(After stating the foregoing facts.) The grounds of demurrer to the petition were special; and if it were subject to them, the petition should have been dismissed unless cured by amendment. Civil Code, § 5631. If the judgment of the trial court on the demurrer was not in effect a dismissal of the petition, such judgment was not a final disposition of the case in the trial court, but left it pending there, and the writ of error to the Court of Appeals was premature, and that court was without jurisdiction to entertain the case. -Civil Code, § 6138. The judgment of the trial court on the demurrer did not in terms dismiss the petition, nor do we think that the language of that judgment can be properly construed as dismissing the petition. If the effect of that judgment could be construed as dismissing the petition, then the case was no longer ponding in the trial court, and therefore the petition could not have been there amended. It would be inconsistent to sustain a demurrer to a petition and dismiss it, and in the same order grant leave to the plaintiff to amend the petition. See Steed v. Savage, 121 Ga. 84 (
The case being before this court on certiorari to the Court of Appeals, the judgment of that court, overruling the.motion to dismiss the bill of exceptions, is held to be error.
Judgment reversed.
