172 Ga. 331 | Ga. | 1931
Alex. Beeves and Mrs. Mary E. Ivey brought separate suits to the January term, 1930, of Pulton superior court against E. W. Grove Bealty Company, Mrs. Sarah Comfort, and
The original petitions alleged that the plaintiffs were the owners of the described lots in Atkins Park. The deed conveying these lots to Eeeves was dated April 19, 1928; and Mrs. Ivey secured title by deed dated November 6,1924. The restrictions which the plaintiffs seek to have declared void and canceled are set forth in the petition. One of the restrictive covenants,'and the most important, is that the party of the second part, the grantee, “will not erect or suffer or license to be erected on the lot above described any commercial or manufacturing establishment or factory or tenement or apartment-house of any kind, at any time; or use or suffer to be used any buildings erected thereon for any such purpose; . . that lie will not build more than one residence on any of said lots. . . All of the foregoing covenants shall be covenants running with the land, and shall be kept by the party, of the second part, his heirs and assigns, forever.”
The .petition sets out facts showing the establishment of Atkins Park as an exclusive residential section laid out in the woods away from the City of Atlanta as its boundaries were in 1905; then it
The court did not err in dismissing the petitions upon demurrer. “When a grantee accepts a deed and enters thereunder, he will be bound by the covenants contained therein, although the deed has not been signed by him.” Civil Code, § 4180. “A purchaser of land is conclusively charged with notice of a restrictive agreement or covenant contained in a deed which constitutes one of the muniments of his own title; and generally this is true whether the deed containing such covenant is recorded or not.” Hancock v. Gumm, 151 Ga. 667 (107 S. E. 872, 16 A. L. R. 1003). Eestrictive covenants like those involved in the consideration of these cases have always been upheld by the courts of this State, where there was such a violation or threatened violation thereof that / would give a court of equity jurisdiction. The present case falls within section 4180, quoted above. Numerous owners of land in this subdivision, as shown by the number of defendants named in this suit, bought their lots of land in full reliance upon the restrictive covenants in the deeds to other purchasers of lots in the same subdivision. In a limited sense, the purchasers of these other lots had a property interest in these restrictive covenants, and a court of equity will not strike down and destroy these covenants merely because under the changed condition of this particular sub
We have not attempted anything like a complete statement of the cases laying down the principle which we have announced. They are numerous; and we are of the opinion that they are uniform in holding. Whatever effect changed conditions may have upon these restrictive covenants under rules made in certain cases cited in the brief of counsel for plaintiffs in error, even if some of these cases are applicable to a state of facts like that presented in this record, we can not hold that the positive, direct rulings of our courts are affected thereby. The decisions by this court are direct, explicit, and controlling; and moreover we are of the opinion that they state sound principles of law. In view of the provisions of our law and constitution, and under clear principles of equity, the petitioners in this case have no right to set aside and have canceled the covenants in the deeds under which they hold their lots in Atkins Park.
The rule against perpetuities made by our statute, which is a codification of the common law (Civil Code, § 3678), deals with estates in land and the vesting of estates, and does not relate to restrictive covenants such as we have in this case.
In regard to the question made by the assignment of error upon the judgment of the court granting an injunction against Alex. Peeves and Mrs. Hoarde, as prayed for in the amendment to
Judgment affirmed.