delivered the opinion of the court.
The' writer of this 'opinion, although he dissented from the opinion of this court of March 11, 1919, whereby it was held that a certain bill of the Legislature became a law without .the approval of the Governor, nevertheless feels momentarily bound by the said decision. One of the laws that was promulgated by the. Secretary of- Porto Rico following said decision was Act No. 93 to amend an act to regulate appeals from judgments of municipal courts in civil cases approved March 11, 1908, and the resolution of the certiorari in this case depends upon section 3 of the law as amended.
' The petitioner appealed from a judgment of the Municipal Court of Río Piedras. The record wag certified by both attorneys and filed by the appellant on the 8th of January, 1920, in Section 2 of the District Court of San Juan. There was some parley between the judge of that court and the *295attorney for the appellant as to tlie inclnsion of the ease in. the calendar of said court. But, be'that as it may, on January 28,1920, the District Court of San Juan, Second Section, transferred the case to the first section. No notice of transfer was given to the appellant and, what is more important, it does not appear that the secretary of the District Court, First Section, entered the case in the docket. On motion of appellee and without notice to appellant the ease was dismissed by the district judge under the alleged authority of the Law of 1908 as amended by Law No. 93 of 1919.
Law No. 93 under discussion makes- section 3 of the amended law read as follows:
“Section 3. — (a) The secretary shall enter the cause on the docket of civil actions, notifying the interested parties thereof. The appellant must request the inclusion of the case in the calendar or list of civil cases set for hearing upon the first reading thereof subsequent to the filing of the case. When the case is called for trial on appeal, the court shall, on motion of the appellant, review and consider any preliminary orders, decisions, or rulings by which he considers himself aggrieved. Such questions having been determined, the cause shall proceed to trial upon the pleadings, unless by virtue of a demurrer the judge allow the complaint or answer to be amended. The action being thus ready for trial, it shall be prosecuted de .novo and shall be governed by all provisions of law and rules of court affecting trials of actions originally brqught in the district court.
“(b) In case the appellant fails to solicit the inclusion of,the action in the calendar, the district judge shall dismiss the action, taxing the costs upon the appellant and the secretary shall immediately, forward the case to the lower court for the execution of thb judgment appealed from.”
Under tlie plain terms of tbis law, before an appellant is bound to ask tliat tbe ease be included in the calendar-he must first be notified by the secretary that it was placed on the docket.
Both the appellee and the court maintain that the, appellant is only entitled to notice from the secretary on those *296occasions when the ease is sent up by tbe secretary of tbe municipal court and insist tbat bere tbe case was certified by tbe attorneys and filed in the second section of tbe district court by the appellant himself. But we bold tbat when an appellant hands tbe transcript on appeal to the secretary of tbe district court this manual tradition is not equivalent to tbe entry on tbe docket by tbe secretary of tbe district court. Before the case may be put on tbe calendar it must first be. placed on tbe docket.
Even, however, if the appellee were right' in maintaining tbat the appellant by filing the case in tbe second section was not entitled to further notice of tbe entry in the docket of tbat court, yet tbe situation would have been necessarily changed by tbe action of tbe judge of tbat court sua sponte transferring tbe case to tbe first section. If tbe literal words of section 3 are not applicable then common sense and analogy require that a notice that the case has reached the docket of the first section should be given to the appellant. Tbe law does not speak as tbe court and appellee seem to think of tbe “filing” or delivering (radicando) of tbe transcript on appeal, but it speaks of entering tbe cause on tbe docket. Tbe difference between “entering” and of tbe secretary having papers in bis possession is made very manifest by our decision in tbe case of Gandía v. Trías et al., ante, p. 152.
There is nothing in this record which shows tbat the dismissal of the appeal was due to any failure of the appellant to pay the fees on filing the transcript, but solely because of his failure to include the case in the calendar, and perhaps then not paying the fees required by law.
If tbe appellee were right in his main contention then perhaps it was unnecessary legally to notify appellant of the motion to dismiss. However, in doubtful cases it is much better practice to give the notice.
After tbe case was dismissed the appellant filed a motion for reconsideration which lie in turn did not notify to the-*297appellee. Likewise, it would have been better practice to .-give such a notice. Tbe court seems to think that this failure of notice made it imperative on it not to consider the motion for reconsideration. The court, however, had a discretion and might have required appellant to notify the appellee.
The order of the district court, first section, dismissing ihe action, must be annulled and the case sent back for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.
Chief Justice Hernández and Justices del Toro, Aldrey and Hutchison concurred.