99 Ga. App. 338 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1959
1. While it is a well-settled principle of law that courts have plenary control of their judgments, orders, and decrees during the term at which they are rendered, and may amend, comet, modify, or supplement them, for cause appearing, or may, to promote justice, revise, supersede, revoke, or vacate them, as may in the exercise of their sound discretion seem necessary; and where, “for good cause shown” a judgment is considered to> have been improvidently or inadvertently entered, the courts may, at the same term, ex mero motu and without notice to either party, vacate or set aside such judgment (Jones v. Garage Equipment Co., 16 Ga. App. 596, 85 S. E. 940; Methodist Episcopal Church South v. Decell, 60 Ga. App. 843, 849, 5 S. E. 2d 66; Bowen v. Wyeth, 119 Ga. 687, 46 S. E. 823; East Side Lumber &c. Co. v. Barfield, 193 Ga. 273, 276, 18 S. E. 2d 492; Hunter v. Gillespie, 207 Ga. 574, 63 S. E. 2d 404), the power so to deal with a judgment is not an unlimited or arbitrary one, but is one of legal discretion; and, as the law seeks an end to litigation, when the parties have had full opportunity to plead and be heard, if a judgment is entered which in its nature ends the controversy, that judgment should not be disturbed, even while in the breast of the court, except in the exercise of sound legal discretion where it is necessary to do so in order to promote justice. Grogan v. Deraney, 38 Ga. App. 287, 290 (143 S. E. 912); Cahoon v. Wills, 179 Ga. 195, 196 (175 S. E. 563); Cofer v. Maxwell, 201 Ga. 846, 848 (41 S. E. 2d 420).
2. Under an application of the rule last above stated to the facts of the present case, the trial court abused its discretion in revising its judgment of unconditional dismissal of the plaintiff’s action so as to permit the plaintiff to amend; and,
3. “ 'A nunc pro tunc entry is for the purpose of recording some action that was taken or judgment rendered previously to the making of the entry, which is to take effect as of the former
Judgment reversed.