§ 8.01-401.3.Opinion testimony and conclusions as to facts critical to civil case resolution (Supreme Court Rule 2:701 derived from subsection B of this section, subdivision (a)(i) of Supreme Court Rule 2:702 derived from subsection A of this section, and subsection (a) of Supreme Court Rule 2:704 derived from subsections B and C of this section).
Chapter 14. Evidence · Article 4. Witnesses Generally · Last amended 1993 · Last verified July 16, 2026
Full Text of § 8.01-401.3
Plain-English Summary
Courts once worried that letting a witness state an opinion on the exact question the jury had to decide would improperly hand that decision to the witness. Section 8.01-401.3 abandons that worry as a categorical rule. It allows an expert or lay witness testifying in a civil proceeding to express an opinion or conclusion on a matter of fact even though that fact happens to be the ultimate issue, or a fact critical to resolving the case.
The permission comes with one firm boundary: no witness, expert or lay, may testify to an opinion that amounts to a conclusion of law. A witness can say what happened and what it means as a matter of fact, but cannot tell the jury how to apply the law to reach a verdict.
Also worth knowing: qualifying under this section still requires the opinion to be “otherwise admissible” under the rest of Virginia’s evidence law — this section removes the ultimate-issue objection specifically, not every other basis for excluding an opinion. And it preserves history: whatever exceptions to the old ultimate-fact rule Virginia courts had already recognized before this statute’s enactment remain in force alongside the new rule.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a witness give an opinion on the exact issue the jury must decide?
Yes, no expert or lay witness testifying in a civil proceeding is prohibited from expressing an otherwise admissible opinion or conclusion solely because that fact is the ultimate issue or is critical to resolving the case.
Are there limits on this kind of opinion testimony?
Yes, in no event may a witness be permitted to express an opinion that constitutes a conclusion of law.
Does this rule apply to lay witnesses as well as experts?
Yes, the section applies to both expert and lay witnesses testifying in a civil proceeding.
Does the opinion still have to meet other evidence rules?
Yes, the section only removes the objection based on the opinion touching the ultimate issue — the opinion must still be otherwise admissible.
Did this section eliminate all prior exceptions to the ultimate-issue rule?
No, except as this section provides, the exceptions to the “ultimate fact in issue” rule that Virginia recognized before the statute’s enactment remain in full force.
Amendment History
1993, c. 909.