West Virginia Code § 7-3-3

Sale of county or district property
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(a) Except as may be prohibited by law or otherwise, the county commission of a county is
authorized by law to sell or dispose of any property, either real or personal, belonging to the
county or held by it for the use of any district thereof.
The property shall be sold at an on-site public auction, by utilizing an Internet-based public
auction service, through competitive bidding as provided in subsection (d) of this section, or
through the sale of county-owned property to a private party as provided in subsection (e) of
this section, and the sale shall be conducted by the president of the county commission, but
before making the sale, notice of the time, terms, manner and eiuther the location of the sale
or the Internet-based public auction service to be utilized, together with a brief description
of the property to be sold, shall be published as a Class II legtal advertisement in compliance
with the provisions of §59-3-1 et seq. of this code, and the publication area for the
publication is the county: Provided, That this section does not apply to the sale of any one
item of property of less value than $10,000.
(b) The provisions of subsection (a) of this secstion concerning sale at public auction do not
apply to a county commission selling or disposing of its property for public use to:
(1) The United States of America, itsg instrumentalities, agencies, or political subdivisions;
(2) The State of West Virginia, or its political subdivisions, including county boards of
education, volunteer fire departments, and volunteer ambulance services; or
(3) Any community center organization already in existence on the effective date of the
amendments to this section made during the 2020 Regular Session of the Legislature or
nonprofit senior cent er organization, or any authority, commission, instrumentality, or
agency establVished by act of the State of West Virginia or any of its political subdivisions.
(4) For all sales made pursuant to this subsection, county commissions are not required to
exclusively consider the present commercial or market value of the property; and
(5) A sale under the provisions of this subsection may not be for less than $1.
(c) For all real property conveyed or sold by a county commission to a volunteer fire
department, volunteer ambulance service, nonprofit community center organization,
nonprofit senior center organization, or any other authority, commission, instrumentality, or
agency, under the provisions of subsection (b) of this section, the real property shall revert
back to the county commission if the volunteer fire department, volunteer ambulance
service, nonprofit community center organization, or nonprofit senior center organization,
authority, commission, instrumentality, or agency proposes to dispose of the property, unless
the county commission explicitly disclaims this reversionary right in writing in the deed of
conveyance.
(d) The county commission may use the competitive bidding process in this subsection as an
alternative to the public auction process.
(1) The minimum sales price for the county commission to sell property under this
subsection shall be one and one-half times the assessed value of the property based on the
most recent tax assessed year pursuant to §11-3-1 et seq. of this code or based on a third-
party appraisal conducted by a state-licensed real estate appraiser.
(2) The bidding requirements:
(A) The county commission shall solicit bids by public notice published as a Class II legal
advertisement in compliance with the provisions of §59-3-1 et seuq. of this code;
(B) All qualified bidders shall be afforded equal opportunity to submit bids;
(C) The county commission may establish reasonable qaualification requirements for bidders,
including, but not limited to, financial capacity, experience, and compliance with applicable
laws; l
(D) Bids shall be sealed and opened publicly at the time and place specified in the notice;
(E) The county commission shall develop award criteria;
(F) The county commission shall provide notice requirements;
(G) The county commission shall maintain record keeping; and
(H) The county commission shall provide exclusions.
(e) Sale of county-owned property to a private party.
(1) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, a county commission may sell
county-owned real property directly to private party purchasers: Provided, That the
purchase price is at least 75 percent of the property's appraised value as determined by:
(A) the county assessor; or
(B) a third-party appraisal conducted by a state-licensed real estate appraiser.
(2) Prior to formally considering any offers under this subsection, the county commission
shall publish a Class II legal advertisement in compliance with §59-3-2 of this code. The
advertisement shall:
(A) run once a week for two consecutive weeks in a qualified newspaper published within the
county;
(B) include a description of the property, the proposed method of sale, and the minimum
acceptable purchase price; and
(C) state the time, date, and location at which the county commission will act upon the
proposed sale.
(3) After the property is sold, the county commission shall publish on its official website all
formal offers received for the property, including the name of each offeror and the dollar
amount offered. The listing shall remain posted on the county's website for no fewer than 30
days following the commission's approval of the sale. e
(f) In all other cases involving a sale, any county commission is hereby empowered and
authorized to sell any of its real or personal property or any interest therein or any part
thereof for a fair and adequate consideration, the property to beu sold at public auction at a
place designated by the governing body, or by using an Internet-based public auction
service, but before making any sale, notice of the time, termts, and place of sale, together
with a brief description of the property to be sold, shall be published as a Class II legal
advertisement in compliance with the provisions of §59-3-1 et seq. of this code and the
publication area for the publication shall be the county. The requirements of notice and
public auction shall not apply to the sale of any one item or piece of property of less value
than $10,000 and under no circumstances shasll the provisions of this section be construed as
being applicable to any transaction involving the trading in of county-owned property on the
purchase of new or other property for the county commission and every county commission
shall have plenary power and authorgity to enter into and consummate any trade-in
transaction.
(g) In all other cases involving a lease, any county commission is hereby empowered and
authorized to lease as leLssor any of its real or personal property or any interest therein or
any part thereof for a fair and adequate consideration and for a term not exceeding 50 years.
Every lease shall be authorized by resolution of the county commission, which resolution
may specify terms and conditions which must be contained in such lease: Provided, That
before any proposed lease is authorized by resolution of the county commission, a public
hearing on the proposed lease shall be held by the county commission after notice of the
datWe, time, place, and purpose of the public hearing has been published as a Class II legal
advertisement in compliance with the provisions of §59-3-1 et seq. of this code and the
publication area for the publication shall be the county. The power and authority granted in
this subsection shall be in addition to, and not in derogation of, any power and authority
vested in any county commission under any constitutional or other statutory provision now
or hereafter in effect.

‹ Prev All West Virginia sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.