Where an order sustaining a demurrer to a petition provides that the petition shall stand dismissed if an amendment thereto is not allowed and filed within ten days, a mere filing of the amendment with the clerk within the ten days, where the amendment was not presented to the court within the period and was not allowed by order of court, is insufficient, and it is not error for the court afterwards to pass an order dismissing the amendment and dismissing the petition and striking the case from the docket.
1. A proposed amendment to a petition can not properly be filed so as to become a part of the record until it has been allowed by the court. Where a demurrer is sustained with leave to amend, and the petition is ordered dismissed unless an amendment "is allowed and filed within" a stated time, the mere filing of a proposed amendment in the office of the clerk of the court on or before the time allowed in the order sustaining the demurrer is not a sufficient compliance with such order that the proposed amendment be allowed within the time specified.
2. The fact that the court, at the time of the rendition of the order sustaining the demurrer with leave to amend the petition within ten days, in response to a request from defendant's counsel that they be heard before the court should allow an amendment to the petition, stated in open court "that any proffered amendment would be allowed subject to any and all objections, and counsel for defendant could subsequently be heard if they had any objections and so desired," did not relieve the plaintiff of the necessity of complying with the requirement that the proposed amendment must *Page 716 be presented to the judge for allowance within the time specified in the order, and operate to permit the mere filing thereof in the office of the clerk within the required time to be a sufficient compliance with the order that the proposed amendment be "allowed and filed within ten days" etc.
3. It follows that the court did not err in rendering the order of June 7, 1941, dismissing the amendment because not allowed and filed within the time provided in the previous order sustaining the demurrer to the petition with leave to amend within ten days, and in ordering the petition dismissed.
Judgment affirmed. Sutton and Felton, JJ., concur.
