Motion, by appellee, to strike bill of exceptions on tbe ground that it was not “presented” to tbe presiding judge within the period provided by Code 1907, § 3019. That statute, in the presently important particulars, reads: “Bills of exceptions may be presented at any time within ninety days from the day on which the judgment is entered and not afterwards. * * * The judge must indorse thereon, and as a part of the bill, the true date of presenting, and the bill of exceptions must, if correct, be signed by him within ninety days thereafter.” Construing and applying this statute in King v. Hill & Shafer Co., 163 Ala. 422, 51 South. 15, where it affirmatively appeared that the bill was not “presented” within the period required by the statute, it was ruled that “the judge had no right to receive it after the time for presenting had expired.” It is evident from the express terms of the statute that two major acts are required of-the proposed appellant and of the judge, respectively, to perfect a bill of exceptions, viz.: Presentation during ninety days, and not afterwards, from the entry of the judgment, by proposed appellant, .and, signing by the judge within 90 days after presentation. — Smith v. State, 166 Ala. 24, 52 South. 396.
Under older statutes, in which however, presentation was not a factor of the consequence the present statute makes it, it was regarded as long settled, and never doubted, that the bill must be “perfect within itself,” and that, where signed by the judge as a bill of exceptions, extrinsic evidence was not receivable to show compliance with the statutory requirement as respected time of signing. — Stearn v. Lehman, 169 Ala., supra, 2 South. 708; Union India Rubber Co. v. Mitchell, 37 Ala. 314; Bryant v. State, 36 Ala. 270; Maddox v. Broyles, 42 Ala. 436; Morris v. Brannen, 103 Ala. 602, 15 South. 865; Chapman v. Holding, 54 Ala. 61. Stearn v. Lehman, *448 supra, seems, doubtless by oversight, not to have been officially reported. The reporter will now correct the omission, noting the fact that its report is directed by the court.
In Stearn v. Lehman, supra, the bill was silent as to when it was signed by the trial judge, and a certificate of that officer was offered to show “that he signed this bill of exceptions within the time” fixed by order of court for that purpose. The court said: “We cannot look to this certificate for the purpose of ascertaining when the judge signed the bill. A bill of exceptions is regarded as a part of the record, in every cause, and ‘must be perfect within itself.’ It cannot, therefore, as we have often held, when complete, be supplemented or corrected by the aid of extraneous evidence, oral or otherwise, which does not form a part of such record. It should have appeared on the face of the record that the bill was signed within the requisite time prescribed by the order of the court.”
The point is made, in brief for movant to strike this bill, that the affidavit (the substantive features of which the reporter will set out) submitted to show compliance with the statutory requirment for 'presentation cannot be considered on the inquiry. In other words, that presentation vel non, and when that was effected, must be determined alone from the bill (signed by the trial judge). We see no escape from the result of the apt analogy afforded by the ruling in Stearn v. Lehman, supra, and of those decisions on which it rests, some of which are cited before.
Our present statute renders the date of presentation of vital importance in the perfection of a bill of exceptions. In the first place, the period within which the judge must sign the proposed bill, and not afterwards, *449begins to run from the true date of presentation. “Within ninety days” is the limit of the period during which the judge may efficaciously sign a bill, and that period has its inception at the date of presentation. That the date of beginning of this period should not rest in parol, or be in any wise at large, it is expressly and imperatively prescribed that the judge “indorse” on the bill, “and as a part of the bill, the true date of presentingReference to earlier statutes on this subject, and to decisions construing and applying them in concrete cases, emphasizes the importance of time in the premises. Treating the statute of 1844, in Wood’s Adm’r v. Brown, 8 Ala. 563, wherein requirements for the addition by the judge of the “correct date of such signing,” as well as a prohibition against signing beyond a defined period, were made, Collier, C. J., after pronouncing the terms of the enactment plain and mandatory, adverted to the evil intended to be remedied by the statute, viz., time elapsing after trial, entailing the dimming of memory of its events. This court has steadily adhered to the letter and effect of the doctrine of that decision.
If the date of presentation were left without memorial, it is apparent that the inquiry of date of presentation might turn upon expressions of mere memory, and Thereby, in consequence, control by that fickle means the further inquiry, upon occasion, of performance vel non of duty, under this statute, by the trial judge in respect of his signing a bill.
The effect of such a condition might become relatively more important and of greater consequence on a motion to establish a bill, or in proceedings of the grave nature possible in virtue of Code, § 3021; for in neither event could the failure, as distinguished from a positive refusal, to sign even a time bill, become a basis for the eslab*450lishment of the bill, or for the imputation of culpability in that failure by the judge, until it was first determined that the period within which he may sign, and thus perform his duty, has expired; and to determine this fact the date of presentation must be ascertained. The statute has prescribed, doubtless to avoid the possibilities and consequences indicated, the sole mode for the ascertainment of the fact of date of presentation. It has required not only the indorsement on the bill by the judge, but has also made that act, when done, a part of the bill. To admit extraneous evidence to show the omitted date of presentation, when the paper purports to bear the signature of the trial judge, would, according to the doctrine of our decisions before cited, effect to add to the bill, and is not permissible. On the reasoning indicated, it cannot be said that indorsement of the date of presentation is unimportant where the bill is signed within the whole period (180 days) counting from the entry of the judgment. But doubtless the effect of the omission to indorse presentation on the bill, where the bill is signed by the judge within the first 90 days, would be neutralized, since the efficacious signing by the judge, within the first 90 days, would affirmatively show presentation within that period.
The purported bill, in this instance, is without indorsement of presentation at any time. It was signed more than 90 days after the entry of the judgment. The affidavit of appellant’s attorney cannot be considered to determine when, if so, presentation was made. Accordingly the motion to strike must prevail.
“Not guilty” is the only appropriate plea in ejectment; and under it any matter operating a bar to the ac-lion is admissible in evidence. — Etowah Min. Co. v. Carlisle, 127 Ala. 663, 29 South. 7, among others.
*451No injury, to appellant, attended any of the rulings made on the pleadings. Indeed, brief of counsel for appellant, as we read it, so concedes.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Dowdell, O. J., and Simpson and Mayfield, JJ., concur.