In January, 1900, J. W. Rucker died, leaving a will by which he disposed of his entire estate, amounting to about $200,-000. To his wife, Mary J. Rucker, in addition to certain bequests of jewelry and household effects, he bequeathed an annuity of $10,000 per annum, with the payment of which the entire estate was charged. It was provided that this amount should be paid annually, and was to be in lieu of dower or any other interest which Mrs. Rucker might have in the estate, except as provided in the will. This amount was to be derived from the income of the. estate, unless that should prove insufficient, in which event the executors were directed to sell or mortgage so much of the corpus as might be necessary to insure the payment of the annuity. Any excess of net income of the estate over the amount necessary to pay Mrs. Rucker’s annuity was bequeathed to certain residuary legatees, and it was provided that upon the death of Mrs. Rucker the estate should be divided in a described manner among certain relatives of the testator. The executors were clothed with very broad powers, and were relieved of the necessity of obtaining any order of court to sell or mortgage the estate in accordance with the terms of the will. After the death of her husband, Mrs. Rucker brought suit against his *902executors for an account and settlement. Her petition alleged, in substance, that at the time of her marriage, in 1861, neither she nor her husband had any property of any consequence in their own right, but that several years thereafter, in 1870, she inherited from her father $12,000. At that time J. W. Rucker did not own as much property as she. At different times in 1872, and again in 1890, she placed in the hands of her husband sums aggregating this entire amount of $12,000, with the understanding that it was to be used by him for her benefit. With her knowledge and consent, he used this money, in connection with funds of his own, in carrying on his business and trading in real estate, dealing in his own name, but at all times recognizing that he was using her money for her benefit. She claimed that at the time of his death the profits arising from the use of her money amounted to at least one half of his estate. The petition recited the execution of the will to which reference has been made, and alleged that the executors had, in violation of the expressed intention of the testator, arbitrarily fixed the time of payment of her annuity by the month, and that they were indebted to her in a considerable sum thereon. It was also charged that undue influence was exerted upon the testator in the making of his will, but the petition contained no prayer that the instrument be set aside as void. The prayers were, (1) for an accounting with the executors,that the amount left with J. W. Rucker as her trustee, and the times when left, may be ascertained and fixed ; (2) that the profits made thereon by J. W. Rucker while in possession as trustee may be determined; (3) that 'on failure to make satisfactory proofs as to profits, the amount of interest due on the trust fund may be ascertained; (4) for judgment against the executors for the amount to which she is entitled out of the estate of J. W. Rucker, and that this be declared a superior lien to all other claims against the estate; (5) for judgment against the executors for the balance due on her annuity, and interest; (6) for such other relief as may seem proper. The defendants demurred to the petition, the material grounds of the demurrer being that it set up no valid cause of action, legal or equitable; that the claims sought to be enforced were barred by the statute of limitations, and were stale as equitable demands; and that, the suit being opposed to the scheme of the will of J. W. Rucker, the plaintiff must elect whether she will take under the will or against it. This demurrer was sustained and the suit dismissed; whereupon the plaintiff excepted.
*9031. We see no warrant for the contention of the plaintiff that in granting her an annuity it was the intention of the testator that she should receive the first payment of $10,000 immediately after his death, and that subsequent payments thereon should be made annually in advance. It is true that the will expressly states that the annuity is to be paid annually, but nowhere is it inferable that the testator meant thereby to require his executors, regardless of circumstances, to make this payment in a lump sum, and certainly there is no ground for a construction that he intended the payments to be made annually in advance. Very broad powers were given by the will to the executors. They were the friends and business associates of the testator, and a reasonable construction of the instrument leads to the belief that he intended the executors, with a view to conserving the best interests of the estate, to exercise a wise discretion as to the time and amount of the payments, with the single restriction upon them that by the end of each year the full amount of the annuity for that year should be°paid to the widow. Granting that the testator in fact intended to give to his will the effect for which the plaintiff contends, it would still be the duty of the executors to keep in view the main idea of the will, that the annuity should be paid out of the income of the estate; and if the annual payment in advance would defeat this end, a due regard for the purposes of the will and the condition of the estate would require them to disregard such expressed intention and pay the annuity in instalments in such a manner as to best subserve the wishes of the testator and the interests of the estate, always provided that the full amount of $10,000 should be paid to the widow by the end of each year. See Wikle v. Woolley, 81 Ga. 106.
2. Tinder the allegations of the petition, J. W. Rucker occupied towards his wife the position of a continuing and confidential agent for the purpose of investing, managing, and taking care of her funds; dealing in his own name, it is true, but always recognizing that he was dealing largely with his wife’s money, for which he was accountable to her, his duties being, in effect, those of a steward or factor. This being so, this case falls squarely within the ruling made in the case of Teasley v. Bradley, 110 Ga. 497, in which this court decided that the statute of limitations does not begin to run in favor of such a person, and against the one whose funds have been entrusted to his care, until such agent has rendered an account, accompanied by *904an offer to settle, or there has been by the principal a demand for a settlement and a refusal to pay by the agent, or there has been an express repudiation of the agency, or until there has been such a change in the relationship of the parties as would warrant the inference that the confidential agency had ceased. None of these alternatives appears to have been established upon the face of the petition in the present case, prior to the filing of the suit; and we are consequently at a loss to understand how it can be rightfully claimed that the plaintiff’s demand is upon its face barred. The facts in the case of Teasley v. Bradley are so nearly identical with those in the case now before us, that the principle there laid down is directly controlling, and we refer to the exhaustive and learned discussion of Mr. Justice Cobb in the case cited, and to the array of authorities by which his conclusions are enforced, as a complete answer to the contentions of the defendant in error upon this point.
3. There is nothing in the will of J. W. Rucker to indicate that in making the instrument he affected to dispose of property not his own, nor is there anything in the petition of Mrs. Rucker evidencing a claim adverse to the scheme of the will. The main purpose of the testator appears to have been to provide for his widow an annuity of $10,000 per annum during her life, and after her death to dispose of his property in a designated manner. Mrs. Rucker in effect says: “ I am entirely willing that the will shall be given full force; in fact, I claim under the will. The first item of the instrument directs that all the just debts of the testator shall be paid. I have a just claim against the estate, which I seek to enforce. The will also allows me an annuity of $10,000 per annum; and after the payment of the debt referred to, the entire estate is chargeable with the payment of my annuity.” We see nothing in that claim which is necessarily inconsistent with the scheme of the will; nor, in our opinion, is this a case where, under the Civil Code, §4013, the plaintiff must elect whether she will take under or against the will. The section referred to expressly limits its provision to cases “ when a testator has.affected to give property not his own, and has given a benefit to a person to whom that property belongs.” Aside from certain jewelry, household furniture, and his carriage and horses, the testator did not make any specific devise or bequest to his widow, nor does she in her suit pray for the recovery of any specific property. She simply seeks to enforce a pre-existing debt against the estate, which is entirely *905-consistent with the scheme of the will as expressed by the testator, and she is not affected, in the assertion of her rights, by the code section before cited. For a full discussion of the meaning and •effect of that section, see Lamar v. McLaren, 107 Ga. 591. In view -of what has been here laid down, it follows that the court below •erred in sustaining the demurrer to the plaintiff’s petition.
Judgment reversed.
All the Justices concurring, except Little, J., absent.