Miller v. Prill
This text of 255 P. 929 (Miller v. Prill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is the second appeal in this case. The essential facts in the case and the former history of the litigation may be found fully set out in the opinion on the former appeal, 138 Wash. 167, 244 Pac. 400. The matter came on again for hearing in the superior court upon the occasion of hearing the final account and report of the administrator and petition for distribution of the three estates combined. At that hearing, William F. Prill, who formerly had intervened in the action, filed objections to the account and also *652 claimed that he was entitled to the insurance money the administrator had collected, as exempt from the payment of all debts. The trial court denied his claim, settled the account and distributed the property. William F. Prill has appealed.
There is nothing of much consequence in these estates except the life insurance money. It is and.has been the real cause of the litigation. When the appellant intervened in the cause, he set up in his complaint the fact of the life insurance policy and alleged that it had been collected by the administrator. He further alleged that he alone, as father and next of Mn of the deceased children who were beneficiaries under the policy, was entitled to the proceeds of it and to the residue of the estate after the payment of expenses. The trial court decided in his favor. The other parties appealed, and in disposing of the matter on that appeal, the judgment of the trial court was reversed and judgment was ordered in favor of Miller against Prill for $3,680 together with interest and costs. It was further decided that “this amount can be collected from any sums that the respondent (William F. Prill) recovers out of the estate of his two deceased children. ’ ’ His petition for a rehearing upon that decision was denied. That decision became the law of this case. The judgment now appealed from adheres to and follows that decision and is affirmed.
The other matters involved in the present appeal relate mostly to expense accounts of the administrator. Within the objections of the appellant, those accounts were necessitated largely by the litigation caused by the appellant. Those accounts altogether, as. well as other small items of expense, together with small amounts of indebtedness objected to by the ap *653 pellant but allowed by tbe trial court, were in our opinion fairly and correctly allowed and approved.
Tbe judgment appealed from is in all respects affirmed.
Mackintosh, C. J., French, Fuhlerton, and Main, JJ., concur.
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255 P. 929, 143 Wash. 651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-prill-wash-1927.