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§ 8.01-379.2:1.Spoliation of evidence.

Chapter 13. Certain Incidents of Trial · Last amended 2019 · Last verified July 16, 2026

In one sentenceThis section defines when a party or potential litigant must preserve evidence relevant to reasonably foreseeable litigation, and gives a Virginia court graduated remedies — curative measures, adverse-inference instructions, or dismissal and default judgment — for evidence lost through a failure to preserve it, scaled to prejudice or to reckless or intentional conduct, without creating a standalone spoliation lawsuit.

Full Text of § 8.01-379.2:1

Text sizeJump to: (A) (B) (C)

A. A party or potential litigant has a duty to preserve evidence that may be relevant to reasonably foreseeable litigation. In determining whether and at what point such a duty to preserve arose, the court shall include in its consideration the totality of the circumstances, including the extent to which the party or potential litigant was on notice that specific and identifiable litigation was likely and that the evidence would be relevant.
B. If evidence that should have been preserved in the anticipation or conduct of litigation is lost because a party failed to take reasonable steps to preserve it, or is otherwise disposed of, altered, concealed, destroyed, or not preserved, and it cannot be restored or replaced through additional discovery, the court (i) upon finding prejudice to another party from such loss, disposal, alteration, concealment, or destruction of the evidence, may order measures no greater than necessary to cure the prejudice, or (ii) only upon finding that the party acted recklessly or with the intent to deprive another party of the evidence's use in the litigation, may (a) presume that the evidence was unfavorable to the party, (b) instruct the jury that it may or shall presume that the evidence was unfavorable to the party, or (c) dismiss the action or enter a default judgment.
C. Nothing in this section shall be interpreted as creating an independent cause of action for negligent or intentional spoliation of evidence.

Plain-English Summary

Evidence has a way of disappearing right when it becomes important — a video gets overwritten, a device gets wiped, a document gets shredded on a routine schedule that suddenly looks less routine. Section 8.01-379.2:1 tells Virginia litigants when the law expects them to stop that from happening and what a court can do when it happens anyway.

The duty to preserve attaches once litigation becomes reasonably foreseeable, not just once a suit is filed. Courts look at the totality of the circumstances — how clearly the party or potential litigant was on notice that specific, identifiable litigation was likely, and that the evidence at issue would matter to it. That timing question can end up being as contested as the underlying case.

When evidence that should have been preserved is lost, altered, concealed, or destroyed because a party did not take reasonable steps, and it cannot be replaced through more discovery, the court’s response depends on why it happened. If the loss caused prejudice to another party, the court can order measures no greater than necessary to cure that prejudice. If the party acted recklessly or with intent to deprive the other side of the evidence, the court can go further: presume the evidence was unfavorable to the spoliating party, instruct the jury it may or must draw that presumption, or dismiss the action or enter a default judgment outright.

What the section does not do is create a new lawsuit. It is a remedy available within existing litigation, not an independent cause of action for negligent or intentional spoliation that someone could sue over on its own.

Frequently Asked Questions

When does the duty to preserve evidence begin under this section?

It can begin before a lawsuit is filed, based on the totality of the circumstances, including how clearly the party or potential litigant was on notice that specific and identifiable litigation was likely and that the evidence would be relevant to it.

What must be true before a court can order remedies for lost evidence?

The evidence must be evidence that should have been preserved in anticipation or conduct of litigation, it must have been lost because the party failed to take reasonable steps to preserve it (or was otherwise disposed of, altered, concealed, or destroyed), and it cannot be restored or replaced through additional discovery.

What can a court do if the loss merely prejudiced the other party without reckless or intentional conduct?

Upon finding prejudice, the court may order measures no greater than necessary to cure that prejudice.

What harsher remedies are available, and when?

Only upon finding that the party acted recklessly or with the intent to deprive another party of the evidence’s use, the court may presume the evidence was unfavorable, instruct the jury it may or shall presume that, or dismiss the action or enter a default judgment.

Does this section let someone sue for spoliation as its own claim?

No. The section states that nothing in it creates an independent cause of action for negligent or intentional spoliation of evidence.

Amendment History

2019, c. 732.

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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