In an action to recover, inter alia, the commission due plaintiff, a lawyer, by reason of his claimed performance of a contract between him as a business broker and the individual defendants Hirsch who owned and controlled the defendant corporation, Welbilt Stove Co., Inc., pursuant tó which he (plaintiff) agreed to find a publicly owned corporation which said individual defendants could acquire by purchase of its capital stock or by merger, consolidation or exchange of stock with the said defendant corporation, plaintiff appeals —as limited by his brief — from so much of two orders of the Supreme Court, Queens County, dated respectively July 14, 1960 and September 14, 1960, as are adverse to him. As to the first order, plaintiff’s appeal (Appeal No. 1) is from those portions which grant defendants’ motion to vacate his notice, dated May 6, 1960, to examine them before trial; which deny his first cross motion to examine them before trial pursuant to an order of the court; and which deny his second cross motion to the extent that it seeks priority over them in the conduct of his examination before trial. As to the second order, plaintiff’s appeal (Appeal No. 2) is from those portions which deny his motion to vacate defendants’ notice, dated July 11, 1960, to examine him before trial; which direct him to submit to such examination on a specified date and to produce his books and records; which deny his motion to vacate in its entirety the defendants’ demand, dated July 11, 1960, for his bill of particulars; and which direct him to serve his bill in response to such demand as modified. Plaintiff’s motion to vacate defendants’ notice of examination was made on the grounds that such notice is improper and that he is entitled to priority in the conduct of his examination of them. The appeals from both orders have been consolidated and heard on one record. Order, dated July 14, 1960, modified as follows: (1) by striking out the first decretal paragraph which grants defendants’ motion to vacate plaintiff’s notice of examination before trial, and which vacates such notice; (2) by substituting therefor a paragraph denying such motion to vacate plaintiff’s notice of examination, and directing that the examination of the defendants pursuant to such notice shall proceed on 10 days’ notice or at such other time as may be mutually fixed by the parties; (3) by striking out the second decretal paragraph which denies plaintiff’s first cross motion for an order to examine defendants before trial; (4) by substituting therefor a paragraph denying such motion as academic since plaintiff is authorized to proceed under his notice of examination; (5) by striking out the seventh or last decretal paragraph which denies plaintiff’s second cross motion insofar as he sought
