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<law><site_title>Virginia Decoded</site_title><site_url>https://vacode.org</site_url><law_id>79107</law_id><section_number>18.2-457</section_number><catch_line>Fine and imprisonment by court limited unless jury impaneled</catch_line><edition url="https://vacode.org/2025/" slug="2025" current="TRUE" last_updated="">2025</edition><structure><unit label="title" level="1" order_by="1" identifier="18.2">Crimes and Offenses Generally</unit><unit label="chapter" level="2" order_by="1" identifier="10">Crimes Against the Administration of Justice</unit><unit label="article" level="3" order_by="1" identifier="5">Contempt of Court</unit></structure><text>
						<section><p>No <span class="dictionary">court</span> shall, without a <span class="dictionary">jury</span>, for any such <span class="dictionary">contempt</span> as is mentioned in the first class embraced in &#xA7;&#xA0;<a class="law" title="Cases in which courts and judges may punish summarily for contempt" href="/18.2-456/">18.2-456</a>, impose a fine exceeding $250 or imprison more than ten days; but in any such case the <span class="dictionary">court</span> may, without an <span class="dictionary">indictment</span>, information or any formal pleading, impanel a <span class="dictionary">jury</span> to ascertain the fine or imprisonment proper to be inflicted and may give <span class="dictionary">judgment</span> according to the <span class="dictionary">verdict</span>.</p></section></text><history>Code 1950, &#xA7; 18.1-295; 1960, c. 358; 1975, cc. 14, 15; 1999, c. 626.</history><metadata></metadata></law>
