§ 8.01-378.Trial judge not to direct verdicts.
Chapter 13. Certain Incidents of Trial · Last amended 1986 · Last verified July 16, 2026
Full Text of § 8.01-378
Plain-English Summary
Juries decide cases, not judges — that principle sits behind Section 8.01-378. A Virginia trial judge cannot give the jury a peremptory instruction telling it what verdict to return. Even if the judge is certain how the case should come out, the decision has to come from the jury’s own deliberation, not from an instruction that pre-writes the answer.
That does not mean a judge is powerless when the evidence fails. If the judge grants a motion to strike the evidence — finding that the plaintiff or defendant has not put on a legally sufficient case — the judge does not send a hollow question to the jury anyway. Instead, the judge enters summary judgment, or partial summary judgment, that matches the ruling on the motion to strike. The outcome is the same as if the judge had directed a verdict, but the mechanism is different: it runs through the summary judgment procedure rather than a jury instruction.
The distinction matters because it keeps the formal record honest about what happened. A directed verdict and a judgment entered after striking the evidence produce a similar practical result, but this section makes sure Virginia courts reach that result through the entry of judgment as a matter of law, not by pretending the jury reached its own conclusion.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a Virginia trial judge tell the jury what verdict to reach?
No. The section prohibits the trial judge from giving a peremptory instruction directing what verdict the jury shall render in any jury trial.
What happens if the judge grants a motion to strike the evidence?
The judge must enter summary judgment, or partial summary judgment, in conformity with the ruling on the motion to strike, rather than sending the matter to the jury.
Does this section eliminate a judge’s power to end a case before jury deliberation?
No. It channels that power through the motion to strike and the entry of summary judgment rather than through a directed-verdict instruction to the jury.
Can a judge enter judgment on only part of the case after striking some evidence?
Yes. The section allows for partial summary judgment when the judge has granted a motion to strike as to part of the evidence, consistent with that ruling.
Why does it matter whether the judge uses a peremptory instruction or a motion to strike?
Because the section requires the outcome to flow from the entry of judgment after a ruling on the evidence, not from an instruction that tells the jury how to vote, preserving the jury’s formal role as fact-finder.
Amendment History
Code 1950, § 8-218; 1958, c. 208; 1977, c. 617; 1985, c. 214; 1986, c. 253.