Legal Question in Civil Litigation in Virginia
co-defendant absent from trial
If a co-defendant fails to appear in court and the plaintiff wins judgement through a judge trial, is the absent co-defendant still responsible for the judgement amount or does it all fall to the defendant who showed up?
2 Answers from Attorneys
Re: co-defendant absent from trial
The co-defendant in a civil trial who has been properly served with notice and fails to appear,
is what the law calls jointly and severally liable along with his co-defendant party for any judgment which is handed down by the court.
Translation: Each co-defendant is liable for up to the entire amount of the judgment but, of course, the plaintiff cannot collect twice from both. The plaintiff can, however, if circumstances warrant, collect the entire amount of the judgment from the one and absolutely nothing from the other. (The defendant who pays would then have the option of seeking contribution from the other.)
Re: co-defendant absent from trial
You've got to be kidding. If people could
get out of paying by just not showing up, then
nobody would ever show up. Genreally speaking
it's the other way around. You lose by not
showing up.
HOWEVER, WARNING: You are skipping over a
critically important step!
First, you have to see if the plaintiff has
successfully gotten official 'service' upon
each defendant.
NOTE that almost always a plaintiff will MAIL
a copy through the normal mail, which is NOT
official service. Receiving a lawsuit by mail
does NOT obligate you in any way.
Official service means that the Sheriff's deputy
put it in your hand or "posted" it on the door
(which can mean various things in reality.
If the plaintiff has failed to achieve official
"service" then you DO NOT want to show up,
because the plaintiff will lose automatically.
What the co-defendants need to do is go to the
courthouse several days before the court date,
and ask the clerk to see the court's file.
If the "service" part of the lawsuit is marked
"NOT FOUND" then you should not answer the
lawsuit. (Actually you might sit in the back
of the courtroom and listen. If they talk about
how the lawsuit is "not found" then do not say
anything. If the lawyer asks for "judgement"
then stand up and object.)
However, assuming that both defendants have been
properly served, then both defendants are on
the hook for the full amount, if the plaintiff
wins. That means that the plaintiff can take
the full amount of the money from either defendant
according to who is easiest to take the money from.
In that case, your best chance is to defeat the
plaintiff outright, and not let him win.
Of course one co-defendant can always sue the
other co-defendant to divide the cost between
them. What the plaintiff does is not the
end of the story.
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