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Discovery Process

Personal Injury Deposition in Virginia

A deposition is sworn out-of-court testimony taken during the discovery phase of yourVirginia personal injury case. What you say in a deposition is legally binding and can significantly impact your settlement outcome.

For informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney.

Contributory negligence

Fault System

$15,000 – $70,000

Avg Settlement

2 years

Filing Deadline

Deposition Tips for Virginia Injury Cases

Tell the Truth

You are under oath. Inconsistencies between deposition testimony and trial testimony destroy credibility and can sink your case.

Listen Carefully

Only answer the question asked. Do not volunteer information. If you do not understand a question, ask for clarification.

Take Your Time

Pause before answering. Your attorney can object before you respond. Never rush.

Say "I Don't Know"

If you genuinely do not remember or know, say so. Guessing can be used against you.

Review Records First

Review your medical records, accident report, and prior statements with your attorney before the deposition.

Fault Is Key

Under contributory negligence, any admission of fault can reduce or eliminate your recovery.

Virginia Law Overview

Virginia maintains the contributory negligence doctrine alongside Alabama, Maryland, and North Carolina, completely barring any plaintiff who bears even minimal fault. This strict rule creates a high burden for plaintiffs and makes Virginia cases highly contested on fault allocation. The statute of limitations is 2 years. Virginia does not require no-fault PIP insurance. Virginia's proximity to the nation's capital and large government contractor workforce creates significant claims under both state law and the Federal Tort Claims Act. Northern Virginia's dense population and heavy traffic generate substantial auto accident litigation. Virginia has no general cap on compensatory damages. Virginia caps punitive damages at $350,000 under Va. Code Ann. § 8.01-38.1. Medical malpractice claims in Virginia have the same 2-year limitation period and are capped at $2.95 million total recovery under the Virginia Medical Malpractice Act. Workers' compensation provides the exclusive remedy for workplace injuries under the Virginia Workers' Compensation Act.

Legal Injury GuideFor informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney.