already " purchased " by exercising the option so as to be presently
entitled to the fee simple in equity subject to the appellant's life
estate, but with a right of possession in the meantime. The diffi-
culties of maintaining the latter position are too manifest. First,
as to the alleged agreement of August 1895 the appellant is still alive,
and, next, the respondent has not bound herself to pay the
purchase money (London and South-Western Railway Co. v.
Gomm (1)). The option, if maintainable as a contractual
right, must be supported by a valuable consideration, and one
is alleged in par. 3 of the defence. But by recollecting that
it is an option only to become owner, and not a final election to
become owner, we are better able to appraise the various alleged
acts of part performance. For, of course, the doctrine of part per-
formance is relied on in order to overcome the difficulty of the
Statute of Frauds. \n Maddison vy. Alderson (2) Lord Selborne
L.C., in a passage now classical, stated the result of the authorities
to be that in a suit founded on part performance of a parol contract
relating to land the defendant is really charged " upon the equities
resulting from the acts done in execution of the contract, and not
(within the meaning of the Statute) upon the contract itself." It
is clear from what the learned Lord Chancellor says, that in such a
case the Court is not asked to give a better remedy in aid of a legal
right, based on the contract, but is called upon to enforce an equity
(independent of the Statute, as Story observes - Equity Jurisprudence,
sec. 754) which has arisen by force of circumstances subsequent to
the contract itself, namely, by acts of part performance sufficient
to attract the equitable jurisdiction of the Court. Lord O'Hagan,
in the same case, pursues the principle further by pointing out that
the proper course in such proceeding is that of " seeking to establish
primarily such a performance as must necessarily imply the existence
of the contract, and then proceeding to ascertain its terms," and that
the Court below had erred in reversing that order. No harm can
arise from reversing the order as a matter of convenience in taking
evidence, provided the necessary elements of part performance
are borne in mind and properly applied to the circumstances when
(1) 20 Ch, D., 562, at p. 581. (2) 8 App. Cas., at p. 469.