Insight LLC v. Patrick Gunter ( 2013 )


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  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
    Docket No. 38158
    INSIGHT LLC, an Idaho limited liability  )
    company; DONALD F. HUTTON, an            )
    unmarried man; HLT REAL ESTATE           )
    LLC, an Idaho limited liability company; )           Moscow, September 2012 Term
    THE EARLE-HENRION TRUST dated            )
    January 27, 1998, the sole and separate  )           2013 Opinion No. 12
    property of DANIEL C. EARLE; and         )
    INDEPENDENT MORTGAGE LTD. CO.,           )           Filed: January 24, 2013
    an Idaho limited liability company,      )
    )           Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,              )
    )
    v.                                      )
    )
    PATRICK GUNTER and MONICA               )
    GUNTER, husband and wife,               )
    )
    Defendants-Respondents,             )
    )
    and                                     )
    )
    SUMMIT, INC., an Idaho corporation;     )
    RON HAZEL, an individual; SARAH         )
    HAZEL, spouse of RON HAZEL;             )
    DARREN BROTT, an individual; and        )
    SUSAN BROTT, spouse of DARREN           )
    BROTT,                                  )
    )
    Defendants.                         )
    ________________________________________ )
    Appeal from the District Court of the First Judicial District of the State of
    Idaho, Bonner County. Hon. John T. Mitchell, District Judge.
    The decision of the district court is vacated and this case is remanded for entry
    of a judgment consistent with this Opinion. Costs on appeal are awarded to
    Appellants.
    Dean & Kolts, Coeur d’Alene, for Appellants. Charles R. Dean argued.
    Ramsden & Lyons, Coeur d’Alene, for Respondents. Marc A. Lyons argued.
    ____________________________
    W. JONES, Justice
    1
    I. NATURE OF THE CASE
    This is an appeal from a district court trial regarding a dispute over two liens on real
    property: a deed of trust and a mortgage. Appellants (“Insight”) are assignees of a mortgage
    secured by 160 acres of real property owned by Summitt, Inc. (“Summitt”), which includes an
    18-acre parcel of land that Summitt purchased from the Respondents (“the Gunters”). The
    Gunters hold a deed of trust on the Gunter property.
    II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Summitt owned a 142-acre parcel of land that it intended to develop into a residential
    subdivision. Respondents, Pat and Monica Gunter owned an 18-acre plot of land that adjoined
    Summitt’s 142 acres (“the Gunter property”). Not wanting to live next to a residential
    development, the Gunters solicited Summitt’s president, Ron Hazel, to purchase the Gunter
    property; the parties agreed to a price of $799,000. On April 21, 2006, the Gunters and Summitt,
    through its president, Hazel, entered into a purchase and sale agreement for the Gunter property.
    The agreement, prepared by Summitt, identified EasyWay Escrow (“EasyWay”) as the closing
    agent for the transaction. The agreement provided $1,000 earnest money and the balance of the
    purchase price was to be paid in “cash at closing.” Possession of the land was to be delivered at
    closing on June 19, 2006.
    After executing the purchase and sale agreement, Hazel contacted Independent Mortgage
    Ltd. Co. (“IM”), seeking a loan of $799,000. IM agreed to loan Summitt $616,000 so long as
    Summitt’s principals executed personal guarantees and secured the mortgage with 160 acres of
    land including both the 142 acres already owned by Summitt and the 18 acres comprising the
    Gunter property.
    Shortly after the execution of the agreement, Hazel contacted Monica Gunter and
    revealed that Summitt was unable to come up with the full amount of the purchase price. Hazel
    informed her Summitt could pay $599,000 and asked the Gunters to finance the remaining
    $200,000 of the purchase price, which the Gunters agreed to do. This conversation was
    documented by notes taken by Monica Gunter and delivered to EasyWay. These notes do not
    mention any other loan or financing contemplated by Summitt for the purchase of the Gunter
    property.
    Sandpoint Title was responsible for recording and providing title insurance for both the
    IM mortgage and the Gunters’ deed of trust. Stephanie Brown prepared the documents related to
    the IM/Summitt mortgage. Carol Sommerfeld, owner of EasyWay Escrow, prepared the
    documents related to the Gunter/Summitt deed of trust. The district court found that Sommerfeld
    2
    was not aware of the mortgage executed between IM and Summitt. The district court also found
    that the Gunters lacked knowledge of the IM/Summitt mortgage at the time of the closing,
    because they were never informed of any financing by Summitt other than their own deed of
    trust. Also, there was no reference to the IM mortgage in any part of the closing file. As to the
    dispute of whether Hazel informed the Gunters or Sommerfeld of the IM/Summitt mortgage, the
    district court found credible Sommerfeld’s and Monica Gunter’s testimony that they were not
    informed of the IM/Summitt mortgage. It also found that IM knew of the Gunters’ deed of trust
    because IM considered seeking a subordination agreement from the Gunters.
    Hazel signed the IM/Summitt mortgage on June 19, 2006, at IM’s offices in Sandpoint,
    Idaho. Later that same day Summitt executed a deed of trust in favor of the Gunters at
    EasyWay’s office. All of the documents were delivered to Sandpoint Title by IM and EasyWay
    for recordation. IM instructed Sandpoint that the IM/Summitt mortgage was to be recorded first.
    The deed from the Gunters to Summitt was recorded on June 20, 2006, at 4:16 p.m. The
    IM/Summitt mortgage was recorded that same day at 4:17 p.m., and the Gunter/Summitt deed of
    trust was recorded at 4:18 p.m.
    In 2007, Summitt defaulted on its obligations to both IM and the Gunters. Insight 1 filed a
    Complaint on August 27, 2008, naming Summitt, Summitt’s principals, and the Gunters as
    defendants. On November 26, 2008, the Gunters answered and denied that their deed of trust was
    junior to the IM/Summitt mortgage. On February 17, 2009, Insight filed a motion for summary
    judgment. The district court denied the motion because there was an issue as to who was the
    initial encumbrancer. Insight filed a motion for reconsideration, which the district court denied.
    The case was tried to the court on June 28, 2010, and the court issued its final order on August 2,
    2010. A final judgment accompanied by a Rule 54(b) certificate was entered on August 6, 2010.
    An Amended Judgment and Rule 54(b) certificate was entered on August 17, 2010. The Notice
    of Appeal was filed on September 17, 2010. An Amended Notice of Appeal was filed on October
    28, 2010.
    After trial, the district court found that the closing of the Gunter/Summitt deed of trust
    was a separate and independent transaction from the IM/Summitt mortgage. The court found that
    the separate closings were not part of “one continuous transaction.” The district court further
    found that the Gunters’ deed of trust effectively encumbered the Gunter property at the time the
    transaction between Summitt and the Gunters closed. However, it found the IM mortgage on the
    1
    The IM/Summitt mortgage was assigned to Insight.
    3
    combined 160-acre parcel of land did not create an encumbrance on the Gunter property until
    after the Gunter/Summitt transaction closed. The rationale was that the mortgage could not
    encumber property that is not owned by the mortgagor. As a result, the Gunters’ deed of trust
    was determined to be the “first encumbrance” on the Gunter property. The court also found that
    IM was not a good faith purchaser—even though it recorded first—because it was aware of the
    financing agreement between Summitt and the Gunters.
    On appeal, Insight argues that the IM mortgage has priority as a matter of law because it
    was a purchase money mortgage that was first recorded thus rendering its “good faith” irrelevant.
    Insight also contends that the Gunters were not good faith purchasers and had imputed
    knowledge of IM’s mortgage through the escrow agent, EasyWay. Respondents counter that the
    Gunters’ deed of trust was the first encumbrance on the Gunter property; the IM mortgage was
    not a purchase money mortgage; and even if it was a purchase money mortgage, the Gunters’
    deed of trust effectively encumbered the land first and therefore had priority.
    III. ISSUES ON APPEAL
    1. Whether the district court erred in concluding IM had notice of the Gunters’ deed of trust.
    2. Whether the district court erred in finding the IM mortgage was not a purchase money
    mortgage.
    3. Whether the district court erred in finding the Gunters’ deed of trust had priority.
    IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    This Court exercises free review over conclusions of law, Smith v. J.B. Parson Co., 
    127 Idaho 937
    , 941, 
    908 P.2d 1244
    , 1248 (1996), but will not set aside a finding of fact unless it is
    clearly erroneous. Idaho R. Civ. P. 52(a). When a case is tried to a court, determinations as to the
    credibility of witnesses, the weight of their testimony, their probative effect, and inferences
    drawn from that testimony are the province of the district court. Estate of Skvorak v. Security
    Union Title Ins. Co., 
    140 Idaho 16
    , 19–20, 
    89 P.3d 856
    , 859–60 (2004); Idaho Power Co. v.
    Congeneration, Inc., 
    134 Idaho 738
    , 746, 
    9 P.3d 1204
    , 1212 (2000).
    On review, the interpretation of a statute is an issue of law over which this Court
    exercises free review. Idaho Fair Share v. Idaho Public Utilities Comm’n, 
    113 Idaho 959
    , 961–
    62, 
    651 P.2d 107
    , 109–110 (1988), overruled on other grounds by J.R. Simplot Co. v. Idaho State
    Tax Comm’n, 
    120 Idaho 849
    , 
    820 P.2d 1206
     (1991). The primary function of the Supreme Court
    when interpreting a statute is to give effect to the legislative intent, which should be derived,
    where applicable, from the clearly expressed intent of the legislature. Payette River Prop.
    Owners Ass’n v. Bd. of Comm’rs of Valley Cnty., 
    132 Idaho 551
    , 557, 
    976 P.2d 477
    , 483 (1999);
    4
    George W. Watkins Family v. Messenger, 
    118 Idaho 537
    , 539–40, 
    797 P.2d 1385
    , 1387–88
    (1990).
    V. ANALYSIS
    Idaho is a race-notice recording state: “Every conveyance of real property . . . is void as
    against any subsequent purchaser or mortgagee of the same property, or any part thereof, in good
    faith and for a valuable consideration, whose conveyance is first duly recorded.” I.C. § 55-812. A
    purchase money mortgage “has priority over all other liens created against the purchaser, subject
    to the operation of the recording laws.” I.C. § 45-112.
    A.        The district court’s finding that IM had notice of the Gunters’ Deed of Trust is
    Clearly Erroneous.
    The district court found that IM had actual notice of the Gunters’ deed of trust, because
    IM considered a subordination agreement and instructed Sandpoint Title to record the IM
    mortgage first. This finding is clearly erroneous.
    The district court found that Summit executed the IM mortgage on June 19, 2006. The
    district court further found that Summit executed the Gunters’ deed of trust also on June 19,
    2006, but later in the day. It is not technically possible for IM to have notice of an encumbrance
    on property before that encumbrance actually comes into existence. Though IM knew that
    Summitt was intending to execute a deed of trust, that was notice of an intent to subsequently
    encumber property, not notice of an actual encumbrance on property. Therefore, the district
    court’s finding that IM had notice of the Gunters’ deed of trust is clearly erroneous.
    B.        The IM/Summitt Mortgage Was a Purchase Money Mortgage.
    A purchase money mortgage is defined by statute as “a mortgage given for the price of
    real property, at the time of its conveyance.” I.C. § 45-112. A purchase money mortgage is given
    where the loan enables the purchaser to purchase the land securing the mortgage. It is executed
    to secure the purchase money necessary to purchase the land. See Pulse v. North American Land
    Title Co., 
    707 P.2d 1105
    , 1107–08 (Mont. 1985); Liberty Parts Warehouse, Inc. v. Marshall
    County Bank & Trust, 
    459 N.E.2d 738
    , 739 (Ind. Ct. App. 1984); see also 55 Am. Jur. 2d
    Mortgages §13, at 202 (1971). The purchase money mortgage must be executed in the same
    transaction as the conveyance or acquisition of title. A deed of trust can be a purchase money
    mortgage. Id. Idaho courts have not required that purchase money mortgages secure the purchase
    money for the entire price of securing the property. See Skvorak, 
    140 Idaho at 18, 21
    , 
    89 P.3d at 858, 861
     (securing purchase money with more than one purchase money mortgage).
    5
    In Skvorak, the Sylvesters agreed to purchase a large parcel of property from the
    Skvoraks called Gold Cup. 
    Id. at 18
    , 
    89 P.3d at 858
    . The Sylvesters obtained a mortgage from
    Crown Pacific for the down payment of Gold Cup and executed a mortgage in favor of the
    Skvoraks for the remaining purchase price. 
    Id.
     These two mortgages were executed on the same
    day, at different times, but outside of the presence of all the parties. 
    Id.
     Crown Pacific recorded
    its mortgage twelve days before the Skvoraks executed their mortgage. 
    Id.
     After the Sylvesters
    filed for bankruptcy, a dispute arose between the Skvoraks and Crown Pacific as to whose
    mortgage had priority. This Court found that both parties held purchase money mortgages on
    Gold Cup, and did not disturb the district court’s finding that both parties had knowledge of the
    other’s mortgage. 
    Id.
     at 21–22, 
    89 P.3d at
    861–62. It was argued that the Supreme Court adopt
    the Restatement approach, which provides that a vendor purchase money mortgage prevails
    against a third party purchase money mortgage that are executed as part of one continuous
    transaction. 
    Id.
     This Court rejected said approach, and found that Idaho’s recording statutes
    resolved this dispute. 
    Id.
     As both parties had notice of the other’s encumbrance, priority was
    resolved by the first party to record, and that party’s good faith was irrelevant. 
    Id.
    In the present case, three sub-issues must be addressed in determining whether the IM
    mortgage was a purchase money mortgage. These sub-issues will be discussed in turn: (1)
    whether the IM mortgage was given to enable Summitt to purchase the Gunter property; (2)
    whether the IM mortgage and the Gunters’ deed of trust was part of one continuous transaction
    involving the sale of the Gunter property; and (3) whether the taking of additional security
    destroys the purchase money status of a mortgage.
    1.      The IM Mortgage Was Given to Enable Summitt to Purchase the Gunter
    Property.
    In the current matter, it is clear that the IM/Summitt mortgage was given as security for
    the purchase of the Gunter property. The record indicates that Summitt sought to purchase the
    Gunter property for $799,000. It also indicates that Summitt did not have the funds necessary to
    close the transaction, so it approached IM about obtaining a loan for the entire purchase price.
    IM ultimately provided $616,000 of the purchase money necessary to complete the acquisition of
    the Gunter property. Like Skvorak, Summitt relied on more than one source to obtain the money
    necessary to complete the transaction. See Skvorak, 
    140 Idaho at 16
    , 
    89 P.3d at 856
    . The primary
    inquiry is whether the IM/Summitt mortgage was executed so as to enable Summitt to purchase
    the Gunter property. It is evident that the IM mortgage was so executed, because the money was
    6
    given to the escrow agent handling the sale of the Gunter property, EasyWay. It was also only
    given after IM examined the property Summitt sought to purchase.
    Therefore, the IM mortgage was given as security for the purchase price of the Gunter
    property.
    2.      The IM Mortgage and the Gunters’ Deed of Trust Were Part of One Continuous
    Transaction.
    
    Idaho Code § 45-112
     requires that a purchase money mortgage be given “at the time of
    [the land’s] conveyance.” This statutory language reflects the commonly recognized requirement
    that a purchase money mortgage be granted as a part of “one continuous transaction involving
    the purchase” of land. See Skvorak, 
    140 Idaho at 22
    , 
    89 P.3d at 862
    ; see also, Van Patten v. Van
    Patten, 
    784 P.2d 218
    , 220 (Wyo. 1989). The execution of the mortgage and the transfer of the
    deed need not be strictly contemporaneous. See, e.g., Skvorak, 
    140 Idaho at 22
    , 
    89 P.3d at 862
    .
    When a deed and mortgage are executed as part of the same transaction, the mortgage is not
    granted to the mortgagee after the mortgagor has obtained title; rather, the mortgagor takes title
    already encumbered by the mortgage. Liberty Parts Warehouse, 
    459 N.E.2d at 739
    .
    Insight argues that the IM mortgage was part of one continuous transaction because
    security instruments were signed on the same day within hours of each other, the mortgage funds
    were sent to EasyWay, and all the documents were recorded together by Sandpoint Title. In other
    words, the mortgage was merely one step of several necessary to accomplish a single transaction.
    Respondents, however rely on the district court’s finding that the IM mortgage closed separately
    from the Gunters’ deed of trust, because the “IM mortgage could not encumber property before it
    is owned by the buyer.” Thus, they argue the Gunter/Summitt deed of trust must have occurred
    before the IM mortgage.
    The district court concluded that the IM mortgage was not a purchase money mortgage
    because it was not part of one continuous transaction. The district court reasoned that the
    mortgage and deed of trust closed at different times and at different locations. The district court
    noted that Carol Sommerfeld closed the Gunter/Summitt transaction at the office of EasyWay,
    while Stephanie Brown prepared all the documents related to the IM/Summitt transaction at the
    IM offices. This evidence, to the district court, did “not reflect coordination of a single closing
    effort” on the part of the parties. The district court noted that the Gunters did not have knowledge
    of the IM mortgage and were not informed of the mortgage. This conclusion was clearly
    erroneous.
    7
    The primary inquiry is whether the mortgage was intended as part of a single transaction.
    Skvorak demonstrates that mortgages need not be executed in unison to be part of the same
    transaction. In Skvorak, the two mortgages were executed at different times on the same day and
    were not executed in the presence of all of the parties. 
    140 Idaho at 18
    , 
    89 P.3d at 858
    . In the
    current matter, Hazel executed the IM/Summitt mortgage on June 19 and the Gunter/Summitt
    deed of trust later that day. Also, the mere fact that the IM mortgage was signed at IM’s offices
    and not in the presence of the Gunters is not fatal to the purchase money mortgage status of the
    IM mortgage, because in Skvorak, both parties had purchase money mortgages even though one
    of them was not signed in the presence of both the parties. 
    Id.
     Likewise, the present case involves
    one transaction with two mortgages enabling Summitt to purchase the Gunter property. A land-
    sale transaction concludes upon the delivery of the deed. Barmore v. Perrone, 
    145 Idaho 340
    ,
    344, 
    179 P.3d 303
    , 307 (2008). Here, before the deed was delivered to Summitt, the proceeds
    and documents were delivered in escrow to the title company. Therefore, there was only one
    transaction.
    The district court also found that the IM mortgage was not a purchase money mortgage
    because it was only able to encumber the Gunter property at the time Summitt gained an
    ownership interest in the Gunter property. But the district court’s reasoning neglects the very
    nature of a purchase money mortgage, and presupposes that the mortgage was not a purchase
    money mortgage in order to find that IM did not encumber the property when executed. Under
    this standard, no purchase money mortgage could effectively encumber property before title
    passes to the mortgagor, because the purchase money enables the mortgagor to acquire title to
    the property. Insight rightly notes that applying the district court’s reasoning—that “[the IM]
    mortgage could not encumber the Gunter property, because Summitt did not own the Gunter
    property when the mortgage was signed,”—would preclude any purchase money mortgage from
    being a purchase money mortgage. In a purchase money mortgage, title does not first pass to the
    mortgagor, which is then encumbered; rather, title passes to the mortgagor already encumbered.
    Liberty Parts Warehouse, 
    459 N.E.2d at 739
    . Nothing in Idaho’s jurisprudence precludes more
    than one purchase money mortgage from being executed on land. See Skvorak, 
    140 Idaho at 16
    ,
    
    89 P.3d at 856
    . Therefore, since the IM mortgage provided the funds necessary to enable
    Summitt to purchase the Gunter property, and since the money was not paid directly to Summitt
    but to EasyWay, the Gunter property passed to Summitt already encumbered by the Gunters’
    deed of trust and the IM mortgage.
    8
    In sum, the district court’s finding that the IM mortgage and Gunters’ deed of trust were
    not part of one continuous transaction is clearly erroneous. The mortgage granted by IM was a
    purchase money mortgage because it was executed to enable Summitt to purchase the property in
    question, in the same transaction as the acquisition of title. The question next becomes whether
    the taking of additional security by IM on the mortgage destroyed the purchase money status of
    the IM mortgage.
    3.       The Taking of Additional Security Does Not Destroy the Purchase Money Status
    of a Mortgage, But Serves As Guarantor of the Mortgage.
    Whether the taking of additional security on a mortgage, beyond the land being
    purchased, destroys the purchase money status of a mortgage, is a question of first impression.
    As early as the 1800s, courts have recognized purchase money mortgages, even though
    additional security was taken on a note. This additional security was often in the form of an
    assignment or a deed of trust. See, e.g., Farmers’ & Mech. Sav. Co. v. McCabe, 
    73 Mo. App. 551
    , 553 (1898); Bliss v. Crosier, 
    34 N.E. 1075
     (Mass. 1893). One particular New York case
    from 1912 involved land given as additional security. See Hubbard v. Lydecker, 
    137 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 714
    , 716 (N.Y.S. 1912). In Hubbard, a purchase money mortgage was given to purchase a lot
    on Prospect Street. The purchase money mortgage also included a lien on a lot on Greenridge
    Avenue as additional security. 
    Id.
     The court held that the mortgage was primarily a lien on the
    Prospect Street lot and that the Greenridge Avenue lot merely stood in the position of a
    guarantor. 
    Id.
    The loan given by IM was given with the intent to enable Summitt to purchase the Gunter
    property. But after examining the property, Insight wanted additional security. Insight agreed to
    take a second mortgage on the adjoining 142 acres of Summitt property to guarantee the loan.
    The IM mortgage was primarily a purchase money mortgage designed to enable Summitt to
    purchase the property.
    In sum, the IM mortgage was a purchase money mortgage that was not destroyed by the
    taking of additional security by IM.
    C.        The District Court Erred in Concluding the Gunter Deed of Trust Took Priority.
    Since both the IM/Summitt mortgage and the Gunter/Summitt deed of trust are purchase
    money mortgages, the next issue is which security interest has priority.
    Insight, argues that the IM mortgage has priority as a matter of law. Insight reads Skvorak
    as holding that as between two purchase money mortgages, the first to record has priority.
    Insight contends that the first party to record is the initial encumbrancer, and that the initial
    9
    encumbrancer’s knowledge is irrelevant. Second, Insight argues that the Gunters, even if they
    lacked actual knowledge, had constructive notice of IM’s mortgage because it was recorded first,
    and constructive notice under I.C. § 55-811 is imparted at the time it is deposited with the
    recorder. Also, Insight contends that the Gunters had imputed inquiry notice of the IM mortgage,
    because EasyWay should have known from its past transactions with Summitt that Summitt was
    securing the purchase money with a mortgage from IM.
    The Gunters contend that even if the IM mortgage is a purchase money mortgage,
    Skvorak does not support Insight’s argument. The Gunters read Skvorak as only applicable when
    both mortgages were part of one continuous transaction, and where both parties knew of the
    other’s mortgage. The Gunters contend they are the initial encumbrancer based on the district
    court’s finding that the IM mortgage and the Gunters’ deed of trust were not part of one
    continuous transaction. In the alternative, the Gunters urge this Court to reconsider its earlier
    rejection of § 7.2 of the Restatement.
    The parties dispute who is the initial encumbrancer under Skvorak. Insight contends IM
    was the initial encrumbrancer on the Gunter property, because the IM mortgage and the Gunters’
    deed of trust were not separate transactions, but one continuous transaction. IM was, therefore,
    the initial encumbrancer because it was the first to record. The Gunters argue the first
    encumbrancer is the first lien to be executed in one continuous transaction. Therefore, they argue
    IM was not the first encumbrancer, because it had knowledge of the Gunters’ deed of trust, and
    its mortgage was a separate transaction. The district court concluded that because the IM
    mortgage was a separate transaction, it was not valid upon its execution but only after the
    Gunters’ deed of trust closed and transferred title of the Gunter property. Consequently, the
    district court held that the Gunters’ deed of trust was necessarily the first to encumber the
    property, and since IM had knowledge of the Gunters’ deed of trust, its mortgage was subsequent
    to the Gunters’ deed of trust.
    In Skvorak, “initial encumbrancer” is merely the characterization of the party against
    whom subsequent purchasers are tested under the recording statutes. The court noted that the
    good faith of the initial encumbrancer is irrelevant. It should be clarified that the good faith of
    the initial encumbrancer is irrelevant as to subsequent encumbrancers, because the initial
    encumbrancer cannot technically have notice of an encumbrance before it comes into existence.
    But the issue presented in Skvorak was “the priority between a vendor purchase money mortgage
    and a third party purchase money mortgage, where the vendor has notice of the third party’s
    mortgage and it was recorded first.” 
    140 Idaho at 22
    , 
    89 P.3d at 862
     (emphasis added). In
    10
    Skvorak, “each party knew or had constructive notice of the other party’s mortgage.” 
    Id. at 21
    , 
    89 P.3d at 861
    . Quite simply, in a dispute involving priority between two mortgages in a single
    transaction, where both parties are good faith encumbrancers of property for value, the first to
    record has priority against all other subsequent mortgages. 
    Id. at 23
    , 
    89 P.3d at 863
    .
    A purchase money mortgage is given priority against other liens subject to the recording
    laws. I.C. § 45-112. Idaho’s race-notice statute provides that “[e]very conveyance of real
    property is . . . void as against any subsequent purchaser or mortgagee of the same property, or
    any part thereof, in good faith and for valuable consideration, whose conveyance is first duly
    recorded.” I.C. § 55-812. Our race-notice statute only voids a prior conveyance if (1) the
    subsequent conveyance was made in good faith and for valuable consideration; and (2) the
    subsequent conveyance is the first duly recorded. Idaho law defines “conveyance” as “the
    instrument in writing by which any estate or interest in real property is created, alienated,
    mortgaged or encumbered.” I.C. § 55-813. A conveyance does not depend upon when it is
    recorded.
    Here, the Summitt/IM mortgage was executed on June 19, 2006, before the
    Summitt/Gunter deed of trust was executed. Therefore, the IM mortgage was the prior
    conveyance and the Gunters’ deed of trust was the subsequent conveyance. Since the Gunters’
    deed of trust was the subsequent encumbrance, the only way it could take priority over the IM
    mortgage as the first encumbrance—where IM by default is a good faith encumbrancer against
    subsequent encumbrancers—is if the Gunters were the first to record. The Gunters were not the
    first to record. Therefore, their deed of trust is junior to the IM mortgage.
    VI. CONCLUSION
    This Court holds that IM was a good faith encumbrancer of the Gunter property; both the
    Gunters and IM held purchase money liens on the Gunter property; and the IM mortgage takes
    priority over the Gunters’ deed of trust. The judgment of the district court is, therefore, vacated
    and remanded for entry of a judgment consistent with this Opinion. Costs on appeal are awarded
    to Insight as the prevailing party. Neither party requested attorney fees on appeal.
    Chief Justice BURDICK, Justices EISMANN, J. JONES and HORTON, CONCUR.
    11