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§ 8.01-277.1.Objections to personal jurisdiction or defective process; what constitutes waiver.

Chapter 7. Civil Actions; Commencement, Pleadings, and Motions · Article 2. Pleadings Generally · Last amended 2011 · Last verified July 16, 2026

In one sentenceSection 8.01-277.1 lists conduct that waives an objection to personal jurisdiction or defective process — filing a merits pleading, most discovery, seeking a ruling on the merits, or actively participating in the case — and lists conduct that does not waive it, such as agreeing to a scheduling order or a contemporaneous venue transfer motion.

Full Text of § 8.01-277.1

Text sizeJump to: (A) (B)

A. Except as provided in § 8.01-277, a person waives any objection to personal jurisdiction or defective process if he engages in conduct related to adjudicating the merits of the case, including, but not limited to:
1. Filing a demurrer, plea in bar, answer, counterclaim, cross-claim, or third-party claim;
2. Conducting discovery, except as provided in subsection B;
3. Seeking a ruling on the merits of the case; or
4. Actively participating in proceedings related to determining the merits of the case.
B. A person does not waive any objection to personal jurisdiction or defective process if he engages in conduct unrelated to adjudicating the merits of the case, including, but not limited to:
1. Requesting or agreeing to an extension of time;
2. Agreeing to a scheduling order;
3. Conducting discovery authorized by the court related to adjudicating the objection;
4. Observing or attending proceedings in the case;
5. Filing a motion to transfer venue pursuant to § 8.01-264 when such motion is filed contemporaneously with the objection; or
6. Removing the case to federal court.

Plain-English Summary

Section 8.01-277.1 draws a clearer line than the old case-law tests around what activity in a lawsuit gives up an objection to personal jurisdiction or defective process. Subsection A lists conduct related to adjudicating the merits that waives the objection: filing a demurrer, plea in bar, answer, counterclaim, cross-claim, or third-party claim; conducting discovery, except as subsection B allows; seeking a ruling on the merits; or actively participating in proceedings aimed at determining the merits. None of that list is exhaustive, the section frames it as “including, but not limited to.”

Subsection B carves out conduct that does not waive the objection, because it is unrelated to adjudicating the merits: requesting or agreeing to an extension of time, agreeing to a scheduling order, conducting discovery the court authorized specifically to adjudicate the objection itself, observing or attending proceedings, filing a motion to transfer venue under § 8.01-264 when it is filed at the same time as the objection, or removing the case to federal court. The whole section is expressly subject to § 8.01-277, the motion-to-quash and untimely-service provisions get their own rules for what counts as waiver.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does filing an answer in a Virginia case waive an objection to personal jurisdiction?

Yes. Filing a demurrer, plea in bar, answer, counterclaim, cross-claim, or third-party claim is listed as conduct that waives the objection.

Does agreeing to a scheduling order waive an objection to defective process?

No. Section 8.01-277.1(B) lists agreeing to a scheduling order as conduct that does not waive the objection.

Can a defendant file a motion to transfer venue without waiving a jurisdiction objection?

Yes, if the motion to transfer venue under § 8.01-264 is filed contemporaneously with the jurisdiction or process objection.

Does removing a case to federal court waive an objection to personal jurisdiction under Virginia law?

No. Removal to federal court is listed among the conduct that does not waive the objection.

Does conducting any discovery waive the objection?

Not necessarily. Discovery generally waives the objection, but discovery the court authorized specifically related to adjudicating the objection itself does not.

Amendment History

2011, c. 710.

Source & verification. Section text and amendment history are reproduced verbatim from the Code of Virginia, published by the Code of Virginia, Virginia Division of Legislative Automated Systems. Last verified July 16, 2026. · Official source
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