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<law><site_title>Virginia Decoded</site_title><site_url>https://vacode.org</site_url><law_id>62618</law_id><section_number>8.01-379.2:1</section_number><catch_line>Spoliation of evidence</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="8.01">Civil Remedies and Procedure</unit><unit label="chapter" level="2" order_by="1" identifier="13">Certain Incidents of Trial</unit></structure><text>
						<section id="A"><p><span class="prefix-number">A.</span> A <span class="dictionary">party</span> or potential <span class="dictionary">litigant</span> has a duty to preserve <span class="dictionary">evidence</span> that may be relevant to reasonably foreseeable <span class="dictionary">litigation</span>. In determining whether and at what point such a duty to preserve arose, the <span class="dictionary">court</span> shall include in its consideration the totality of the circumstances, including the extent to which the <span class="dictionary">party</span> or potential <span class="dictionary">litigant</span> was on notice that specific and identifiable <span class="dictionary">litigation</span> was likely and that the <span class="dictionary">evidence</span> would be relevant. <a id="paragraph-228306" class="section-permalink" href="https://vacode.org/8.01-379.2_1/#A"><i class="fa fa-link"/></a></p></section>
						<section id="B"><p><span class="prefix-number">B.</span> If <span class="dictionary">evidence</span> that should have been preserved in the anticipation or conduct of <span class="dictionary">litigation</span> is lost because a <span class="dictionary">party</span> 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 <span class="dictionary">discovery</span>, the <span class="dictionary">court</span> (i) upon <span class="dictionary">finding</span> prejudice to another <span class="dictionary">party</span> from such loss, disposal, alteration, concealment, or destruction of the <span class="dictionary">evidence</span>, may <span class="dictionary">order</span> measures no greater than necessary to cure the prejudice, or (ii) only upon <span class="dictionary">finding</span> that the <span class="dictionary">party</span> acted recklessly or with the <span class="dictionary">intent</span> to deprive another <span class="dictionary">party</span> of the <span class="dictionary">evidence</span>&#x2019;s use in the <span class="dictionary">litigation</span>, may (a) presume that the <span class="dictionary">evidence</span> was unfavorable to the <span class="dictionary">party</span>, (b) instruct the <span class="dictionary">jury</span> that it may or shall presume that the <span class="dictionary">evidence</span> was unfavorable to the <span class="dictionary">party</span>, or (c) dismiss the <span class="dictionary">action</span> or enter a <span class="dictionary">default judgment</span>. <a id="paragraph-228307" class="section-permalink" href="https://vacode.org/8.01-379.2_1/#B"><i class="fa fa-link"/></a></p></section>
						<section id="C"><p><span class="prefix-number">C.</span> Nothing in this section shall be interpreted as creating an independent <span class="dictionary">cause of action</span> for negligent or intentional spoliation of <span class="dictionary">evidence</span>. <a id="paragraph-228308" class="section-permalink" href="https://vacode.org/8.01-379.2_1/#C"><i class="fa fa-link"/></a></p></section></text><history>2019, c. 732.</history><metadata></metadata></law>
