149 Ga. 587 | Ga. | 1919
1. While an estate may be granted upon a condition either express or implied, upon performance or breach of which the estate shall either commence, be enlarged, or defeated (Civil Code, § 3716), the law inclines to construe conditions to be subsequent rather than precedent, and to be remediable by damages rather than by forfeiture. Civil Code, § 3717. And “Equity seeks always to construe conditions subsequent into covenants, and to relieve against forfeitures, where the rules of construction will allow.” Civil Code," § 4568. This court has accordingly held (Thompson v. Hart, 133 Ga. 540, 66 S. E. 270), that “A deed will not be construed as a grant on condition subsequent, unless the language used by express terms creates an estate on condition,- or unless the intent of the grantor to create a conditional estate is manifest from a reading of the entire instrument.” To the same effect see Self v. Billings, 139 Ga. 400 (77 S. E. 562).
2. Accordingly where a deed was executed and delivered, purporting to convey fee-simple title to a tract of land, which, in the granting clause contained the following words: “By accepting this deed Charles W.
(a) The case differs from Wadley Lumber Co. v. Lott, 130 Ga. 135 (60 S. E. 836), where the grantor in effect reserved the right, under specified conditions, to re-enter upon payment of the price Stipulated.
3. The right of the plaintiffs to the relief prayed for being dependent upon giving the words quoted from the deed sueli construction as would render the instrument a grant upon condition subsequent, the court did not err in sustaining the general demurrer to the petition.
Judgment affirmed.