§ 8.01-295.Territorial limits within which sheriff may serve process in his official capacity; process appearing to be duly served.
Chapter 8. Process · Article 3. Who and Where to Serve Process · Last amended 1982 · Last verified July 16, 2026
Full Text of § 8.01-295
Plain-English Summary
A sheriff’s authority to serve process does not stop at his county line. Section 8.01-295 lets him execute process throughout the political subdivision where he serves and in any county or city that borders it, giving him room to reach defendants who live just across a boundary without forcing the plaintiff to hunt down a different sheriff.
The section also protects service that looks right on paper from being undone by a technical mismatch. If process appears to have been duly served, and is good in other respects, it counts as valid even if it was not addressed to an officer at all, or if the officer it named was not the one who executed it. Substance wins over a labeling slip.
One thing the section does not do is force a sheriff’s hand: nothing here requires him to serve process in a jurisdiction other than his own. If a defendant sits somewhere outside his territory and its contiguous neighbors, the plaintiff needs another route — a different sheriff, a private process server, or another method Chapter 8 allows.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where can a sheriff serve process under his official authority?
Throughout the political subdivision in which he serves and in any contiguous county or city.
Is process considered invalid if it was not directed to a specific officer?
No. If the process appears to be duly served and is good in other respects, it is deemed valid although not directed to an officer.
What if process was directed to one officer but executed by someone else?
The section still deems it valid if it appears duly served and is good in other respects, even though executed by some other person than the one to whom it was directed.
Must a sheriff serve process in a jurisdiction other than his own under this section?
No. The section states it shall not be construed to require the sheriff to serve such process in any jurisdiction other than his own.
Does this section define a sheriff’s own jurisdiction for service purposes?
It ties his authority to the political subdivision in which he serves plus any county or city contiguous to it, without extending service farther afield as a matter of right.
Amendment History
Code 1950, § 8-50; 1977, c. 617; 1982, c. 674.