(after stating the case). The appellants contend that the plaintiffs obtained no title to the land in *536question, nor any interest therein, by the deed of mortgage under which they claim, executed to them by the appellants Collett and wife, because the latter had no title to nor any interest in that land, that they could convey; that the husband Collett had but a parol contract with M. C. Avery, who had the title to it, whereby she contracted to convey the title to him when he should pay the purchase money he agreed to pay her for the same, and he had not paid such purchase money or any part thereof; and they pleaded that such parol contract was void under the statute of frauds, because no memorandum or note thereof was put in writing, and signed by M. C. Avery or by some other person by her authorized to sign the same. The plaintiffs, on the contrary, contended that the writing set forth above, beginning with the words “Collett’s boundary,” and ending with the other words, “ balance due $20, at 8 per cent, interest,” constitute a sufficient memorandum or note in writing, of the parol contract mentioned, to render it effectual in contemplation of the statute; and we are of the opinion that it is sufficient.
The memorandum in writing referred to is all on a half-sheet of ordinary commercial note paper, in the order as set forth above. Between the description of the land and the receipt, which are on the same side of the paper, is a blank space about two inches wide, and the promissory note and memorandum at the foot of it fill the upper half of the paper on the opposite page, beginning close to the top of it.
The juxtaposition of the several parts of the writing, their nature, purpose and meaning, as expressed, their reference to and bearing upon each other, as appears from express words and plain implication, all go to show that the land described is that mentioned and referred to in the receipt; and the terms therein, “ in part payment on a lot on Rocky Ford road,” imply that Austin Collett, to whom the receipt was given, had contracted with M. C. Avery to purchase *537from her, and she with him, to sell him the land mentioned and described. The description certainly designated a piece or lot of land by metes and bounds, containing one acre and one quarter of an acre, situate on the Rocky Ford road, capable of being identified by parol proof. The receipt near to such description, on the same side of the half-sheet of paper, refers to “ a lot on Rocky Ford road,” and, by the strongest implication, acknowledges a contract of sale of it to Austin Collett. The note, immediately following the receipt on the opposite side of the paper, made by him to M. C. Avery, recites that it was given “ on (for) a lot adjoining W. Grant’s, on the Rocky Ford road.”
The several parts of the writing clearly refer to one and the same transaction, and must be construed together. It is evidence, and intended by the parties so to be, of a contract of sale of the lot of land specified, by M. C. Avery to Austin Collett, and she, by signing the receipt, acknowledged and signed this contract in writing as certainly as if it had been formally drawn out and signed by her. Hence, the references and recitals. The contract is informally and awkwardly expressed in the writing, but its nature, scope and purpose clearly appear from it, and this is a sufficient compliance with the requirements of the statute. . Mayer v. Adrian, 77 N. C., 83; Farmer v. Batts, 83 N. C., 387; Thornburg v. Masten, 83 N. C., 293. It may be added, that if the contract in question were to be treated as not in writing, M. C. Avery, the person to be charged therewith, did not avail herself of the statute retidering such contracts void — she was not bound to do so; but she recognized and acted upon it, and, at the request of Austin Collett, conveyed the.land to Rufus Avery. If, therefore, Austin Collett, under the contract of purchase, paid for the land, or paid any part of the purchase money, the plaintiffs, by their deed of mortgage, acquired the whole of his interest in it — indeed, they acquired the right to have the land for the purposes o'f the *538mortgage, subject to the right of M. C. Avery to have the purchase money due to her for it. And so also, if Rufus Avery, after the execution of the plaintiffs’ mortgage, at the request of Austin Collett, paid the purchase money for the land or any part of it, and took the title therefor, having notice of the mortgage, as he must have had, as it was registered, then he took the title for the plaintiffs for the purposes of their mortgage, the land being charged with so much of the purchase money as he paid. Indeed, he, in that case, sustained the same relation to the plaintiffs as did M. C. Averjr before she conveyed the title to the land to him. By virtue of her contract with Collett, and the mortgage made by him to the plaintiffs, she held the land for them, subject to the payment of the purchase money due her. Rufus Avery, having obtained the title, with notice of the plaintiffs’ right, so holds the land for the like purposes, unless, as he alleges, his right to the land antedates the mortgage of the plaintiffs.
In his answer, Rufus Avery expressly alleges that Austin Collett, a long while before he executed the mortgage to the plaintiffs, abandoned his parol contract of purchase of the land, and consented to allow him to pay for it and take the title, and there was some evidence produced on the trial tending to prove this allegation. Colleit might thus abandon his executory contract, or transfer it to another. We can see no reason why he could not. The contract to convey was not a conveyance of the title to the land, and might be abandoned. If the allegation just mentioned were true, then Collett conveyed nothing by his deed of mortgage to the plaintiffs, because he had nothing to convey — not even an equity. The plaintiffs, in their reply, expressly deny the allegation of the answer just mentioned, and thus a material issue of fact was raised by the pleadings. The appellants did not waive the trial of this issue, nor did the Court submit it to the jury. Perhaps the issue which was at first submitted to the jury, and afterwards, in the course of the trial, withdrawn, *539'might have been sufficient, though it was scarcely pertinent. The Court, however, the appellants objecting, withdrew it entirely and submitted another, not at all that raised by the pleadings. The issue raised was material' and important, and should have been tried. All the material issues must be tried, unless waived, and it is error not to try them. Porter v. The Railroad Co., 97 N. C. 66; Davidson v. Gifford, 100 N. C., 18.
It seems that the Court was of the opinion that Rufus-Avery had rights and equities in conflict with the same of the plaintiffs. How this was, is not clearly disclosed by the record before us. If Collett owed him before he made the mortgage to the plaintiffs, and gave him a mortgage, by parol or otherwise, of his interest in the land he so contracted to purchase, to secure such indebtedness, this could not prejudice the rights of the plaintiffs as mortgagees, because such mortgage was not registered. At most, he could only be entitled to have so much of the purchase money, and the interest thereon, as he paid to M. C. Ayery -r to that extent he might be subrogated to the latter’s .rights, and lien for such part of the purchase money as he paid. Beyond, so far as appears, he would be on no better a footing than any other creditor who had a senior unregistered mortgage.
There is error, such as entitles the appellants to a new trial.
Error. New trial.