Imagine putting 20 years of work into a house that you don’t own and suddenly you get that house for free, at no additional expense.
That is essentially what Jane Saynor did before she received an unbelievable act of kindness from her landlord.
Jane Saynor was 51 when she found her Melbourne house for rent 22 years ago. Hoping to find a house with two bedrooms and a garden, she finally found the perfect house.
She never imagined she would own it decades later.
The house is in St Albans, in the perfect northwestern section of Melbourne where she wanted to settle down in. Her rent started and remained at AUS$200 for the over 22 years she lived there.
After moving in, Jane wanted to redesign the garden, which started off housing just one potted plant. When not working at her market job in Epping, she focused on the outer and inner features of the home.
Her focus on keeping everything clean and up to date was particularly appreciated by her landlord, John Perrett, who worked hard in turn to keep every necessary repair up-to-date.
Years into their landlord-tenant relationship, John surprised Jane with a phone call while at his lawyer, or solicitor’s, office.
The solicitor needed Jane’s full name because John was drawing up his will and wanted to leave the house to her.
Jane was of course confused at first, but she soon learned that his promise was true.
Around this time, John had moved into a nursing home while in the later stages of Parkinson’s disease. However, it was not his illness that led to his choice to gift Jane with a home.
John had a record of generosity throughout his life. His roles in the community included sharing his millions of dollars in wealth while working as a pharmacist, football player, real estate investor, and philanthropist.
Another example of his incredible kindness was donating AUS$19 million to the Royal Melbourne nephrology department.
30 years before that gift, John had received a kidney transplant in the department, and he was eventually able to give back to them in a way that he could so many years later.
“That was a life-saving gift, I guess, to take him off dialysis and he was grateful for the care that he received, for all the doctors and nursing and medical staff to look after him at the Royal Melbourne Hospital,” Professor Nigel Toussiant from the Royal Melbourne Hospital said.
John never had any children and therefore shared much of his wealth with others, including Jane.
Jane had always wanted to retire while still in the only home she had known for over 20 years, and John was able to make that dream come true.
While John sadly passed away in 2020, it was then that Jane received the property officially.
“I thank him still every day of my life,” Jane said.
What do you think of John’s life and legacy? What about Jane’s gift?