§ 8.01-15.2.Servicemembers Civil Relief Act; default judgment; appointment of counsel.
Chapter 2. Parties · Article 2. Special Provisions · Last amended 2019 · Last verified July 16, 2026
Full Text of § 8.01-15.2
Plain-English Summary
Subsection A protects defendants who may be away on military duty and unaware of a pending suit against them. Notwithstanding § 8.01-428, a Virginia court cannot enter a default judgment against a nonappearing defendant until the plaintiff files an affidavit either stating whether the defendant is in military service and showing the facts supporting that statement, or stating that the plaintiff is unable to determine the defendant’s military status. The Supreme Court, subject to § 8.01-3, prescribes the affidavit’s form, though the requirement can also be satisfied by a written statement, declaration, verification, or certificate subscribed and certified or declared true under penalty of perjury. A default judgment entered in violation of the federal Servicemembers Civil Relief Act may be set aside as the Act provides, but failure to file the affidavit is not, by itself, grounds to set aside an otherwise valid default judgment against a defendant who was not a servicemember at the time of service or entry of default.
Subsections B through D govern counsel appointed to represent a servicemember defendant under the federal Act. The court may assess reasonable attorney fees and costs against any party as it deems appropriate — including against a party who violated the Act — directing in its order which party pays, though fees cannot be assessed against the Commonwealth unless it is the party that obtained the judgment, and any fee award is capped at $125 unless the court finds a higher amount appropriate. Appointed counsel may issue a subpoena duces tecum for discoverable electronic and print files, records, documents, and memoranda bearing on the transactional basis for the suit, and if the subpoena requests it, the plaintiff must also turn over documents or information about the servicemember’s location.
The final subsection keeps the appointment independent: counsel appointed under the Act cannot be selected by the plaintiff or have any affiliation with the plaintiff, though the plaintiff’s own counsel may, if the court asks, supply a list of attorneys familiar with the Act’s requirements.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a Virginia court enter a default judgment without checking whether the defendant is in military service?
No. Section 8.01-15.2(A) requires the plaintiff to file an affidavit addressing the defendant’s military status, or stating an inability to determine it, before a default judgment can be entered against a nonappearing defendant.
What if the plaintiff cannot determine whether the defendant is a servicemember at all?
Section 8.01-15.2(A) allows the affidavit to state that the plaintiff is unable to determine the defendant’s military service status, rather than requiring a definitive answer.
Is a default judgment automatically invalid if the required affidavit was never filed?
Not necessarily. Section 8.01-15.2(A) says the failure to file an affidavit is not grounds to set aside an otherwise valid default judgment against a defendant who was not, at the relevant time, a servicemember.
Who pays for counsel appointed to represent a servicemember defendant?
Section 8.01-15.2(B) lets the court assess reasonable attorney fees and costs against any party it deems appropriate, capped at $125 unless the court finds a higher amount warranted, though the Commonwealth is not assessed fees unless it obtained the judgment.
Can the plaintiff choose which attorney is appointed to represent the servicemember?
No. Section 8.01-15.2(D) bars the plaintiff from selecting appointed counsel or having any affiliation with them, though the plaintiff’s counsel may provide a list of attorneys familiar with the Act if the court requests one.
Amendment History
2004, c. 381; 2005, c. 909; 2016, c. 643; 2019, c. 454.