§ 8.01-226.Duty of care to law-enforcement officers, firefighters, etc.
Chapter 3. Actions · Article 21. Miscellaneous Provisions · Last amended 2017 · Last verified July 16, 2026
Full Text of § 8.01-226
Plain-English Summary
The common-law “fireman’s rule” traditionally limited a landowner’s or third party’s liability to firefighters and police officers injured responding to a hazard the defendant’s own conduct created, on the theory that responders assume the risks inherent in their jobs. This section both codifies and narrows that framework for Virginia.
Subsection A sets out the duty of care by scenario. On premises normally open to the public, an owner or occupant owes the listed public-safety officials — firefighters, Department of Emergency Management hazardous materials officers, nonfirefighter regional hazmat team members, and law-enforcement officers — a duty to keep the property reasonably safe or warn of known dangers, whether the premises happen to be open to the public at that moment or not. On premises not normally open to the public, the same duty applies once the owner or occupant knows, or has reason to know, the official is on, about to come onto, or imminently likely to come onto that part of the property. While otherwise performing their duties away from those two premises scenarios, the covered officials are owed a duty of ordinary care.
The last paragraph of subsection A is where the section narrows the fireman’s rule rather than merely preserving it: that common-law doctrine is not a defense to claims against third parties whose own negligence did not cause the emergency and who were not occupiers of the property where the emergency arose, claims based on further negligent acts separate from what caused the emergency, claims based on a statutory duty created specifically for the responder’s benefit, or claims against a defendant whose conduct amounts to an intentional tort, gross negligence, or willful or wanton misconduct. Subsection B defines “law-enforcement officers” narrowly, as police officers, sheriffs, and deputy sheriffs, and defines “firefighters” to include emergency medical personnel and special forest wardens.
Frequently Asked Questions
What duty does a property owner owe a firefighter or police officer who comes onto the property?
It depends on the premises. On property normally open to the public, the owner or occupant must keep it reasonably safe or warn of known dangers. On property not normally open to the public, that same duty applies once the owner knows or has reason to know the official is on, about to come onto, or imminently likely to come onto the property. Otherwise, the official is owed ordinary care.
What is the “fireman’s rule,” and does Virginia still follow it?
It is a common-law doctrine limiting liability to firefighters and police officers injured responding to a hazard, on the theory they assume job-related risks. Section 8.01-226 keeps the doctrine but narrows where it can be used as a defense, carving out several categories of claims where it does not apply.
When can the fireman’s rule NOT be used as a defense?
When the claim is against a third party whose negligence did not cause the emergency and who was not occupying the property where it happened; when it is based on further negligence separate from what caused the emergency; when it rests on a statutory duty created for the responder’s benefit; or when the defendant’s conduct was an intentional tort, gross negligence, or willful or wanton misconduct.
Who counts as a “law-enforcement officer” under this section?
Only police officers, sheriffs, and deputy sheriffs — a narrower category than “law enforcement” might suggest in other contexts.
Who counts as a “firefighter” under this section?
Firefighters as ordinarily understood, plus emergency medical personnel and special forest wardens designated under § 10.1-1135.
Amendment History
1987, c. 442; 1992, c. 731; 1996, cc. 646, 660; 2000, c. 962; 2017, c. 315.