§ 8.01-50.1.Certification of expert witness opinion at time of service of process.
Chapter 3. Actions · Article 5. Death by Wrongful Act · Last amended 2025 · Last verified July 16, 2026
Full Text of § 8.01-50.1
Plain-English Summary
Section 8.01-50.1 borrows the certifying-expert requirement used in ordinary medical malpractice suits and applies it to wrongful death claims against health care providers. Under subsection A, the moment a plaintiff first requests service of process on a defendant — or asks that defendant to accept service — the complaint, counterclaim, or third-party claim is deemed a certification that the plaintiff already obtained a signed written opinion from an expert witness reasonably believed to qualify under § 8.01-581.20. That opinion must state that the defendant deviated from the applicable standard of care and that the deviation proximately caused the claimed injuries. No further statement is required, a plaintiff may split the certification between standard-of-care and causation experts, and each certified defendant must be identified.
Subsection B excuses the certification where the plaintiff, in good faith, alleges a theory of liability that does not need expert testimony because the alleged negligence falls within the common knowledge and experience of a jury.
Subsection C protects the certifying expert from becoming a discovery target: that expert need not be the one who testifies at trial, and no defendant can discover the certifying expert’s identity, qualifications, or opinions — unless the certifying expert is later named as a trial witness, in which case the opinions and their bases become discoverable under Rule 4:1, apart from the fact that the expert also served as the certifying expert.
Subsection D adds a follow-up step: within 21 days after a defendant answers, the plaintiff must certify to that defendant, using the statute’s prescribed language, that the necessary opinion existed at the time service was requested, or that none was needed. A court may, for good cause, review the certifying opinion in camera. If the plaintiff failed to obtain the required opinion when the statute called for one, the court must impose sanctions under § 8.01-271.1 and may dismiss the case with prejudice.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does requesting service of process certify in a Virginia wrongful death medical malpractice case?
It certifies that the plaintiff already obtained a signed written opinion from a qualifying expert stating that the defendant deviated from the applicable standard of care and that the deviation proximately caused the injuries claimed — obtained before service was first requested on that defendant.
When is the expert certification not required?
Subsection B excuses it when the plaintiff, in good faith, pursues a theory of liability where the alleged negligence is within the common knowledge and experience of a jury, so expert testimony is not needed to prove the claim.
Can a defendant find out who the certifying expert is or what that expert said?
Generally no. Subsection C shields the certifying expert’s identity, qualifications, and opinions from discovery, unless that same expert is later identified as a trial witness — at which point the opinions and their bases become discoverable under Rule 4:1, though the expert’s role as certifying expert remains protected.
What happens if a plaintiff never obtained the required certifying opinion?
Under subsection D, the court must impose sanctions under § 8.01-271.1 and may dismiss the case with prejudice if the plaintiff did not have the necessary certifying expert opinion at the time service of process was requested.
What must a plaintiff do after a defendant files an answer?
Within 21 days of the answer, the plaintiff must certify to that defendant, using the statute’s required language, either that the necessary certifying opinion was obtained at the time service was requested or that no such opinion was needed.
Amendment History
2005, cc. 649, 692; 2007, c. 489; 2013, cc. 65, 610; 2025, c. 359.