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§ 8.01-166.How defendant may apply therefor, and have judgment suspended.

Chapter 3. Actions · Article 15. Improvements · Last amended 1977 · Last verified July 16, 2026

In one sentenceA defendant facing a judgment or decree that would take land, who made permanent improvements while believing in good faith that the title was good, may petition the same court before execution to suspend the judgment and empanel a jury to weigh the plaintiff’s damages against an allowance for those improvements.

Full Text of § 8.01-166

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Any defendant against whom a decree or judgment shall be rendered for land, when no assessment of damages has been made under Article 14 (§ 8.01-131 et seq.) of this chapter, may, at any time before the execution of the decree or judgment, present a pleading to the court rendering such decree or judgment, stating that he, or those under whom he claims while holding the premises under a title believed by him or them to have been good, have made permanent improvements thereon, and moving that he should have an allowance for the same which are over and above the value of the use and occupation of such land; and thereupon the court may, if satisfied of the probable truth of the allegation, suspend the execution of the judgment or decree, and impanel a jury to assess the damages of the plaintiff, and the allowances to the defendant for such improvements.

Plain-English Summary

Article 15 answers an old problem in real-property litigation: what happens when someone who occupied and improved land in the honest belief that they owned it loses a suit for that land? Section 8.01-166 opens the article by giving that occupant — described here as the defendant in the land-recovery action — a way to ask for credit for the value added to the property, rather than walking away with nothing for the money and labor invested.

The section applies only when no damages have already been assessed under Article 14, the related procedure for recovering possession of land. Before the court executes the judgment or decree awarding the land to the plaintiff, the defendant — or someone claiming through the defendant — may present a pleading asserting that the property was held under a title believed to be good, and that permanent improvements were made to it. The pleading asks the court to allow credit for those improvements, over and above whatever the defendant owes for having used and occupied the land.

The court does not have to grant this request automatically. Section 8.01-166 gives the court discretion to first weigh whether the allegations carry the ring of truth. If the court finds probable truth in what the defendant alleges, it can suspend execution of the judgment and impanel a jury to work out two figures side by side: the damages owed to the plaintiff for the defendant’s use of the land, and the allowance owed to the defendant for the improvements made to it.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does Section 8.01-166 let a defendant who is about to lose a land case do?

It lets the defendant present a pleading before execution of the judgment or decree, alleging permanent improvements made under a good-faith belief in good title, and ask the court to suspend execution and impanel a jury to assess an allowance for those improvements.

Does this section apply if damages have already been assessed under Article 14?

No. Section 8.01-166 applies only when no assessment of damages has been made under Article 14, the related procedure for recovering land.

What must the defendant show to get the judgment suspended?

A pleading alleging that the defendant, or those under whom the defendant claims, held the premises under a title believed good and made permanent improvements, with the court satisfied of the probable truth of that allegation.

Can someone other than the named defendant rely on this section?

Yes. The section extends to those under whom the defendant claims, meaning predecessors in the chain of title who made the improvements.

What happens once the court grants the petition?

The court suspends execution of the judgment or decree and impanels a jury to assess the plaintiff’s damages and the defendant’s allowance for improvements.

Amendment History

Code 1950, § 8-842; 1977, c. 617.

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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