§ 8.01-418.When plea of guilty or nolo contendere, finding of guilt in absentia, or forfeiture in criminal prosecution or traffic case admissible in civil action; proof of such plea, finding, or forfeiture.
Chapter 14. Evidence · Article 9. Miscellaneous Provisions · Last amended 2023 · Last verified July 16, 2026
Full Text of § 8.01-418
Plain-English Summary
When a civil case and a criminal or traffic case grow out of the same event, this section lets the civil side draw on what happened in the criminal court. If a party pled guilty or nolo contendere, was found guilty while absent, or forfeited bond or bail in the criminal prosecution, evidence of that plea, finding, or forfeiture — as reflected in the criminal court’s records — comes into the civil case.
Sometimes the criminal record does not clearly show what happened. When it is silent or ambiguous about whether a plea was entered or a forfeiture occurred, the civil court does not just exclude the evidence — it admits whatever is relevant on that question and decides for itself, as a factual matter, whether the plea, finding, or forfeiture took place.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a defendant’s guilty plea in a criminal case be used against them in a related civil lawsuit?
Yes. Evidence of a guilty plea, as shown by the criminal court’s records, is admissible in a civil action arising out of the same occurrence.
Does a nolo contendere plea count the same way as a guilty plea under this section?
Yes. The section treats a nolo contendere plea the same as a guilty plea, in-absentia guilty finding, or forfeiture for admissibility purposes.
What if the criminal court’s records do not clearly show whether a plea was entered?
The civil court admits relevant evidence on the question and decides for itself whether the plea, finding, or forfeiture occurred.
Does this section apply to traffic infractions as well as crimes?
Yes. It covers a plea, in-absentia finding, or forfeiture arising from a prosecution for a criminal offense or a traffic infraction.
Does the criminal and civil case have to involve the same event?
Yes. The plea, finding, or forfeiture must have arisen out of the same occurrence upon which the civil action is based.
Amendment History
Code 1950, § 8-267.1; 1970, c. 354; 1977, c. 617; 1986, c. 46; 2023, c. 278.