This is an application for rule nisi brought by the respondents in a contempt proceeding to compel the trial judge to certify the bill of exceptions presented by them to him in appealing from a judgment finding them guilty of contempt. The petition, in proper form, prays for this court to issue a rule nisi requiring the trial judge to show cause why he should not sign the bill of exceptions. The cause of the petitioners is predicated on the right of an appellant to- compel the trial judge to certify, without qualification, a true bill of exceptions. The specific contention is that the trial judge in certifying the bill of exceptions ordered certain statements of counsel deleted from the brief of evidence and required another statement made by counsel inserted in the brief of evidence.
A certificate that the facts alleged in a bill of exceptions upon which an appeal is based are not true amounts to a refusal to certify that the bill of exceptions is true.
McBurney
v.
Anderson,
78
Ga. App.
776 (4) (
It appears from a careful perusal of the facts alleged in the petition that the matters which the trial court ordered deleted from the brief of evidence consisted of colloquies between the court and counsel for the petitioners which were not evidence in the case and not, under Code (Ann.) § 6-801, properly included in the brief of evidence. Assuming but not deciding that some of the statements of the petitioners’ counsel, if offered in the form of sworn testimony, might have been admissible and of some evidential value, this did not serve to change their nature from mere observations of counsel to that of competent evidence.
It is well settled that clients are bound by statements of their attorneys made in open court. While it is true that declarations of an attorney as to the mental attitude of his client are not binding on the client unless made in his presence
(Farrar
v.
Brackett,
86
Ga.
463, 466,
Having determined that the trial judge was, as disclosed by the record, correct in his ruling as to the matter that should be included and excluded from the brief of evidence, we are constrained to hold that the petition for mandamus nisi shows no right to have the writ issued. The writ is denied and the petition dismissed.
