Defendant George H. Chaffin Investment Company, a limited partnership, seeks reversal of a decree granting plaintiff Rodney Martin specific performance of an oral contract which the trial court found that the deceased George H. Chaffin had made to convey or devise to him certain real property in Genola, Utah County.
Martin began working as a ranch laborer for Chaffin in 1936. He became foreman over all of Chaffin’s farm and ranch properties in 1947 and continued in that capacity beyond Chaffin’s death to January of 1976. The Investment Company disputed but the trial court found that Chaffin in 1947 had orally agreed to convey to Martin 120 acres of land referred to as “the home place” if Martin would continue working as his foreman. Martin remained, receiving a salary and occasional raises. The trial court determined that he labored long and unusual hours and, with his wife, rendered personal services to Chaffin in reliance upon the contract. In 1968 Chaffin formed the Investment Company as part of his estate plan and conveyed certain real property to it, including the 120 acre ranch. The trial court found that Martin had no notice of the conveyance and, further, that a gift of an interest in the Investment Company which Chaffin had made to Martin in 1969 was for his faithful service, unrelated to the 1947 agreement. The trial court held that Chaffin had breached the oral agreement when he died in 1975 without having conveyed or devised the ranch *275to Martin. Consequently Martin was granted a decree of specific performance against the Investment Company which, as a constructive trustee, held the ranch for him. No cause of action was found against the executrix of the Chaffin estate.
Our standard of review was stated in Randall v. Tracy Collins Trust Co., 6 Utah 2d 18, 23, 305 P.2d 480, 483 (1956):
In an equity review of facts if the record shows a fair preponderance, or even if the evidence is balanced evenly, the trial court finding should be sustained. If the evidence is so vague and uncertain that the finding is obviously erroneous, there may be a new finding on review.
Ordinarily a verbal gift of land or an oral agreement to convey land is within the statute of frauds. However, the doctrine of part performance allows a court of equity to enforce an oral agreement, if it has been partially performed, notwithstanding the statute. U.C.A., 1953, § 25-5-8 of the Utah Statute of Frauds provides:
Nothing in this chapter contained shall be construed to abridge the powers of courts to compel the specific performance of agreements in case of part performance thereof.
In the context of an elderly aunt’s promise to devise property to her nephew, this Court outlined our standard of sufficient part performance:
First, the oral contract and its terms must be clear and definite; second, the acts done in performance of the contract must be equally clear and definite; and third, the acts must be in reliance on the contract. Such acts in reliance must be such that a) they would not have been performed had the contract not existed, and b) the failure to perform on the part of the promisor would result in fraud on the performer who relied, since damages would be inadequate. Reliance may be made in innumerable ways, all of which could refer exclusively to the contract. This reliance provision is included to prevent unfounded and fraudulent claims against a decedent’s estate, which are inherent within such situations as this.
Randall v. Tracy Collins & Trust Company, supra, at 24, 305 P.2d at 484. In that case we held that the nephew’s change of residence from Ogden to Provo in order to live near his aunt, to care for her and to manage her affairs met that standard. Professor Corbin states a similar standard:
(1) The performance must be in pursuance of the contract and in reasonable reliance thereon ... (2) The performance must be such that the remedy of restitution is not reasonably adequate ... (3) The performance must be one that is in some degree evidential of the existence of a contract and not readily explainable on any other ground.
2 Corbin on Contracts, § 425 (1950). Another statement of the rule explains:
Part performance to be sufficient to take a ease out of the statute must consist of clear, definite, and unequivocal acts of the party relying thereon, strictly referable to the contract, and of such character that it is impossible or impracticable to place the parties in status quo, mere nonaction being insufficient.
37 C.J.S., Statute of Frauds, § 250 (1943).
The critical observation to make in reading these delineations of what constitutes sufficient part performance is that it must be proved by strong evidence. Whether phrased in “reliance” terminology where the evidentiary measurement is a substantial change in position or worded in “performance” language where the measurement is whether the acts appear to be a result of the contract, or whether they are explainable on another ground, the strong, acts-oriented evidentiary standard is constant. This acts-oriented rather than word-oriented evidentiary requirement is consistent with one of the worthwhile functions of the Statute of Frauds. It is:
[to impose] a high evidentiary standard by which oral real estate contracts must be proved to qualify for a. specific performance. Equity has always demanded more conclusive proof of a contract before granting its “most perfect remedy” of specific performance ...
*276“The Doctrine of Part Performance as Applied to Oral Land Contracts in Utah,” 9 Utah Law Review 91, 105 (1971).
This Court in Price v. Lloyd, 31 Utah 86, 86 P. 767 (1906), reversed a judgment which had awarded land to a niece who had performed personal services for the deceased and, with her husband, had moved onto his property. The judgment was reversed because the niece’s use of the land and other acts for her uncle were insufficient evidence “that her status or relation had been so far altered that not to enforce a performance ... inflict[ed] an unjust and unconscionable ... loss to her_ She [showed] no such strong equities ... as ... are required to be shown independent of the parol gift or verbal contract.” Id. at 101, 86 P. at 772. Speaking of certain improvements the niece made to the land, this Court stated:
[W]e are of the opinion that the improvements are not of such value or character as to take the case out of the operation of the statute. Furthermore the evidence does not satisfy us with that clearness and persuasion required by the authorities that they were made in conse-quenc [sic] of a gift, or in pursuance of a promise to convey, or that they are otherwise referable thereto. Indeed, there is little or no direct evidence proving such fact, nor is there any circumstance from which it may be reasonably inferred ... [The improvements] ... are as consistent with some interest in the premises less than a freehold as with an estate in freehold.
Price v. Lloyd, Id. at 98, 86 P. at 770.
This strong evidentiary standard had been observed in Brinton v. Van Cott, 8 Utah 480, 33 P. 218 (1893). There, in reliance language, this Court held that the. defendant’s failure to fulfill the contract would work a fraud upon the rights of the plaintiff since she gave up plans of future independence to faithfully perform personal services of incalculable value for the defendant. Although the young woman’s reliance was continued performance of service rather than a substantial change in position, the evidentiary concern was satisfied since it was uncontested that the young woman’s sacrifice of plans of future independence and continued service were a result of an actual contract. Crucially significant was the fact that the existence of the contract had been admitted as true. Further:
The agreement was distinct and certain as to what plaintiff should receive. There was no vague, uncertain, undefined expectation of benefits to be derived, but a distinct positive promise,— not to make plaintiff a gift, but in consideration of certain services, to bestow upon her her entire property.
Id. at 486, 33 P. at 220. Consequently, in Brinton, both equity and the statute of frauds’ purpose of verifying an actual agreement were accomplished.
Similarly, this Court maintained a high evidentiary standard in Van Natta v. Heywood, 57 Utah 376, 195 P. 192 (1920). We stated:
[T]his class of cases should be scrutinized with particular care; and unless under the circumstances the proof is positive, clear, and convincing, the relief sought should, and will, be denied.
Id. at 381, 195 P. at 194. Significantly, not only many friends’ add neighbors’ testimony but independent evidence supported the existence of an oral contract and the plaintiff’s reliance upon it:
[T]he plaintiff accepted the offer of the said Joseph McCullough [decedent], and entered into possession of all the property of said estate, and at all times worked for the said Joseph McCullough until his death, without compensation, except when plaintiff was drafted into the United States army, during which time the said Joseph McCullough leased the property belonging to his said estate subject to the condition that the said lease should be canceled upon the discharge and return of the plaintiff herein from the army; that upon the retirement of plaintiff from service in the army he returned to the said Joseph McCullough, and thereupon the lease was terminated, and *277plaintiff again went into possession of the property of said estate, and continued to possess the same and care for and remain with the said Joseph McCullough, without compensation, until the death of said McCullough ...
Id. at 377, 195 P. at 192.
As we have suggested, the greatest value of the requirement of exclusively referable acts of reliance is .its evidentiary significance.
[A]cts of part performance must be exclusively referable to the contract in that the possession of the party seeking specific performance and the improvements made by him must be reasonably explicable only on the postulate that a contract exists [Citations omitted.] The reason for such requirement is that the equitable doctrine of part performance is based on estoppel and unless the acts of part performance are exclusively referable to the contract, there is nothing to show that the plaintiff relied on it or changed his position to his prejudice ...
In re Roth’s Estate, 2 Utah 2d 40, 44, 269 P.2d 278, 281 (1954).
In Ravarino v. Price, 123 Utah 559, 260 P.2d 570 (1953), quoting from the earlier Price v. Lloyd case, we remarked:
“... In order that a plaintiff may be permitted to give evidence of a contract not in writing, and which is in the very teeth of the statute and a nullity at law, it is essential that he establish [in equity], by clear and positive proof, acts and things done in pursuance and on account thereof, exclusively referable thereto, and which take it out of the operation of the statute.”
Id. at 574, 260 P.2d at 578. In the next paragraph we quoted Justice Cardozo:
“Equity ... declines to act on words, though the legal remedy is imperfect, unless the words are confirmed and_ illuminated by deeds.... ”
Id. at 574, 260 P.2d at 578. The Ravarino case involved an inter vivos transfer rather than an instance of a promise to devise. The statute of frauds remained a bar because the promisee did not acquire possession of the property and the purchase of a strip of adjoining land was reasonably explainable on grounds other than the existence of an oral contract.
As recently as in McDonald v. Barton Brothers Investment Corp., Utah, 631 P.2d 851 (1981), another inter vivos transfer of land case, we reaffirmed the requirement of exclusively referable acts of reliance. We articulated:
If the acts relied on were not done in the execution of the oral contract but can be explained on another ground, they are insufficient to remove the bar of the statute of frauds and the contract is unenforceable.
Id. at 853. See also Coleman v. Dillman, Utah, 624 P.2d 713 (1981); Holmgren Brothers, Inc. v. Ballard, Utah, 534 P.2d 611 (1975). Cf. Jackson v. Jackson, 122 Utah 507, 252 P.2d 214 (1953) (where a property settlement agreement was an insufficient memorandum of an oral contract to remove the contract from the statute and the promisee’s raising of the children was a term she had agreed to in the property settlement rather than an act exclusively referable to the oral contract).
However, as the Brinton and Van Natta cases allude, where the contract is admitted or strong independent acts which prove the contract exists, the requirement of exclusively referable acts has been relaxed. Therefore, in the case of In re Roth’s Estate, supra, we remanded with instructions to grant specific performance because even though it was possible to explain the taking possession and making of improvements on some other basis than that a contract existed, the promisor’s own testimony established an oral agreement on his part to sell his interest in the property to his brother. We explained the rule:
[W]here the existence of the oral contract is established by an admission of the party resisting specific performance or by competent evidence independent of the acts of part performance, the requirement that the acts of part performance must be exclusively] referable to the oral contract is satisfied. ...
*278Id. 2 Utah 2d at 45, 269 P.2d at 281. Likewise in Randall v. Tracy Collins & Trust Co., supra, 6 Utah 2d at 24, 305 P.2d at 484 we expressed:
If the contract has great clarity and definiteness, there may be no need for reliance which is exclusively referable to the contract, so long as performance fulfills the terms.
In light of its history in our cases, the requirement of exclusive referability is “an evidentiary requirement of equity that the facts speak for themselves.” 9 Utah Law Review 91, supra, at 107. The requirement overcomes “the court’s reluctance to prevent the statute from operating on the basis of purely oral evidence.” Id. at 106. As a corollary, where either independent acts which prove the contract can be found, or an admission of the contract is present, the requirement of exclusive referability may be relaxed because the evidentiary concern is assauged by either the admission or the independent acts. Consequently, the more conclusive the direct proof of the contract, the less stringent the requirement of exclusively referable acts. As Professor Corbin puts it:
If there is ample and convincing direct testimony less corroboration by circumstances is required. In most cases, such circumstantial corroboration is indispensable. ...
In great numbers of cases in which the part performance has been held insufficient on some ground or other and specific enforcement has been refused, the most compelling factor has been insufficiency of proof, the weakness often lying in the uncertainty and conflicting character of the direct human testimony itself.
2 Corbin on Contracts, supra, § 442 at 528.
In the case at bar the court found evidence to support a contract between Martin and Chaffin which was based upon the testimony of Martin’s witnesses:
5. The Court finds that the terms of the oral contract between Martin and Chaffin are sufficiently supported by the. testimony of the witnesses William Stanley Bradford, Albert Nielsen, Bill Nielsen and Eddie Allen, all of whom have no interest in the outcome of this case, to meet the burden of persuasion required by Randall v. Tracy-Collins Trust Co., 6 Utah 2d 18 [305 P.2d 480], and the Court therefore finds that the oral agreement was entered into as alleged.
The court also found that Martin relied upon the oral agreement:
7. From the time Chaffin and Martin entered into their agreement in the spring of 1947 until Chaffin’s death on July 30, 1975, Martin worked exclusively for Chaffin as his foreman in reliance upon their agreement that the subject property would be conveyed to Martin. In reliance on their agreement, Martin labored 10 to 16 hours per day,- 7 days a week during the summer months and, occasionally when necessary, worked around the clock. In the winter time, Martin labored 8 to 10 hours per day, 7 days a week. During this period of time Martin’s salary ranged from $75 per month in 1947, to $375 per month in 1975. From 1960 until 1969, Martin received $325 per month without a single raise. Additionally, it is found that Rodney Martin and his wife Martha, provided substantial personal services to Chaffin and that Martin’s son Denny performed substantial labor with respect to the farming operations on Chaffin’s farms and ranches for which he was not compensated. It is further found that these services would not have been provided but for the agreement between Chaffin and Martin that the subject property was to be conveyed to Martin.
The court concluded that Martin would not have continued to work for and provide personal services to Chaffin except for the agreement between them.
We respect the court’s findings and recognize the deference to be paid to the trial court who views first-hand the witnesses as they offer their testimony. We have no quarrel with his basic findings of the extent of services rendered by Martin to his employer. However, reviewing the court’s application of our law to those findings, we *279can only conclude that the court erred in its holding that there was sufficient part performance. The trial court drew one conclusion from Martin’s services but that is legally insufficient since they admit of another equally valid and consonant conclusion against his claim of contract. See Price v. Lloyd, supra.
The fact that Martin worked for Chaffin as his foreman is not an exclusively referable act of reliance on the alleged oral agreement since it was consonant with Martin’s employment. Martin’s long hours, not atypical of a ranch foreman’s life, were remunerated by salary. Martin’s wife’s driving Chaffin to various locations on occasion and asking him to stay for dinner when he was at the Martin house during mealtime were not inconsistent with good relations between an employer and an employee and his family. (At least once Mrs. Martin received compensation for her efforts). Further, Martin’s son was compensated for his labors from the time he reached the age of fourteen. (In arguing about the son’s testimony, Martin’s attorney agreed “The man has testified he got paid. I don’t think there is any dispute about it.”)
Martin’s claim that he declined other and better offers of employment elsewhere to remain with Chaffin is also unavailing to prove reliance since, as we quoted earlier, mere nonaction is insufficient to constitute part performance. Professor Corbin concurs:
If the performance rendered by the promisee consists wholly of forbearance to act, the fact is less likely to be evidential in character than when it consists of affirmative action.
2 Corbin on Contracts, supra, § 430 at 474. This claim of forbearance is at best highly equivocal as to Martin’s motives.
Of course, the fact that Martin continued to work long, hard hours for his employer might be viewed as sufficient reliance had there been an admission of an oral agreement as in Brinton, supra, or independent acts pointing to such an agreement as in Van Natta, supra, where the promisor leased the property contingent upon the promisee’s return from the army. However, the evidence of the oral contract in this case required the judge to weigh the credibility of Martin’s witnesses against witnesses for the Investment Company who vigorously disputed the existence of an oral contract. Thus the necessity of showing acts of part performance which were exclusively referable to the claimed agreement remains vital. Yet with only the foundation of a finding of fact that a contract was made based upon disputed testimony that the ranch had been orally promised to him over 30 years ago, Martin contends (and the dissenting opinion advocates) that the oral contract should be enforced. None of the case law we have discussed would permit it. In all of our cases either the requirement of acts of exclusive referability was met, or it was relaxed where there was no evidentiary concern regarding the existence of a contract. Neither Martin’s proof of the oral contract nor his acts in supposed reliance so comply.
Even in Randall v. Tracy Collins Trust Co., supra, which is most similar to the case at bar, the nephew changed the location of his home, and left his business to become an employee of his aunt’s bank so that he could look after her business in reliance upon the oral contract. Moreover, he and his family changed lifestyles to prepare meals and sit home with her at nights and on holidays. Martin and his family did not change locations, interrupted no lifestyle and did no other acts that were not consonant with his job as ranch foreman. In Randall the contract and its terms were proved by clear, convincing and unequivocal testimony. We found the evidence to be sufficient because as we quoted from the trial court’s memorandum decision:
“There is no direct evidence to dispute any of this testimony, and a careful examination of the transcript certainly would not justify a concept that the effectiveness of the testimony had been destroyed on cross examination.”
*280Id. at 22, 305 P.2d at 483. However, the testimony of Martin’s witnesses as to the existence of an oral contract was controverted and a major point of dispute of the lawsuit.1 The trial court’s finding of an oral contract must be followed by a finding of exclusively referable acts which Martin has failed to demonstrate. He and his family’s acts of labor, neighborliness and forbearance, as we have expressed, were entirely consonant with his employment as ranch foreman. Even if we follow the standard advocated in the dissenting opinion (which is mentioned in some of our cases and by Professor Corbin) that the acts of part performance need only be “not readily explainable” or “not reasonably explicable” on some other ground, our result would not be different. Martin’s acts of claimed part performance of a vigorously disputed contract are so equivocal that they do not meet any of those high evidentiary standards.
We have no quarrel with the argument in the dissenting opinion that the statute of frauds should not be used to perpetrate a fraud upon an innocent and unsuspecting person such as an employee who renders services in good faith upon a promised expectation. Such a rule would be easy to apply if there were some magical way of determining in each case whether in fact a contract had indeed been made. We could then apply the statute as a bar or refuse to apply it depending upon whether a contract was in fact made. There being no sure-proof method of determining whether a contract was made, the Legislature has made it the policy in this state that oral contracts for the conveyance of land will not be enforced except where there is sufficient part performance to provide a high evidentiary basis for their existence. This policy which the Legislature has translated into the statute of frauds may well result, in some cases, in the denial of a benefit to a well-deserving employee or servant. We are helpless to prevent that result where the evidence of part performance of the claimed contract falls below the high evi-dentiary standard required' by courts of equity — regardless of the precise words which they may use in describing that standard. As unfortunate as it would be to deprive a man who had worked his life in reliance upon the expectation of receiving property, it would be equally serious to take property from an owner after his death (when he cannot be heard) on the strength of a questionable oral agreement supposedly made many years prior. If the statute of frauds is to be given any force, we cannot affirm the trial court.
With the exception of Martin’s interest in the Investment Company, the decree is reversed. Costs awarded to appellant.
HALL, C.J., and OAKS, J., concur.. We find nothing in the record to indicate that the trial court found the existence of the contract by clear and convincing evidence as stated in the dissenting opinion. However, this fact is of no consequence to our decision.