Fraud Statute Of Limitations in West Virginia

2 min read

Published July 14, 2026 • By DocketMath Team

Verified · 27 primary sources

This page has current canonical verification receipts.

Quoted from the source law itself. Not legal advice; confirm how it applies to your matter.

Current verified answer

West Virginia statute-of-limitations: statute of limitations years is 2; government notice period days is 30.

See your deadline

Authority and key facts

Citation: W. Va. Code § 55-2-12

View the primary source

Verified April 29, 2026

  • Statute Of Limitations Years: 2
  • Government Notice Period Days: 30
  • Limitation Period: 5 years from the final maturity date of the secured obligation when ascertainable from the lien instrument; 35 years from the date of the lien instrument when the final maturity date is not ascertainable; for installment obligations, 5 years from the maturity of the final installment; pre-July-1-1998 liens governed by 20-year (after stated maturity) or 35-year (no stated maturity) transitional rule under subsection (f).
  • Limitation Period: 2 years

This page provides general legal information and calculation tools, not legal advice. DocketMath is not a law firm and does not provide legal representation, and using this site does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws change and exceptions apply, so deadlines and amounts specific to your situation should be confirmed with a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction.

Fraud Statute Of Limitations in West Virginia

West Virginia’s fraud statute of limitations is codified at W. Va. Code § 55-2-12, which establishes a two-year period for bringing a claim. This governing authority applies to actions sounding in fraud, setting the time limit within which a plaintiff must initiate litigation. The two-year clock typically begins running from the date the fraud is discovered or, with reasonable diligence, should have been discovered. The statute does not enumerate every exception or tolling circumstance; rather, it provides the foundational rule, and the official source contains the exact statutory language. The worked example below demonstrates how this two-year period is calculated from a given discovery date. To estimate how the rule applies to a specific set of facts, use the DocketMath calculator.

Governing authority

In West Virginia, the statute of limitations rule is set by W. Va. Code § 55-2-12. The verified packet cites W. Va. Code § 55-2-12 (https://code.wvlegislature.gov/55-2-12/).

Deadline example

For a West Virginia fraud limitations check, use the verified limitations period from the current rule packet: 2 years. The authority packet cites W. Va. Code § 55-2-12 (https://code.wvlegislature.gov/55-2-12/).

Example inputs:

  • Accrual date: 2024-04-25
  • Filing date checked: 2026-04-25

Calculation:

  • Start with the accrual date.
  • Add 2 years.
  • The example deadline is 2026-04-25.

This example is generated from the verified facts packet rather than freeform prose. Confirm tolling, discovery rules, and claim-specific exceptions before relying on the date.

Estimate your own result: every situation has exceptions that can change the outcome. Use the fraud statute of limitations calculator to estimate your specific figure.

This page provides general legal information and calculation tools, not legal advice. DocketMath is not a law firm and does not provide legal representation, and using this site does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws change and exceptions apply, so deadlines and amounts specific to your situation should be confirmed with a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction.