terminate the contract if they had chosen to do so. They had the right
of choice and, whichever course they took, they not only bound the
appellant but they necessarily bound themselves. Waiver of such an
express stipulation as clause 21 reattaches the jurisdiction of equity
to give its remedies, for in that event the stipulation as to time ceases
to be applicable (Steedman v. Drinkle (1)). And similarly at law,
where the party having the right to terminate the contract so acts
as to insist on its performance - and he may do so if he thinks it
more advantageous to him to hold the defaulting party to his full
undertaking - he cannot afterwards fall back on his freedom to
elect. The evidence given at the trial as to the conduct of the
parties and the negotiations between them after the plaintiff had
made default was such as to make it proper to leave to the jury the
question whether the defendants had elected, prior to the resale, to
determine the contract or to treat it as subsisting, or whether, up
to that time, they had made no election : but none of these questions
were submitted to the jury. It isnot desirable that we should express
any opinion as to the effect of this evidence further than that it was
not so decisive in favour of either view as to justify a direction to
the jury. The Supreme Court appear to have assumed that the
appellant's statement that he was unable to pay the instalment
which had become due necessarily amounted to a repudiation by
him of all his obligations under the contract, and ipso facto relieved
the respondents from any further performance of it. But even if
the statement did amount to a total repudiation, as to which we
do not think the evidence is necessarily conclusive, the question
whether the respondents elected to treat the contract as existing,
still remains for determination, and, as we have already indicated,
the state of the evidence required that this question should be
submitted to the jury. Next it is assumed that if he did make such
statement, he is concluded by his statement. He would not neces-
sarily be concluded thereby. He would be at full liberty to treat
it as an admission only and repel it by counter evidence, which might
or might not be believed. In Slatterie v. Pooley (2) Parke B. says :
"What a party himself admits to be true may reasonably be pre-
sumed to beso." Where no estoppel exists, he is, however, entitled