Opinion by
Rice, P. J.,David T. Morgan died October 6, 1883, leaving a will in which he gave to Lauretta T. Morgan an annuity of $3,000 payable quarterly, and Nancy A. Morgan an annuity of $600 payable semiannually. After payment of the legacies' and other charges he devised the residue of his estate to Lauretta T. Morgan, Nancy A. Morgan, Jane G. Watson and Annie M. Morgan, giving to Jane G. Watson three sixths and to each of the others one sixth. Nancy A. Morgan died April 6, 1897, and in the following year the orphans’ court, at the instance of her executor, awarded a citation upon the appellant, the executor and trustee under the will of David T. Morgan, to show cause why he should not pay the sum of $65.00, it being alleged by the petitioner that the balance of annuity due Nancy A. Morgan at her death was $150, of which $85.00 had been paid to the petitioner, and it being alleged by the respondent that the $85.00 payment was all that was due. The court below found in favor of the petitioner’s contention and from its decree this appeal was taken.
Although under' the will the annuity was payable semiannually, it appears that beginning in 1886, it was actually paid in quarterly instalments of $150 each on or about the 15th day of February, May, August and November in each year. The starting point of this computation was November 16,1885, and assuming for a moment that the annuity had been paid, up to that date, it is apparent that the amount due at the death of the annuitant was only $85.00, as the appellant claims. The question of fact upon which the case turns is whether or not the annuity accruing between October 6,1883, the date of the death of the testator, and November 16, 1885, was paid. This question arises in this way. To No. 39, February term, 1886, the trustee filed an account from which we make the following extract :
*2061885.
Nov. 16 Net income 2 years $7,940.02
Accountant claims credit for distribution of income as follows :*
Lauretta T. Morgan, under the will, $8,000 per annum for 2 years $6,000.00
Less amount assigned to Jane G. Watson, 2,000.00
Amount payable to L. T. Morgan 4,000.00
Jane G. Watson assigned to her from Lauretta T. Morgan $1,000 per annum $2,000.00
Nancy Morgan, under the will, $600 per annum for 2 years $1,200.00 7,200.00
Bal. of income after paying $7,200, above, $740.02
Accountant claims further credit for distribution of income as follows, said $740.02 being divided into six shares and paid out as follows, under the will:
1885.
Nov. 16. Lauretta T. Morgan, 1/6 $123.34
Jane G. Watson, 8/6 370.00
Nancy Morgan, 1/6 123.34
Annie Morgan, 1/6 123.34
The true interpretation of this account is, that the sum of $7,940.02 was the net revenue of the estate from the date of the death of the testator, namely October 6, 1883, up to the date of the accounting, namely November 16,1885, and this is in accordance with the uncontradicted parol testimony of the draftsman of the account which we quote: “ I started with the sum of $7,940.02 to distribute in accordance with the terms of the will; out of that amount Mrs. Nancy Morgan was entitled to receive $1,265 as annuity, and the sum of $58.34, her share of the surplus; these two amounts make $1,323.34. In stating the account I set off to her as annuity, $1,200, and as surplus $123.34, the total being the same as the first mentioned figure. I, therefore, saw to it that Mrs. Nancy Mórgan received her annuity at the rate of $50.00 per month from the death of Mr. Morgan up to November 16, 1885, and further that she obtained one sixth of the surplus revenue. From and *207after that date, November 16, 1885, Mrs. Nancy Morgan and her representatives have received from this estate an annuity of $600 per annum, together with a share in the surplus.” Such being the case, the proper mode of determining the amount of the surplus for distribution was to deduct the amount of the annuities that had accrued up to that date. If this course had been pursued in stating the account, Nancy A. Morgan would have received precisely the same amount, but it would have been subdivided differently. That is to say, instead of $1,200 income and $123.34 surplus, total $1,323.23, she would have received $1,265 income for two years and thirty-nine days, and $58.34 surplus, total $1,323.34. As already pointed out, the course of dealing between her and the trustee shows almost conclusively that they regarded the annuity as paid up to November 16, 1885, for during all the subsequent years they treated November 16, instead of October 6, the anniversary of the death of the testator, as the date from which to compute the annuity. This significant fact, taken in connection with the uncontradieted evidence explanatory of the mistake in stating the account, conclusively repels any possible inference that the annuity for the thirty-nine days between the date of the testator’s death and November 15, 1883, was not paid. The mistake in calling this part of the total sum of $1,323.34, surplus instead of annuity,, did the annuitant no harm, and no equity that we can discover precludes the appellant from showing it.
The decree is reversed and the petition dismissed at the costs of the appellee. .