Whilе the covenants in the deed to secure debt to pay all taxes which may be imposed or which *444 may otherwise aсcrue, and to pay any debt thereby secured, might or might not have been breached by the failure to pay taxes due Mаy 1, 1964, or to pay the $2,012.72 which was a part of the purchase price held in escrow until certain things had been done, yet the undisputed evidence shows an unquestioned breach of the covenant to obtain written consent from the grantee bеfore making substantial alterations and removal of improvements on the premises, and our decision will be based upon this breach to determine if maturity was thereby accelerated, and if it was error to enjoin the sale under the powеr contained in the deed.
On this phase of the case, the issue sought to be raised is that of estoppel based upon the facts that the grantee knew such alterations were intended, lived so near thereto until he must have observed the alterations, and several times went upon the premises where he saw what was being done, and made no protest until the grantor had expended about $50,000 in making improvements and repairs. Sound thinking on this situation requires a clear recognition that a forfeiture of title with a loss of improvements is not here involved; that the improvements were on the grantor’s lands and not those of the grantee, and he is not being deprived of a particle of same; that the grantor had equal knowledge with the grantee of the necessity of obtaining written consent of the grantee to make substantial alterations; that the grantеe had no duty to remind the grantor of that requirement which he 'had written into the deed he executed; and that the grantee is not endeavoring to stop such alterations. He is merely exercising a right plainly given by the deed which the grantor executed to him, to wit: accelerate the maturity of his debt because of a breach of a covenant solemnly made in thе deed.
It is essential to a clear understanding to eliminate the contentions of the defendant in error as follows: (1) the power of sale in a deed to secure debt must be strictly construed and fairly exercised.
Code Ann.
§ 37-607 (Ga. L. 1937, pp. 481, 482);
Schneider v. Smith,
There can be no estoppel by conduct where both parties have equal knowledge or equal means of knowing the truth.
Nelson v. Girard,
It would have been lawful for the grantee tо even hope the grantor would violate the covenant and thus accelerate maturity. They both fully agree that such could be the result of the breach. They are conclusively presumed to have intended such result, else it would not have been written into the deed. The grantor has a complete means of keeping his land and the improvements *447 he has made thereon, and that is by paying the matured debt. The sale is to collect the debt not to take the land. Presumably its sale price will be enhanced in the amount of the improvements, and this will inure to the grantor.
The evidence and the law demanded that the sale be allowed to proceed, and it was error to enjoin the same.
Judgment reversed.
