The paragraph excluded does not show an exception and no duty is shown requiring the judge to allow, settle or certify it. Miller v. Miller, 36 Nev. 115, 134 P. 100; Quinn v. Quinn,53 Nev. 68, State v. Warren, 18 Nev. 459, 5 P. 134.
The record is in the bill of exceptions, and speaks for itself. It shows no evidence was adduced before Judge Walsh as to the appraisers' acts outside of court. Therefore, none can be remembered or summarized or inserted in a bill of exceptions, or proved now. When the trial court settles the bill of exceptions in keeping with the documents of record and the evidence preserved or within memory, its duty is done, and the certificate is deemed true. Lewis v. Hyams, 25 Nev. 242, 59 P. 376.
Section 45, chapter 90, Statutes 1935, which superseded sec. 9404 N.C.L., is inapplicable in this proceeding. Water Co. v. Tonopah Belmont, 49 Nev. 172, 241 P. 1079; Brockman v. Ullom,52 Nev. 267, 286 P. 417, 241 P. 1079; Quinn v. Quinn, 53 Nev. 68,292 P. 620; Brearley v. Arobio, 54 Nev. 385, 19 P.2d 432; Taylor v. Taylor, 56 Nev. 100, 45 P.2d 603; Wittenberg v. Wittenberg, 56 Nev. 442, 56 P.2d 619. The cases which have given occasion for this court to consider sec. 45, chap. 90, Statutes 1935, have referred particularly to the power of this court to issue "orders to the lower court or the clerk thereof, for the certification to the supreme court of additional records or proceedings." The statute is broad enough, however, *Page 331 to empower this court to "take such steps and issue such orders * * * as shall be necessary or proper to correct or complete the record on appeal." Brockman v. Ullom, 52 Nev. 263, 286 P. 417.
In other cases this court has indicated that the statute in question is to be given a liberal construction in order to secure in each case a decision upon the merits. Picetti v. Orcio,56 Nev. 1, 41 P.2d 289; Boyd v. Hough, 56 Nev. 123, 127, 47 P.2d 381,382; City of Fallon v. Churchill County B.M. Corp., 57 Nev. 9,54 P.2d 273; Taylor v. Taylor, 56 Nev. 100, 45 P.2d 603. OPINION Ambassador Gold Mines, Limited, hereinafter referred to as the petitioner, filed in this court a petition alleging that on December 23, 1933, one Edward W. Mollart, hereinafter referred to as respondent, and the petitioner submitted to arbitration, by written instrument, in accordance with the provisions of chapter 38 N.C.L. (vol. 4, p. 2638, sec. 8811 et seq.), a controversy arising in Lyon County, Nevada, involving damages claimed by said respondent from said petitioner. The petition also alleges that the respondent selected W.L. Blackwell as arbitrator, and that said petitioner selected D.C. Randall as arbitrator, and that thereafter the court appointed J.M. Maionchi as the third arbitrator; that thereafter W.L. Blackwell and J.M. Maionchi, two of said arbitrators, filed their award, which included a finding that petitioner should pay to the said respondent the sum of $8,000; that said award was made by said two arbitrators without notice to D.C. Randall, the arbitrator appointed by petitioner, and without the aid, advice, and consent or acquiescence of said D.C. Randall, and also without notice to either *Page 332 of the parties or their respective attorneys, and without the production or introduction or consideration of any sworn testimony or documentary evidence, and without the knowledge or consent of the petitioner, a corporation.
The petition further alleges that the petitioner filed in the First judicial district court of Nevada a notice of motion to vacate said award of said arbitrators, together with an affidavit in support thereof, whereupon an affidavit in opposition thereto was filed by respondent; that thereafter said motion to vacate came on for hearing before the Honorable J. Emmett Walsh, district judge, who denied the same; that thereafter petitioner argued before the judge a motion for a new trial and a motion to recall and perpetually stay execution, which were overruled; that thereafter petitioner took steps to appeal said matter to the supreme court of Nevada, including the preparation of a bill of exceptions.
It is further alleged that before the said bill of exceptions could be prepared and submitted to the said Hon. J. Emmett Walsh for settlement, said Walsh died; that on the two above-mentioned hearings before the said judge no record was made; that your petitioner, in preparing said bill of exceptions, included the following:
"That thereafter, without notice to either of the parties or their respective attorneys, and without the production or introduction or consideration of any sworn testimony or documentary evidence, and without the knowledge or consent of the Ambassador Gold Mines, Ltd., a corporation, the said arbitrators, to-wit: W.L. Blackwell and J.M. Maionchi without notice to the said D.C. Randall, and without his aid, advice and consent or his acquiescence, made and entered their findings on arbitration in words and figures as follows, to-wit."
The petition further alleges that upon objection by *Page 333 the respondent to the above-quoted portion of the bill of exceptions the same was stricken, on September 3, 1936, from the bill of exceptions, by the Honorable Thomas F. Moran, district judge, to whom said matter had been assigned after the death of the said Walsh; that the portion so ordered stricken is a true statement of facts material to the appeal of your petitioner in this matter; that at the conclusion of the two hearings before the Honorable J. Emmett Walsh, said facts were known to said judge as having appeared by admissions of counsel and otherwise in said hearings before him, and if petitioner had had an opportunity to present said bill of exceptions to said judge for settlement, that petitioner believes and has every right to believe that said bill of exceptions would have been approved by said Judge Walsh without striking out the above-quoted portion.
The petition herein prays that an order be entered by this court granting petitioner leave to prove the facts contained in that portion of the bill of exceptions so stricken out and directing the manner of proving the same.
To said petition respondent filed a demurrer, upon the following grounds: (1) That said petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action or to entitle petitioner to any relief whatsoever; (2) that it does not appear from said petition that there has been any refusal by any district judge or by Honorable T.F. Moran, district judge presiding in said matter, as judge or otherwise, to allow any exception in accordance with the facts or at all; (3) that this court has no jurisdiction to add to or take from any bill of exceptions or statement of facts, settled by the judge in this action, any matter or matters, whatsoever.
1. Section 8815 N.C.L. reads:
"All the arbitrators shall meet and act together during the investigation, but, when met, a majority may determine any question. Before acting, they shall be sworn *Page 334 before an officer authorized to administer oaths, faithfully and fairly to hear and examine the allegations and evidence of the parties in relation to the matters in controversy, and to make a just award according to their understanding."
If arbitrators W.L. Blackwell and J. Maionchi acted as charged in the petition, it is clear that they were unfit to act in that capacity, and it may be that their action was so irregular as to have justified the court, on proper application and showing, in vacating the award (section 8817 N.C.L.), but the real question before us is whether or. not petitioner is entitled to prove his exception as sought, pursuant to the section below quoted. In support of the demurrer, which admits, for the purpose of this hearing, the truth of the allegations in the petition, counsel for respondent directs our attention to subdivision 2, sec. 31, chap. 90, Stats. 1935, pp. 203, 204, and section 32 of the same act. The portion of subdivision 2, section 31, mentioned and relied upon by respondent, reads:
"When the transcript of the proceedings, as provided in subdivision (1) of this section, is not served and filed as the bill of exceptions of the proceedings relating to the point or points involved upon such proceedings, then the bill of exceptions shall be based and be prepared upon a record of the proceedings made up as follows:
"(a) The point of the exception shall be particularly stated, and may be delivered in writing to the judge, or, if the party require it, shall be written down by the clerk. When delivered in writing or written down by the clerk, it shall be made conformable to the truth, or be at the time, or at or before the conclusion of the trial, corrected until it is so made conformable to the truth. If the judge shall in any case refuse to allow an exception in accordance with the facts, any party aggrieved thereby may petition the supreme court for leave to prove the same, and shall have the right so to do, in such mode and manner and according to such *Page 335 regulations as the supreme court may by rules impose, and such exceptions as are allowed by said supreme court shall become a part of the record of the cause."
As we understand the theory of respondent, it is that a bill of exceptions can be settled only in case of a trial before a court, and that such bill of exceptions can contain no matter as the basis of an exception unless an exception is actually taken to a ruling of the court relative thereto. Referring to the statement sought to be incorporated in the bill of exceptions, counsel for respondent says: "The paragraph does not show an exception and no duty is shown requiring the judge to allow, settle or certify it."
We think the matter in question and the petition fails to show that an exception was taken so as to entitle it to be incorporated in a bill of exceptions. In fact, we do not see, from the facts alleged in the petition, how an exception could have been taken to it. The conduct complained of did not take place in the presence of the court, so that an objection could have been made thereto and a ruling made by the court.
We do not wish to be understood as intimating that if petitioner applied to the court for an order vacating the award, pursuant to section 8817 N.C.L., upon the ground that the arbitrators or a majority of them were guilty of the acts charged in the matter sought to be embodied in the bill of exceptions, that an exception might not be taken to an adverse ruling, which might be embraced in a bill of exceptions. Such is not the theory of this matter, and there is no allegation of the petition upon which such a theory could be predicated.
2. Counsel for petitioner states that petitioner is proceeding under section 45, ch. 90, Stats. 1935, which reads:
"If at any time before final judgment of the supreme court it shall be made to appear to the court that the record on appeal does not accurately or fully state the proceedings under consideration before the court, *Page 336 the court may take such steps and issue such orders, including orders to the lower court or the clerk thereof, for the certification to the supreme court of additional records or proceedings as shall be necessary or proper to correct or complete the record on appeal."
It seems that petitioner has changed his position in this matter since the petition was filed. As we have pointed out, the petition prays for an order granting him leave to prove certain matters stricken from the bill of exceptions, and that the court prescribe the mode and manner of making proof.
Upon reading the petition, we naturally assumed that petitioner was proceeding pursuant to the last sentence quoted above from subdivision 2, sec. 31, chap. 90, Stats. 1935, which provides that an aggrieved party may petition the supreme court for leave to prove an exception in accordance with the facts.
Section 45, ch. 90, Stats. 1935, just quoted, was originally sec. 5, chap. 97, Stats. 1923, which was carried into Compiled Laws of Nevada 1929, as section 9404. We had occasion to refer to this provision in Water Co. v. Tonopah Belmont Dev. Co., 49 Nev. 172,241 P. 1079, and in Brockman v. Ullom, 52 Nev. 267,286 P. 417, and have placed a liberal interpretation upon the section.
3, 4. Let us consider just what is contemplated by the section in question. It provides that if it shall be made to appear to this court that the record on appeal does not accurately or fully state the proceedings under consideration before the trial court, this court may take such steps and issue such orders, including orders to the lower court or the clerk thereof, for the certification to the supreme court of additional records or proceedings as shall be necessary or proper to correct or complete the record on appeal. What does this section contemplate that this court can order certified up? Clearly, it can contemplate nothing more than records or proceedings had in the court. Certainly the clerk of a trial court cannot certify to something that does not *Page 337 appear of record in his office, and the court cannot certify up something that did not transpire in the court. Furthermore, any ruling that may be made by a court, or any record which should be embraced in a bill of exceptions, cannot be considered by this court unless it is in a bill of exceptions, properly settled. It was not intended by the section in question to displace the functions of a bill of exceptions. The matter which it is sought to have incorporated in the bill of exceptions did not transpire in the presence of the court, and could only be brought to the attention of the court on an application to vacate the award, pursuant to section 8817 N.C.L. It may be that a ruling upon such an application could be embraced in a bill of exceptions, as to which we express no opinion, as the question is not presented.
We are clearly of the opinion that the petition fails to show cause for relief, and that the demurrer must be sustained.
It is so ordered. *Page 338