Two questions only are presented for consideration. First, whether the two instruments, consisting of the deed from the Building and Loan Association to the defendant Dickerson, and his mortgage to the defendant Viney Farrar, executed as they were simultaneously, are to be construed as one instrument, and to operate as one assurance to her of the land which is the subject of controversy ? And if so, then whether her mortgage is to have precedence over that, under which the plaintiff is seeking to sell the land— the,same being prior in point of time.
The true rule in the construction of deeds and all other written instruments is to. give effect, if possible, to the intent of the parties thereto, by which is meant, that where it is clearly the intent of the parties that the land shall pass-, the form of the conveyance is not material, but the intent shall be effectuated by every legal means. Accordingly this court declared in the case of Howell v. Howell, 7 Ired., 491, that, if necessary to give effect to the intention of the partiés, they would not hesitate to treat several instruments, execm *469led at the same time, and relating to the same subject, as forming 'but one, that is, to construe the several instruments as component parts of one and the same instrument.
So too in Bunting v. Jones, 78 N. C., 242, speaking of a deed to the purchaser of land, and a mortgage to secure the purchase money, executed by him at the same time, it is said that the two were intended, by the parties to be concurrent acts, and should therefore be construed as one act. Looking to the decision of other courts we find them without an exception, so far as we are informed, all pointing to the same conclusion.
In Holbrook v. Finney, 4 Mass., 566, where a father conveyed land by deed to his son, who at the same time gave a mortgage to the father to secure the purchase money, the supreme court of that state held that the two instruments were to be considered as parts of one and the same contract between the parties- in the same manner as a deed of de-feasance forms with the deed to be defeated but one contract though engrossed on several sheets. To the same effeet is' the decision of the same court in the case of Clark v. Munroe, 14 Mass., 351, and that of the supreme court of the state of New York in the case of Stow v. Tift, 15 Johnson, 458, and also in Jackson v. McKenny, 3 Wend., 233.
In the case now before us the two deeds bear the same date, are consistent with each other, relate to the same prop-' erty, and are manifestly parts of one agreement evidenced by different instruments, and as to the intention of the parties it is dear that finding himself unable to discharge his debt due to the association .for the purchase money of the land, the defendant Dickerson sought the aid of the defendant Farrar, wh© agreed to give it, by surrendering her shares of stock for cancellation, provided she were made secure by a mortgage on the land, and that this was thoroughly understood and assented to by all the parties, including the officer of the association. If then by any possible *470legal construction of the two instruments this intention of the parties can be carried into effect, it is the duty of the courts to adept it.
This brings us to the other question, viz : whether the defendant Farrar, having advanced the money to pay for the land to the Building and Loan Association, and upon the conveyance thereof to the' defendant Dickerson, having eo instanti taken a mortgage from him to secure the money sc* advanced, is entitled to precedence over the other mortgage notwithstanding it is of an older date. In many of the states they have undertaken to regulate this matter of precedence between conflicting mortgages and liens, by statutes which declare that whenever lands are sold and conveyed, and a mortgage is given by the purchaser, at the same time, to secure the purchase money, such mortgage shall be preferred to, and exclude any claim, or lien, arising through the mortgagor. Here we have no such statutory provision, and must needs therefore consider the point in the light of the com.mon law alone. It is impossible to conceive of a decision furnishing a stronger analogy, determining as it does a principle which must govern this case, than that rendered in the case of Bunting v. Jones before cited from our own reports. There, the facts were that the plaintiff, purchasing the land and paying for it, had the conveyance made to the defendant, who immediately' executed a mortgage to the plaintiff to secure the purchase money, and the question was as to the right of the defendant’s wife to have dower in the premises. If any right, accruing through the mortgagor, could under the circumstances attach to the land, it must have been that of dower, since that, of all rights, is most favored by the law, and yet so observant was the court of the intention of the parties, and so careful to give effect to it, that it would not allow it to be defeated, even by the wife’s: claim of dower. To the very same import are the other authorities cited, of Holbrook v. Finney, Clark v. Munroe, *471and Stow v. Tift. These cases all proceed upon the idea that the seizin of the husband was but for an instant, and that it was not intended to be in him beneficially at all, or for his own use, but that the real purpose was to put the title in the mortgagee as a security for his money advanced, and that the husband was a mere conduit pipe or medium of conveyance. But we are not left to reason from analogy merely in regard to the point; on the contrary, we have to guide us, the deeisons of several courts of eminent respectability. In Jackson v. Austin, 15 John, 477, and Haywood v. Nooney, 3 Bart. (N. Y.) 643, the facts were almost identical with those of the present case, except that the older incum-brances, for which priority was claimed, were judgment liens instead of mortgages; and in both cases, it was held that the preference was due to the mortgage given to secure the payment of the purchase money to the party who had advanced it. It is true, that in that state there was a statute on the subject; but the same court in the case of Stow v. Tift supra, held it to be declaratory merely of the common law, and indeed the preamble to the statute itself, so declares.
Again the supreme court of Illinois (in which state they have no such statute) declared in the case of Curtis v. Root, 20 Ill., 53, that it was a principle of law too familiar to justify a reference to the authorities, that a mortgage given for the purchase money of land and executed at the same time the deed is executed to the mortgagor, takes precedence of judgmentspreviously existingagainsthim. The reason given is that the execution of the deed and of the mortgage being simultaneous acts, the title to the land does not for a single moment rest in .the purchaser, but merely passes through his hands, and without stopping, vests in the mortgagee, and during such instantaneous passage no lien of any character can attach to the title. True it is, that in the case just cited the mortgage was to the vendor of the land, but in point of right and principle it can make no difference whether it be *472given to the vendor, himself, for the purchase money, or to one who actually advances the means to pay the purchase money to the vendor, and it was so expressly ruled in the case of Kaiser v. Lembeck, 3 Iowa, 520.
Impelled by these authorities and convinced as we are of their correctness, we are constrained to hold that His Honor in the court below, erred in declaring . that the preference should be given to that mortgage under which the plaintiff claims. . In our view of the case- the mortgage given for the purchase money stands upon the higher ground and is entitled to precedence — not upon the ground of any supposed equity in the vendor as such .to have the purchase money of the land sold or any right of subrogation in the defendant Farrar to his lien upon the land, but purely and simply upon the ground that the two instruments being executed at the same moment of time are to be treated as one, and construed as if the association had conveyed the land directly to her, and had not made use of the defendant Dickerson as an instrument to that end. If there had been an interval of time between the two transactions during which the title to the land had rested in Dickerson, then this right of priority would have been lost to her and attached to the elder mortgage.
It is therefore declared by this court that the mortgage executed to the defendant Farrar on the 4th day of May, 1876, constituted the first and highest lien upon the land, to the extent of $400, that being the amount of the purchase money then actually due and paid, together with the interest thereon from the day of such payment. We have thus restricted her right to the actual amount of the purchase money because of her offer made at the bar of this court to accept that sum, and have not at all considered her right to have the whole of her debt secured in the mortgage in case she had seen fit to demand, it.
As to the suggestion of usury made in this court-by the *473plaintiff, it is sufficient to say, that no such point appears by the record to have been taken in the court below, and if it had been it could not avail in a court of equity whose aid the plaintiff himself had sought.
There is error. Let judgment be entered in this court according to the rights of the parties as herein declared.
Error. Reversed.