Thе two writs of error, being similar with respect to the questions raised, will be dealt with in one opinion.
There is no contention that the petition did not state a cause of action, or even that the plaintiff did not prove its ease as laid; the only' questions for determination being those raised by the motion to strike the alleged defenses.
There were two amendments to the plaintiff’s petition, but the contents of these amendments have nоt been and need not be stated. The defendants had already filed their answers, and were not required to reply to these amendments. Accordingly, the amendments have no bearing upon the sufficiency of the alleged defenses to withstand the motion to strike.
Watson
v.
Barnes,
125
Ga.
733 (
As to the several defenses alleged, the answers of the defendants were substantially identical, and this being true, it will be sufficient in this connection, and throughout the remainder of this opiniоn, to refer only to the answer of the defendant Fisher. It may be further stated, however, that in the brief filed in this court by counsel for Dooley, only the first three of the defenses are insisted on, the other three being expressly abandoned. Counsel for Fisher insists upon all six.
The defendant Fisher, in the part of her answer designated as “Defense One,” after alleging the facts shown in the preceding statement as to the source of her title, further alleged: “Defendant shows that the said covenant by its own terms is limited to the said lot and portion of lot, and runs only and solely to the said grantors, H. H. Lattimore and William Lattimore; . . that it was placed thereon solely for the benefit of Lattimore and Lattimore; that the plaintiff can not complain and has no standing in this action as to lot 19 and the eastern 15 feet of lot 20, Myers Ward, for the reason that neither the plaintiff nor any persons claiming by or through it or through the said estate of Peter Eabey has ever had any interest or ownership in lot 19 and the eastern *357 15 feet of lot 20, Myers Ward, and is not a predecessor in title of this defendant. The only person who may complain as to the alleged violation of any covenant, in the event snch person is dissatisfied, is a predecessor of this defendant in title to lot 19 and the eastern 15 feet of Lot 20, Myers Ward.”
It is a general rule of construction as applied to a pleading, that, when considered on a general demurrer or motion to strike, it is to be construed most strongly against the pleader; and the rule applies to an answer as. well as a petition.
Krueger
v.
MacDougald,
148
Ga.
429 (
The petition in the instant case, though not alleging in express terms that there was such a general restrictive scheme, did show by allegations of fact that there was such a scheme as to the eight and a half lots owned by the plaintiff and the defendants. In the light of these averments, all of which were admitted in the answers, the allegations in '“Defense One,” construed most strongly against the pleaders, must be taken as showing that the covenants were applicable to all of the land in question, under a general plan or scheme, and that the covenants would be enforceable in equity as between the plaintiff and these defendants. Accordingly, the court did not err in striking the first defense.
The defendant alleged the following as “Defense Two:”
“2. Defendant shows that, since the placing of the covenants upon this property by the said Lattimore & Lattimore, the character of the whole neighborhood has so changed that the restriction is of no value to the land intended to be benefited, and it would be oppressive and inequitable to enforce the said restriction, owing to the present use of the whole neighborhood, it having become a predominantly negro seсtion.
“3. Defendant shows that the north side of Forty-second Street has no restrictions of any kind. On the north side of said street, there are seventeen owners of property in the block between Burroughs Street and Florence Street. Of these seventeen owners, seven are of the white or Caucasian race, while ten are of the colored race. Of the seven white persons who own houses on the north side of Forty-second Street, several have rented their houses to colored tenants. The predominate majority of the houses on the north side of Forty-second Street are occupied by colored tenants. In addition, the white persons who still own property on the north side are selling, or have contracted to sell, their property to colored persons who intend to occupy the said houses as residences.
“4. At the prеsent time there are approximately thirty families living in houses on the north side of the street, of whom only about *359 ten are of the white race, the remainder being colored, according to the defendant’s information and belief. Because of there being no restrictions on the north side of the street, the neighborhood on the north side has heretofore become predominantly colored, and within a short time will be exclusively colored.
“5. The lots owned by plaintiff and defendant are situated in the block on Forty-second Street between Burroughs and Florence Streets, which is bounded on the west and north by a colored residential section, to which the property in question is immediately contiguous. Forty-second Street is a narrow street only fifteen feet in width. Directly across the street from the defendant’s lots the houses are occupied by negroes.
6. On the south side of Forty-second Street between Burroughs and Florence Streets, where the properties of plaintiff and defendant lie, there are eleven owners of property. Of these eleven owners, five are of the white race and six of the colored race, the six persons of the colored race having acquired the said property even though the alleged covenant as to Caucasians еxisted in the deeds from Lattimore & Lattimore on all of said property. Of the five white persons, two have already entered into contracts of sale to sell their property to colored persons, these two persons being the defendant and the codefendant, Margarita H. Dooley, trustee.
“7. Defendant shows that there are only six buildings on the south side of Forty-second Street between Burroughs and Florence Streets. Of these buildings, one is a store, with a house adjacent thereto, on the corner of Burroughs Street, owned and occupied by a white person, 31. P. Johnson. Adjacent to this property is a four-unit apartment house owned by the petitioner and occupied by white tenants. There is then a distance of approximately forty-five feet separating the property owned by the petitioner and the property owned by the defendant, Margarita H. Dooley, trustee. Immediately adjacent to the defendant Dooley’s property is a building owned by the defendant Fisher. Both the codefendant and this defendant have contracted to sell their property to negroes. Immediately to the west of the properties of the defendants are vacant lots, three of which are owned by colored persons and two by white persons. Immediately west of the vaсant lots are two bungalows, both of which are owned and occupied by negroes.”
*360 As will be seen from these averments, “Defense Two” presents the contention that, because of the influx of negroes, the character of the whole neighborhood has so changed that the restriction against sale to negroes is no longer of any value to the property intended to be benefited, and therefore it would be inequitable to enforce it. The change, it is contended, resulted from two causes: (1) sales to negroes of lands in unrestricted sections in the same general neighborhood, though lying without the restricted area and separated therefrom by streets; and (2) sales to negroes of various lots within the limits of the restricted area itself. Thus the defense has two prongs, even though they may be kindred in nature.
In
Reeves
v. Comfort, 172
Ga.
331 (
As to changes without the restricted area, the decision in the
Reeves
case controls the present case. It is controlling in principle, even though the particular changes there involved were commercial, so to spеak, rather than racial. In Grady
v.
Garland, 67 App. D. C. 73 (89 Fed. 2d, 817), a case very similar to the present, it was said: “The restriction is for the protection of the property to which it applies, and is not affected by similar conditions which may arise in adjoining property. . . The object of the restriction here was to prevent the invasion of the restricted property by colored people, not the invasion 'of property surrounding it. If thе facts here alleged were sufficient in equity to justify the setting aside of the covenant of restriction, all that would be necessary to defeat such a covenant would be the settlement of a few colored families in the immediate vicinity of the restricted area.” Accordingly, in the present case, we may lay aside all allegations with respect to changes without the restricted area. Compare Kenealy
*361
v.
Chevy Chase Land Co., 63 App. D. C. 327 (72 Fed. 2d, 378); Smith
v.
Lynch,
We consider next the allegations as to changes within the restricted area itself.
An examination of the record in Reeves v. Comfort, supra, discloses that the principal changes there alleged to have occurred within the restricted subdivision consisted of the following acts by owners of 'property situated therein, all -in violation of applicable covenants: selling lots of less width than that prescribed, building two houses on a single lot, building duplexes, extending buildings over the building line, and facing some buildings in the wrong direction. Whether or not the decision in that' case, construed in the light of these facts, would be applicable to the changes alleged to have taken place within the restricted area involved in the instant case, and even assuming that it would not be applicable, it does not follow that the part of the answer in the instant' case designated as “Defense Two” stаted a valid defense.'
There are decisions in other jurisdictions to the effect that a change in conditions may prevent the enforcement of the restrictions in equity, where the change is of such character and extent that it is no longer possible to carry into effect the general purpose intended by the restrictive covenants. On the general subject, see
Nor can the defendants take advantage of the fact that they have allowed negroes to encroach upon them from the west, until they *363 have finally become virtual barriers against further encroachment toward the plaintiff. We are fully authorized to put it this way, since the defendants do not attempt in any manner to account for the situation in which they find themselves. Thus, with respect to the right of this plaintiff to seek relief as against the present defendants, the changes alleged could not be said to be so radical and fundamental in charaсter as to destroy the general purpose of the restrictive covenant on which the plaintiff relied; and therefore, even under the theory of law urged by the defendants, the allegations as to changes within the restricted area did not set forth a valid defense. In this view as to the factual element, no decision is necessary, and none is made, as to whether the legal position taken is sound or unsound as a matter of Geоrgia law.
From what has been said, the court did not err in striking “Defense Two.”
“Defense Three” was based on acquiescence and estoppel. The following facts were alleged: In 1940 a negro purchased lot 23. In 1939 two negroes purchased the west half of lot 29 and whole lot 30. Shortly thereafter they constructed a bungalow known as 655 West 42nd Street, in which they have resided for the past four or five years. In 1940 or 1941, another negro purchasеd lots 27 and 28, and constructed a bungalow known as 653 West 42nd Street, in which she and her family have since resided. The names of all of these purchasers were alleged. It was further averred: “3. Several other purchases have been made by negroes in 1941 and 1942 of lots in Myers Ward on the south side of Forty-second Street between Burroughs and Florence Streets, which sales were made without objection on the part of petitioner or any other person; 4. Defendant therefore shows that the petitioner by acquiescence in the alleged violation is estopped from making any complaint as to the proposed sale by the defendant; 5. In reliance upon the acquiescence by the plaintiff in the said sale and occupations of lots by negroes, this defendant entered into a contract with” a named negro woman, and incurred a liability to a named-realtor for commissions upon the sale of said property.
It thus appears from the allegations in this defense, when considered with the admitted allegations of the petition, that five lots, whose numbers were given, were sold to negroes, and that two bungalows have been constructed, but that, of all the lots that were
*364
sold to negroes, lot
23
was the one nearest to the land of the plaintiff. It also appears that, between that lot and the plaintiff’s property, there are at least four and a half other lots that are owned by white people, including the lots of Dooley and Fisher, upon which two residences are situated. It does not appear that the plaintiff or Eabey, the testator, had anything whatever to do with any of the sales to negroes. The mere fact that neither of them complained because of the more remote sales, that is, sаles of lot 23 and other lots still farther away, did not affect the plaintiff’s right to enjoin sales of lots 18 and 19 and the east half of lot 20, belonging to the defendants and lying between the six lots of the plaintiff and the several lots that had been previously sold to negroes. In other words, the plaintiff would not be estopped by acquiescence from seeking to enjoin violations by these defendants merely because the same covenants mаy have been previously violated by other and different parties, by more remote sales. See, in this connection,
Seawriglit
v. Blount, 139
Ga.
323 (2) (
In “Defense Four,” it was alleged that the covenant against sale or disposition “to any person not of the white or Caucasian race” was invalid under the 14th amendment to'the United States constitution, for the reasons: (a) it is an attempt to prevent this defendant from selling the said property to any person thаt she may desire, based solely upon race or color; (b) it is a discrimination against persons of a race or color; (c) because of the change in character of the neighborhood since the placing of the covenant in the deed to the grantor’s predecessor. There was no merit in this defense.
Nor was there any merit in “Defense Five,” in which it was averred that the covenant in question had expired by operation
*365
of law under the act of 1935, declaring that '“covenants restricting lands to certain uses shall not run more than 20 years in municipalities which have adopted zoning laws.” Ga. L. 1935, p. 112; Ga.- Code Ann., § 29-301. Properly construed, the act of 1935 was not intended to operate retrospectively, and wоuld not have the effect of terminating a covenant that was already in existence as a valid and binding contract between the parties. Code, § 2r302;
Smith
v.
Pindar Real Estate Co.,
187
Ga.
229 (3) (
“Defense Six” was based on the allegations of fact that had been made in Defenses Two, Three, Pour, and Five, inclusive, and prayed for a decree declaring the covenant void and removing it as a cloud on title. From what has been said in reference to the other defenses, the court did not err in striking “Defense Six.”
Judgments affirmed.
