*324 OPINION
By the Court,
Pursuant to an order of the trial court filed on April 11, 1968, a proceeding was held on April 15, 1968 to consider the appellant’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus. At that proceeding no testimony was taken, nor was there any evidence рresented. There were only arguments by respective counsel for the parties. There has. never been a petition filed in this matter in the Juvenile Court. Before a petition could be filed by the respondent, alleging the grounds for the original dеtention of the appellant, her counsel announced: “[W]e will go to the Suрreme Court with it.” After the arguments of counsel the writ was denied.
The appeal is taken upon the grounds:
(1) That the appellant was treated as a delinquent without due process; and
(2) That the appellant was denied due process because the respondent had failed to afford her a hearing within a reasonable time.
In support of her contentions, thе appellant relies heavily upon In re Gault,
There is nothing before this court, еither by way of testimony, material evidence, a minute entry or otherwise, by which we would be able to determine these issues. The record is devoid of any accеptable evidence that goes to prove that the appellant was ever taken into custody for violating any law or ordinance, or was ever held in detention by the juvenile authorities, nor has the appellant in any other aсceptable manner supplied any material evidence.
*325 Neither the аrgument by counsel for the appellant before the trial court, nor his arguments in the briefs filed on behalf of the appellant in this court can be considered аs evidence or as part of the record.
It has long been a recognized rule of law that any statement or argument made by counsel before the trier оf facts, concerning the fact of a case, cannot be regarded as evidence. Frazier v. Cupp,
In the case of Mitchell v. Bromberger,
In Cawley v. Pershing County,
In Wilson v. Wilson,
In determining cases, an appеllate court must confine its consideration to the facts reflected in the record and the necessary and reasonable inferences that may be drаwn therefrom. The statements made by counsel in their briefs, alleging facts, or their arguments made in open court portraying what might have occurred, will not be considеred by this court. State v. Griswold,
The fact that a petition for a writ of habeas corpus was filed,
*326
and an order was entered requiring a hearing on the application, does not justify the assumption that the trial court committed error when the writ was dеnied. As a matter of fact, the presumption is that no error was committed. Water Co. v. Belmont Dev. Co.,
Because we are unable to determine, from the record, the grounds for the appellant’s application for a writ of habeаs corpus, we cannot accept her contention that error was committed. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
