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§ 8.01-397.Corroboration required and evidence receivable when one party incapable of testifying (subdivision (b)(5) of Supreme Court Rule 2:804 derived from this section).

Chapter 14. Evidence · Article 4. Witnesses Generally · Last amended 2013 · Last verified July 16, 2026

In one sentenceOften called Virginia’s Dead Man’s Statute, this section bars a judgment for an interested party built solely on that party’s uncorroborated testimony when the opposing party cannot testify for any reason other than a self-inflicted injury, while allowing the incapacitated party’s own prior writings and, with proper authentication, an adverse party’s business-record entries to serve as corroboration.

Full Text of § 8.01-397

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In an action by or against a person who, from any cause, is incapable of testifying, or by or against the committee, trustee, executor, administrator, heir, or other representative of the person so incapable of testifying, no judgment or decree shall be rendered in favor of an adverse or interested party founded on his uncorroborated testimony. In any such action, whether such adverse party testifies or not, all entries, memoranda, and declarations by the party so incapable of testifying made while he was capable, relevant to the matter in issue, may be received as evidence in all proceedings including without limitation those to which a person under a disability is a party. The phrase "from any cause" as used in this section shall not include situations in which the party who is incapable of testifying has rendered himself unable to testify by an intentional self-inflicted injury.
For the purposes of this section, and in addition to corroboration by any other competent evidence, an entry authored by an adverse or interested party contained in a business record may be competent evidence for corroboration of the testimony of an adverse or interested party. If authentication of the business record is not admitted in a request for admission, such business record shall be authenticated by a person other than the author of the entry who is not an adverse or interested party whose conduct is at issue in the allegations of the complaint.

Plain-English Summary

Picture a lawsuit where one side of the story can never be told, because the person who would tell it has died, or is otherwise incapable of testifying through illness, incompetency, or similar cause. Section 8.01-397 protects against the risk that the surviving, interested party invents whatever version of events wins the case. It does so by refusing to let a court enter judgment for that interested party based only on that party’s own uncorroborated word.

The section balances the scale two ways. First, it lets in evidence that would otherwise be hard to use: entries, memoranda, and declarations the incapable person made while still capable, relevant to the dispute, come in regardless of whether the adverse party testifies. Second, it defines what counts as corroboration, allowing a business-record entry authored by the adverse or interested party to help corroborate that party’s own testimony — but if authentication is not admitted through a request for admission, someone other than the author, and not an interested party involved in the case’s allegations, must authenticate the record.

One limit worth noting: the protection does not apply if the incapacitated party became unable to testify because of an intentional, self-inflicted injury. The statute is aimed at leveling an unfair evidentiary playing field, not at rewarding someone who caused their own incapacity.

Frequently Asked Questions

What triggers the corroboration requirement under this section?

It applies in an action by or against a person who, from any cause, is incapable of testifying, or by or against that person’s committee, trustee, executor, administrator, heir, or other representative.

Can the interested party still win the case on their own testimony alone?

No — no judgment or decree may be rendered in favor of an adverse or interested party founded on that party’s uncorroborated testimony in these circumstances.

What kind of evidence from the incapacitated person can be used?

All entries, memoranda, and declarations made by the incapable party while he was capable, relevant to the matter in issue, may be received as evidence, whether or not the adverse party testifies.

Does the statute apply if the person became incapable because of a self-inflicted injury?

Not for an intentional self-inflicted injury — the phrase “from any cause” specifically excludes situations where the incapable party rendered himself unable to testify that way.

Can a business record help corroborate an interested party’s testimony?

Yes, an entry authored by the adverse or interested party in a business record may serve as corroboration; if authentication is not admitted in a request for admission, someone other than the author who is not an adverse or interested party involved in the allegations must authenticate it.

Amendment History

Code 1950, § 8-286; 1977, c. 617; 1988, c. 426; 2013, cc. 61, 637.

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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