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What if an LLC goes bust!

 

 

Researching the formation and maintenance of a Limited Liability Company (LLC) in West Virginia involves several specific legal and administrative steps regulated by the Secretary of State and the State Tax Department.

1. Formation Steps

To officially form an LLC in West Virginia, you must complete the following:

  • Name Selection: The name must be "distinguishable" from other registered entities. It must include an entity designator like "Limited Liability Company," "L.L.C.," or "LLC."

  • Articles of Organization: File Form LLD-1 with the Secretary of State. This document establishes the business and requires details such as the principal office address and whether the LLC is member-managed or manager-managed.

  • Registered Agent: You must appoint a registered agent (or "agent for service of process") with a physical West Virginia street address to receive legal documents.

  • Business Registration Certificate: After the LLC is approved, you must apply for this certificate through the State Tax Department. This acts as a general state business license.

2. Costs and Fees (2026)

The typical costs for a domestic LLC are as follows:

Fee TypeAmountFrequency
Articles of Organization Filing$100One-time
Business Registration Certificate$30One-time
Annual Report Fee$25Yearly
Name Reservation (Optional)$15Valid for 120 days
Trade Name / DBA (Optional)$25One-time

3. Ongoing Compliance

  • Annual Reports: All LLCs must file an annual report between January 1 and June 30 each year to remain in good standing. Failure to file can lead to administrative dissolution.

  • Operating Agreement: While not required by West Virginia law to be filed with the state, it is highly recommended to have a written agreement. This internal document outlines ownership percentages, voting rights, and profit distribution.

  • Taxation: By default, LLCs are "pass-through" entities. Single-member LLCs are typically taxed as sole proprietorships, while multi-member LLCs are taxed as partnerships unless they elect corporate status with the IRS.

4. Technical Resources

For filing and research, the West Virginia One Stop Business Portal is the primary digital tool for managing entity registration, tax applications, and annual reports in a single interface.

Choosing to form an LLC in West Virginia offers a balance of personal protection and operational ease, but it also carries specific responsibilities and legal boundaries.

1. Core Benefits

  • Limited Personal Liability: The most significant advantage is the "corporate veil." Under WV Code §31B-3-303, members and managers are generally not personally liable for the company's debts, obligations, or legal liabilities. Your personal assets (home, car, savings) are typically shielded from business creditors.

  • Pass-Through Taxation: Unlike a corporation, an LLC is not taxed as a separate entity by default. Profits and losses "pass through" to your personal tax return, avoiding the "double taxation" on dividends.

  • Operational Flexibility: West Virginia law is relatively permissive. You aren't strictly required to hold annual meetings or keep formal minutes, which are mandatory for corporations.

  • Tax Incentives (2026): Recent state legislation, such as the Central West Virginia Economic Development and Rural Revitalization Act, may offer specific investment and job creation tax credits for businesses in certain counties (like Webster or Lewis). Additionally, West Virginia has implemented a 5% personal income tax cut effective January 1, 2026, which directly benefits owners of pass-through entities.

2. Potential Liabilities and Risks

While the "limited liability" in the name is powerful, it is not absolute. You can still face personal financial exposure in the following scenarios:

  • Piercing the Corporate Veil: If a court finds that the LLC is just an "alter ego" of the owner (e.g., you commingle personal and business funds or fail to maintain a separate bank account), they can "pierce the veil" and hold you personally liable.

  • Personal Tortious Conduct: You are always personally liable for your own wrongful acts. If you personally commit a crime, fraud, or cause injury while working for the LLC, the business structure will not shield you from the resulting lawsuits.

  • Personal Guarantees: Most banks or landlords in West Virginia will require a "personal guarantee" for small business loans or leases. By signing these, you waive your limited liability for that specific debt.

  • Administrative Dissolution: If you fail to file your Annual Report by June 30, the Secretary of State can dissolve your LLC. If you continue to operate a dissolved business, you lose your liability protection and become personally responsible for all new obligations.

  • Unpaid Taxes: West Virginia and the IRS can hold members personally responsible for certain business taxes, such as employee withholding or sales tax collected but not paid.

3. Comparison at a Glance

FeatureLLC BenefitPotential Liability
Business DebtsAssets protected from creditors.Personal guarantee can override this.
LawsuitsProtected from company negligence.No protection for personal malpractice.
TaxesPass-through (no double tax).Personal liability for unpaid payroll taxes.
ComplianceMinimal formalities required.Dissolution if Annual Report is missed.

Would you like a more detailed look at how to maintain the "corporate veil" to ensure your personal assets stay protected?



Land Secrets, the "GVEDC Bypass," and the JacMal Legacy in Pocahontas County

 

The $1.1 Million Paper Trail: Land Secrets, the "GVEDC Bypass," and the JacMal Legacy in Pocahontas County

1. The Paper Trail in the Potomac Highlands

In the quiet aisles of the Pocahontas County Clerk’s Office in Marlinton, a series of property filings is beginning to tell a multi-million-dollar story. For local residents currently bracing for a proposed "Green Box" fee hike to as much as $310 per year, the trail of deeds leads to a specific two-acre parcel and a name that has become central to the county’s future: JacMal. As Pocahontas County nears its December 2026 "trash cliff"—the official deadline for the landfill's closure—a sophisticated real estate maneuver is unfolding. This is not just a matter of public utility; it is an intricate play of private legacies, legal middlemen, and a $1.1 million buyout that has left taxpayers asking who truly benefits when the "garbage monopoly" takes hold.

2. The Portmanteau Behind the Property: Jack + Mary Alice

The name "JacMal" is a personal tribute hidden within a corporate shell. It is a portmanteau of Jack and Mal (Mary Alice), referring to the late John M. "Jack" Burns and his wife, Mary Alice. John M. Burns was a revered local craftsman who established a woodworking shop on Chieftain Lane in Green Bank.

Over decades, this personal enterprise evolved. The woodworking shop provided the foundational infrastructure for what became Green Bank Storage. In 2008, the family formalized this legacy by moving assets into JacMal Properties LLC. This transition reflects a shift from traditional craftsman landownership to a modernized commercial asset model. Notably, the property sits within the National Radio Quiet Zone (NRQZ). In an area where electronic interference is heavily monitored by the Green Bank Observatory, the "low-tech" stability of self-storage has proven to be a uniquely compatible—and lucrative—use of the Burns family land.

3. The Power of the "Nominal" $1.00 Transfer

An investigator parsing the JacMal chain of title (specifically Deed Book 330, Page 125) will find the tell-tale legal marker of organizational strategy: "$1.00 and other valuable consideration."

In West Virginia property law, this is "nominal consideration." It signals that the transfer was not a market-rate sale, but a calculated move to create a liability shield. By moving the land from personal names into an LLC, the family shielded their personal estates from the risks of commercial operations.

To an Information Architect, the proof of intent is in the taxes:

"Under W. Va. Code § 11-22-2, the excise tax is calculated at a rate of $1.10 for every $500 of value. The presence (or absence) of those excise tax stamps—often found as a typed notation or a physical stamp on the deed—serves as a 'financial fingerprint.' When the tax is $0.00 or the bare minimum, it confirms an organizational move rather than an arm's-length sale."

This maneuver allowed the property to maintain a "Chain of Continuity" for future financing while protecting the family from personal liability, all while avoiding the immediate valuation spike that a recorded high-dollar sale price would trigger for the County Assessor.

4. The GVEDC "Bypass": A Legal Middleman for Public Land

The current controversy involving the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) centers on a "three-party" maneuver designed to navigate around strict state laws. To facilitate a new transfer station on public landfill acreage, the SWA is utilizing the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) as a "Title Shield."

Under W. Va. Code § 7-3-3, a public entity like the SWA is generally barred from deeding land to a private developer without a rigid public auction. However, by first transferring the two-acre parcel to the GVEDC, the authorities can invoke W. Va. Code § 7-12-7. This statute grants Economic Development Corporations the power to lease or sell property for "economic development" without competitive bidding.

The investigative "get" here is the financial motivation: GVEDC’s Ruthanna Beezley has explicitly noted that this involvement "eliminates property tax," keeping the land off the tax rolls to save the SWA money. This "inter-governmental cooperation" effectively bypasses the public auction rules that would otherwise protect the public’s interest in the land.

5. The $1.1 Million Buyout: Option #4 and the 15-Year Lease

To settle a board deadlock, the SWA approved "Option 4," a fixed-rate lease-to-own agreement with JacMal Properties LLC (managed by Jacob Meck). While JacMal acts as the "bank" by funding the initial $2.75 million construction estimate, the taxpayers are the ones who will ultimately settle the tab.

The Financial Terms:

  • Monthly Lease Payment: $16,759 (Fixed for 15 years).
  • Final Buyout Amount: $1,103,495.24 (Due in 2041 to take full ownership).
  • Pre-Construction Cap: $200,000 (The maximum the SWA must reimburse JacMal for engineering and drilling if the deal collapses).

This structure ensures that the SWA avoids a $10 million bill for a new landfill, but it locks the county into a decade-and-a-half of high-priority debt.

6. The "Trash Monopoly": Guaranteed Revenue via Flow Control

To guarantee the SWA can afford the $16,759 monthly check to JacMal, the board passed updated Mandatory Garbage Disposal Regulations in March 2026. This includes a "Flow Control" clause—a legal mandate that every ounce of trash generated in Pocahontas County must pass through the JacMal-built transfer station.

During the "Lots of Yelling" meeting on March 17, 2026, residents from Durbin and other outlying areas protested this move. Under Flow Control, residents lose the right to haul their own waste to potentially cheaper facilities in Greenbrier or Randolph counties. This creates a legal monopoly; by forcing all local waste through a single point, the SWA ensures the tipping fees necessary to pay the private lease. Without this "monopoly," the project’s financial viability would likely collapse under PSC scrutiny.

7. The $4,500 "Secret" Monthly Mandate

Beyond the advertised lease, a "regulatory threat" looms. SWA Attorney David Sims has warned the board that the West Virginia Public Service Commission (PSC) is likely to mandate a "forced savings" escrow account.

Because the SWA is obligated to pay the 1,103,495.24 buyout in 2041, the PSC wants proof that the money will actually be there. The projected requirement is an additional **4,500 per month** in a restricted account. As of Spring 2026, Sims is actively attempting to "persuade" the PSC to waive this, but the threat of this $54,000 annual expense is a primary driver behind the aggressive push for higher green box fees and the elimination of the landfill’s "Free Day" on July 1.

8. Conclusion: Facing the December "Trash Cliff"

As the December 2026 closure deadline for the landfill draws near, the project has moved from the paperwork phase to the "point of no return." Core drilling rigs are now active on the site, but the engineering reports are fraught with risk. The site is plagued by Karst topography (sinkhole risks) and the danger of "legacy fill" from the original landfill shop construction.

If the drills hit a void, the "fixed" $2.75 million construction cost could vanish, leaving the SWA with a $200,000 bill for the "pre-construction" cap and no backup plan. Pocahontas County has found a path forward through the GVEDC bypass and the JacMal partnership, but it is a path paved with private monopolies and regulatory gambles. In the race to avoid the "trash cliff," the county has traded its freedom of disposal for a $1.1 million debt, leaving residents to wonder if transparency was the first thing tossed into the bin.

 

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From Steel Rails to Waste Trails: 5 Surprising Realities of Pocahontas County’s Economic Evolution

Pocahontas County stands at a pivotal crossroads. Historically defined by its "Steel Rails" and "Virgin Hemlock," the region is now pivoting from the industrial liquidation of forests to the complex logistics of modern waste management. As the county prepares for a significant infrastructure shift, the following five realities reveal how history, law, and mechanical engineering are converging to shape a future defined by what the community leaves behind.

1. The 2026 "Trash Cliff"

Pocahontas County is approaching a hard deadline: December 2026. This is the terminal date when the local landfill will reach capacity and cease operations. For a rural jurisdiction with a lean waste stream of only 8,000 tons annually, the traditional solution—building a new landfill cell—is a financial impossibility.

The engineering reality is stark. Developing a new cell requires an investment exceeding $2 million per acre for liners and leachate systems, totaling over $10 million over 15 years. Faced with these "low-volume" economics, the Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) has determined that the only path to survival is abandoning the landfill model entirely. The transition to a transfer station is no longer a matter of preference; it is a survival necessity to avoid a total cessation of waste services.

2. The 2.3x Efficiency Rule: The Secret Math of Waste Logistics

The move to a transfer station is driven by the "2.3x Efficiency Rule," a logistical optimization designed to overcome the county's rugged geography. To understand this, one must visualize the difference between packing a loose suitcase and using a vacuum-sealed storage bag.

Standard refuse collection vehicles (RCVs) utilize hydraulic cylinders to actuate a packer blade with 80,000 to 110,000 lbs of force. Operating at 2,500 to 3,000 PSI, these units achieve a compaction ratio of roughly 4:1. However, even a compacted 25-cubic yard garbage truck is an economic laggard on the highway. RCVs are high-maintenance machines built for stop-and-start residential work; they cost an estimated $4.00+ per mile to operate and achieve a dismal 3 to 4 MPG.

By contrast, a 40-foot transfer trailer can carry a net payload of 25 to 28 tons—effectively consolidating the contents of 2.1 to 2.3 garbage trucks into a single haul. These trailers operate at roughly $2.50+ per mile with a more efficient 5 to 6 MPG.

"Research indicates a 'break-even' distance—the point at which a transfer station becomes more cost-effective than direct hauling—of approximately 10 to 15 miles."

For Pocahontas County, where the distance to regional landfills in Greenbrier or Tucker County far exceeds this threshold, the transfer station is the only way to manage "ton-mile" costs.

3. The "GVEDC Shield": A Strategic Three-Party Property Maneuver

Securing a site for the new facility required a sophisticated legal maneuver involving the SWA, the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC), and JacMal Properties LLC (a portmanteau of Jack and Mal, referring to the late John M. "Jack" Burns and Mary Alice Burns).

To build on the two-acre site adjacent to the landfill shop, the SWA is transferring the land to the GVEDC first. This "GVEDC Shield" acts as a legal escrow of convenience to bridge the gap between public duty and private speed:

  • Bypassing Public Auction: Under West Virginia Code § 7-3-3, public land must usually be sold at a public auction. However, W. Va. Code § 7-12-7 grants Economic Development Authorities broader powers to lease or sell property for "economic development" without such rigid constraints.
  • The Title Shield: By having the GVEDC hold the deed, the project qualifies for a tax exemption. This ensures a private developer like Jacob Meck does not have to pass property tax costs back to the SWA through the lease, lowering the monthly burden.

The "nominal" $1.00 transfer is a calculated gamble intended to avoid the "illegal gift" of public assets while providing the legal cover for a 15-year lease-to-own arrangement.

4. From Global Timber Hub to the "Radio Quiet Zone"

The county’s current struggle is an echo of its 1920 industrial peak, when the population reached a record 15,002. During the "Steel Rails" era, industrialists like Johnson N. Camden and Henry Gassaway Davis overhauled the landscape to extract spruce and hemlock.

The economy then relied on a "Chemical Synergy": hemlock bark fueled the tanneries of Marlinton and Frank for leather production, while the wood fueled the massive mills at Cass and Richwood. This extraction was an "industrial machine" that treated the landscape as a liquidation asset. Just as the old tanneries served as a "hedge against volatility" in the lumber market, the modern SWA is implementing Flow Control—a legal monopoly mandating all county waste must pass through the new station—to hedge against the volatility of the regional waste market.

The irony is that the very "remoteness" the railroad barons fought to conquer became the county’s most valuable commodity in 1955 with the establishment of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory. Today, the "Radio Quiet Zone" protects scientific research from the electronic noise of the world, effectively turning isolation into an economic asset.

"The 'Steel Rails' were a double-edged sword; while they brought wealth and modernization, they also accelerated the depletion of the very assets that sustained the region."

5. The $4,500 "Sims Warning" and the End of the "Free Day"

The transition to "Option 4"—the 15-year lease-to-own agreement—carries a significant fiscal impact. While the base lease is 16,759 per month, local residents must heed the **"Sims Warning."** SWA attorney David Sims cautioned that the Public Service Commission (PSC) will likely mandate a restricted escrow account requiring an additional **4,500 monthly deposit**. This ensures the SWA can fund the $1.1 million buyout at the end of the term.

This brings the total monthly capital obligation to over $21,200. To cover this, the SWA is moving toward:

  • The End of the "Free Day": Effective July 1, 2026, the SWA will discontinue the monthly "free day." While state law mandates this for landfills, it is not required for transfer stations, allowing the SWA to capture revenue on every ton.
  • Increased Fees: Proposing a "Green Box" fee increase to as much as $310 per year.

Conclusion: Betting the Farm on Core Drilling

The trajectory of Pocahontas County has come full circle—from the extraction of resources to the management of their remains. Today, the county’s future rests on the "physical" reality of core drilling at the landfill shop site. These geotechnical tests are the final gatekeepers.

The risk is geological: the region’s Karst Topography is notorious for limestone voids and sinkholes. If the drilling hits an unstable cavern or legacy fill from the original landfill, the 2.75 million construction estimate could collapse. The SWA is already on the hook for up to **200,000 in reimbursable pre-construction costs** regardless of the outcome.

As the county faces its 2026 "trash cliff," one must wonder: can a community built on the boom-and-bust cycles of timber successfully navigate the long-term logistical demands of the 21st century? The stability of the soil—and the strategy—will soon be put to the ultimate test.

Voiding a Dollar Deal!

 


Yes, the public can legally challenge a $1.00 nominal transfer of public property, as government entities are generally prohibited from "gifting" public land behind closed doors.

Under West Virginia law, if a county or public agency sells real estate directly to a private party, the purchase price typically must be at least 75% of the property's appraised value to ensure the public interest is served. If a public entity transfers land to a private LLC for $1.00 and fails to follow strict statutory protocols—such as passing a formal board resolution, publishing Class II legal advertisements, or attempting a public auction—the transfer is considered a "voidable" transaction and can be challenged in court as an illegal gift of public funds. If regulators like the Public Service Commission (PSC) reject the transfer as an "imprudent" use of public assets, the board members who authorized it could even be held personally liable for the loss.

To avoid this "nominal trap," agencies often funnel the $1.00 transfer through an Economic Development Authority (like the GVEDC) to shield the transaction under the guise of inter-governmental economic development. However, the public still has formal avenues to challenge this indirect maneuver:

  • Circuit Court Civil Actions: Citizens can file a civil lawsuit in circuit court arguing that the GVEDC was used as a "pass-through" entity to unlawfully circumvent competitive bidding and public auction laws. Relying on legal precedents like Gomez v. Kanawha County Commission, the public can challenge the government's action by demonstrating that the inter-agency transfer was a "sham to hide a private sale" and was impelled by "bad faith or arbitrary and capricious motives".
  • The State Auditor’s Public Integrity and Fraud Unit: Citizens can file formal complaints with this unit, which investigates waste and abuse, to look into the misuse of public property and potential collusion involved in structuring the transfer.

Ultimately, the success of a legal challenge against a $1.00 pass-through maneuver depends on whether a judge interprets the transaction as an "unlawful circumvention" of procurement transparency laws or a valid "creative administrative solution" for regional economic development.

Dollar Deals

 


The Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC) and local government bodies utilize nominal transfers of $1.00 primarily to facilitate public-private partnerships while bypassing strict public auction laws and avoiding tax liabilities.

This practice serves several key strategic and legal purposes:

  • Exploiting the "Public Use" Exception: When county commissions dispose of property to other governmental entities or development authorities like the GVEDC for "public use" or economic development, they are granted immense discretion. They are not required to seek fair market value and can legally convey the asset for as little as $1.00, entirely bypassing the mandatory public auction process that governs standard public property sales.
  • Valuation Protection and Tax Avoidance: A $1.00 consideration clause signals that the transaction is an organizational move rather than an arms-length market sale. This prevents the creation of a "new" market price on public records, which stops the County Assessor from immediately spiking the property's appraised value. Furthermore, routing the property to the GVEDC qualifies the transaction for an "Inter-governmental/Economic Development" tax exemption and allows the GVEDC to hold the title to successfully eliminate property taxes for the site.
  • Creating a "Title Shield" for Private Developers: A public entity, such as a Solid Waste Authority, cannot legally deed land directly to a private developer for a nominal fee like $1.00; doing so could be rejected by regulators as an "imprudent" or illegal gift of public assets, potentially making board members personally liable. By funneling the $1.00 nominal transfer through the GVEDC first, the agencies create a legal shield that justifies the transaction under the guise of economic development, allowing a private developer to subsequently build and operate on the land.
  • ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This strategy appears to reference specific mechanisms for managing property valuation and tax liability, often involving partnerships with entities like an economic development corporation.

Based on this text, here is a breakdown of how this strategy works and the relevant considerations for understanding it.


Strategy Breakdown

  1. Protecting Property Valuation: * The strategy suggests using a "$1.00 consideration clause." This is sometimes used in "quitclaim deeds" or "corrective deeds" to transfer a property between entities where the change in ownership is for organizational, non-market reasons (like transferring assets to a subsidiary or a trusted partner).

    • The Goal: A nominal price like $1.00 is intended to communicate to public recorders and the County Assessor that the transaction was not an "arms-length sale"—a transaction between two unrelated parties acting in their own self-interest to determine a fair market price. The goal is to prevent this low number from setting a new, lower "market price" or, more importantly, to prevent the transaction from triggering a revaluation that could spike the property's appraised value (and thus the property taxes).

  2. Securing Tax Avoidance/Exemption:

    • The strategy specifically involves transferring the property title to an economic development corporation (like the hypothetical "GVEDC").

    • The Goal:

      • These organizations are often non-profits or quasi-governmental entities. Property owned by them is frequently eligible for specific tax exemptions.

      • The text refers to an "Inter-governmental/Economic Development" exemption. These exemptions are common in many jurisdictions and are designed to encourage development, attract businesses, and stimulate the local economy.

      • By having the GVEDC hold the title, the strategy aims to "eliminate property taxes for the site" based on the assumption that the GVEDC's exempt status would apply to the property.


Relevant Considerations and Context

While this strategy outlines a specific method, it is crucial to understand that tax and real estate laws are complex, vary significantly by jurisdiction, and are subject to change. This overview does not constitute legal or financial advice.

1. "Arms-Length" and County Assessor Authority

County Assessors are trained to identify transactions that are not "arms-length." A nominal sale price of $1.00 is a clear flag. Assessors generally have the authority and mandate to assess property at its full, true market value, regardless of the price paid in a nominal transaction. They typically look beyond the reported sale price to other indicators of market value, such as recent comparable sales in the area or the property’s income potential.

2. Qualification for Tax Exemption

  • Entity Status: Economic Development Corporations (EDCs) are not automatically exempt from all taxes. Their exempt status depends on their specific charter, state laws, and the use of the property.

  • Property Use: Tax exemptions for non-profits and EDCs are often tied to the use of the property. Simply holding a title may not be enough to secure a full property tax exemption, especially if the property is being used for a for-profit enterprise or is sitting idle. Most states have "use it and keep it" rules, where the property must be actively used for the organization's exempt purpose.

  • PILOT Programs: In many economic development scenarios, instead of full tax elimination, an EDC and a developer might enter into a Payment In Lieu Of Taxes (PILOT) agreement. This requires the developer to pay a specified fee (often less than the full tax amount) to the local government while still benefiting from the development status.

3. State and Local Laws

This strategy hinges entirely on the specific property tax codes, constitutional provisions regarding taxation, and statutes governing economic development organizations in the state and locality where the property is located. For example, some states may have specific provisions for "tax increment financing" (TIF) or other enterprise zones that offer similar, but distinctly regulated, tax benefits.

4. Public Scrutiny and Transparency

Economic development deals are often subject to public record laws and significant public scrutiny. These transactions are designed to provide a public benefit (like job creation or blight removal), and the justification for a full tax exemption must be robust and defensible.

Conclusion:

This strategy attempts to proactively manage property taxes by leveraging specific deal structures and organizational partnerships. However, the success and legality of such a move are highly dependent on:

  • The actual "true market value" of the property as determined by the assessor.

  • The specific rules governing property tax exemptions in the local jurisdiction.

  • The primary purpose and structure of the partnership with the Economic Development Corporation.

For accurate and specific information regarding property taxes, exemptions, and real estate transactions, it is crucial to consult with a qualified tax professional and a real estate attorney who is familiar with the laws in the relevant jurisdiction.

 

What if an LLC goes bust!

    Researching the formation and maintenance of a Limited Liability Company (LLC) in West Virginia involves several specific legal and admi...

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