West Virginia Code § 44-1-14

Appraisement of real estate and probate personal property of decedents;
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disposition; hiring of experts.
(a) The personal representative of an estate of a deceased person shall appraise the
deceased's real estate and personal probate property, or any real estate or personal probate
property in which the deceased person had an interest at the time of his or her death, as
provided in this section. e
(b) After having taken the appropriate oath, the personal representative shall, on the
appraisement form prescribed by the Tax Commissioner, list the following items owned by
the decedent or in which the decedent had an interest and the fauir market value of the items
at the date of the decedent's death:
(1) All probate and nonprobate real estate including, but not limited to, real estate owned by
the decedent, as a joint tenant with right of survivorship with one or more parties, as a life
estate, subject to a power of appointment of the decedent, or in which any beneficial interest
passes by trust or otherwise to another person by rleason of the death of the decedent; and
(2) All probate personal property, whether tangible or intangible, including, but not limited
to, stocks and bonds, bank accounts, mortgiages, notes, cash, life insurance payable to the
executor or administrator of the decgedent's estate and all other items of probate personal
property.
(c) Any real estate or interest in real estate so appraised must be identified with particularity
and description. The personal representative shall identify the source of title in the decedent
and the location of the realty for purposes of real property ad valorem taxation.
(d) For purposes of t his section, the term "probate personal property" means all personal
property whicVh passes by or under the decedent's will or by the laws of intestate descent and
distribution or is otherwise subject to administration in a decedent's estate under common
law.
(e) The personal representative shall complete, under oath, a questionnaire included in the
appraisement form designed by the Tax Commissioner for the purpose of reporting whether
the decedent owned or had an interest in any nonprobate personal property: Provided, That
the Tax Commissioner shall design a questionnaire that is as much as possible phrased in
understandable English.
(f) The appraisement form shall be executed and signed by the personal representative. The
original appraisement form and two of its copies, together with the completed and notarized
nonprobate inventory form required by section seven, article eleven, chapter eleven of this
code, shall be returned to the clerk of the county commission by whom the personal
representative was appointed or to the fiduciary supervisor within ninety days of the date of
qualification of the personal representative. The clerk or supervisor shall inspect the
appraisement form to determine whether it is in proper form. If the appraisement form is
returned to a fiduciary supervisor, within ten days after being received and approved, the
supervisor shall deliver the documents to the clerk of the county commission. Upon receipt
of the appraisement form, the clerk of the county commission shall record it with the
certificate of approval of the supervisor. The date of return of an appraisement form must be
entered by the clerk of the county commission in his or her record of fiduciaries. The
nonprobate inventory form shall be maintained and preserved by the clerk of the county
commission or the fiduciary supervisor, but shall not be recorded in the recoerds of the clerk
of the county commission. The nonprobate inventory form is confidential tax return
information subject to the provisions of section five-d, article ten, chaptrer eleven of this code
and may not be disclosed by the clerk of the county commission and his or her officers and
employees or former officers and employees. Nothing in this section may be construed to
hinder, abrogate or prevent disclosure of information as authorized in section thirty-five,
article eleven, chapter eleven of this code. t
(g) An executed and signed appraisement form is prima facie evidence:
(1) Of the value of the property listed;
(2) That the property is subject to administration; and
(3) That the property was received bgy the personal representative.
(h) Any personal representative who refuses or declines, without reasonable cause, to
comply with the provisions of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and, upon conviction
thereof, shall be fined not less than $25 nor more than $500.
(i) Every personal representative has authority to retain the services of an expert as may be
appropriate to assist and advise him or her concerning his or her duties in appraising any
asset or propeVrty pursuant to the provisions of this section. An expert so retained shall be
compensated a reasonable sum by the personal representative from the assets of the estate.
The compensation and its reasonableness is subject to review and approval by the county
commission, upon recommendation of the fiduciary supervisor.
(j) Except as specifically provided in subdivision (1), subsection (b) of this section and in
section seven, article eleven, chapter eleven of this code, the personal representative is not
required to list and appraise nonprobate real estate or nonprobate personal property of the
decedent on the forms required in this section or section seven, article eleven, chapter
eleven of this code.

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