WVa Governor Agrees To Live In Government Seat, Ending Case
WVa Governor Agrees To Live In Government Seat, Ending Case
West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice has agreed to live in the seat of state government in Charleston, ending a longrunning challenge over his residency.

CHARLESTON, W.Va.: West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice has agreed to live in the seat of state government in Charleston, ending a long-running challenge over his residency.

A Kanawha County judge Monday signed an order dismissing a 2018 lawsuit filed by a former state lawmaker.

Through his attorney, Justice said he intends to reside in Charleston consistent with the definition of reside in the Supreme Court of Appeals opinion,” according to the dismissal order signed by Senior Status Circuit Judge Dan O’Hanlon.

The parties agree that Respondents voluntary agreement to reside at the seat of government within the meaning of the Constitution renders this case moot and that the case should be dismissed, O’Hanlon wrote.

In allowing the lawsuit to proceed in November, the state Supreme Court rejected arguments from Justice that the courts could not force him to live in the state capital.

The challenge has been a thorn in the side of Justice, a two-term governor who defended living in Lewisburg even though the state constitution says the governor shall reside at the seat of government in Charleston. The justices wrote that courts had the right to compel the Republican governor to comply with the constitution.

Justice’s lawyers had appealed to the Supreme Court after the lower court declined to throw out the case. Democratic Del. Isaac Sponaugle brought the suit after bipartisan criticism that Justice lived 100 (160 kilometers) miles away from Charleston, near his resort, The Greenbrier.

Both sides had argued over the definition of residency. Sponaugle claimed the common sense meaning of the word residency holds that the governor needs to sleep in Charleston. But Justice’s lawyers have said the term was vague and the matter was a political question outside the court’s purview.

While defending the constitution’s residency clause, the justices also said the governor “failed to meet his burden to show that the circuit court exceeded its legitimate powers.

Under the terms of the dismissal order, Justice, a billionaire businessman and richest person in the state who owns a complex business empire of coal and agricultural entities, agreed to pay $65,000 to Sponaugle for attorney fees and costs.

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