The plaintiff was a dealer in flour. The defendant Henri Rousseau was a baker, who made purchases of flour from the plaintiff from time to time upon an open account. He made payments irregularly, which were credited on this account; and also, at times, gave notes to the plaintiff, but no credit was given on the account until the notes were paid. On April 18, 1921, the account showed a balance claim against the defendant Henri Rousseau of *561$937. On that day Henri Rousseau made and delivered to the plaintiff, as payee, a promissory note indorsed by the defendant Omer Rousseau. This note, which is the note described in the declaration, is a promise to pay to the order of Louis Snell $500. When due the note was duly and properly presented for payment, and the indorser was duly and properly notified. On April 20, 1921, the defendant Henri Rousseau purchased one hundred barrels of flour for $1,200, the account with the last purchase showing an indebtedness of $2,137. Between April 20, 1921, and August 6, 1921, he made payments of $820, including $437 “credited upon the account as ‘paid by note.’” On August 6, 1921, the plaintiff transferred the account to the Rousseau Bating Company, a corporation in which the defendant was interested and for which the flour was purchased. Between August 6, 1921, and October 22, 1921, the corporation made payments on the account amounting to $473.08, leaving a balance unpaid of $843.90. Since October 22, 1921, no further payments on the account have been made.
At the hearing without a jury in the Superior Court, the judge “upon all the evidence,” found “that the plaintiff did not intend to accept the note [in suit] in payment of an open account or any part of it, and that there was no understanding or agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant or the Rousseau Bating Company as to the application of the payments made from time to time, except that when made, they should be applied to the running account.” The judge ruled, subject to exception by the plaintiff, “that where neither the debtor nor the creditor makes a special appropriation of payments at the time when they are made, but they are entered as general credits on the general account, the creditor cannot make a special application of them thereafter to any special part of the account.”
The rule as to application of payments in the case of running accounts with many debits and credits is stated by Wells, J., in Crompton v. Pratt, 105 Mass. 255, at 257, as follows: “The general rule of law, in case of payments *562by a debtor to one who is his creditor upon distinct transactions, or for distinct amounts, when neither party makes an appropriation at the time, is that the payments are applied by law to the liabilities of earliest date”; and it was further decided in Worthley v. Emerson, 116 Mass. 374, that such payments are to be applied to the earlier items of the account although for some of these the creditor has a lien and has none for others. See also Swett v. Boyce, 134 Mass. 381, 387; and Cushman v. Snow, 186 Mass. 169. This application is made by the law because it is most just and equitable between the parties; and, being in accordance with the ordinary and usual course of business dealing, is presumed to be the intentions of the parties. In United States v. Kirkpatrick, 9 Wheat. 720, 737, it is said by Story, J.: “It is certainly too late for either party to claim a right to make an appropriation, after the controversy has arisen, and a fortiori at the time of the trial.” American Woolen Co. v. Maaget, 86 Conn. 234, 245. Stone Co. v. Rich, Ann. Cas. 1914 C, 244.
Applying the law thus stated to the findings of fact, the further fact appears that since the date of the note, April 18, 1921, payments on the open account have been made in excess of the indebtedness of the defendant Henri Rousseau on that date. It results that the indebtedness for which the plaintiff held the note in pledge or as collateral security has been extinguished and discharged, and it follows that the payment of the account which the note secured discharged the obligation of the maker of the note to the payee of the note, and revested in him all title to and beneficial interest in the pledged or collateral security.
Upon the facts, the requested rulings numbered 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6, were inapplicable to the questions of fact in issue, and were rightly refused. The conversation between the plaintiff and defendant in the court house on the morning of the trial, to the effect that the defendant asked the plaintiff “whether or not they could settle before they went into court,” and the plaintiff replied: “I will see my lawyer about it”; and the defendant stated “that he couldn’t pay the five hundred at one time but would be willing to *563pay fifty dollars a week,” and the plaintiff said “that he couldn’t do a thing until he had seen his attorney,” was properly refused as evidence, on the ground that it was not an admission of liability but was in its nature an offer of compromise seeking delay and change in the terms of the obligations of the note. Strauss v. Skurnik, 227 Mass. 173.
The finding for the defendant was right.
Exceptions overruled.