This was a suit brought by a firm of attorneys against a trustee for a sum claimed to be due for legal services, under an express oral contract alleged to have been made by a predecessor in office of the defendant trustee. In addition to their own evidence in support of their claim, the plaintiffs offered the interrogatories of the former trustee, testifying positively that he had employed the plaintiffs and made a contract with them to represent him as trustee, and that they had successfully represented the trust estate. The defendant, however, offered in rebuttal the depositions of this same former trustee, taken subsequently to his interrogatories, in which he affirmatively denied the making of any contract as trustee or for the trust estate with the plaintiffs, swore that he had contracted solely as an individual for the representation only of his individual interest, which was involved, and made no explanation of his conflicting testimony contained in the interrogatories sued out by the plaintiffs.
As we first conceived the case, it would be controlled by an answer to the following question certified to the Supreme Court: “Where a suit is brought against a trustee for a sum alleged to be due for legal services under and by virtue of an express oral contract alleged to have been made with a predecessor in office of the defendant trustee, and where, in support of his own evidence that such contract was made, the plaintiff introduces the interrogatories of the former trustee, by which the making of the alleged contract is corroborated, but the defendant, the present trustee, introduces in rebuttal depositions of the same former trustee, taken subsequently to his interrogatories,' in which depositions he affirmatively denies the making of the contract sued on, but without any explanation of, his conflicting testimony as contained in the interrogatories sued out by the plaintiff, and where there are no other facts or circumstances in evidence supporting
Judgment affirmed.