This suit was instituted in the District Court of Hill County by E. M. Cox, appellee here, on May 4, 1897, for the purpose of having a receiver appointed to take charge of certain property which had been levied upon by Tom Bell, sheriff of Hill County, Texas, at the suit of Winfield Scott v. T. P. Weatherred, W. J. Weatherred, H. C. Weatherred, B. H. Vaughan, R. L. Long, and the Citizens National Bank of Hillsboro.
In this suit W. H. Childers and his wife, S. E. Childers, W. S. Heard, J. M. Word, B. H. Vaughan, W. Scott, Citizens National Bank of Hillsboro, Texas, and Tom Bell were made defendants. After the formal allegations, the petition alleged in substance that on the 6th of November, 1896, W. H. Childers made, executed, and delivered to B. H. Vaughan certain notes aggregating the sum of $5306.85, and that said notes were given as a part of the purchase money on certain real estate and personal property mentioned and described in the petition, and that the said property had been conveyed to Childers by B. H. Vaughan by deed absolute upon its face, and that Childers, for the purpose of securing the payment of said notes, made, executed, and delivered to J. M. Word, trustee, to secure said Vaughan in the payment of said notes, a *192deed of trust upon said property both real and personal, and that in January, 1897, B. H. Vaughan made, executed and delivered to W. S. Heard his "promissory note, for $1044 due on December 1, 1897, and that E. M. Cox, appellee, and one R. A. Williamson signed said note for B. H. Vaughan as sureties, and that as a further security for the payment of said Heard note, B. H. Vaughan assigned as collateral to Heard the Childers notes hereinbefore mentioned; that on the 20th of January, 1897, the said Vaughan made, executed and delivered to the Citizens National Bank of Hillsboro, Texas, his note for the sum of $4000, due October 15, 1897, on which note E. M. Cox and H. C. Weatherred were sureties, and that this note of $4000 was further secured by the Childers notes as collateral; that on the 23d day of April, 1897, Winfield Scott, appellant herein, filed suit in the District Court of Tarrant County, Texas, in two eases against T. P. and W. J. Weatherred et al., and therein caused writs of attachment to issue and be levied upon the property, real and personal, herein mentioned.
The petition prayed for an injunction restraining Bell and Scott, and all other persons acting through or under them, from interfering with said property, and for the appointment of a receiver, and for judgment establishing the several debts and the foreclosure of the liens. On May 3, 1897, without notice and without hearing, the Hon. J. M. Hall granted the prayer for the appointment of a receiver, and on the 4th of May, 1897, the said petition was filed in the District Court of Hill County, Texas.
The defendant W. S. Heard answered, adopting the allegations of the plaintiff as to the execution and delivery by Vaughan as principal, with Cox and Williamson as sureties, of the promissory note mentioned in plaintiff’s petition, and alleged the ownership of said note to be in himself, and joined the plaintiff in his prayer for relief and for judgment against Vaughan and Cox and Williamson for the balance of the principal, interest, and attorney’s fees thereof.
The appellant, Winfield Scott, answered, setting up in full the history of the controversy out of which grew the suits wherein the writs of attachment above mentioned were rendered, and that the various debts claimed by Vaughan against Childers and by Heard and the bank against Vaughan were fraudulent, and void. So far as this case is concerned, the most material part of Scott’s answer is that part wherein he alleged that the chattel mortgage from Childers to Vaughan had never been regisered as required by law, and that a receiver had been appointed on May 3, 1897, without notice and without a hearing, and that the personal property in controversy herein had been sold by said receiver for $657, and that W. H. Childers had sued appellant, W. Scott, in the District Court of Hill County, on the 11th of September, 1897, for the conversion of the personal property in controversy herein, and therein, in October, 1899, recovered judgment against appellant for the sum of $1231 for said conversion; that such judgment has never been reversed or set aside, but has been paid off and discharged by the *193appellant, W. Scott, and appellant prayed for judgment against E. M. Cox for the value of the cattle taken from his possession by the receiver appointed herein at the suit of E. M. Cox, without notice and without a hearing, at chambers, before this suit was filed.
The defendants, W. H. Childers, S. E. Childers, J. M. Word, B. H. Vaughan, Citizens National Bank of Hillsboro, Texas, and Tom Bell, did not answer. On October 17, 1901, this cause was submitted to the District Court of Hill County, Texas, without the intervention of a jury. On the 11th of November, 1901, the District Court of Hill County rendered a judgment herein against the appellant in favor of W. S. Heard against Vaughan and Cox, in favor of the Citizens National Bank of Hillsboro, Texas, against Vaughan, Childers and Cox and directed that the amount received from the sale of the personal property in controversy be applied on Heard’s debt, and that Scott take nothing; that all parties recover their costs from Scott. From this judgment defendant, Scott, prosecuted an appeal to this court.
Opinion on Motion to Strike Out Statement of Facts.—In this case a motion was made by the appellees to strike out the statement of facts. The matters set up in the motion required a careful examination of the record, and hence the motion was held up to be decided when the case was considered on its merits. The purported statement of facts begins by giving the style and number of the suit, the court in which it was pending and the term of the court, and proceeds: “We hereby agree that the following is a statement of facts in the above styled and numbered cause for the purposes of this suit only, and that said case may be tried by this court upon same as an agreed statement of facts, to wit:” Then follows the matters agreed upon, which are divided into twenty-one subdivisions. The fifteenth subdivision sets up the filing of a suit by W. H. Childers against Tom Bell and W. Scott for damages for the conversion of personal property and the rendition of a judgment in said case for the plaintiff for the value of the property, and alleges payment of the judgment, and adds that “the pleadings and judgment in said case are made a part of this subdivision.” The agreed statement is signed by counsel for the parties and marked approved in open court by the judge. It is styled “agreement of counsel,” and was filed in the trial court on October 17, 1901. The judgment was rendered on November 11, 1901. The case was tried by the judge without the intervention of a jury. The record does not show the pleadings and judgment in the case of Childers v. Bell and Scott, referred to in the agreement. The record is silent as to whether the case was tried on this agreement or not. If the ease was tried on this agreement the record does not show that other facts were not introduced in evidence. The judge does not certify that the agreement contains all the facts introduced in evidence, and, as stated above, the record does not show that the agreement itself was introduced in evi*194dence. It was filed previous to the trial. It is not contended, and could not be successfully, that the appeal is -based on an agreed case as provided for in article 1414, Revised Statutes. We conclude that the agreement does not meet the requirements of the statute and can not be considered as a statement of facts. Rev. Stats., art. 1379; Taylor v. Campbll, 59 Texas, 315: It follows that the motion to strike out the statement of facts must be sustained.
Opinion Upon the Case.—The trial court filed conclusions of fact and of law, and in the absence of a statement of facts we must treat his findings as embracing the facts of the case. So far as they are material to this case the facts are:
On November 6, 1896, one W. H. Childers executed and delivered to B. H. Vaughan certain promissory notes in consideration of the conveyance by Vaughan to Childers of certain real estate and personal property described in the pleadings and in the judgment appealed from. The notes were unpaid at the time of the trial and amounted to $8754.90. At the time of the execution of the said notes Childers also executed a deed of trust on the property, both real and personal, conveyed to him by Vaughan to secure said notes. On January 19, 1897, B. H. Vaughan became indebted to W. S. Heard on a note for $1044, calling for interest and attorney’s fees, upon which note E. M. Cox and R. A. Williams became sureties at the request of said Vaughan. As a further security for said note, said Vaughan indorsed and delivered to said Heard, as collateral security, the notes executed by W. H. Childers to Vaughan, which collateral-security was to inure to the benefit of said Cox, should he sustain any loss by reason of becoming surety for Vaughan. On January 20, 1897, B. H. Vaughan executed and delivered to the Citizens National Bank of Hillsboro a note for $4000, calling for interest and attorney’s fees, which note E. M. Cox and H. C. Weatherred signed as sureties at the request of Vaughan; it being agreed between Vaughan and Cox that the Childers notes, indorsed by Vaughan to Heard as collateral security, should remain in the possession of said Heard and inure to the benefit of Cox to protect him against loss by reason of having become surety on Vaughan’s note to the bank. When the deed of trust was executed by W. H. Childers to B. H. Vaughan the parties resided in Hill County, and the property described in the deed of trust was located in said county. The deed of trust was filed and recorded as a deed of trust on real estate on January 7, 1897, in Hill County, but it was not filed, deposited, and registered as a chattel mortgage on personal property.
On April 23, 1897, H. C. Weatherred, B. H. Vaughan and others were indebted to Winfield Scott in the sum of $15,000, and on that day Scott instituted suits in the District Court of Tarrant County and caused writs of attachment to issue to Hill County, and on the 24th day of April the same were levied by Tom Bell, sheriff of Hill County, on the personal property involved in this suit as the property of H. C. *195Weatherred, and the same was taken possession of by said officer. Thereafter on the 4th day of May, 1897, E. M. Cox filed this suit, making all parties interested in the transaction parties thereto, setting up all the facts in detail and praying for the issuance of an injunction against said Bell and said Scott, and for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the personal property levied upon by said Bell. The injunction was issued and a receiver appointed who received, and, under order of the court, sold said property for the sum of $657, which sum he paid into court. The receiver was appointed without notice or a hearing. Neither Scott nor Bell had any notice or knowledge of the. deed of trust on the property executed by Childers to Vaughan. On September 11, 1897, W. H. Childers filed suit in the District Court of Hill County against Tom Bell and Winfield Scott for damages for the conversion by the levy of said writs of attachment on the personal property in controversy herein, described in the judgment herein rendered, and in October, 1899, said Childers recovered judgment against W. Scott in the sum of $1231.58 for said conversion, from which judgment an appeal was taken to this court where the same was affirmed, and said judgment, together with interest and costs, was thereafter paid by said Scott. The suit before us was filed in the District Court on the 4th day of May, 1897.
In the absence of a statement of facts we can not consider the assignments of error numbered from 1 to 8, inclusive.
Appellant groups his ninth, tenth, and eleventh assignments of error and contends therein that: "Where a person, without notice of a prior unrecorded chattel mortgage, converts property belonging to the mortgagor and the mortgagor brings suit for such conversion and recovers judgment for the value of the property converted, and the person cast in such suit pays off the judgment so rendered, then he is a bona fide purchaser for value and his title thereto relates back to the time of conversion.” It is insisted that, as the title to the property was in Childers, when Scott paid the judgment in favor of Childers for the value of the property he thereby acquired title to the property as of the date of the levy of the writs of attachment. There would be some force in this contention if Scott occupied the position of an innocent purchaser of the property. When the suit of Childers was instituted, in September, 1897, against Scott to recover damages for a conversion of the property, he knew that Cox was asserting a lien upon the same, and that he then had a suit pending in the same court, to which Scott was a party, in which the lien was sought to be foreclosed, and that the court, through a receivership, had actually taken possession of the property for the purpose of adjusting the equities between all the parties. Knowing these facts, Scott made no attempt to delay the suit of Childers until this suit was terminated. He did not seek a consolidation of that suit with this, or make the parties asserting a lien on the property parties to that suit. It is clear that under the laws of this State the holder of a valid mortgage on personal property is en*196titled to recover of one who converts the same for its value, at least to the extent of his lien. Focke v. Blum, 82 Texas, 436; Fouts v. Ayres, 11 Texas Civ. App., 338, 32 S. W. Rep., 435; Boydston v. Morris, 71 Texas, 697, 10 S. W. Rep., 331; Taylor v. Fielder, 5 Texas Civ. App., 417, 23 S. W. Rep., 481; Zapp v. Johnson, 87 Texas, 641, 30 S. W. Rep., 861; Ward v. Gibbs, 10 Texas Civ. App., 287, 30 S. W. Rep., 1127.
Scott was content to proceed to the trial of the issues in the suit by Childers against him without seeking any protection therein against his liability to the lienholders. He seems to have defended that suit on the ground that Childers was not the owner of the property. He was unsuccessful in that suit and judgment was rendered against him for the value of the property, from which judgment he took an appeal to this court, where it was affirmed. 24 Texas Civ. App., 349, 60 S. W. Rep., 775. Thereupon Scott paid off the judgment. He insists that under the facts he occupies the position of an innocent purchaser as of the date of the levy of the writs of attachment. In this contention we do not concur. Scott was not a creditor of Childers. He attached the property as the property of Weatherred. It was not Weatherred’s property, but was the property of Childers. The effect of the payment of the Childers judgment by Scott was to transfer to him such title in the property as Childers had at the time of the conversion. He was not a “subsequent purchaser” of the mortgaged property such as is contemplated by the statute requiring the filing and deposit of chattel mortgages. Rev. Stats., art. 3328. This statute evidently means a purchaser of goods by. contract,—one who, of his own volition, buys them, and pays a price agreed upon, and receives a transfer therefor from the one who sells and delivers them. The statute did not contemplate a wrongdoer or trespasser upon the property who, against his will, is cast in judgment for the value of it and takes title unwillingly by operation of law upon payment of the judgment. Marsden v. Cornell, 62 N. Y., 215.
Again, the trial court” found, in effect, that Scott was not an innocent purchaser. In the condition of the record, if necessary, we would presume that there was evidence to support this finding. If there was evidence that at the time the chattel mortgage was executed and delivered by -Childers to Vaughan, an actual delivery of possession of the mortgaged property was made to the mortgagee and such possession was continuous, then the chattel mortgage took effect as to creditors and subsequent purchasers, notwithstanding the same was not filed, deposited, and registered as a chattel mortgage.
It is insisted by appellant in argument that as the mortgage debt of Heard and Vaughan had matured and was due at the time the suit of Childers was instituted, that they then had a cause of action, and having failed to intervene in the Childers suit and protect their rights, the recovery of judgment by Childers and payment of the same is a bar to any suit to subject the property to the mortgage on the part of *197Heard or Vaughan. In answer to this it may be said that Coz, prior to that time, had instituted this suit to which Childers, Heard, Vaughan, and Scott were each parties and in which said lien was sought to be foreclosed. Heard did take action to enforce his lien by asserting the same in this suit.
We are further of the opinion that if Scott wanted to defend against said lien in that suit he should have taken the proper steps to make his defense available. 60 Texas, 777.
It is contended that the appointment of a receiver without notice and without hearing, and before filing the petition, when there is no suit pending, is wrongful. The appointment of a receiver without notice and before the filing of the petition was irregular. At the time the receiver was appointed an injunction or restraining order was applied for and granted, and the writ issued. No complaint is made of the court’s action in this respect. It appearing that the property is subject to the lien and has been applied by the court to the satisfaction of the same, and further, that no motion was made to vacate the receivership, the fact that his appointment was irregular presents no sufficient' ground under the facts of this case for reversing the judgment.
Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.