Skip to Content
Menu Toggle
What Happens If You Miss the Deadline to Respond to a Lawsuit

Media Contacts

Charles B. Jimerson
Chief Executive Officer

Jimerson Birr welcomes inquiries from the media and do our best to respond to deadlines. If you are interested in speaking to a Jimerson Birr lawyer or want general information about the firm, our practice areas, lawyers, publications, or events, please contact us via email or telephone for assistance at (904) 389-0050.

subscribe to legal alerts

subscribe to our blogs

sign up now

What Happens If You Miss the Deadline to Respond to a Lawsuit

June 2, 2026 Professional Services Industry Legal Blog

Reading Time: 13 minutes


A summons is not a suggestion. Once your business has been served with a complaint, a hard clock starts running, and that clock does not care about your travel schedule, your insurance adjuster’s email backlog, or the fact that the allegations are nonsense. Miss the deadline to respond, and the plaintiff can take control of the case before you ever get to defend it.

This article explains exactly what happens when a Florida business misses its answer deadline, what it costs, and what your options look like if you are already past the date. If you are still inside the window, our companion piece on how to respond to a lawsuit filed against your business walks through the response itself.

Key Takeaways

The following summary captures the principles every Florida business owner should understand about missing a litigation response deadline:

  1. In Florida state court, a defendant generally has 20 days to respond after service of process under Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.140.
  2. In federal court, the response window is typically 21 days under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12.
  3. Failure to meet the applicable deadline permits the plaintiff to seek a clerk’s default under Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.500 or Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 55.
  4. Once a default is entered, every well-pleaded allegation of liability in the complaint is treated as admitted.
  5. A resulting default judgment is enforceable through wage garnishment, bank levies, and judgment liens against the defendant’s business assets.
  6. Relief from a default remains available in defined circumstances, but it requires prompt action and a showing of specific elements under Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.540 or Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60.

The discussion that follows examines each of these points in greater detail.

How the Response Deadline Actually Works

When your business is served, the summons gives you a fixed number of days to file a response. In Florida state court, that window is 20 days from the date of service. In federal court, it is generally 21 days. Service rules for Florida state actions are codified in Chapter 48 of the Florida Statutes, with personal service requirements detailed in Section 48.031.

A few common misunderstandings that trip up business owners:

  • Weekends and holidays count. The day count includes them, with limited exceptions for the last day falling on a weekend or holiday.
  • The clock starts at service, not at receipt of the email forward. If your registered agent is served on a Monday and forwards the documents to you on Wednesday, you still lost two days.
  • Waiting on the insurer does not stop the clock. Insurance notice and the answer deadline are independent obligations. Your defense lawyer can appear and protect the deadline while coverage is being sorted.
  • A motion can substitute for an answer. A timely motion to dismiss, motion for more definite statement, or motion to strike under Rule 1.140 tolls the time to answer, but the motion itself still has to be filed within the original window.

If you only learned about the lawsuit through a customer, a vendor, or an online docket search, you may have a service problem worth raising as a defense. We cover that in detail in “You’re Being Sued and Didn’t Know It.”

What Actually Happens When You Miss the Deadline

Missing the deadline does not automatically produce a default judgment the next morning. It opens the door to one. The process typically unfolds in three steps.

Step One: The Clerk’s Default

If you have failed to file or serve any paper in the action, the plaintiff can ask the clerk of court to enter a default. Under Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.500(a), the clerk is required to enter the default once the plaintiff files the proper paperwork. The federal equivalent appears in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 55(a).

A clerk’s default does two important things at once:

  • It establishes that you are in default for failing to plead or otherwise defend.
  • It treats every well-pleaded allegation of liability in the complaint as admitted.

You are not yet on the hook for a specific dollar amount, but the question of whether you are liable is no longer open.

Step Two: The Default Judgment

After the clerk’s default is entered, the plaintiff can move for a default final judgment. If the case involves a fixed or easily calculable amount (an unpaid invoice, a promissory note, a contract with a stated price), the clerk can sometimes enter the judgment directly under Rule 1.500(d) or Federal Rule 55(b)(1). For unliquidated damages, the court will set a hearing where the plaintiff puts on evidence of how much the business should pay.

By the time a default judgment is entered, you have lost the right to contest liability, and you are fighting only over the number of zeros.

Step Three: Collection

A default judgment is not theoretical. It is enforceable through the same tools as any other Florida money judgment. Common consequences include:

In other words, missing a 20-day deadline can produce a public judgment that follows your business for years and complicates everything from financing to vendor onboarding.

Why Defaults Are Worse Than Most Owners Expect

A few practical consequences are easy to underestimate until you are inside one.

The plaintiff stops negotiating reasonably. Once they have a default, the leverage flips. The plaintiff is now negotiating from the position of “we won,” and any discount you ask for comes from a number that already includes statutory interest and, often, attorneys’ fees.

Affirmative defenses are gone. Defenses like statute of limitations, accord and satisfaction, release, waiver, comparative fault, and failure to mitigate must generally be raised in the answer. A default forfeits all of them.

Insurance coverage may be jeopardized. Most professional liability policies require timely notice and cooperation with the carrier’s defense. A default entered before the carrier is notified can give the insurer grounds to deny coverage, leaving the business to pay out of pocket.

Counterclaims become harder. If the plaintiff actually owes you money, breached its own obligations, or made misrepresentations of its own, you may have lost a key procedural opportunity to bring those claims efficiently in the same action. Categories like negligent misrepresentation and contractual indemnity often anchor those counterclaims.

The judgment is public. Default judgments appear in court dockets, credit reports, due diligence searches, and (for regulated industries) licensing records. They surface in M&A diligence, lender underwriting, and customer procurement reviews for years afterward.

Can a Default Be Set Aside?

Yes, sometimes. But the standard is specific, and the window is short.

Setting Aside a Clerk’s Default in Florida State Court

Before a default judgment has been entered, the defaulted party can move to set the clerk’s default aside under Rule 1.500(d). Florida courts apply a long-standing three-part test:

  1. Excusable neglect for the failure to respond.
  2. A meritorious defense that, if proven, would change the outcome.
  3. Due diligence in moving promptly to set the default aside once the defendant learned of it.

Florida’s appellate courts have explained that the policy of the state strongly favors resolving cases on the merits rather than on procedural defaults. The leading discussion appears in North Shore Hospital, Inc. v. Barber, 143 So. 2d 849 (Fla. 1962), and the three-part standard has been applied countless times since, including in cases such as Halpern v. Houser, 949 So. 2d 1155 (Fla. 4th DCA 2007).

Setting Aside a Default Judgment in Florida State Court

Once a default judgment has been entered, the standard is harder. The motion is made under Rule 1.540(b), which permits relief for reasons including:

  • Mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect.
  • Newly discovered evidence.
  • Fraud, misrepresentation, or other misconduct of an adverse party.
  • The judgment is void.
  • The judgment has been satisfied, or it is no longer equitable to enforce it.

Motions under most subsections must be filed within a reasonable time, and motions based on mistake, inadvertence, or excusable neglect must be filed within one year of the judgment.

Setting Aside a Default or Default Judgment in Federal Court

In federal court, the framework is parallel but distinct. Defaults are set aside under Federal Rule 55(c) for “good cause.” Final default judgments are set aside under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b), which sets out grounds substantially similar to Florida’s Rule 1.540. The Eleventh Circuit has emphasized that defaults are not favored and that doubts should be resolved in favor of resolving cases on the merits, as discussed in Florida Physician’s Insurance Co. v. Ehlers, 8 F.3d 780 (11th Cir. 1993).

What “Excusable Neglect” Is Not

Florida courts have rejected a long list of excuses over the years, including:

  • “We were busy” or “the file got buried.”
  • “I assumed our insurance carrier would handle it.”
  • “The summons was delivered to a former employee.”
  • “I thought we had more time.”
  • “I called the plaintiff, and we were trying to work it out.”

What courts usually do credit:

  • Genuine misdirection of papers within a sophisticated office where systems were reasonably designed but failed in a specific, demonstrable way.
  • Service problems where the defendant did not actually receive the summons through no fault of its own.
  • Clerical errors by counsel that were promptly caught and addressed.
  • Reliance, supported by documentation, on the plaintiff’s express agreement to extend time.

The thread running through every successful set-aside motion is the same: prompt action, candid explanation, and a real defense.

A Realistic Timeline If You Have Already Missed the Deadline

If your business has missed the response deadline, the next few days matter more than the prior few. Here is a practical sequence we run with clients in that position.

Day One

  • Pull the docket. Determine whether the plaintiff has already moved for a clerk’s default and whether a hearing has been set on damages.
  • Calendar every upcoming court date and confirm the operative case management order, if any.
  • Notify every potentially applicable insurance carrier in writing, even if late notice is a concern. The conversation about coverage is harder when notice is even later.
  • Issue an internal litigation hold if one is not already in place. Spoliation problems compound default problems quickly.

Days Two and Three

  • Engage experienced defense counsel. If you already have outside counsel, get them on a call with a litigation partner the same day.
  • Begin drafting the motion to vacate the default, with affidavits supporting excusable neglect and outlining a meritorious defense.
  • Locate documents that demonstrate when service occurred, who received it, and what happened next inside the company.

The First Two Weeks

  • File the motion to vacate. Filing within days of learning about the default is the single best fact a defendant can offer the court.
  • If the clerk has not yet entered a default and the plaintiff has not moved for one, file the response in proper form immediately. A late answer that beats the motion for default sometimes moots the issue.
  • If a default judgment has been entered and the plaintiff has begun collection efforts, evaluate whether to seek a stay of execution alongside the motion to vacate.

The Second 30 Days

How To Make Sure This Never Happens In The First Place

Most missed deadlines are not the product of bad lawyering. They are the product of weak intake systems inside the business. A handful of straightforward practices eliminate the risk almost entirely:

  • Use a reliable registered agent and confirm that the address on file with the Florida Division of Corporations is current. Service of process on a stale address creates the worst kind of default, the one entered before anyone at the business knew the case existed.
  • Build a written intake protocol for legal papers. Every employee should know who at the company receives summonses, complaints, subpoenas, demand letters, and regulatory notices, and what to do with them the same day.
  • Maintain a current list of insurance carriers and notice addresses. A claims-made policy depends on prompt written notice. Late notice is its own preventable disaster.
  • Pre-engage defense counsel. Businesses that already have a relationship with a general counsel for small and growing businesses move faster when a complaint lands because the lawyer knows the company, its contracts, and its risk profile.
  • Train senior staff on the difference between a demand letter and a lawsuit. The first does not start the clock. The second does.

Owners and executives of professional services firms face heightened exposure because the legal standard of care is built into the engagement. The same operational discipline that protects against professional liability matters and legal malpractice claims also protects against missed answer deadlines.

How Jimerson Birr Helps Businesses In This Situation

Our Lawsuit Defense team represents small and mid-sized businesses across Florida and Georgia in commercial disputes, employment claims, class actions, regulatory matters, and industry-specific litigation. We routinely handle two kinds of default scenarios:

  • Defendants who realize the deadline is about to lapse. Here, the priority is filing a timely, properly drafted response and protecting the carrier relationship.
  • Defendants who learn of a default or default judgment after the fact. Here, the priority is moving for relief promptly and assembling the affidavits, documents, and meritorious-defense showing that Florida and federal courts expect.

We also serve as outside general counsel for small and growing businesses across a wide range of industries, which means we are often involved long before a complaint is ever filed. That continuity is what makes the difference between a missed deadline that quietly disappears and one that becomes a years-long collection fight. Our team of experienced trial lawyers handles the rare case in which a default cannot be vacated, and the question becomes how to minimize the damages award itself.
If your business has missed a response deadline or you have a strong sense that one is about to be missed, the right time to call is now. Contact Jimerson Birr at 904-389-0050 to schedule a confidential consultation with a lawsuit defense attorney and put a real plan in motion.

we’re here to help

Contact Us

CONTACT US
Jimerson Birr