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How Florida Judicial Foreclosure Works — Applied to St. Augustine
Florida is one of the 22 states that requires judicial foreclosure. Every St. Augustine mortgage foreclosure must run through the Richard O. Watson Judicial Center civil division at 4010 Lewis Speedway. The process cannot proceed through a non-judicial private sale the way Texas, Georgia, or Arizona foreclosures do. The judicial requirement is your protection. It gives you a defined timeline, defined notice requirements, and a defined window during which you can sell the property and protect your equity.
F.S. § 702.01 — Equity. All Florida mortgages must be foreclosed in equity. The foreclosure claim is tried to the court without a jury. Any counterclaim against the foreclosing mortgagee must be severed for separate trial. Florida foreclosure is a judicial-equity proceeding, not a self-help remedy.
F.S. § 702.015 — Elements of Complaint. The foreclosure complaint must be verified, must include a certification that the plaintiff is in possession of the original mortgage note, and (if the note has been lost) must include a lost-note affidavit with a clear chain of all endorsements, transfers, or assignments.
F.S. § 702.10 — Order to Show Cause. A lienholder may request an order to show cause for the entry of final judgment in a foreclosure action. The court reviews the request and, if the complaint complies with F.S. § 702.015 and alleges a cause of action, issues an order to the defendants to show cause why a final judgment of foreclosure should not be entered. The hearing date cannot occur sooner than 20 days after service of the order or 45 days after service of the initial complaint.
F.S. § 702.065 — Final Judgment in Uncontested Proceedings. In uncontested mortgage foreclosure proceedings where the mortgagee waives the right to recoup any deficiency judgment, the court must enter final judgment within 90 days from the date of the close of pleadings. This 90-day deadline is the practical ceiling on Florida uncontested foreclosure timing.
F.S. § 45.031 — Public Auction by Clerk of Court. After final judgment of foreclosure, the property is sold at public auction by the St. Johns County Clerk of Circuit Court (Brandon J. Patty). St. Johns County foreclosure auctions are conducted online. The highest bidder receives a certificate of title once the bid is paid in full. The certificate of title is the moment when your ownership rights formally terminate. Until that moment, you retain the right to sell the property to anyone and pay off the mortgage at closing.
The St. Augustine Foreclosure Timeline Step by Step
Step 1 — Default and Acceleration. After approximately three to four missed monthly mortgage payments, the lender typically issues a formal acceleration notice declaring the entire loan balance due.
Step 2 — Foreclosure Complaint Filed. The lender files the foreclosure complaint with the Richard O. Watson Judicial Center civil division naming you (and any junior lien holders, judgment creditors, and other interested parties) as defendants. You receive formal service of the complaint and summons. You have 20 days to file an answer.
Step 3 — Mediation or Loss Mitigation Window. Federal mortgage servicing laws prohibit dual tracking. During this window — typically 60 to 120 days after the complaint is filed — you can negotiate a loan modification, a forbearance plan, or a short sale with the lender's approval. For VA-loan borrowers (a meaningful portion of Northeast Florida mortgages given the regional veteran-resident density), the VA's foreclosure-prevention resources provide additional options.
Step 4 — Order to Show Cause or Summary Judgment. If no modification is reached, the lender moves under F.S. § 702.10 or for summary judgment. The court reviews the case and enters a final judgment of foreclosure. This is typically 4 to 9 months after the complaint was filed.
Step 5 — Public Auction Under F.S. § 45.031. The St. Johns County Clerk of Circuit Court conducts the public auction online. The sale typically happens 8 to 14 months after the original complaint was filed.
Step 6 — Certificate of Title and Writ of Possession. Once the certificate of title issues, your ownership terminates. The lender (typically the high bidder) can file a motion for writ of possession. The St. Johns County Sheriff executes the writ if you have not voluntarily vacated.
The Hardest Truth - and Why It Should Change How You Act
This is the single most important sentence on this page. In Tennessee, once a non-judicial trustee sale completes, you generally cannot get the home back. The Tennessee Code provides a two-year redemption right in §§ 66-8-101 through 66-8-103, but standard deeds of trust nearly always expressly waive that right. Pull out your deed of trust and look - most owners' redemption rights are gone before the sale ever happens.
Tennessee also no longer recognizes 'wrongful foreclosure' as a standalone legal claim, following a Tennessee Supreme Court ruling. That makes the path to undoing a completed sale even narrower than in many states. The practical implication is straightforward: every option you have lives on this side of the sale date. After it, almost none of them remain. That is why a clear-eyed look at your options - including selling to a cash buyer who can close before the sale - needs to happen now, not after.
Why the Pre-Auction Window Matters Most
During the 8-to-14-month window between the formal complaint and the certificate of title, you retain full ownership of the property. You can sell the property to anyone — including a cash buyer who pays off the mortgage at closing as part of the transaction. The cash sale eliminates the foreclosure auction entirely.
Sellers who close a cash sale during this window almost always net more equity than the eventual foreclosure auction would have produced. St. Johns County foreclosure auctions typically produce final sale prices in the range of 60 to 75 percent of the property's appraised value because the auction buyer takes the property without inspection, without title insurance, and with various redemption-period and writ-of-possession risks. A direct cash sale to Jax during the pre-auction window prices the property at the as-is fair market value minus standard buyer costs — almost always a better economic outcome for the seller. For VA-loan borrowers specifically, avoiding the foreclosure auction also preserves potential VA-loan eligibility for future home purchases.
How a Cash Sale Coordinates with the Mortgage Payoff
When Jax buys a St. Augustine property with an active foreclosure case and a mortgage balance, the mortgage payoff is coordinated at closing through the licensed Florida title company. The cash offer accounts for the mortgage balance — the offer amount minus the mortgage payoff (plus any back-tax payoff, HOA lien, or other lien) equals the equity that wires to your account at closing. No separate seller payment to the lender is required.
Once the closing funds and the deed is recorded with the St. Johns County Clerk of Circuit Court, the foreclosure case becomes moot — the lender's lien is satisfied, and the foreclosure complaint is dismissed. You walk away with your equity in your account, the foreclosure case closed, and the credit-impact mitigated relative to a completed foreclosure auction.
Frequently Asked Questions
Get a Written Offer Before the Public Auction
If a foreclosure complaint has been filed (or is about to be filed) against your St. Augustine property under F.S. Chapter 702, you have a defined window before the public auction under F.S. § 45.031. A written cash offer this week — with the mortgage payoff coordinated at closing — converts an uncertain timeline into a definite dollar amount. Local Jacksonville operator. BBB accredited. 10 years. 100+ closed Northeast Florida deals. Close as fast as 7 days from offer acceptance, or on the timeline that works for your situation.
Call Marko directly at (904) 888-7606 • marko@jaxhomebuyers.com
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