Tbe primary question presented by this appeal is tbe propriety of tbe compulsory nonsuit.
It is well settled in this State tbat “where tbe owner of a tract of land subdivides it and sells distinct parcels thereof to separate grantees, imposing restrictions on its use pursuant to a general plan of development or improvement, such restrictions may be enforced by any grantee against any other grantee, either on tbe theory tbat there is a mutuality of covenant and consideration, or on tbe ground tbat mutual equitable easements are created.” 26 C.J.S., Deeds, section 167; Brenizer v. Stephens, 220 N.C. 395, 17 S.E. 2d 471; Bailey v. Jackson, 191 N.C. 61, 131 S.E. 567; Homes Co. v. Falls, 184 N.C. 426, 115 S.E. 184.
Moreover, tbe right to enforce tbe restrictions in such case is not confined to immediate purchasers from tbe original grantor. It may be exercised by subsequent owners who acquire lots in tbe subdivision *248covered by the general plan through mesne conveyances from such immediate purchasers. 14 Am. Jur., Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions, section 319.
Furthermore, covenants limiting the use of land may be enforced against a subsequent purchaser who takes title to the land with notice of the restrictions. Davis v. Robinson, 189 N.C. 589, 121 S.E. 697. The law contemplates that a purchaser of land will examine each recorded deed or other instrument in his chain of title, and charges him with notice of every fact affecting his title which such an examination would disclose. In consequence, a purchaser of land is chargeable with notice of a restrictive covenant by the record itself if such covenant is contained in any recorded deed or other instrument in his line of title, even though it does not appear in his immediate deed. Sheets v. Dillon, 221 N.C. 426, 20 S.E. 2d 344; Turner v. Glenn, 220 N.C. 620, 18 S.E. 2d 197; Bailey v. Jackson, supra.
The defendants maintain with much earnestness that the nonsuit was proper on the ground that the testimony at the trial was insufficient as a matter of law to sustain the allegations of the complaint that the Stephens Company had imposed the restrictions on the use of the lots pursuant to a general plan to develop the subdivision as a restricted residential community or neighborhood. They advance several arguments to support this position.
They assert initially that the Stephens Company had developed Myers Park as a unit composed of its different subdivisions; that it had sold lots in another subdivision of Myers Park situated just across East More-head Street from the lot of the defendants for commercial purposes; that the purchasers of such lots had erected various types of business buildings thereon, and were devoting the same to sundry commercial enterprises; and that these facts negative the claim of the plaintiffs that Blocks 11-C and 11-D, which are merely parts of Myers Park as a whole, constitute a restricted residential community or neighborhood. The defendants overlook the fact that this identical contention has been expressly rejected by this Court on at least four occasions. McLeskey v. Heinlein, 200 N.C. 290, 156 S.E. 489; Johnston v. Garrett, 190 N.C. 835, 130 S.E. 835; Homes Co. v. Falls, supra; Stephens Co. v. Homes Co., 181 N.C. 335, 107 S.E. 233. The land shown on the map of Blocks 11-C and 11-D of Myers Park “is in fact, and was designed to be, a separate, distinct and integral subdivision,” bearing no relationship whatever in the present field of law to any other subdivision of Myers Park. Stephens Co. v. Homes Co., supra.
The defendants insist secondarily that the restrictive covenants in the deeds from the Stephens Company to the original purchasers were designed to create a mere personal right in favor of the Stephens Company, *249and were not intended to benefit the lots sold or those who purchased them. They say that this proposition is established by this provision appearing in all of the original deeds: “Nothing herein contained shall be held to impose any restrictions on or easements in any land of the Stephens Company not hereby conveyed.” The defendants rely on Humphrey v. Beall, 215 N.C. 15, 200 S.E. 918, in which this Court corrected an erroneous judgment rendered by the writer of this opinion while he was serving as a Superior Court Judge and by reason thereof was still subject to what Chief Justice Bleckley of the Supreme Court of Georgia was pleased to call “the fallibility which is inherent in all courts except those of last resort.” Broome v. Davis, 87 Ga. 584, 586, 13 S.E. 749.
The facts in the instant action are quite different from those in Humphrey v. Beall, notwithstanding that most of the deeds in that case contained a stipulation like that quoted above. The grantor in the Humphrey case, i.e., the Charlotte Consolidated Construction Company, retained unsold approximately 60 lots scattered throughout the 255 lots in its development, and was empowered by the clause under consideration to sell those unsold lots without restrictions. The Stephens Company, however, did not reserve any land in Blocks 11-C and 11-D of Myers Park free from the restrictions. The contrary is true. It sold every lot in the subdivision subject to restrictive covenants limiting its use to residential purposes. In so doing, the Stephens Company rendered the stipulation in question wholly nugatory. It did not revive this clause by repurchasing Lots Nos. 1, 2, and 3 of Block 11-D. This is necessarily so because its re-acquirement of those lots was under chains, of title subjecting them to the restrictive covenants. Pappas v. Eighty Hundred Realty Co., (Mo. App.), 138 S. W. 2d 762. Besides, each deed in the Humphrey case expressly provided that any restrictions upon the lot sold might be changed at any time and in any manner by the mutual written agreement of the granlor and the owner for the time being of the lot conveyed. No such vitiating stipulation appears in the deeds of the Stephens Company.
The defendants invoke the ninth restrictive covenant in the deed from the Stephens Company to A. I. Henderson, who was the plaintiffs’ ante-cessor in title, as a refutation of the idea that the restrictions were embodied in the conveyances pursuant to a general plan to develop the subdivision as a restricted residential community or neighborhood. This argument is without convincing force. The ninth restrictive covenant in the Henderson deed has never vested in the Stephens Company any power “to change, alter, or close up” Henley Place, which is the only “street or avenue” shown on the map of Blocks 11-0 and 11-D of Myers Park. This is true because Henley Place is adjacent to Lot No. 17 and is necessary to its full enjoyment. Moreover, the controversy in respect to *250this particular restrictive covenant is a mere academic disquisition. The City of Charlotte accepted the dedication of Henley Place to public use as a street of the municipality, and has exclusive control over it as such.
The defendants contend finally on the present aspect of the litigation that the eighth restrictive covenant in the deed from the Stephens Company to G. O. Doggett, their predecessor in title, purports to limit the use of their lot “for agricultural purposes”; that no comparable restriction appears in the plaintiff’s chain of title; and that this variation in restrictions destroys the uniformity essential to establish a general plan for the improvements of the lots in Blocks 11-C and 11-D. This argument ignores the legal principle that absolute uniformity in details is not required to establish a general plan for the development of a tract subdivided into a number of building lots. Franklin v. Realty Co., 202 N.C. 212, 162 S.E. 199; Bailey v. Jackson, supra; Snow v. Van Dam, 291 Mass. 477, 197 N.E. 224; Humphreys v. Ibach, 110 N. J. Eq. 647, 160 A. 531, 85 A.L.R. 980; Neidlinger v. New York Ass’n for Improving Condition of Poor, 121 Misc. 276, 200 N.Y.S., 852. The mere fact that all of the restrictions are not exactly the same in all of the deeds does not prove that the restrictive covenants limiting the use of the property to residential purposes are not intended to apply to all the lots in the subdivision. 14 Am. Jur., Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions, section 202.
In passing on the propriety of the compulsory nonsuit, we must assume that the evidence of the plaintiffs is true, and give them the advantage of every fair and legitimate inference which it raises. Hughes v. Thayer, 229 N.C. 773, 51 S.E. 2d 488.
When the testimony of the plaintiffs is accepted as truth, it makes out this ease:
The Stephens Company subdivided Blocks 11-0 and 11-D of its Myers Park property into 37 building lots so that it might sell the entire property in separate parcels to various purchasers. The shapes and sizes of the lots rendered them more suitable to residential purposes than to business uses. The Stephens Company sold all of the 37 lots to various grantees by deeds containing covenants that the different grantees and their respective heirs and assigns should use the lots “for residential purposes only.” The defendants and all other present proprietors of property within the subdivision took title to their respective lots with notice of the restrictions. This is necessarily so for all of them acquired their lands under recorded chains of title containing deeds embodying the restrictive covenants. Many of the owners of lots in Blocks 11-C and 11-D have erected substantial and valuable dwellings upon their holdings. There has not been a single, violation of the restrictive covenants anywhere within the subdivision. The erection of duplex houses and the renting *251of dwellings .witbin tbe subdivision do not constitute violations of the covenants for the deeds permit these acts.
These facts fairly and legitimately warrant these inferences:
It cannot be gainsaid that the restrictive covenants were put in the deeds to enable the Stephens Company to dispose of its property to its greatest advantage. But this does not show that the restrictions were designed to create a mere personal right in favor of the Stephens Company, and were not intended to benefit the lots sold and those who bought them. The reverse is, indeed, the case. The object of the Stephens Company to sell its land to its greatest advantage was effected only because its representations as to the restrictions convinced the purchasers of the several lots that the observance of the restrictions within the borders of the subdivision would enhance the value of the lots which they purchased. This being so, the restrictions were devised to benefit the lots in the subdivision, and those who bought them as well as the Stephens Company. Sanford v. Keer, 80 N. J. Eq. 240, 83 A. 225, 40 L.R.A. (N.S.) 1090. The soundness of this conclusion is shown by another factor. Since the Stephens Company did not contemplate reserving any part of the land and did not do so, it necessarily intended that the protection of the restrictive covenants should inure to the benefit of the purchasers of the lots in the subdivision, and that each of the purchasers should be entitled to enforce them as against all of the others.
It follows, therefore, that the evidence of the plaintiffs was sufficient to sustain a finding that the restrictive covenants were placed in the deeds pursuant to a general plan to develop Blocks 11-C and 11-D of Myers Park as a restricted residential community or neighborhood.
The defendants assert with much strenuosity, however, that even this conclusion does not warrant the reversal of the compulsory nonsuit. They say that Blocks 11-C and 11-D of Myers Park have lost their residential character since the restrictions were created, and that in consequence it would be oppressive and inequitable to give the restrictions effect as against their lot. This claim is predicated on the evidence that traffic has increased on Baldwin Avenue, East Morehead Street, Henley Place, and King’s Drive, and that business establishments have grown up in territory adjoining or surrounding the subdivision.
The testimony invoked by the defendants on this phase of the case does not show that the increased traffic has substantially impaired the suitability of lots in Blocks 11-C and 11-D for residential purposes. Continental Oil Co. v. Fennemore, 38 Ariz. 277, 299 P. 132; Strong v. Hancock, 201 Cal. 530, 258 P. 60; Ludgate v. Somerville, 121 Or. 643, 256 P. 1043, 54 A.L.R. 837.
It does disclose, however, that all business changes have occurred in territory outside the development. There is not a single business estab*252lishment within the subdivision. It is, indeed, utilized exclusively for residential purposes in conformity to the restrictions. This being so, the fact that adjoining or surrounding property is now used for business purposes does not alter the character of the subdivision itself, and those who have been led to buy lots or build homes in that locality by reason of the restrictive covenants are entitled to have their property preserved for the purpose for which they purchased it. Vernon v. Realty Co., 226 N.C. 58, 36 S.E. 2d 710; Turner v. Glenn, supra; Brenizer v. Stephens, supra; McLeskey v. Heinlein, supra.
This conclusion compels a further decision for the plaintiffs on the secondary question arising on the appeal. The court erred in permitting the defendants to cross-examine the plaintiff, E. R. Higdon, as to changed conditions outside the development. Turner v. Glenn, supra; Brenizer v. Stephens, supra.
For the reasons given, the compulsory nonsuit is
Reversed.