Opinion by
The plaintiff was the owner of the furniture and personal property in a hotel which' he occupied under a lease from the defendant. The plaintiff, through his agent, had been negotiating with one Leamy with a view to the sale of the hotel furniture, and, as a step in that negotiation, appraisers had been agreed upon, with a view to ascertaining the value of the various chattels with regard to which they were bargaining. The appraisers made a written inventory of almost the entire property, fixing the value of each specific article. They added to the inventory a foot note stating that the valuation of the dishes, table linen and certain other articles specifically designated was left for future consideration. For some reason the sale to Leamy was never consummated. After the appraisement had been made, the plaintiff removed a portion of the goods appraised from the hotel. The plaintiff alleges that he subsequently sold all the personal property in the hotel to his landlord, the defendant. The defendant denies that he ever agreed to purchase goods, or pay for the same, but he alleges that he bought the goods at a sale by the constable, under a landlord’s warrant issued for the collection of rent.
The plaintiff declares upon an express contract of sale of the various chattels, at prices agreed upon, as set forth in an itemized statement, to the declaration attached and made part thereof. In these negotiations the plaintiff was represented by Charles F. Mann, his agent. The agent of the plaintiff and other witnesses testified to an oral contract entered into by the defendant, in substance as follows: The defendant agreed to buy and plaintiff’s agent agreed to sell all the chattels and fixtures in the house ; the price to be paid for the chattels which had been valued by the appraisers and specified in the inventory was to be the amount of that valuation; for the articles which had not been appraised the defendant was to pay what they were worth in the hotel; the articles which had been valued by the appraisers but subsequently removed from the hotel were not to come within the operation of this contract of sale. They agreed that the amount of rent for the real estate *143which the defendant was to receive was the rent for two months, which amount was to be taken out of the purchase money for these chattels. Evidence was produced that the parties then had the appraisement list before them, and that when witnesses were called up to hear what they had agreed upon the paper was produced and the attention of the witnesses called to it by plaintiff’s agent, and that defendant thereupon said it was all right. This paper was clearly identified at the trial as the same which the parties had before them during their bargaining, and was offered in evidence on behalf of plaintiff. The defendarit objected to this evidence and the overruling of that objection is now made the foundation for the first, second, seventh and eighth assignments of error. The contention of the defendant is that, under the provisions of the Act of May 25, 1887, P. L. 271, a copy of tins paper ought to have been attached to plaintiff’s statement, and, because this had not been done, the paper was not admissible in evidence. The paper was not in itself in any sense a contract. It simply contained a list of articles and designated the value of each. It was not signed by any party, it contained no covenants and did not purport to be even a bill of sale. The defendant had no connection with the transactions, with a view to which the appraisement had originally been made. The oral evidence tended to establish that, in making the parol contract, the parties, in bargaining as to the prices of the various chattels, agreed upon the figures which they found in this list. If the parties themselves had fixed a valuation for each specific chattel and had employed a clerk to make an inventory thereof, as they proceeded with their work, that paper would be evidence as to the prices agreed upon by the parties, and any person to whom they had made declarations as to its correctness would have been competent to prove the same. So long, however, as that paper did not embody any covenants and remained unsigned by the parties, the whole matter still rested in parol. It can make no difference whether such an informal inventory is made by the parties themselves, or adopted from the work of others, the whole matter still rests in parol, and the paper is not such a contract as to come within the provisions of the act requiring a copy thereof to be attached to the statement: Vicary v. Moore, 2 Watts, 451; Spangler v. Springer, 22 Pa. 454; Malone & Sons v. Railroad, 157 Pa. *144430. The paper was abundantly identified, and, in connection with the oral evidence', it was both relevant and material; in its admission in evidence there was no error.
The third, fourth and fifth specifications of error are not founded on any ruling of the court upon the admission of evidence, nor upon the charge of the court or its answer to any request for instructions. They are simply statements of the defendant’s views as to what the law ought to be, have no foundation in the record, and cannot be considered.
The remaining specifications of error raise but one question. The learned court below rejected evidence offered by the defendant as to the condition and value of the chattels, the specific price of which had been fixed in the inventory. As to these articles the plaintiff was not entitled to recover at all, unless he proved that the defendant had agreed to buy them at a price agreed upon; no evidence had been produced which would have entitled him to recover upon any other theory. The defendant did not offer to prove that there had been any misrepresentation or fraud in the sale, nor was it even suggested that he was not aware of the condition of the goods when he bought them, if he did buy them. If the defendant had agreed to purchase at a fixed price, in the absence of any allegation of fraud or misrepresentation, he was bound by his bargain, and could not ask the jury to make a new one for him because he had paid more than the goods were worth. The learned judge of the court below, in instructing the jury with regard to the goods contained in the inventory, said: “ It is not very material in this case whether they were worth exactly that price or less ; if Mr. Mayer agreed to buy them at that price, you should find for the plaintiff for that inventory price; if he did not agree to to buy them, as he says he did not, you should find for the defendant.” The only question upon which the jury were required to pass, with regard to those particular goods, was whether the defendant had agreed to buy them at a fixed price. The learned judge properly instructed the jury as to the burden of proof upon this question. All the assignments of error are overruled.
Judgment affirmed.