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<law><site_title>Virginia Decoded</site_title><site_url>https://vacode.org</site_url><law_id>55782</law_id><section_number>8.01-453</section_number><catch_line>When and how payment or discharge entered on judgment docket</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="17">Judgments and Decrees Generally</unit><unit label="article" level="3" order_by="1" identifier="6">Satisfaction</unit></structure><text>
						<section><p>The <span class="dictionary">fact</span> of satisfaction of any judgment so docketed, and if there is more than one <span class="dictionary">defendant</span>, by which <span class="dictionary">defendant</span> it was satisfied, shall be entered by the clerk in whose office the judgment is docketed whenever it appears from a certificate of the clerk of the <span class="dictionary">court</span> in which the judgment was rendered that the judgment has been satisfied or upon the direction, in writing, of the <span class="dictionary">judgment creditor</span> or his duly authorized attorney or other agent. However, the <span class="dictionary">judgment creditor</span> may record an instrument, upon payment of the fees for recordation of each instrument pursuant to &#xA7;&#xA0;<a class="law" title="Fees collected by clerks of circuit courts; generally" href="/17.1-275/">17.1-275</a>, releasing the <span class="dictionary">lien</span> of any judgment so docketed as against one or more parcels of real property, even when full satisfaction of the judgment has not been made and entered by the clerk.</p></section></text><history>Code 1950, &#xA7; 8-380; 1977, c. 617; 1979, c. 192; 1986, c. 276; 1988, c. 420; 2015, c. 631; 2016, c. 482.</history><metadata></metadata></law>
