State Foreclosure Information
Florida
When you develop a definite plan of action with well-timed, well-informed steps, you can stop
the foreclosure process and save your home. We have outlined the foreclosure process for the
state of Florida.
The Process
In Florida, mortgages must be foreclosed by filing a lawsuit in court. As in any lawsuit,
the borrower must be served with notice of the lawsuit and must be given an opportunity
to appear and defend his or her rights. The lender will try to show that the borrower is
in default, and that foreclosure is therefore necessary under Florida equity law. Florida
is unusual in that the legislature has passed very few statutes regulating foreclosures.
Most of the law on the subject of foreclosures in Florida is found scattered in dozens of
cases. The basic statute, chapter 702.01 reads as follows:
All mortgages shall be foreclosed in equity. In a mortgage foreclosure
action, the court shall sever for separate trial all counterclaims against the foreclosing
mortgage. The foreclosure claim shall, if tried, be tried by the court without a jury.
Counterclaims by a borrower may be tried by a jury, but they must be tried
separately from the main foreclosure lawsuit.
In Florida because the lawsuit to foreclose on a borrower is a suit in equity,
it is impossible to obtain an injunction to stop what is, in essence, a court ordered sale.
In addition, the court can order the sale at a low price. A sale can be set aside if there
is an error in the procedure to foreclose; however, it cannot be set aside due to the low
sale price. The court order commanding foreclosure will specify how the foreclosure must
take place, and the foreclosure must take place on those terms.
After the sale takes place, the sale terms must be confirmed by the court
that ordered the sale. If the terms of the sale order are met, title in the buyer’s name
can become complete by filing a certificate of title. At the discretion of the court, junior
lien holders can redeem the property, up to the time of the confirmation of the sale. The
equity of redemption is cut off when the sale is confirmed, but it exists prior to that
time, which means the borrower can save the property from foreclosure by coming up with
the money before confirmation.
Deficiency
A separate action for a deficiency must be filed within four years after
the foreclosure sale.
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