In actions for an accounting and dissolution of a partnership (Actions Nos. 1 and 2, each involving a separate partnership) and an action to enforce a lien upon trust funds pursuant to article 3-A of the Lien Law (Action No. 3), the appeals are from three orders of the Supreme Court, Kings County (one in each action), all dated November 18, 1976, each of which (1) denied a cross motion by the respective defendants for consolidation of the three actions and (2) granted plaintiffs’ motion in each action (i) for a priority of the examination before trial of the defendants and (ii) to strike interrogatories served by defendants. Orders modified by (1) deleting the first decretal paragraph of each order and substituting therefor, in each order, a provision granting the cross motion for consolidation of the three actions and (2) deleting the third decretal paragraph of each order and substituting therefor, in each order, a provision denying the branch of plaintiffs’ motion which sought to strike the interrogatories. As so modified, orders affirmed, without costs or disbursements. These three actions present a common question, namely, whether there has been a wrongful diversion of building loan mortgage funds. In the absence of any showing of specific prejudice by the plaintiffs, consolidation should have been ordered in the interest of judicial economy. We note that the mere fact that the third action seeks a different form of relief than do the other two actions does not, in view of their relation to each other, bar consolidation (see Matter of Elias v Artistic Paper Box Co., 29 AD2d 118). "Objections to interrogatories should be specific and general objections are improper” (3A Weinstein-Korn-Miller,
