§ 8.01-384.1:1.Interpreters for non-English-speaking persons in civil cases.
Chapter 13. Certain Incidents of Trial · Last amended 2003 · Last verified July 16, 2026
Full Text of § 8.01-384.1:1
Plain-English Summary
Section 8.01-384.1:1 addresses a different language barrier than its companion section — not deafness or hearing loss, but a party or witness who does not speak English. In any civil trial, hearing, or other proceeding, the judge may appoint an interpreter: a qualified English speaker fluent in that person’s language. If the non-English-speaking person would rather choose their own interpreter, they can, as long as the court approves that interpreter as competent.
Money for the interpreter comes with a structure attached. To the extent funds are appropriated for it, the court fixes compensation according to guidelines the Judicial Council of Virginia sets, and it gets paid from the state treasury’s general fund as part of the expense of trial. The court also has discretion to assess that amount against either party as a cost of the case, and if it is collected, the money goes back to the Commonwealth rather than to the interpreter directly.
The section protects something beyond logistics, too: when a person communicates through an interpreter under circumstances where the communication itself would be privileged and the parties could not be forced to testify about it, that privilege extends to the interpreter as well. An interpreter cannot become the backdoor through which a privileged conversation gets exposed. Like its companion for the deaf and hard of hearing, this section applies in both circuit courts and district courts.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who can request appointment of a court interpreter under this section?
A non-English-speaking person who is a party or witness in a civil trial, hearing, or other proceeding before a judge.
Must the person accept the interpreter the judge appoints?
No. A non-English-speaking person may instead obtain a qualified interpreter of their own choosing, as long as the court approves that interpreter as competent.
How is the interpreter’s compensation determined and paid?
To the extent of available appropriations, the court fixes compensation in accordance with guidelines set by the Judicial Council of Virginia, paid from the general fund of the state treasury as part of the expense of trial, though the court may assess it against either party as part of the cost of the case.
What happens to the privilege that would normally attach to a communication if it goes through an interpreter?
The privilege applies to the interpreter as well — whenever a person communicates through an interpreter under circumstances that would make the communication privileged and non-testifiable, that privilege also covers the interpreter.
Does this section apply in both circuit and district courts?
Yes, the provisions of this section apply in circuit courts and district courts.
Amendment History
1996, c. 559; 2003, c. 1011.