§ 8.01-675.5.Appeal of interlocutory orders and decrees by permission; immunity.
Chapter 26.1. Appeals to the Court of Appeals · Last amended 2023 · Last verified July 16, 2026
In one sentenceSection 8.01-675.5 lets a party ask the circuit court to certify a pretrial civil order for interlocutory appeal by showing substantial disagreement, no controlling precedent, dispositive effect, and litigant benefit, then gives the party 15 days after certification to petition the Court of Appeals, which may accept the appeal at its discretion.
A.When, prior to the commencement of trial, the circuit court has entered in any pending civil action an order or decree that is not otherwise appealable, any party may file in the circuit court a motion requesting that the circuit court certify such order or decree for interlocutory appeal.
The motion shall include a concise analysis of the statutes, rules, or cases believed to be determinative of the issues and request that the court certify in writing that the order or decree involves a question of law as to which (i) there is substantial ground for difference of opinion; (ii) there is no clear, controlling precedent on point in the decisions of the Supreme Court of Virginia or the Court of Appeals of Virginia; (iii) determination of the issues will be dispositive of a material aspect of the proceeding currently pending before the court; and (iv) it is in the parties' best interest to seek an interlocutory appeal. If the request for certification is opposed by any party, the parties may brief the motion in accordance with the Rules of Supreme Court of Virginia.
Within 15 days of the entry of an order by the circuit court granting such certification, a petition for appeal may be filed with the Court of Appeals. If the Court of Appeals determines that the certification by the circuit court has sufficient merit, it may, in its discretion, permit an appeal to be taken from the interlocutory order or decree and shall notify the certifying circuit court and counsel for the parties of its decision.
The consideration of any petition and appeal by the Court of Appeals shall be in accordance with the applicable provisions of the Rules of the Supreme Court of Virginia and shall not take precedence on the docket unless the court so orders.
B.No petitions or appeals under this section shall stay proceedings in the circuit court unless the circuit court or appellate court orders such a stay upon a finding that (i) the petition or appeal could be dispositive of the entire civil action or (ii) there exists good cause, other than the pending petition or appeal, to stay the proceedings.
C.The failure of a party to seek interlocutory review under this section shall not preclude review of the issue on appeal from a final order. An order by the Supreme Court or Court of Appeals denying interlocutory review under this section shall not preclude review of the issue on appeal from a final order, unless the order denying such interlocutory review provides for such preclusion.
Plain-English Summary
Section 8.01-675.5 gives litigants a way to seek early appellate review of an otherwise unappealable order. Before trial begins, any party in a pending civil action may move the circuit court to certify an order or decree for interlocutory appeal. The motion has to include a concise analysis of the controlling statutes, rules, or cases and ask the court to certify in writing that the order involves a question of law with substantial ground for difference of opinion, no clear controlling precedent from the Supreme Court or Court of Appeals, dispositive effect on a material aspect of the pending proceeding, and a genuine benefit to the parties from an interlocutory appeal.
If the circuit court certifies the order, the moving party has 15 days from that certification to file a petition for appeal with the Court of Appeals. Accepting the appeal is not automatic even then — the Court of Appeals decides in its discretion whether the certification has sufficient merit, and it notifies the certifying circuit court and counsel of its decision either way. Once accepted, the appeal does not jump ahead of the docket unless the Court so orders.
As with the immunity-order appeals in §§ 8.01-670.2 and 8.01-670.3, filing a petition or appeal under this section does not automatically stay the circuit court case; a stay requires a finding that the appeal could dispose of the entire action or that good cause, apart from the pending petition or appeal, justifies one. And skipping interlocutory review under this section, or having it denied, does not by itself preclude review of the same issue later on appeal from a final order, unless the denial order specifically says otherwise.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I get a pretrial order certified for interlocutory appeal to the Court of Appeals?
File a motion in the circuit court asking it to certify the order, addressing four required showings: substantial ground for difference of opinion, no clear controlling precedent, dispositive effect on a material aspect of the proceeding, and that an interlocutory appeal is in the parties’ best interest.
How long do I have to petition the Court of Appeals after the circuit court certifies the order?
15 days from the entry of the certification order.
Is the Court of Appeals required to accept an interlocutory appeal once the circuit court certifies it?
No. The Court of Appeals may permit the appeal in its discretion if it determines the certification has sufficient merit.
Does filing this petition automatically pause the case in circuit court?
No. Proceedings are stayed only if the circuit court or appellate court orders a stay, based on a finding that the appeal could be dispositive of the entire action or that good cause otherwise exists.
If I do not seek interlocutory review, do I lose the right to raise the issue later?
No, unless the order denying interlocutory review specifically provides that it precludes later review on appeal from a final order.
Amendment History
2021, Sp. Sess. I, c. 489; 2022, c. 307; 2023, c. 741.
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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