CHASSAN PROFESSIONAL WALLCOVERING, INC., Appellant,
v.
VICTOR FRANKEL, INC., а Florida Corporation, Barry Dorfman and Dana Dorfman, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
*92 Martin H. Colin of Colin & Smith-Adam, Lake Worth, for appellant.
Williаm L. Epstein and Steven Ellison of Broad and Cassel, West Palm Beach, for appellee-Victor Frankel, Inc.
OWEN, WILLIAM C., Jr., Senior Judge.
Appellant, plaintiff below, suffered an adverse final judgment when the trial court, midway through the presentation of appellant's case in this non-jury trial, held as a matter of law that appellant's claim was barred by (1) res judicata, and (2) accord and satisfaction, two of the appellees' affirmative defenses. We reverse.
Appellant entered into a series of contracts to furnish all labor and materials to pаint, in a workmanlike manner, a number of houses being built by Victor Frankel, Inc., a builder. One of those houses was known as the Dorfman house. Appellant sued Frankel (the "initial" suit) for money allegedly owed for painting work performed on a house оther than the Dorfman house. Frankel counterclaimed for improper workmanship on five of the houses, including the Dorfman house.
While that suit was still pending, appellant filed a separate suit (the "second" suit) against Frankel and Dorfmаn, seeking money allegedly owed under the contract to paint the Dorfman house and to foreclose a mechanic's lien against the property. The second suit is the one before us.
Frankel, who at that point in time had not been served with process in the second suit and was unaware it had been filеd, entered into a settlement agreement with appellant on the initial suit. Thе settlement resulted in the entry of an order of dismissal of the initial suit. Thereafter, whеn Frankel and Dorfman were served with process in the second suit, their answer inсluded the affirmative defenses mentioned above.
Both parties agree that in the initial suit, after Frankel filed its counterclaim alleging that appellant had breached his contract to paint the Dorfman house in workmanlike manner, appellant's claim for money due it on the Dorfman painting contract *93 was a compulsory counterclaim in that suit as one "... arising out of the transaction or occurrence that is the subject matter of the opposing party's claim ..." Stone v. Pembroke Lakes Trailer Park, Inc.,
Had the initial suit been terminated by entry of final judgment, the second suit would have been barred under the doctrine of res judicata. Branscomb v. Ploof Truck Lines, Inc.,
The affirmative defense of accord and satisfaction requires рroof of (1) a preexisting dispute as to the nature and extent of an obligation between the parties, (2) their mutual intent to effect settlement of that disрute by a superceding agreement, and (3) the obligor's subsequent tender and the оbligee's acceptance of performance of the new agreement in full satisfaction and discharge of the prior disputed obligation. Republic Funding Corp. v. Juarez,
The judgment, together with the subsequent order awarding attorney's fees, is reversed and this cause remanded for a new trial.
DELL and GUNTHER, JJ., concur.
