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“Miami‑Dade: judge vacating sale based only on attorney’s payoff claim?”

Miami‑Dade, judicial foreclosure.

Plaintiff (FNMA) got a final judgment set for sale on June 16, 2026. I won the sale and I’m within the 24‑hour window to pay. After the sale, plaintiff filed an “Objection to Sale and Motion to Vacate Judgment, Enjoin Issuance of Certificate of Sale, Set Aside Foreclosure Sale, Dismiss Action Without Prejudice, Dissolve Lis Pendens and Release Original Documents.”

Their motion says the borrower tendered a full payoff on June 12 and that they filed an “emergency motion” to cancel the sale the day before, but they attached zero proof of payoff (no wire, no receipt, no affidavit). Final judgment does NOT extend redemption beyond what Florida law provides, so redemption ends at certificate of sale.

I’m a third‑party bidder in good faith, about to fund.

Question: In this situation, how likely is it that a Miami‑Dade judge will actually vacate a properly conducted, fully funded sale to a third‑party based only on an unverified attorney representation of payoff, and what key arguments should I raise in an objection to protect my purchase?

Posted one day ago
  
  
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Georgina Flores

Dalton Wade Inc

(305) 302-2419

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Answers


Here's my own AI enhanced answer, note, neither of us are attorneys, but we know alot, and it all hinges on whether or not you pay or walk away, for that decision I would suggest you call a real estate attorney immediately, our own Jeff Harrington+:

It all hinges on whether the payoff was real or just a promise.
Foreclosure courts operate in equity. Under Florida Statute § 45.0315, the borrower's right of redemption is absolute if exercised before the certificate of sale is filed. If the borrower actually wired cleared funds on June 12 to satisfy the judgment, the judge is almost certainly going to vacate the sale. No judge will take a home from a homeowner who completely paid off their debt just because the bank's attorney fumbled the cancellation procedure.

However, if the "payoff" was just a signed short sale contract, a loss mitigation agreement, or a promise to wire funds that hadn't cleared by the auction, the dynamic changes. Without actual funds received prior to the sale, the right of redemption was not exercised, and the judge will be much less forgiving of an unverified motion.

Here is the exact battle plan and the key arguments the bidder needs to raise.

  1. The Prerequisite: Fund the Bid
    Before doing anything else, they must fund the remaining balance.
    If they do not post the final funds with the clerk, they default. They will lose their 5% deposit and completely forfeit their legal standing to object to the bank's motion. You cannot fight for a property you haven't paid for.

  2. Key Arguments for the Objection
    Once funded, the bidder's attorney should file an aggressive objection to the bank's motion, attacking both the lack of evidence and the procedural sloppiness.

Demand Strict Proof of Redemption

An unsworn pleading by the plaintiff's attorney is not evidence. The objection should demand an evidentiary hearing requiring the bank to produce hard proof — a wire transfer receipt or a cleared check dated prior to the June 16 auction. If the bank cannot produce documentary evidence that the funds actually cleared before the gavel dropped, the right of redemption was lost.

Hammer the Procedural Failures

This is a strong procedural argument specific to this venue. Miami-Dade's 11th Judicial Circuit has strict, walk-in procedures (typically handled in Courtroom 3-3) specifically designed for emergency sale cancellations.

The local rules require these motions to be supported by documentary evidence.

The bank's counsel filed a last-minute emergency motion but completely failed to attach proof of the payoff, and failed to walk it in for a hearing to secure an order before the sale.

Their negligence in following established 11th Circuit procedures should not prejudice a bona fide third-party purchaser who relied on the court's active sale docket.

Cite the Unilateral Mistake Doctrine

Under Florida case law (such as Venezia v. Wells Fargo Bank), a foreclosure sale is generally only set aside if there is an irregularity in the conduct of the sale itself. The online auction was conducted properly. The bank's failure to communicate internally, process the payoff in a timely manner, or properly calendar a cancellation hearing is a unilateral mistake by their counsel. Florida courts have repeatedly held that a bank's internal administrative failures are not a valid basis to strip a good-faith bidder of a lawfully won property.

Posted one day ago
  
  
Damon Simons
218 × 5 Administrator

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