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§ 8.01-393.When book or paper or equivalent in clerk's office lost, destroyed, or illegible to be again recorded.

Chapter 14. Evidence · Article 3. Establishing Lost Records, Etc · Last amended 1977 · Last verified July 16, 2026

In one sentenceThis section lets a Virginia clerk re-record a lost, destroyed, or illegible book of wills, deeds, or other filed papers, based on the original document or an attested copy someone produces, with the new record noting whether it came from an original or a copy and how that source was authenticated, giving the re-recording the same effect as what it replaces.

Full Text of § 8.01-393

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When any such book, or any book, microfilm record, or record in other form containing the record of wills, deeds, or other papers, or any other paper filed in a clerk's office, is lost, destroyed, or is illegible, the clerk in whose office such book or paper was, upon the production to him of any original paper which was recorded in such book, or of an attested copy of the record thereof, or of anything else in such book, or of any paper so filed, shall, on application, record the same anew. The record shall show whether it is made from an original or a copy, and how the paper from which it was made was authenticated or attested. Such record shall have, as far as may be, the same effect that the record or paper for which it is substituted would have had.

Plain-English Summary

Deed books, will books, and the miscellaneous papers filed in a Virginia clerk’s office anchor a lot of legal certainty about who owns what. Section 8.01-393 addresses what happens when that anchor is damaged — when a book of recorded wills, deeds, or other papers, or any other paper filed in the clerk’s office, is lost, destroyed, or illegible.

The fix depends on someone bringing the clerk the raw material to rebuild it. If a person produces the original paper that was recorded in the damaged book, or an attested copy of the record, or anything else that was in that book or filed there, the clerk records it anew upon application. The clerk is not just copying blindly, either — the new record has to show whether it was made from an original document or from a copy, and how that source paper was authenticated or attested in the first place, so the provenance of the rebuilt record stays clear.

Once made, the new record stands in for what it replaces. As far as the law can make it so, the reconstructed record carries the same effect that the original record or paper would have had, which keeps deeds, wills, and other recorded instruments enforceable even after the physical book that once held them is gone.

Frequently Asked Questions

What kinds of clerk’s office records does this section cover?

Any book, microfilm record, or record in other form containing the record of wills, deeds, or other papers, or any other paper filed in a clerk’s office.

What must someone produce to get a record re-recorded under this section?

The original paper that was recorded in the lost or damaged book, an attested copy of the record, or anything else that was in the book or filed there.

What must the new record show?

Whether it was made from an original or a copy, and how the paper from which it was made was authenticated or attested.

What legal effect does the re-recorded document have?

As far as may be, the same effect that the record or paper for which it is substituted would have had.

Does someone need to file a formal petition to get this done?

The text describes the clerk recording the material anew “on application,” upon production of the original or an attested copy.

Amendment History

Code 1950, § 8-281; 1977, c. 617.

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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