§ 8.01-114.When property to be taken by officer; summary of evidence, affidavits and report to be filed.
Chapter 3. Actions · Article 12. Detinue · Last amended 1993 · Last verified July 16, 2026
In one sentenceSection 8.01-114 lets a plaintiff bring a detinue action by warrant or motion for judgment alone, or file a sworn petition seeking pretrial seizure of specific personal property that describes the property, the plaintiff’s claim, and the statutory grounds, so a judge or magistrate can order the sheriff to seize it.
A.A proceeding in detinue to recover personal property unlawfully withheld from the plaintiff may be brought on a warrant or motion for judgment if pretrial seizure is not sought at the time of filing.
A petition in detinue for pretrial seizure pursuant to this article may be filed either to commence the detinue proceeding or may be filed during the pendency of a detinue proceeding which commenced on a warrant or motion
for judgment. If a petition is filed, it shall:
1.Describe the kind, quantity and estimated fair market value of the specific personal property as to which plaintiff seeks possession;
2.Describe the basis of the plaintiff's claim of entitlement to recover the property, with such certainty as will give the adverse party reasonable notice of the true nature of the claim and the particulars thereof and, if based on a contract to secure the payment of money, the amount due on such contract; and
3.Allege one or more of the grounds mentioned in § 8.01-534 and set forth specific facts in support of such allegation. Further, if a petition is filed, a judge, or a magistrate appointed pursuant to Article 3 (§ 19.2-33 et seq.) of Chapter 3 of Title 19.2, may issue an order or other process directed to the sheriff or other proper officer, as the case may be, commanding him to seize the property for the recovery of which such action or warrant is brought, or a specified portion thereof, and deliver same to the plaintiff pendente lite under the circumstances hereinafter set forth.
B.The judge or the magistrate may issue such an order or other process in accordance with the prayer of the petition after an ex parte review of the petition only upon a determination that: (i) the petition conforms with subsection A and (ii) there is reasonable cause to believe that the grounds for detinue seizure described in the petition exist. The plaintiff praying for an order shall, at the time that he files his petition, pay the proper costs, fees and taxes, and in the event of his failure to do so, the order shall not be issued.
C.The judge or magistrate, as the case may be, may receive evidence only in the form of a sworn petition which shall be filed with the papers in the cause.
D.The order commanding the seizure of property shall be issued and served together with the form for requesting a hearing on a claim of exemption from seizure as provided in § 8.01-546.1. The order shall be issued and returned as provided in § 8.01-541 and may be issued or executed on any day, including a Saturday, Sunday or other legal holiday. Service shall be in accordance with the methods described in § 8.01-487.1. The provisions of § 8.01-546.2 shall govern claims for exemption.
Plain-English Summary
Section 8.01-114 opens Virginia’s detinue article by giving a plaintiff two paths to recover personal property someone else is unlawfully withholding. The plaintiff can bring an ordinary detinue proceeding by warrant or motion for judgment, without asking for pretrial seizure at all. Or the plaintiff can file a petition seeking pretrial seizure, either to start the detinue proceeding from scratch or during a proceeding already underway on a warrant or motion for judgment.
A petition seeking seizure has to do three things: describe the kind, quantity, and estimated fair market value of the specific property sought; describe the basis of the plaintiff’s claim with enough detail to give the defendant real notice of what is being claimed, including the amount due if the claim rests on a contract securing payment of money; and allege one or more statutory grounds for seizure, backed by specific supporting facts. If the petition does that, a judge, or a magistrate, can order the sheriff or another proper officer to seize the property, or a specified part of it, and deliver it to the plaintiff pending the outcome of the case.
The judge or magistrate can only issue that seizure order after an ex parte review, and only on finding that the petition conforms to these requirements and that reasonable cause supports the grounds alleged. The plaintiff has to pay the costs, fees, and taxes when filing the petition, or the order does not issue. The judge or magistrate can consider only the sworn petition itself as evidence, filed with the case papers. And the seizure order must go out together with the form for requesting a hearing on a claimed exemption from seizure, following the issuance, return, and service procedures the statute specifies, on any day including weekends and holidays.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I have to ask for pretrial seizure to bring a detinue action in Virginia?
No. Section 8.01-114 lets you bring detinue by warrant or motion for judgment without seeking pretrial seizure at all.
What must a petition for pretrial seizure include?
A description of the kind, quantity, and estimated fair market value of the property; the basis of your claim with enough detail to give the defendant real notice, including any amount due under a contract; and one or more statutory grounds for seizure with supporting facts.
Can a judge issue a seizure order without notifying the defendant first?
Yes, through an ex parte review, but only after finding the petition meets the statute’s requirements and that reasonable cause supports the grounds alleged.
Do I have to pay anything before the seizure order issues?
Yes. You must pay the proper costs, fees, and taxes when filing the petition, or the order will not be issued.
What comes with the seizure order when it is served?
The order is served together with the form for requesting a hearing on a claimed exemption from seizure, and it may be issued or executed on any day, including weekends and holidays.
Amendment History
Code 1950, § 8-586; 1973, c. 408; 1974, c. 122; 1977, c. 617; 1978, c. 403; 1986, c. 341; 1993, c. 841.
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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