¶ 1 Alfred J. Villoresi (Villoresi) appeals the trial court’s order granting preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer and dismissing his claim for equitable enforcement of an option agreement for the purchase of land. Villoresi contends that the court overlooked allegations pleaded in his Complaint that if taken as true would have entitled him to the relief he sought. Upon review of the Complaint we conclude that Villoresi failed to plead an actionable claim. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s order.
¶ 2 This action arises out of the parties’ apparent disagreement over the terms of an option agreement for the purchase of 281 acres nestled in the Pocono Mountains. John Villoresi, Amy Villoresi (the Villore-sis), and defendant Charles J. Femminella each held an undivided one-third interest in the land subject to a mortgage of
¶ 3 Approximately one year later, in October 1998, Femminella transferred the land to his daughter (Daughter) for the sum of one dollar, and she contracted to have the land timbered, removing some amount of marketable wood from the property. Daughter retained title to the property for an ensuing period of two years but then reconveyed it to Femminella (again for one dollar) on December 1, 2000. On December 20, 2000, the Villoresis assigned their rights under the option agreement to Alfred J. Villoresi, the plaintiff in this action. Nevertheless, Villoresi did not attempt to exercise the option.
¶4 On December 28, 2000, two days before the option was to expire, Villoresi commenced an action in Monroe County at No. 8859 Civil 2000 seeking specific performance and asserting claims of breach of contract and unjust enrichment. Upon review, the trial court dismissed the Complaint, concluding that Villoresi had not attempted to exercise the option and had not properly pled an excuse for so failing. Two years and six months later, on June 27, 2002, Villoresi filed the Complaint in this action at No. 6830 Civil 2002. In response to that second Complaint, Fem-minella filed preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer, asserting that Villo-resi had previously sought relief on the same allegations of fact and that this second complaint failed to raise new allegations that would entitle him to relief. The trial court again found Villoresi’s Complaint insufficient, sustained Femminella’s demurrer, and dismissed the action with prejudice. Villoresi, acting pro se, now files this appeal, raising the following question for our review:
WHETHER THE LOWER COURT ERRED IN DISMISSING VILLORE-STS COMPLAINT WITH PREJUDICE SINCE HE FAILED TO TENDER THE TOTAL OPTION PRICE AFTER THE DEFENDANT SIGNIFICANTLY REDUCED ITS VALUE AFTER THE AGREED UPON PRICE, AFTER THE ACCEPTANCE OF THE CONSIDERATION, AFTER TRANSFERRING TITLE DURING THE OPTION PERIOD, AND AFTER RECEIVING THE BENEFIT OF THE BARGAIN?
Brief for Appellant at 7. Femminella, whose Counter-Statement of the Question essentially restates the rationale underlying the trial court’s decision, presents the issue as follows:
Did the Trial Court commit an error of law or abuse of discretion in dismissing a second Complaint seeking specific performance of an Option Contract where Plaintiff did not exercise the option during the option period and has not pled any legally cognizable excuse for his failure to so act?
¶5 Regardless of the formulation of the question we apply, Villoresi’s appeal challenges the trial court’s order granting the defendant’s demurrer and dismissing his complaint. Thus, we must determine whether the Complaint is sufficient as a matter of law to sustain a cause of action. See Mistick Inc. v. Northwestern Nat’l Cas. Co.,
¶ 6 In support of his claim for relief, Villoresi contends that his Complaint averred sufficient facts to require transfer of the land in accordance with the option contract with a reduction in price as compensation for the removal of timber during the option period. Brief for Appellant at 26. He argues in the alternative that the Complaint pled sufficient facts to require a return of the $32,000 consideration paid for the option by the Villoresis on a theory of unjust enrichment. Brief for Appellant at 26. The trial court concluded that because Villoresi had failed to exercise the option during the life of the agreement, he forfeited any right to relief he may have had either in the form of specific performance or an award of damages. Upon review of Villoresi’s Complaint as well as the applicable caselaw, we concur in the trial court’s conclusions.
¶ 7 “An option to purchase land is a substantial interest in the land,” which exists from the date the option is created until the date of its exercise or expiration, if such a date is specified in the agreement. Appeal of Powell,
One who under a properly executed agreement has an option to purchase land does not hold the lands, nor even an absolute agreement that he shall have the lands conveyed to him, but he does get something of value, that is, the right to call for a conveyance of the lands if he elects to purchase in the manner specified.
Appeal of Phoenixville, V.F. & S.E. Ry. Co.,
¶ 8 Subject to the optionee’s right of election, the optionor’s right to use or convey the land during the life of the option contract is limited. See Snyder,
¶ 9 In reliance on this ruling, Villoresi contends that, like the optionee in Walsh, he is entitled to relief following Femminel-la’s sale of the land to Daughter and subsequent removal of timber, notwithstanding his admitted failure to exercise the option. Brief for Appellant at 20 (“Using the Walsh holding, Villoresi was entitled to damages for the waste of the Property, even though his option was not exercised.”). We conclude, however, that Walsh provides no such entitlement.
¶ 10 In Walsh, the court determined correctly that the optionee was entitled to enjoin removal of topsoil from land subject to an option contract in order to preserve the value of the land. See 76 Pa.D. & C. at 113-14. The court premised its analysis on the determination that “[t]opsoil is a very material part of the land,” id. at 114, and granted the injunction precisely because an award of damages could not compensate the optionee for the consequent change in the character of the property he had optioned to purchase. The court’s order, as any order granting injunctive relief, acted only to preserve the status quo to assure the optionee of the benefit of his bargain if in the future he elected to purchase the land as his option allowed. Critical to the court’s disposition, and implicit in its rationale, is the recognition that the option remained to be exercised; unlike the option at issue here, it had not expired.
¶ 11 Thus, while the decision in Walsh establishes grounds for injunctive relief to prevent waste during the life of the option, it provides no basis for any relief of any sort after the option has expired if the optionee has not exercised the option. Indeed, the court in Walsh relied expressly on the earlier directive of our Supreme Court that if the agreement expires of its own terms and the optionee has not attempted to exercise his right to consummate the purchase option, he has no right of action. See id. at 111 (quoting Barnes,
¶ 12 Such a conclusion is consistent with appellate caselaw dating back well over a century. Neither our cases nor those of our Supreme Court offer any support for a right to conveyance of the land or damages
¶ 13 In each such case, our Courts recognized that the optionee’s entitlement to any remedy derived from the retroactive application of his equitable interest in the property to the date on which the option was created. See, e.g., Shaffer,
¶ 14 In a second argument, Villoresi asserts that Femminella’s transfer of title to the land to a third party during the option period constituted a breach of the option contract. Brief for Appellant at 23. He concludes, without citation to authority, that “[sjince the defendant breached the contract, Villoresi should have been given the opportunity to renegotiate and adjust the terms of the option contract.” Brief for Appellant at 24. We acknowledge that Femminella acted beyond the scope of his lawful authority when he transferred the land in question to a third party. See Appeal of Phoenixville, V.F. & S.E. Ry. Co.,
¶ 15 In a third argument, Villoresi asserts that he is entitled to a refund of the $32,000 consideration paid to Femminella for the option to purchase the property. Brief for Appellant at 24-25 (“Villoresi was entitled to the ‘money that was paid on account of the purchase and on the expenses incurred on the faith of the contract.’ ”). Although Villoresi’s Complaint • characterizes this claim as one of unjust enrichment, the only precedential case cited in his brief does not address this cause of action, but focuses instead on the proper measure of damages for breach of an oral contract. See Weir v. Rahon,
¶ 16 In any event, waiver notwithstanding, Villoresi’s claim fails-to establish grounds for the relief he seeks. A cause of action for unjust enrichment may arise only when a transaction of the parties not otherwise governed by an express contract confers a benefit on the defendant to the plaintiffs detriment without any corresponding exchange of value. See Temple Univ. Hosp. v. Healthcare Mgmt.,
¶ 17 In this case, the parties’ transaction was fully delineated within the confines of the written option agreement. Indeed, the $32,000 sum that Villoresi seeks to recover was the very consideration that rendered the option contract enforceable. Consequently, it cannot be deemed a benefit conferred without a corresponding exchange of value; Villoresi’s predecessors paid the sum in question to obtain the rights established in the option contract. That contract entitled them to call for conveyance of the subject property at a stated price for a defined period of time, and required Femminella and his assigns to part with the property on those terms. The failure of Villoresi or his predecessors to exercise their rights under the agreement does not render the exchange of value in any way unjust. Even
¶ 18 For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the order of the trial court granting Femminella’s preliminary objections.
¶ 19 Order AFFIRMED.
