There was no grace period issue here. The person who suggested the edit made no change; the edit form was submitted as presented (whether accidentally or due to misunderstanding, I don't know).
As you can see, the title of the latest revision of that question ends in "....", but the question title does not. Such unnecessary punctuation is automatically removed on submission, but the edit that appended those dots was made in March of 2011, and the auto-removal was only added in July of that year. Apparently we then made that change retroactively to the rendered posts, but not to the revision data. I can see arguments for and against that, but neither way creates any major problems. And in this case, it actually uncovered a bug, and that's definitely a plus :)
The edit suggestion went through because the "has anything changed?" check is made against the post's current content, but both the editor content and the suggested edit diff are based on the post's current revision. If it weren't for the above-mentioned retroactive title change, the two would have been identical.
The actual bug here was that the punctuation cleanup was not applied to suggested edits. The "dot dot dot dot" should have been removed when that edit submission was made, but this wasn't the case. This is fixed in the next build.