This is an appeal from an order vacating a residential foreclosure sale on the basis of unsworn allegations by a husband that his wife, a co-signatory with him on the foreclosed mortgage, “actively concealed” the proceeding by hiding all notifications under the family sofa. There is no issue as to service of process. Process was served lawfully on the husband’s seventy-eight-year-old mother-in-law, who trustingly handed the summons and complaint over to her daughter. The husband, represented on this appeal by his daughter, asserts this is one of several bizarre acts concerning the family finances that have come to light since the foreclosure sale, which has led the family to conclude the wife is mentally disturbed. The amount of the foreclosure judgment is a mere $26,500, which the husband asserts he is ready to pay in full. The motion to vacate the foreclosure sale was opposed below and continues to be opposed here by a bona fide third-party purchaser at the sale, Chase Home Loans, LLC. We reverse the order of the trial court.
The husband’s motion was brought under Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.540(b), which permits a trial court to relieve a party or a party’s legal representative from a final judgment, decree or order based upon mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect. However, as we often have said, unsworn representations of counsel about factual matters do not have any evidentiary weight in the absence of a stipulation. See Lazcar Int’l, Inc. v. Caraballo,
We have no doubt the trial court’s motivation in reaching its decision was inspired by benevolence and compassion for the family. We also are mindful that in equity jurisdiction there is some play in the joints. John Crescent, Inc.,
Reversed.
