delivered the opinion of the court.
On June 26, 1912, the Bank of Porto Bico brought suit in the District Court of San Juan, Section 2, against Sola e Hijo, Sola, Arguelles & Co. and Benjamín Forteza, to recover a *996loan of $2,000 which the three defendants jointly and severally bo and themselves, in a promissory note dated August 31, 1910, to pay to the plaintiff on December 5 of the same year. The note was transcribed in the complaint, in which it ,was alleged that the time was extended to February 16, 1912.
In his answer to the complaint Magín E. Argüelles alleged among other facts the following, under paragraphs 4 and 5 of his third ground of defense:
“4. The promissory note referred to in the complaint was cancelled after its maturity and renewed several times after the date on which Magín R. Argüelles ceased to be a member of the firm of Sola, Argüe-lles & Co., said renewals having been made without the knowledge or consent of the defendant Argüelles.
“5. Defendant Magín R. Argüelles alleges that before the renewal of said note, which was made without his knowledge or consent, the firm of Sola, Argüelles & Co. was solvent and had more than sufficient assets to discharge the said liability.”
After the answer was filed a motion was made by counsel for Magín E. Argüelles alleging that an inspection of the original note copied in the complaint as well as of the books of account of the plaintiff bank was necessary for his defense in order to enable him to establish the facts on which he based allegations 4 and 5 of his third ground of defense, which inspection would be limited to an examination of'the entries relative to the extensions of time, payment of interest and cancellation of the note on which the complaint is based, and concluding with the prayer that, in accordance with section 314 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the adverse party be ordered to permit the mover to make the inspection requested.
The court overruled the said motion in its order of June-24 of the present year, and the present application for a writ of certiorari is the result of that ruling. The applicant bases, his petition for a review of the proceedings of the court below on an alleged violation of section 314 of the Code of Civil Procedure, alleging besides that he had no other speedy,, *997adequate and efficient remedy at law, because the said order is not appealable. The writ of certiorari was issued on October 10 last and the bearing was set for the 20th of the same month. The original record of the case was brought up to this court and we have deduced therefrom the facts herein-before set forth.
It is true that no appeal lies from the aforesaid order, as it is not included in the appealable orders enumerated in section 295 of the Code of Civil Procedure. However, as it is a decision or ruling upon a contested motion, it should be considered as excepted to by force of law and therefore subject to review upon a review on appeal of the final judgment in the case, provided that it be made a part of the record.
This being the case, it is obvious that the petitioner cannot assert that he has no other remedy than the writ of cer-tiorari; but not for that reason, however, can we hold that the writ of certiorari does not lie.
The writ of certiorari is of an extraordinary character and does not lie generally in cases where the law provides another ordinary mode of redress, but if the ordinary remedy, on account of the dilatoriness of the procedure which governs it, might result in a complete or partial failure of justice, the extraordinary remedy of certiorari will lie, it being well understood that as certiorari is not a writ of right, it may be granted or refused in the discretion of the court receiving the application.
In the cases of Méndez v. Soto Nussa, 13 P. R. R., 366, and Núñez v. Soto Nussa, 14 P. R. R., 190, we adopted, subject in application to the discretion of the court, the rule laid down by the Supreme Court of Missouri in the distinguished opinion delivered by Judge Sherwood in June, 1900 (Hamilton v. Gainotte, 50 L. R. A., 794), reading as follows:
“A remedy by appeal or writ of error is not sufficient to bar a certiorari unless it is adequate to meet the necessities of the case; that is to say, equally beneficial, speedy and sufficient; not merely a *998remedy which at some time in the future will bring about a reversal of the judgment complained of, but a remedy which will promptly relieve the petitioner from the injurious effects of that judgment and the acts of the inferior court or tribunal.”
In view of the rule quoted above and in the exercise of our discretion, should we review the proceedings of the lower court in this ease in the present certiorari proceedings'?
Section 314 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which the petitioner invokes in his defense against the order of the lower court of June 24 last, reads a's follows:
“Section 314. — Any court in which an action is pending, or-a judge thereof, may, upon notice, order either party to give to the other, within a specified time, an inspection and copy, or permission to take a copy, of entries of account in any book, or of any document or paper in his possession or under his control, containing evidence relating to the merits of the action, or the defense therein. * * * This section is not to be construed to prevent a party from compelling another to produce books, papers, or documents, when he is examined as a witness.”
The petitioner alleged in his overruled motion that in order to prove that the promissory note on which recovery was sought was canceled after its maturity and renewed on seAmral occasions subsequent to his retirement from the firm of Sold, Arguelles & Co., as alleged in his answer to the complaint, it was necessary that he inspect the original note copied in the complaint as well as the books of account of the plaintiff bank, adding in explanation that such inspection would be confined to the entries relative to the extensions of time, payment of interest and cancellation of the note on which this action is brought.
We see no reason why the petitioner should be shown the original note copied in the complaint, for his answer was not verified; for which reason, as y^ell as for the reason that the said answer merely makes a general denial of the facts, the genuineness of the note should be deemed admitted in accordance with the provisions of section 119 of the Code of Civil Procedure, reading as follows:
*999‘Section 119. — "When action is brought upon a written instrument, and the complaint contains a copy of such instrument, or a copy is annexed thereto, the genuineness and the execution of such instruments are deemed admitted, unless the answer denying the same be verified. ’ ’
The answer was not verified nor does it contain a specific denial of the genuineness of the promissory note.
In regard to the refusal to allow an inspection of the books of account of the plaintiff bank in order to prove allegations 4 and 5 of the third ground of defense, we have quoted these allegations in full and from the literal wording thereof we can only deduce that the defendant Argüelles desired from said inspection to adduce evidence to show the cancellation of the note after its maturity and its renewal after the date-on which Argüelles withdrew from the firm of Sola, Argüelles & Co., for it is apparent that the books of the bank would not show whether the firm of Sola, Argüelles & Co. was solvent and had assets more than sufficient to satisfy the amount, of the obligation.
In the application for the writ of certiorari (which to attest the good faith of the petitioner should have been sworn to) it is not even alleged that the refusal of the lower court, to authorise the inspection of the books of the bank left the-, petitioner without any other means of proving at the trial the allegations to which he refers in his answer, and it was. his duty to prove the necessity of the remedy sought.
In deciding the case of Méndez against Soto Nussa we-stated that the writ of certiorari was never intended to reach the admission or exclusion of evidence, and that principle is. applicable to the case at bar in which a means of securing evidence, such as the inspection of the books of the adverse-party, has been denied, which denial, as we have said before,, may be reviewed when the final judgment is reviewed on appeal.
For the reasons stated we are. not inclined in this case to exercise our discretion to the extent of reviewing in certiorari *1000proceedings the order of the District Court of San Juan, Section 2, entered on June 24 last. Therefore, the writ of certiorari heretofore issued should he quashed and the original record returned to the lower court to he proceeded with according to law.
Writ quashed and petition denied.
Justices "Wolf, del Toro and Aldrey concurred. Mr. Justice MacLeary took no part in this decision.