This is an action of contract brought by the inembers of a partnership for goods sold to the defendant, The goods were sold under an arrangement, made between the managing member of the firm and the defendant, that one quarter of the price fixed should be applied to a private debt owed by the former to the latter. It is this part which now is sued for. The rest has been paid, except twelve dollars and nineteen cents, as to which the only question is one of tender.*
The case is governed by Homer v. Wood, 11 Cush. 62, which is stronger than this. There the claim of the firm, which one partner had undertaken to set off against his own debt, was preexisting, so that his transaction was only an unauthorized attempt to discharge a valid claim, yet it was held that he could not rescind his own act, and that as he necessarily was one of the plaintiffs, they could not recover. Here the original terms on which the defendant accepted the goods were as we have stated, and the plaintiff who made the contract, at least, cannot recover on á different contract from the one he made. It is true *133that the agreed facts do not expressly state that the defendant acted in good faith, but that is immaterial. Farley v. Lovell, 103 Mass. 387.
P. B. Kiernan, for the plaintiffs.
S. W. Creech, for the defendant, submitted the case on a brief.
The plea of tender is bad. Brickett v. Wallace, 98 Mass. 528.
Judgment affirmed.