(After stating the foregoing facts.) In this statutory action for land by the plaintiff, in which he alleged that he claimed title to the land sought to be recovered, and where the abstract of title attached to the petition was not made a part thereof, the fact that neither the petition nor the abstract attached thereto showed a common grantor did not render the petition subject to demurrer interposed thereto upon this ground, and the original judgment of the trial court sus
*49
taining the demurrer was erroneous.
Bentley
v.
Phillips,
171
Ga.
866 (
It is contended by the defendant, now plaintiff in error, that this original judgment — which provided that, in default of an amendment showing a common grantor within a given time, the petition would stand dismissed, which judgment was not excepted to, but was acquiesced in by the plaintiff by offering an amendment that failed to disclose a common grantor — became the law of the case, binding upon both the plaintiff and the trial court, and resulted in the automatic dismissal of the petition; and that the trial court was without power or jurisdiction thereafter to reverse its ruling; and that the judgment allowing the amendments offered by j,he plaintiff, overruling the motions to dismiss the petition, and also overruling the demurrer should be reversed.
It is true that this court has many times held that where, after such an order of the judge without any exception thereto, the plaintiff seeks to amend his petition, but the amendment fails to comply with essential requirements of the order, he is bound thereby, not only because it is the law of the case under the ruling unexcepted to, but for the additional reason that the plaintiff has submitted to the adverse ruling on demurrer by seeking to comply therewith, and cannot thereafter be heard to complain that such order was erroneous, and that the required amendment which he elected to offer, but failed to complete in essential requirments, was in fact unnecessary. It is also true that this court has held that, where on demurrer to a petition an order is entered requiring that the petition be amended by setting forth certain facts construed by the order to be material to the cause of action, and that in default of such amendment within a stated time the petition “stand dismissed,” such order is the law of the case, whether right or wrong, in the absence of timely exception and writ of error therefrom, and that, if the petitioner fails to amend, a dismissal of the action automatically results, or a formal order of dismissal is proper. See
Burruss
v.
Burruss,
196
Ga.
813 (
When these amendments were offered the defendant objected thereto, and filed her written motions to dismiss the petition under the original judgment because the plaintiff had failed to comply with the requirement thereof that he allege a common grantor.
The trial court, upon considering the amendments, the objections thereto, and the motions to dismiss, overruled the objections to the amendment and the motions to dismiss, and also entered a judgment overruling the demurrer which had previously been sustained.
Equally as well established as the rules above announced and relied upon by the plaintiff in error, is the rule that a trial judge has the power during the same term of court at which a judgment is rendered, to revise, correct, revoke, modify, or vacate such judgment, even upon his own motion, for the purpose of promoting justice and in the exercise of a sound legal discretion.
Deen
v.
Baxley State Bank,
192
Ga.
300 (
*51 While the trial court might have lawfully sustained the objections to the amendments offered and dismissed the petition under the rulings announced in the Burruss case, 196 Ga. 813 (supra), and the Gamble case, 193 Ga. 591 (supra), and the cases there cited — when it was made to appear to the trial judge by the amendments presented by the plaintiff, in an effort to comply with the original judgment of the trial court, that the original judgment had erroneously required of the plaintiff the impossible, it was clearly not an abuse of discretion on the part of the trial judge, during the same term of court, to overrule his former judgment in order to promote justice and permit the plaintiff’s petition, which, under the authorities hereinbefore cited, alleged a good cause of action, to remain in court. To hold otherwise would serve no good purpose, and would only tend to delay a final adjudication of a good cause of action by requiring the filing of a new petition by the plaintiff.
What is here held is not in conflict with the decision of this court in
Humphries
v. Morris, 179
Ga.
55, 56 (
Judgment affirmed.
