§ 8.01-403.Witness proving adverse; contradiction; prior inconsistent statement (Subsection (c) of Supreme Court Rule 2:607 and subdivision (a)(i) of Supreme Court Rule 2:613 derived from this section).
Chapter 14. Evidence · Article 4. Witnesses Generally · Last amended 1977 · Last verified July 16, 2026
Full Text of § 8.01-403
Plain-English Summary
Trial witnesses do not always cooperate with the side that called them. Section 8.01-403 addresses what a lawyer can do when their own witness turns hostile on the stand. The general rule stays protective of witnesses called by a party: that party cannot attack the witness’s credit through general evidence of bad character.
But when the witness proves adverse in the court’s own judgment, the calling party gets a specific tool with the court’s leave: proof that the witness made a statement at another time that is inconsistent with the present testimony. There is a foundation requirement before that proof can come in — the circumstances of the earlier statement, enough to pin down the particular occasion, must be described to the witness, who must then be asked whether he made the statement.
Because a prior inconsistent statement used this way is about credibility, not substantive proof, the section gives either party the right to ask the court to instruct the jury accordingly: not to consider the inconsistent statement for anything except contradicting the witness.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I attack my own witness’s character for truthfulness?
No, a party producing a witness is not allowed to impeach that witness’s credit by general evidence of bad character.
What can I do if my own witness gives testimony that hurts my case?
If the witness, in the court’s opinion, proves adverse, the party who called him may, with leave of the court, prove that the witness made a statement at another time inconsistent with his present testimony.
What has to happen before I can introduce a prior inconsistent statement to contradict my own witness?
The circumstances of the earlier statement, sufficient to identify the particular occasion, must be described to the witness, and he must be asked whether or not he made such a statement.
Can the jury use the inconsistent statement as proof of what happened?
Not if either party requests otherwise — the court, if requested, shall instruct the jury not to consider evidence of the inconsistent statement except for the purpose of contradicting the witness.
Does the court have discretion over whether the witness has proved adverse?
Yes, the party needs the statement to have been made inconsistent with present testimony “in case the witness shall in the opinion of the court prove adverse,” and needs leave of the court to proceed.
Amendment History
Code 1950, § 8-292; 1977, c. 617.