delivered the opinion of the Court:
There are four assignments of error. One of them based upon the refusal of the court to grant a new trial need not be. considered. The other three are, in effect—
(1) That it was error to refuse to permit the plaintiff to introduce in evidence the record of the chancery suit of Mackey and others v. Walter and others, for the purpose of showing-that Walter and those acting with him would receive 50 per cent: of the entire estate.
(2) That it was error to exclude from the evidence the records of other chancery suits which would show that Walter had realized upon a large part of the real estate, and had received various amounts out of the same.
(3) That it was error to rule that the plaintiff’s claim was barred by the statute of limitations.
We do not regard any of these assignments of error as well founded in law.
It is sought by the suit to enforce a joint liability; for the joinder of two or more defendants in a suit at common law,, based upon contract, express or implied, can only be upheld upon the theory of joint liability. But there is no evidence whatever in the record before us of any joint liability on the part of the defendants. Between the appellant and the defendant Walter the record fails to disclose even the semblance of a. contract. All that the record shows bearing upon Walter’s liability is a part of the testimony of the plaintiff testifying as a witness on his own behalf, in which he says that in July or-August of 1889, “at the request of Roach he turned all the *329papers over to General Denver, who turned them over to Walter, upon the promise that he was to be paid for his work;” and again, that “he had never gotten any information from Walter, and indeed had never talked with him until after he had surrendered all the papers to General Denver, his cotrustee, and that he afterwards went to see Walter, and Walter said to witness that he ought to be paid when they had the money to pay with.” This further statement from his testimony may also be cited: “Witness also said that Walter had produced the papers prepared by witness in the equity cause of William F. Boogher v. J. L. Weaver, etc., and admitted that he got them from Roach; he also admitted that they had used them, and were still using them. The names in the recitals of the deed drawn hy the attorneys for these trustees, Denver and Walter, are the same as shown by the work of witness.”
How far the statement in this last cited portion of the plaintiff’s testimony has any bearing on the present controversy we are not advised. We are not advised of the nature and purpose of the suit of Boogher v. Weaver, etc., or what bearing that suit had on the present case. The natural inference from its title would be that it was a controversy merely between Boogher and Weaver as to their respective rights under the contract between them, and in no way involved the rights of any of the heirs of Abraham Young. If it did involve more than this it should have been set forth. This court cannot ascertain from this record the contents of that suit. Apparently the papers referred to are papers prepared by the plaintiff for his own suit against Weaver, and it is not apparent why he should have compensation for them from Walter or from anyone else. If we were permitted to indulge in conjecture, we might assume that this suit and the papers used therein, and to which reference is made, were part of the general scheme to recover property claimed by the heirs of Abraham Young, but we cannot determine cases upon conjecture.
The other statements cited are no sufficient evidence on the part of Walter to pay the plaintiff for anything. The witness states that Walter said to him that he (witness) “ought to be *330paid when they had the money to pay withand we may well •assume that this statement was true, and that the plaintiff should be paid. But it does not show that Walter promised to pay, or in any manner bound himself to pay, even if he used the material prepared by the plaintiff. There is no reason why he should not have used that material without liability on his part to anyone, after it had been delivered to him, or to General Denver, by Thomas W. Boach, unless the use was under circumstances from which a promise from himself could have been implied. But there are no such circumstances.
It is true that the plaintiff also testified that “at the request ■of Boach he turned over all the papers to General Denver, who turned them over to Walter, upon the promise that he (plaintiff) was to be paid for his work.” This promise evidently was the promise of Boach, and not the promise either of Denver or of Walter. Indeed it is very evident from all the testimony that there was no promise whatever, so far as this record discloses, from either Denver or Walter, to pay the plaintiff for the material furnished by him. If the testimony implicates anyone in such a promise, it is only the appellee, Thomas W. Boach.
But if we assume that Boach made such a promise, of which, perhaps, no doubt need be entertained, and if we assume also that the circumstances of the case will imply a promise by Walter to pay, yet the plaintiff’s cause of action on either or both promises has long since been barred by the statute of limitations. The services for which compensation is claimed are stated to have been rendered from November 1, 1888, to 1892, and the plaintiff states that he turned over his papers to General Denver in May of 1890. The promise of Boach for payment and the alleged implied promise of AValter were both made at or about the same time. This suit was not instituted until April of 1898, nearly eight years afterwards. Plainly therefore the statute of limitations had intervened to bar the plaintiff’s claim, however well founded it may have been in its origin. There is nothing whatever in the record from which a promise can be implied to keep the claim alive, or to make its payment contingent upon the realization of funds from the estate of Abraham Young. *331As we have seen, there was no promise whatever by Walter, but •only an expression of opinion that the plaintiff ought to be paid whenever there was money wherewith to pay him, which cannot reasonably be construed as a promise; and the promise of Roach was unconditional that the plaintiff should be paid for his work, which of course became barred in three years thereafter.
It is true that in the record there appears a contract in writing between Thomas W. Roach and others, and John L. Weaver, in which the latter was to do the work for which, or for part of which, the appellant was afterwards employed, and was to receive a compensation of 10 per cent of the value of the property to be recovered, which was “to be paid in cash, or as may be otherwise agreed upon, upon the amounts as fast as obtained and disposed of at the value of the property when disposed of,” and that afterwards, for an alleged consideration of $1,000, Boogher and Weaver contracted with each other that Boogher •should do some of the work which Weaver had undertaken, and that he should receive therefor one half of Weaver’s fee. And this contract was ratified by Thomas W. Roach as trustee for himself and the other heirs. But this contract, even if it were not infected with the vice of champerty, as we intimated in the •opinion in the case of Boogher v. Roach, 12 App. D. C. 477, is not the contract upon which the plaintiff sues. That contract was abandoned by Weaver in 1889, and renounced by the plaintiff himself soon afterwards. The-suit is upon a quantum meruit, or an implied contract, resulting from the acceptance and use of the plaintiff’s work, with the understanding that it should be paid for by the defendants at its proper value, not at the percentage stipulated in the Weaver contract.
It is very clear, therefore, that the plaintiff has no good and sufficient ground of action against Walter, and that his claim against Roach is barred by the statute of limitations.
It is argued, however, on behalf of the appellant that while the ruling of the trial court may have been right, as we here hold it was, upon the application of the statute of limitations as the record stood with the testimony excluded which he sought to *332introduce, yet, as that testimony would show when the property had been disposed of, the value of such property, and when the sums realized therefrom by the trustee had been realized, its. exclusion was error. This assumption of what the excluded testimony would show is not supported by anything that appears, in the record. The evidence which was excluded was that of a. certain chancery suit between Franklin H. Mackey and John II. Walter and others, No. 21,842 in the supreme court of the District, and other chancery causes relating to the subject-matter. Of course, it is unnecessary to expend argument upon the-proposition that there was error in the exclusion of “other chancery causes relating to the subject-matter.” Such a statement as to proposed testimony is too vague and indefinite to be-considered by an appellate court.
With-reference to the record of the chancery cause which is more specifically mentioned, that of Mackey v. Walter, the offer was to show by it that Walter and those who were acting with him would receive 50 per cent of the estate, and that Walter had received various amounts from the estate. Assuming that this record was otherwise admissible, yet the offer was of testimony that was wholly irrelevant. The crucial difficulty in the-plaintiff’s case as to Roach is the statute of limitations; and there was no offer here to show anything that would take the case out of the operation of the statute. Under the plaintiff’s-theory of the case, that his claim became payable only when there was money realized from the Young estate which should be applied to its payment, yet there was no offer to show when such money was realized. It is now argued that the record, if admitted, would have shown the time when such sums were realized. But this is mere assumption; nor would it have been, of any consequence when such sums were received, unless the time of receipt was within the period of limitations. The proffer at the trial should have been to show by the record that these sums had been received at a time which would have taken the ease out of the operation of the statute.
But even this proffer would properly have been rejected, for-it would have been as irrelevant as that which was actually *333made. It would have been based on the Weaver-Boach contract •or the Weaver-Boogher-Boach contract of 1889, which is not in this case, and not upon the implied contract upon which the plaintiff has brought his suit. There is not a scintilla of evidence in connection with the latter contract, that it was to be performed only upon the realization of funds by the Young estate. Such may have been the intention perhaps, for an implied contract upon a quantum meruit may be made to depend upon a contingency, as well as an express contract; but there is no proof here of any such agreement or understanding; and in the absence of such agreement or understanding, services rendered under an implied contract are entitled to compensation immediately upon their conclusion.
The case of Hughes v. Eschback, 1 D. C. 66, cited on behalf •of the appellant, is not antagonistic to the views here stated. In that case it was held by the supreme court of the District of Columbia in general term that, under the common counts of a declaration, a contract in writing under seal could be given in evidence. But that is a very different thing from importing into a suit on the common counts one part of a discarded, abandoned, and champertous contract under which no compensation is claimed.
We are of opinion that there was no error in the rulings of the trial court, and that the judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs. And it is so ordered. Affirmed.