§ 8.01-381.What jury may carry out.
Chapter 13. Certain Incidents of Trial · Last amended 1992 · Last verified July 16, 2026
Full Text of § 8.01-381
Plain-English Summary
Once a jury retires to deliberate, what goes with it into the jury room matters. Section 8.01-381 draws a clean line: pleadings never go, exhibits can. The pleadings — the formal papers stating claims and defenses — stay behind because they are arguments about the case, not evidence of it, and letting the jury pore back over one side’s phrasing could tilt deliberations toward advocacy rather than fact-finding.
Exhibits are different. With the court’s leave, physical and documentary exhibits admitted at trial can go with the jury, and the section goes further than just permitting it. If any party asks, the court has to instruct the jury that it may request exhibits for use during deliberations, and whatever exhibits the jury asks for get sent to the jury room, or otherwise made available, so the jury is not stuck trying to remember details of evidence it already saw once at trial.
The practical effect is to keep deliberations anchored in the evidence rather than the pleadings, while making sure jurors know they can ask for the exhibits they need instead of guessing whether that is allowed.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can the jury take the pleadings with it during deliberations?
No. No pleadings may be carried from the bar by the jury.
Can the jury take exhibits into deliberations?
Yes, exhibits may be carried by the jury with leave of court.
Does the jury automatically know it can request exhibits during deliberations?
Only if instructed — upon request of any party, the court shall instruct the jury that it may request exhibits for use during deliberations.
What happens once the jury requests an exhibit?
Exhibits requested by the jury shall be sent to the jury room or otherwise made available to the jury.
Who can trigger the instruction about requesting exhibits?
Any party can request that the court give the jury this instruction.
Amendment History
Code 1950, § 8-221; 1977, c. 617; 1992, c. 495.