delivered the opinion of the court.
This is the second motion made in this case to dismiss the appeal. The first was presented on November 2, 1914, and was heard on November 9 and decided on November 16. Belaval v. Todd, Mayor of San Juan, 21 P. R. R., 419.
The first motion was based on rule 59 of this court and the court decided that there was no proof of bad faith on the paid of the appellant and not sufficient proof of lack of diligence, especially as the question of such lack of diligence had been submitted to the district court and decided against the contention .of the propounder of the present motion.
Some time after this, namely, on November 20, 1914, the respondent in this case made an application for a writ of certiorari, which was heard by the court December 3, 1914, and disposed of in an exceedingly summary manner, considering the importance of the case, on December 24, 1914. Belaval v. Córdova Dávila, 21 P. R. R., 509. While this cer-tiorari was pending in this court, on December 12, 1914, the appellant alleged that he had prepared and presented to the District Court of San Juan the record on appeal, but that *122the secretary of that court could not certify to the record because the original papers had been transmitted to this court by reason of the writ of certiorari. The appellant petitioned, the court, therefore, to extend his time for twenty days as-the time for filing the record was about to expire. On December 14, 1914, the court made an order by which the time for presenting the transcript was extended for twenty days, to-begin on December 18, 1914, The order of this court was-notified to Mr. Falcon, the attorney of the appellant, and to Mr. Belaval, the attorney of the respondent, on December 15, 1914.
On December 26, 1914, the respondent made his second motion to dismiss the appeal, reciting that on December 24,. 1914, this court had made a. decision in the certiorari case' annulling the extension of time granted to the appellant by the District Court of San Juan within which to file the statement of the case. . .
The ground for asking for the dismissal in the second motion is that, as the statement of the.case had been stricken from the record, the mandamus case stood as if no statement of the case had ever been presented, and that, therefore, the appellant was under a duty to present his record on appeal within thirty days from the time of the date of the appeal, citing rule 40 of this co.urt and the decision in the case of Ciuró v. Ciuró, 20 P. R. R., 36.
The writ of certiorari annulled an order of the District Court of San Juan bearing date May 29, 1914. This motion was presented on December 26, 1914. The writ of certiorari which was -finally granted by this court would have been equally available to the respondent at any time from the date of said order of the- District Court of San Juan, namely, May 29, 1914. Buie 58 of this court provides:
“If the transcript of the record or the brief made by appellants be not filed within the time prescribed, the appeal may be dismissed, on motion, after' notice given.- If the transcript, though not filed *123within the time prescribed, be on file at the time such notice is given, that fact shall be sufficient answer to the motion.”
This rule, as well as rule 40 on which the respondent relies, was made pursuant to the judicial power vested in this court by the Foraker Act and by the Code of Civil Procedure passed by the local Legislature of Porto Pico. No provision is made in the Code of Civil Procedure, or any other law, for the time when an appeal should be brought to this court in case there is no statement of the case or bill of exceptions. Rule 40 and rule 58 were each made in pursuance of the power vested in this court to govern cases over which it had acquired jurisdiction 'by reason of an appeal from a district court, but these rules are not exhaustive of the power of the court over appeals when it once has acquired jurisdiction. We have repeatedly extended the time for filing a transcript of record both before and after the Legislature passed Act No. 70 of March 9, 1911, inasmuch as the power of this court over the cases in which it has acquired jurisdiction is complete and it was not the intention of the Legislature'to curtail the power of extension by saying that the transcript should be filed in this court thirty days after the approval of the statement of the case by the trial judge. We have also held in several decisions that rule 58 is still in full force and vigor. García v. American Railroad Co. of Porto Rico, 17 P. R. R., 519; Hernández v. The American Railroad Co. of Porto Rico, 17 P. R. R., 1177, and Successors of José Martínez v. Tomás Dávila & Co., 17 P. R. R., 970. See also Parker v. Oller, 21 P. R. R., 426. Now, if this court can make a rule, as we have held it can, to cover cases when the record is on file in spite of .the transcript being brought up more than thirty days after the time fixed by rule 40, we have also the same power to extend the time for filing a transcript in advance of a motion to dismiss by a respondent.
On December' 12, 1914, the appellant, under the erroneous impression that he still, had some days in which to file *124a transcript, made an application to this court for the extension of time to file such .transcript. His erroneous impression was based on the action qf the District Court of San Juan in attempting to extend the time. Be that as it may, at the time the appellant made such motion for an extension there was no motion pending asldng for a dismissal of the case, and the certiorari had not been decided. The motion asking for an extension of time was granted, to run from December 18, and'such time expired on January 7, 1915. On January 6, 1915, the record in this case was filed in the court. Although this transcript was filed, as respondent alleged, eleven.days later than the motion to dismiss, nevertheless it was filed within the twenty days granted by this court. No application was made to this court by respondent to curtail the time or to reconsider its action of December 14. The order extending the time for filing the transcript remained in force, and the record, according to the principles of strict procedure and our own rules, must be held to have been filed in time.
But considering the peculiar nature of the case, and considering that the District Court of San Juan and, apparently, all the attorneys had an idea that an order to extend the time for filing a bill of exceptions until the stenographer’s notes were turned over was a perfectly valid exercise of power, we would have exercised our discretionary power to permit this appeal to stand. 'The case was most extraordinary. Not only the bar in general but the attorneys of the respondent were under the same impression as the district court, because, as we have pointed out, the certiorari which was finally granted could have been obtained in June or July, 1914, and no. attempt was made by the respondent to apply for the cer-tiorari until November 20, 1914. In the original motion to dismiss there was no reliance on the grounds made in the certiorari> everyone relying upon the practice of waiting for the stenographer’s notes, which was the practice for years.
*125Respondent in Ms brief attempts to cliide tlic court for failing to decide the original motion in Ms favor. He insists in petulant language that the bad faith of the appellant is now justified, as the latter is now insisting that the mandamus must be held to be. ineffective. Respondent’s attitude and language are very disrespectful and this is not the conduct to be observed by parties or attorneys before this court. Not only in the original motion but in the motion now before the court the respondent failed to show the bad faith of the appellant, and failed to prove the lack of diligence of the said appellant. On the other hand, the record shows that the respondent could have sought the relief finally obtained by the certiorari months before. We are not satisfied that the respondent at any time exhausted his remedies either in this court or in the court below. The same application made in the petition for certiorari could have been made in the original motion, and such a motion could have been presented to this court in the months of June or July. The respondent could always have maintained, and we believe successfully, that the action of the district court in its order of May 29, 1914, was null and void. The comments, then, of the respondent come with exceedingly bad grace. Furthermore, respondent not only attacks the appellant without due showing and criticises the' court in a disrespectful manner, but the comments in question have nothing to do with the matter immediately before the court, namely, whether the appeal ought not to be dismissed because the record, as alleged by respondent, was not brought up in time.
In addition to the motion of the respondent, the appellant, at the hearing, made an oral motion to dismiss and file the case on the ground that the mandamus would be fruitless. We shall not enter into the consideration of such a question because it really involves the merits of the action. We have frequently held that the failure to bring up a statement of the case does not prevent this court from examining the pleadings. The merits of these pleadings can be consid*126ered after a full hearing, and the issues should not be disposed of in this irregular and unsatisfactory way.
The motions of the respondent and of the appellant must be
Overruled.
Justices del Toro, Aldrey and Hutchison concurred. • Mr. Chief Justice Hernández took no part in the' decision of this case.'