third persons on various occasions that he had sold the farm to Wag
Appellants contend the agreement was a tripartite contract between decedent and his wife on the one part, Joseph Wagner and his wife on the other and the three remaining children of decedent as third parties and that, under its terms, decedent merely leased the farm for the term of his life, the agreement to sell being one affecting only the son and daughters. The conclusion to be drawn from this contention is that the contract with Emanuel Specht was merely a leasehold and expired at his death, and that if it be construed as a contract to sell the writing was merely testamentary in form and, consequently, revocable. This argument overlooks the fact that the ownership of the land in question was in decedent, that the son and daughters had but a mere expectancy of inheritance from their parent at the time of his death and no vested right in the property. They were not necessarily parties to the agreement and their participating at the request of their father was, we think, correctly explained by the court below as an act of caution on the part of the parent in “bridging an anticipated stream of turbulence that might flow out of the years intervening between the inception and the completion of the contract. It was an advance-waiver of a possible after-repudiation. It was the written expression of the consensus of opinion of all the possible parties in interest that they approved the contract as conscionable and desirable and deemed it obligatory upon the parties thereto. By joining therein they set their approval upon the valuation fixed for the services to be rendered and consequently their approval of the valuation of the farm.” While the provision that “we the undersigned agree to sell” is plural in form and includes parties who, in fact, had no immediate interest
The decree is affirmed at the costs of appellants.