1. The Code (§ 2264) does not require the' court to be active in assigning a struck jury, in the cases for which that mode of trial is provided. . It is only when one of the parties makes the necessary demand, that the court is called upon to order the selection of a jury according to the provisions of the section we are considering. It follows from this, that immediately after the parties have announced themselves ready for trial, and before any steps have been taken therein, the party desiring a struck jury must make the demand; and if he delay until the organization of the jury has been entered upon, the court is not bound to grant his request. "Whether it would be error, if the court should make such order after the proper time for making the demand had been permitted to elapse, we need not now inquire.
*852. The motion to suppress the deposition of the witness Daniels, came too late. The court did right in overruling it. — Code, § 2328.
3. There was no error in permitting the sheriff to amend his return, so as to make it speak the truth. No rights, as the law l-ecognizes that term, had vested in the defendant, which were disturbed by the amendment. Hodges v. Laird, 10 Ala. 678; Caskey v. Haviland, 13 Ala. 314; Kemp & Buckey v. Porter, 6 Ala. 172; Watkins v. Gayle, 4 Ala. 153; Thatcher v. Miller, 13 Mass. 269; McGehee v. McGehee, 8 Ala. 86; Woodward v. Harbin, 4 Ala. 534.
4. Having shown that there was no error in allowing the amendment of the sheriff’s return, such amended return, under all our authorities, dates as of the time when it should have been made. — See Hodges v. Laird, supra; Woodward v. Harbin, supra. There was no error in admitting the amended return in evidence.
5. There was no error in excluding the evidence, that with the proceeds of the slave, Mrs. Carrie “ raised and educated her children — that is, by means of the stock of cattle,” bought with that money. To allow this defense, would be to legalize the void sale, by the use to which she applied the proceeds.
6. Neither was it permissible to prove that Mrs. Carrie had expressed the belief that “the sale was a good one,” or that “she knew the sale was a good one, because she had received the advice of her attorney, Mr. Hall.” The validity of the sale depended on the facts attending it, not on her opinion.
7. That portion of the evidence of the witness Roan, which states that “ she (Amelia Carrie) afterwards divided the cattle ” (bought with the proceeds of the slave) “ among her children, which they received as coming to them from their father’s estate,” presents a question of more difficulty. Evidently, the testimony, as offered, was wholly insufficient as a defense to this action.. Their receipt of the cattle, which, it is alleged, were bought with the money received for the slave, could not operate as a ratification of the sale of said slave, unless they, the *86children, at -the time they received the cattle, were of lawful age, and knew with what funds the cattle had been bought. Whether this defense will avail, if they had such knowledge, we do not now determine. — See Story on Agency, §§ 244-253; Butler & Alford v. O’Brien, 5 Ala. 316; Elliott v. Br. Bank of Mobile, 20 Ala. 345.
8. That portion of the evidence of the witness Daniels, which assumed to repeat a declaration made by Mrs. Carrie, to the effect that the slave Fanny had been sold at private sale, should have been excluded. She is not a party to this suit; was not in possession of the property when she made the declaration; and it was not made in connection with any act which it could explain. We suppose this decision was made on the authority of Gantt v. Phillips, 23 Ala. 295. In that case, the declarations were proved against the administrator de bonis non, to defeat the claim he set up. They consisted chiefly of statements made by the executrix, Mrs. Gantt, while she had control of the estate. In this case, the declarations are offered by the administrator de bonis non, to defeat the title executed by the administratrix in chief, aud to show continuing property in the estate. The difference consists in the well-defined distinction between proving admissions against and for the party making them.
The charge of the court presents the only remaining questions which we propose to consider. The charge must be construed in connection with the evidence, all of which is set out in the bill of exceptions. The plaintiff read in evidence a statute of Mississippi, prohibiting private sales by executors and administrators, and which agrees in substance with our own. The proof is in conflict, whether the sale of the slave Fanny by Mrs. Carrie was public or private; but the jury, we suppose,found it was private. The proof conduces to show that the sale and change of possession took place more than twenty years before the present suit was brought. The proof also shows that, when this suit was instituted, the slaves in controversy were in the jail of Tallapoosa county, having been lodged there by the sheriff under a former seizure, in a suit by Mrs. Carrie against the defendant in this suit. *87The proof shows that, before the seizure in this case, the sheriff was instructed by the plaintiff’s attorney — the same attorney having instituted both suits — to discharge the levy made under Mrs. Carrie’s writ. The amended return shows that, in legal effect, this was then done.
9. The circuit court did not err in construing the Mississippi statute in relation to private sales by administrators. In that State, as in this, such sales are void.
10. It is here contended, that, at the time this suit was commenced, the defendant had not such possession of the slaves as would justify the maintenance of this action.
In the case of Walker v. Fenner, 20 Ala. 192, 198, which was an action of detinue, this court said, that, after carefully looking into the authorities, it might “be safely asserted, as the rule deducible from them, that to entitle the plaintiffs to recover, they must show that the defendant, either at the time of demand made, or, in the event there was no demand, at the time the writ was sued out, had the actual possession, or the controlling power over the property; unless, having the possession anterior to such demand or suit, he has wrongfully, or to elude the plaintiff’s action, parted with it; or unless he holds it under a contract of bailment, the terms of which he violates by failing to re-deliver it.” To the same effect are Fenner v. Kirkman, 26 Ala. 650-5; Harris v. Hillman, ib. 380.
At tké time this suit was commenced, the defendant had not the actual possession of the property, neither had he, so far as this testimony informs us, parted with the possession by any act or volition of his own. He had been dispossessed by legal process. So long as the property was held under that process, the sheriff had a special property in it, and the defendant did not have the “ controlling power” over it. The primary court in this case instructed the jury, in effect, that if they believed the testimony of the witness Lockett, as to the custody of the slaves when this suit was brought, then the defendant had such possession as would justify this action. In this the circuit court passed on the sufficiency of the evidence, leav*88ing its credibility to be passed on by tbe jury. "Was this correct under tbe facts of tbis case?
"We think it clear tliat, if tbe sheriff, under instructions from plaintiff’ or ber attorney, discharged the first levy before tbe second writ was sued out, this placed tbe slaves under tbe legal control of tbe defendant, and, on tbis point, justified tbe institution of tbe second suit. After such discharge of the levy, tbe sheriff’s possession- ceased to be in bis official character, and be held tbe slaves as tbe naked bailee of tbe defendant. In other words, bis possession was that, of defendant, and became wrongful when be failed to deliver the slaves on demand. Tbe defendant had the immediate right of possession.. See Walker v. Fenner, supra.
Let us apply these principles to tbe question we are considering. Tbe testimony of Lockett, tbe only witness who, speaks to tbis point, fails to show that tbe instructions to discharge the first levy preceded tbe suing out of tbe second writ. In tbe brief statement of these facts, tbe idea is rather conveyed, that at one and the same time, tbe direction was given to discharge tbe first levy, and to make tbe second. If tbis be so, it is somewhat repugnant to tbe idea that tbe instructions to discharge were given before tbe second writ was issued. In tbis state of tbe proof, tbe court should have left it to the jury to say whether the one or the other preceded. If the second writ was issued before tbe order was given to discharge tbe levy, then tbe defendant bad not, “ at tbe time the writ was sued out,” such controlling power over tbe slaves as would sustain tbis branch of tbe action.
11. Another portion of the charge instructed tbe jury to find for tbe plaintiff, if they found certain hypotheti-cated facts to be true, “ even should they believe from tbe evidence that defendant and bis father, under whom be claimed, held possession of tbe slave Fanny in Hancock county, Mississippi, for twenty years, claiming them openly as their own property.”
In tbis, as in most of the States of tbis Union, there is a growing disposition to fix a period, beyond which human transactions shall not be open to judicial investiga*89tion, even in eases for which no statutory limitation has been provided. • This period is sometimes longer, and sometimes shorter, dependent on the nature of the property, and the character of the transaction. By common consent, twenty years have been agreed on, as a time at the end of which many of the most solemn transactions will be presumed to be settled and closed. See 2 Story’s Equity, § 1028 b. The nature of this presumption, and the manner of drawing it, are not in the mother country, and in the several States, the same. See, on this subject, Cowen & Hill’s Notes to Phil. Ev. (editiop by Van Cott,) Part I, pp. 536, 456, 457, 464, 485 to 500, 504-505; Vol. 5, same edition, 267; Sims v. Aughtery, 4 Strob. Eq. 103.
The precise question we are considering does not appear to have been before considered in this court. Kindred questions have been under review. In Rhodes v. Turner and Wife, 21 Ala. 210, an effort was made to bring an administrator to a settlement after a great lapse of time. Chilton, J., employed the following very pointed language: “If a final judgment had been rendered, according to the principles of the common law it would be presumed to have been paid after the expiration of twenty years; and if the parties allow this period to elapse without taking any steps to compel a settlement, we think the presumption of payment arises, and the executor or administrator should be exempted from the necessity of hunting up evidence to prove accounts and vouchers which ordinarily enter into such settlements.”
In Barnett v. Tarrence, 23 Ala. 463, a settlement had been attempted; but it was so defective, that, under our decisions, it could not be regarded as a final settlement. More than twenty years afterwards the administrator was cited to a final settlement, and he was sought to be charged with assets for which he had never accounted. This court, after deciding that it would presume, after so great a lapse of time, in favor of the correctness of that settlement, that the necessary notices were given, and that the parties in interest were present, proceeded to remark, that “ a decree, rendered under such circumstances, is binding on the parties to it until it is reversed in the proper court. * * * *90The executors cannot now be called upon, in the probate court, to go into a settlement again, when all parties have reposed on that already made, for so long a period that it is fair to presume that much of the proof which was then obtainable could not now be commanded.” In further considering this presumption, the court added, “We have carefully examined the ground on which the rule here suggested is founded, and are thoroughly convinced its adoption is essential to the safety and repose of executors, administrators and guardians, and to the advancement of the ends of common justice. It is'strictly analogous to the rule at common law in relation to judgments, and more liberal than the rule in equity with respect to stale claims.”
The case of Gantt’s Adm’r v. Phillips, 23 Ala. 275, was a suit by an administrator de bonis non, to recover a slave, the title to which, it was alleged, had never passed out of the estate. The defendant, and those under whom he claimed, had been in the adverse possession of the property for more than twenty years. The record of the orphans’ court did not show that the person named as executrix of the will had ever qualified. If she had not qualified, then there could have been no assent to the legacy — the slave was still a part of the estate of the testator, and the plaintiff was entitled to recover. The circuit court charged the jury, that the record of her appointment as executrix would be the highest and best evidence of the fact; but, if the proof showed to their satisfaction that the appointment and qualification of said Elizabeth Gantt as executrix had been duly made, and that in the lapse of time the papers and records of the appointment had been lost or destroyed, then the jury might presume her appointment and qualification. The latter part of this charge was assigned as error. This court, after collating and commenting on many decisions of other courts, said, “ under the circumstances, we consider the court left the question to the jury quite as favorably as the plaintiff was authorized to demand.” The j udgment was affirmed.
*91In Harvey v. Thorpe, 28 Ala. 250, a similar decision was made. — Lay v. Lawson, 23 Ala. 377.
It will be observed, that in the case cited from onr own reports of Barnett v. Tarrence, the presumption drawn by the court in favor of the regularity and validity of the decree was conclusive, not a mere prima-facie intendment, liable to be overturned by proof. To the same effect is' the principle announced in Rhodes v. Turner and Wife, supra. These were proceedings against administrators, for wasting, misapplying, and not accounting for assets of the estates they represented. Under the authority of those cases, if an administrator has converted to his own use, or privately sold, the property of the estate, and has not been proceeded against for the conversion until the expiration of twenty years after the time when he should have settled the estate, he is forever discharged, on a mere presumption of law. Suppose after that time an administrator de bonis non should be appointed, and should sue , the purchaser for property which the administrator in chief had sold to him privately, or without an order. The law would presume, in favor of the faithless administra-' tor in chief, that he had accounted and settled for the property, although the record might show nothing on the subject. If the purchaser, under these circumstances, should be held accountable for this identical property, would not the law present a strange anomaly ? Applying these principles to the case at bar, Mrs. Carrie, in 1858, when this suit was brought, could not, under our decisions, be made to account for the conversion or devastavit of these slaves. Can McArthur be made to account for them ?
In the cases of Gantt v. Phillips, and Harvey v. Thorpe, the question, whether the presumption was conclusive or not, was not presented by the record, and was not discussed. We do not regard them as authorities against the principles announced in Rhodes v. Turner and Wife, and Barnett v. Tarrence, supra.
There is an able discussion of this question in the case of Sims v. Aughtery, 4 Strob. Eq. 103. That case, in its legal bearings, was strikingly like the present. The cir-*92emit decree was pronounced by Chancellor Lunkin, who, quoting from a former decision, used tlie language that,, “the lapse of twenty years is sufficient to raise the presumption of almost anything that is necessary to quiet the title of property. If there had been no will and no administration, administration would nevertheless be presumed, and that defendants had acquired a title from the administrator. * * * After a possession of twenty-five years, the court will presume a sale by the executor for the purpose of paying the debts, an administration de bonis non after Lyle’s death, and a sale by such administrator, or almost anything else, in order to quiet the long possession.”
In the court of appeals, the opinion was delivered by Chancellor Largan. The profession is referred to it as an elaborate vindication of this doctrine. After copying the language of Chancellor Lunkin last above quoted, he adds, “This is strong language, but not stronger than is warranted by the authorities, or demanded by a stern and imperative public policy. In regard to property not the product of manual labor, there is, perhaps, no title extant in any part of the world, that could withstand the searching scrutiny of justice, and which, if traced to its origin, would not be found to be based upon fraud, rapine, spoliation, or conquest.”
After adverting to the statutes of limitation as one means of giving repose to stale subjects of litigation, he proceeds to remark, “'We have another system of rules, founded upon what is called the doctrine of legal presumptions, which prevail alike in courts of law and equity, and which are eminently subservient to the quieting of titles, and the prevention of litigation arising upon obscure and antiquated transactions. If these legal presumptions require a longer period than statutory bars to acquire force and effect, they are more general in their operation. They are highly conducive to the peace of society and the happiness- of families; and relieve courts from the necessity of adjudicating rights so obscured by time and the accidents of life, that the attainment of truth and justice is next to impossible. ***** These *93legal presumptions, by which, conflicting claims and titles are set at rest, I have endeavored to show are natural and necessary. They spring spontaneously out of ■the.-' institution and relations of property, As to the precise-' time at which they arise, each independent community must judge for itself. We have adopted the law of the mother country. In South Carolina, as in England, by the lapse of twenty years without admissions, specialties and judgments are presumed to be satisfied, and trusts discharged. Twenty years continued possession will raise the presumption of a grant from the State, of deeds, wills, administrations, sales, partitions, decrees, and (the chancellor has said) of almost anything that may be necessary to the quieting a title, which no one has disturbed during all that period.” See, also, the case of Williamson v. Williamson, 1 Johns. Ch. 488, 492-3.
In examining the numerous authorities on this question, to be found in the reported cases of trials at lawj the profession will frequently encounter the declaration,’ that from this lapse of time the jury are authorized to draw the presumption which we have been considering. By this we understand, that the question is at all times one for the jury; a presumption they may draw, but that there are no rules which govern them in such eases. Such was the instruction of the circuit court in the case of Gantt v. Phillips, and in the case of Harvey v. Thorpe, supra. Now, with all due deference, we confess ourselves unable to perceive any solid reason on which to rest such a principle. We think it is at war with the analogies of the law, and with the theory of jury trials. Juries are organized to pronounce on the credibility of witnesses; to determine disputed facts; to draw conclusions from doubtful and contradictory premises; and to admeasure damages where the law has afforded no standard. We do not say these are the only functions of a jury, but they are the controlling ones. Whenever the facts of a ease are clear and uncontroverted, the rights of parties are, or should ■ be, fixed and uniform. When there remains no fact to be found, or conclusión to be drawn from contested and indeterminate premises, there is no use for a jury, for the *94law determines the rights of the parties. This principle is absolutely necessary, as the basis of a uniform system of jurisprudence. So, in cases where a jury trial is necessary, every proposition which stands forth clear and undisputed, and which rests on no inference to be drawn from disputable or controverted premises, is, or ought to be, a question of law. On this principle rest all our presumptions of law.
It is not our purpose to deny to the jury the right and duty of determining whether in fact the twenty years have elapsed. That fact being found, however, and there being no countervailing, proof, what reason can exist for leaving it to the discretion, possibly caprice, of that body, whether they will draw the, desired conclusion ? There is one naked fact, to-wit, acquiescence for twenty years. There can be no reason for indulging the presumption in one case which does not exist in all others. Chancellors invariably draw the presumption [from this one fact, and we think a rule equally uniform should prevail in courts of law. To lay down a different rule, will be to invite a contest and jury trial in every case thus circumstanced. The circumstances of each case will be appealed, to by opposing counsel, in the hope that they severally may impress the jury with the belief that it is their duty in the particular case to indulge or withhold the presumption, as the one or the other result will promote their several interests. We are unwilling to declare a rule, the result of which may be to tempt juries from their propriety, to multiply litigation, and to increase the uncertainty which must always attend the administration of the law.
We do not wish to be understood as saying that this presumption is always conclusive. In the first instance, perhaps it never is so. In cases like the present, however, we hold that a prima-facie presumption is raised, whenever there is satisfactory proof of twenty years uninterrupted, adverse enjoyment and possession.
Speaking of this presumption, Mr. Starkie says, (edition of 1826, vol. 8, p. 1214,) “ It gives to the evidence a technical efficacy beyond its simple force and operation.” On page 1224, he says, this is not a direct and immediate *95inference to be made by the courts [of law]; yet “the court will, under certain circumstances, direct a jury to presume an outstanding term to have been surrendered by the trustee.” To the same effect is Vandick v. Van Buren, 1 Caines’ Rep. 34. See, on this subject, Cow. & Hill’s Notes to Phil. Ev. (ed. by Van Cott,) Part I, pp. 485, et seq.; 2 Wend. Black. 266, note 10; Beck on Presumptions, 144; Smithpeter v. Ison, 4 Rich. Law, 203; 3 Bouv. Bacon, 621; Jackson v. McCall, 10 Johns, 377; 1 Greenlf. Ev. § 46; Warren v. Webb, 2 Strange, 1129; Rex v. Carpenter, 2 Show. 47; Trotter v. Harris, 2 Younge & Jervis, 285; Beall v. Lynn, 6 Har. & Johns. 336, 353, 361; Ld. Pelham v. Pickingill, 1 T. R. 381; Doe v. Ireland, 11 East, 280, 284; Goodtitle v. Baldwin, ib. 288; Penwarden v. Ching, 1 Moody & Mal. 400; Rex v. Long Buckley, 7 East, 45; Mayor of Kingston v. Horner, Cowper, 102, 110; Stodder v. Powell, 1 Stew. 287; 1 Greenl. Cruise, 415, 416; Bustard v. Gates, 4 Dana, 430; McPherson v. Cunliff, 11 Serg. & R. 422, 432.
This prima-facie case may, of course, be overturned. It cannot be done by proving that the title was, in its inception, defective. Proof, to be effectual for this purpose, must be addressed to the character of the plaintiff’s possession, either in its acquisition or use; must tend to show that such possession is not inconsistent with the plaintiff’s right; or some other excuse, independent of original defect of title, must be given for the seeming long acquiescence. We cannot now be more definite.
The record before us contains no excuse for the delay.; and in such case, the prima-facie presumption becomes conclusive. It results from this, that the charge of the circuit court was erroneous.
We confine this rule, for the present, to property situated substantially as this is, and do not design to pronounce upon the effect of all possessions that are acquiesced in for twenty years.
We think the facts of this case are eminently illustrative of the propriety of indulging the presumption that these proceedings were regular. The sale took place twenty-two or twenty-three years before this suit was in*96stituted. During all that time, save perhaps a few months, the property remained 'in the neighborhood in which it was sold, in the independent and undisputed possession of the elder and younger McArthur. The court-house, and all the records pertaining to Mrs. Carrie’s administration, have been destroyed by fire; and the few living witnesses who are left to testify of this transaction, give versions of it that are wholly different and irreconcilable. One class swears, that the sale was private, for they conducted the negotiation; another’, that it was public, for they witnessed it. The various persons who have held office in the probate court in which these proceedings were, or should have been of record, differ as radically and essentially in their recollection of what those records did disdlose. This discrepancy and conflict should not induce us to pronounce a severe judgment on the motives of the witnesses. All who have lived long enough, and who, after the lapse of a quarter of a century, have attempted to call up from “memory’s waste ” the details of any transaction of only ordinary interest, will deal charitably with sueh discrepancies.
This transaction originated in the State of Mississippi. The possession by the defendant .and his father, under whom he claims, has been mainly held in that State. 'Whether or not a different rule prevails there, — and, if different, whether that rule will be enforced by our courts, are questions not presented by this record, and we do not now decide them. See Stevenson’s Heirs v. McRreary, 12 Sm. & Mar. 9, 44; Walker v. Forbes, at the last term of this court.
Judgment of the circuit court reversed, and cause remanded.
Rice, C. J., not sitting.