West Virginia Code § 36-1-20

When survivorship preserved
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(a) Section nineteen of this article does not apply to any estate which joint tenants have as
executors or trustees, nor to an estate conveyed or devised to persons in their own right,
when it manifestly appears from the tenor of the instrument that it was intended that the
part of the one dying should then belong to the others. Neither shall it affect the mode of
proceeding on any joint judgment or decree in favor of, or on any contract with, two or more,
one of whom dies.
(b) When the instrument of conveyance or ownership in any estate, whether real estate or
tangible or intangible personal property, links multiple owners together with the disjunctive
"or," such ownership shall be held as joint tenants with the right of survivorship, unless
expressly stated otherwise.
(c) A person convicted of violating the provisions of section one or three, article two, chapter
sixty-one of this code as a principal, aider and abettor or accessory before the fact, or
convicted of a similar provision of law of another state or the United States, or who has been
convicted of an offense causing the death of an incapacitated adult set forth in section
twenty-nine-a, article two, chapter sixty-one of this code, as a principal, aider and abettor or
accessory before the fact, or convicted of a similar provision of law of another state or the
United States, may not take or acquire any real or personal property by survivorship
pursuant to this section when the victim of the criminal offense was a joint holder of title to
the property. The property to which the convicted person would otherwise have been
entitled shall go to the person or persons who would have taken the property if the convicted
person had predeceased the victim.
(d) A person who has been convicted of an offense of abuse or neglect of an incapacitated
adult pursuanVt to section twenty-nine, article two, chapter sixty-one of this code, a felony
offense of financial exploitation of an elderly person, protected person or an incapacitated
adult pursuant to section twenty-nine–b of that article, or convicted of a similar provision of
law of another state or the United States, may not take or acquire any real or personal
property by survivorship pursuant to this section, when the victim of the criminal offense is a
joint holder of the title to the property. The money or property which the person would have
otherwise have received shall go to the person or persons who would have taken the money
or property if the convicted person had predeceased the victim. This subsection does not
apply if, after the conviction, the victim of the offense, if competent, executes a recordable
instrument, sworn to, notarized and witnessed by two persons that would be competent as
witnesses to a will of the victim, expresses a specific intent to allow the person so convicted
to retain his or her tenancy in the property with rights of survivorship.

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