This action was brought by defendant in error, hereinafter called plaintiff, to recover from plaintiffs in error, hereinafter called defendants, moneys paid by plaintiff to defendant as the purchase price for certain sheep sold and delivered by defendants to plaintiff and afterwards claimed by plaintiff to be the property of the Chesney Sheep Company, a partnership, and not the property of the defendants when sold and delivered by defendants to plaintiff, and that plaintiff had been obliged to return the sheep to the Chesney Sheep Company. The case was tried to a jury which returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants for the sum' of $1,000, upon which judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff. The defendants bring error.
1. A written motion is submitted in connection with the submission of the proceedings in error in this case to strike the bill of exceptions from the record for the reason that it *344does not contain all of the evidence which was given upon the, trial, and to dismiss the appeal., We think the motion so submitted calls attention to the fact that’ all errors assigned cannot be here considered in the absence, of all the evidence. That is not, however, a ground for striking the bill. Our attention is inevitably called to the certificate of the presiding judge to the bill of exceptions, the last sentence of which certificate reads as follows: “Said bill of exceptions contains only a small portion of the evidence in said case.” The certificate of the judge is necessary to giv.e life and verity to the bill, and where any question is presented to this court, which calls'for the consideration of the evidence then all of the evidence bearing on the question must be so presented and so certified to entitle it to consideration.
The question has been many times decided in this jurisdiction. It is said in State v. Craig, 15 Wyo. 445, 89 Pac. 584, that the statute providing that “No particular form of exceptions is required, but that the exception must be stated with the facts, as briefly as possible, is not satisfied with anything less than all the evidence bearing on and which is necessary to explain the exception or error complained of.” In Callahan v. Houck & Co., 14 Wyo. 201, 83 Pac. 372,- this court said that the omission of the certificate to.a bill of-exceptions to state that the bill contains all the evidence is a defect in the bill itself. In Iowa State Savings Bank v. Henry, et al., 22 Wyo. 189, .136 Pac. 863, the doctrine is again reiterated -as follows, viz: “The certificate of the trial judge to the bill in this case recites'that it ‘contains all of the material evidence offered, given and introduced in said cause,’ and it does-not-appear anywhere in the bill by recital or otherwise that it- contains all the evidence given upon the- trial.” This rule- is statutory and Sec. 4598 of the Compiled Statutes so requires.
It is attempted to predicate error upon the admission and rejection of evidence over defendants’ objections and exceptions. We cannot infer that all of the evidence given at the time of the trial is of any value upon review in this *345court unless properly certified by the presiding judge. Here the objection is to the relevancy and competency of evidence offered by the plaintiff. It is apparenf'that such evidence when considered in connection with all the other evidence even if not relevant or competent, might not be prejudicial either because cumulative or for other reasons, a question which cannot be here considered in the- absence of alb the evidence. • ' 1 .
The question remains in the case for consideration here as to whether any of the instructions are inapplicable and prejudicial upon any possible phase of the evidence. (Downing v. State, 10 Wyo. 373, 69 Pac. 264.) An inspection of the instructions given and here complained of indicate that they, are all based upon the evidence given upon the trial and all the evidence is not included in the bill. It is impossible to review questions which involve a consideration of the evidence as in the case here without bringing up all the evidence bearing on the question sought to be raised., It is so held in criminal cases, notably in Downing v. State, supra, and in Koppala v. State, 15 Wyo. 398, 89 Pac. 576, and we think we should follow the uniform rule in vogue in this jurisdiction in both civil and criminal cases.
2. Notwithstanding the defect above pointed out in the bill of exceptions plaintiffs in error insist that th'ey are entitled to urge their assignment of error predicated on the giving of the following instruction to the jury over their objection:
"The jury are instructed that if you find from the evidence that the defendants sold and delivered to the plaintiff sheep which they, the defendants, at the time did not own, and that the plaintiff in good faith paid for and received the said sheep with the understanding that they belonged to the defendants, and if you further find from the evidence that a part or a portion of said sheep' sold was at the time the property of the Chesney Sheep Company or that of any-other party or person other than the defendants and that the right to make sale thereof had not been given the defendants could not give or convey to the plaintiff *346title thereto and that under the law the plaintiff or defendants is bound to account to the true owner or owners of said sheep and finder such circumstances the plaintiff is entitled to recover from the defendants the money paid for the sheep so sold and delivered together with the damage that the jury may find'that he has sustained by reason of such wrongful sale so made to him, then the jury should find for the plaintiff.” Of course the measure of damages to be recovered in such a case would be the price paid for the sheep at the time such agreement and delivery v ere made together with interest from that date henceforth, and other damages necessarily arising out of the transaction. (13 Cyc. 168; Sec. 311 Williston on Sales.) If the title never resided in the defendants and they had nothing to sell, then they delivered nothing to the plaintiff although they claimed ownership. The instruction is not definite as to the measure of damages but it is not here objetced to on that ground, and the verdict and judgment are not complained of on the ground that the damages assessed are excessive.
3. It is assigned as error that the' court during the trial erroneously permitted the jury to view certain sheep. The allegations in support of this assignment appear only in the affidavit in support of the motion for a new trial. The question in principle was before this court in Jenkins v. State, 22 Wyo. 34, 78, 134 Pac. 260, 135 Pac. 749, where the alleged misconduct of the prosecuting attorney was made to appear by an ex-parte affidavit in support of a motion for a new trial, and in that manner carried into the bill. We there said: “The objection- and exception do' not appear in the bill' of exceptions independent of this ex-parte affidavit which was filed in support of the motion for a new trial. * * * * * What occurred upon the trial must appear by the bill and not by ex-parte affidavits.” The case at bar falls clearly within the opinion in that case. We find no error here complained of sufficient to reverse this judgment and it is accordingly affirmed. Affirmed.
Potter, C. J., and Beard, J., concur.