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§ 8.01-116.Return of property to defendant or other claimant.

Chapter 3. Actions · Article 12. Detinue · Last amended 1993 · Last verified July 16, 2026

In one sentenceSection 8.01-116 lets a defendant or other claimant get seized property back by posting a bond double its estimated value that guarantees costs, damages, and forthcoming of the property, permits a judge to allow lesser security on application, and directs unbonded property be kept or, if perishable, sold.

Full Text of § 8.01-116

Text sizeJump to: (A) (B) (C)

A. Subject to the provisions of subsection B below, the defendant in any such proceeding, or any other person claiming title to the property so seized and taken possession of by the officer, may have such property returned to him at any time after such seizure upon executing a bond, with sufficient surety, to be approved by the officer, payable to the plaintiff, in a penalty at least double the estimated value of the property. The bond shall contain a condition to (i) pay all costs and damages which may be awarded against the defendant in the proceeding and all damages which may accrue to any person by reason of the return of the property to the defendant or the claimant and (ii) have the property forthcoming to answer any judgment or order of the court or judge respecting the same. The bond shall be delivered to the officer and returned by him to the office of the clerk. The officer, on receiving the bond, shall forthwith return the property taken by him to the defendant or any other person claiming title thereto or from whose possession it was taken.
B. In any such proceeding, upon application of the defendant after reasonable notice to the plaintiff or his attorney, the judge of the court in which the proceeding is pending may order the property returned to the defendant upon such lesser security and upon such terms as in the nature of the case may be just and reasonable.
C. If no bond or security is delivered to the officer after his seizing and taking possession of such property, the property, if in the hands of the officer, shall be kept by him. However, if the property is perishable or expensive to keep, it may be sold by order of the court in the same manner as if it were a sale under execution.

Plain-English Summary

Section 8.01-116 gives the person who lost possession a way to get the property back while the case is still pending. The defendant, or any other person claiming title to seized property, may have it returned at any time after the seizure by executing a bond, with sufficient surety approved by the officer, payable to the plaintiff, in a penalty at least double the estimated value of the property. That bond has to promise two things: paying whatever costs and damages the court awards against the defendant, along with any damages someone suffers because the property was returned, and having the property forthcoming to answer any judgment or order the court later enters. Once the officer receives the bond and delivers it to the clerk’s office, the officer must immediately return the property to the defendant, claimant, or whoever it was taken from.

The court can soften those terms. On the defendant’s application, after reasonable notice to the plaintiff or the plaintiff’s attorney, the judge may order the property returned on lesser security and on whatever terms are just and reasonable given the circumstances of the case.

If no bond or security is ever delivered, the officer keeps the property. The exception is perishable or expensive-to-keep property, which the court can order sold in the same way property is sold under execution — turning it into proceeds rather than letting it decay or accumulate storage costs while the case runs its course.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a defendant get seized detinue property back before trial?

Yes. Section 8.01-116 lets the defendant, or another claimant, get the property returned any time after seizure by posting a bond double its estimated value.

What does the return bond have to guarantee?

Payment of any costs and damages awarded against the defendant, plus damages from returning the property, and having the property forthcoming to satisfy any later judgment or order.

Can the judge allow a smaller bond than the statute’s default?

Yes. On the defendant’s application, after reasonable notice to the plaintiff, the judge may order the property returned on lesser security and on terms that are just and reasonable.

What happens to the property if no one posts a return bond?

The officer keeps it, unless it is perishable or expensive to keep, in which case the court can order it sold the way property is sold under execution.

Who approves the sufficiency of the surety on the return bond?

The officer who seized the property approves the surety before returning the property to the defendant or claimant.

Amendment History

Code 1950, § 8-588; 1973, c. 408; 1977, c. 617; 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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