§ 8.01-339.No person eligible for whom request is made.
Chapter 11. Juries · Article 2. Jurors · Last amended 1977 · Last verified July 16, 2026
Full Text of § 8.01-339
Plain-English Summary
This short section closes off a particular kind of manipulation: nobody gets to lobby their way onto a jury. If a person, or someone acting on that person’s behalf, asks a jury commissioner to place their name in the jury box or otherwise steer them toward jury service, that request disqualifies them.
The point is to keep jury selection random and untainted by self-interest. A commissioner’s oath under § 8.01-344 echoes the same principle, promising to select nobody who has been requested.
The rule works as a flat bar rather than a case-by-case judgment call — once the solicitation happens, the person becomes ineligible, regardless of how well-intentioned the request might have been.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a person ask to be placed on a jury list in Virginia?
No. Doing so, or having someone else make that request on their behalf, makes that person ineligible to serve on any jury.
Why does Virginia disqualify people who ask to serve on a jury?
The rule keeps jury selection random and free of self-interested manipulation, preserving impartial administration of justice.
Does the disqualifying request have to come from the prospective juror personally?
No. The section applies whether the person makes the request themselves or someone else makes it for them.
What does it mean for a jury commissioner to “designate” someone as a juror by request?
It refers to any way a commissioner is asked to single out or place a person’s name for jury service, which triggers ineligibility under this section.
Is there any exception for a well-meaning request to serve?
No. The section bars the result of active solicitation regardless of the requester’s motive.
Amendment History
Code 1950, § 8-208.4; 1973, c. 439; 1977, c. 617.