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HomeMilitary and Veterans CodeDiv. 2Pt. 1Ch. 8Art. 2§ 435 Armory Property Leasing And Sales

§ 435 Armory Property Leasing And Sales

Military and Veterans Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 435 Armory Property Leasing And Sales

This law lets the state lease or sell armory buildings, but only after the legislature approves the sale or lease, and it requires that armories be offered first to local agencies, priced at fair market value, and that the money from the sale go into a special fund for maintaining or building new armories.

Key Takeaways

  • •Armories must be offered to local agencies first before any private sale.
  • •The sale price must be based on an appraisal and needs legislative approval.
  • •All net proceeds are placed in the Armory Fund for future armory use.

Example

A city learns that a nearby National Guard armory is for sale and wants to buy it to use as a community center.

The state must first post a notice on its website. The city has 90 days to say it is interested. If it is the highest bidder above fair market value, the armory can be sold to the city. The sale price must be based on an appraisal, and after the sale the net money earned goes into the Armory Fund for other armory projects.

How to Calculate

Net Proceeds = Gross Proceeds - (Outstanding Reimbursements + Disposition Costs)

  1. Find the total amount received from the sale (Gross Proceeds).
  2. Identify any money that must be paid back to the Property Acquisition Law Money Account (Outstanding Reimbursements).
  3. Add up all the direct costs of selling the armory (Disposition Costs).
  4. Subtract the sum of steps 2 and 3 from the Gross Proceeds to get Net Proceeds.

The state sells an armory and receives $1,200,000 in gross proceeds.

Result: Net Proceeds = $1,200,000 - ($70,000 + $50,000) = $1,080,000

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 435 Armory Property Leasing And Sales

(a) The Director of General Services, with the approval of the Adjutant General, may lease for not more than 99 years or sell for fair market value, upon terms and conditions and subject to any reservations and exceptions as may be determined to be in the best interests of the State, any real property held for armory purposes. Real property shall not be sold or leased pursuant to this subdivision unless the Legislature, by statute, approves the sale or lease of the property. (b) (1) An armory shall be offered for sale to any local agency, as defined in subdivision (a) of Section 54221 of the Government Code, before being offered for sale to private entities or individuals. (2) For purposes of paragraph (1), fair market value shall be determined by an appraisal undertaken and approved by the Director of General Services. (3) The Department of General Services, subject to this subdivision, shall maintain a list of armories authorized for sale in a conspicuous place on its Internet Web site. The Department of General Services shall provide local agencies and, upon request, members of the public, with electronic notification of updates to the list of properties. (4) To be considered as a potential priority buyer of the armory, a local agency shall notify the Department of General Services of its interest in the armory within 90 days of the Department of General Services posting on its Internet Web site the notice of the availability of the armory property. When more than one local agency expresses an interest in the armory, the Department of General Services shall transfer the armory to the local agency offering the highest amount of money above fair market value. (5) If no local agency is interested, or an agreement, as provided above, is not reached, then the disposal of the armory to private entities or individuals shall be pursuant to a public bidding process designed to obtain the highest most certain return for the state from a responsible bidder, and any transaction based on that bidding process shall be deemed to be the fair market value. (c) As to an armory sold pursuant to this section, the Director of General Services shall except and reserve to the state all mineral deposits, as described in Section 6407 of the Public Resources Code, together with the right to prospect for, mine, and remove the deposits. If, however, the Director of General Services determines that there is little or no potential for mineral deposits, the reservation may be without surface right of entry above a depth of 500 feet, or the rights to prospect for, mine, and remove the deposits shall be limited to those areas of the armory conveyed that the director determines to be reasonably necessary for the removal of the deposits. (d) There is in the State Treasury the Armory Fund. All net proceeds from the sale or lease of an armory shall be deposited in the fund. The money in the fund is available, upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the maintenance of existing armories, and for the acquisition or construction of new or replacement armories, including, but not limited to, the cost of design. The disposition of armory properties is not subject to subdivision (g) of Section 11011 of the Government Code. (e) For the purposes of this section, “net proceeds” are the gross proceeds less: (1) Outstanding reimbursements due to the Property Acquisition Law Money Account for costs incurred by the Department of General Services in selling an armory property. (2) All costs directly related to the disposition of an armory, including, but not limited to, all costs and expenses incurred by the Department of General Services, as specified in subdivision (f). (f) Notwithstanding subdivision (d), the Department of General Services shall, upon appropriation by the Legislature, use funds from the Property Acquisition Law Money Account for the purposes of selling armory properties. The Director of Finance may approve loans from the General Fund to the Property Acquisition Law Money Account. (g) The sale of an armory shall be made on an “as is” basis and is exempt from Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 21100) of Division 13 of the Public Resources Code. Upon vesting title of the armory to the purchaser or transferee of the armory, the purchaser or transferee is subject to any local governmental land use entitlement requirements and to Chapter 3 (commencing with Section 21100) of Division 13 of the Public Resources Code. (Amended by Stats. 2018, Ch. 92, Sec. 162. (SB 1289) Effective January 1, 2019.)

Last verified: January 11, 2026

Key Terms

Director of General ServicesAdjutant General

Related Statutes

  • § 432 Armory Board Management Rules
  • § 433 Militia Armory Leasing Authority
  • § 434 Armory Government Control
  • § 436 Property Donations For Armories
  • § 437 Armory Property Acquisition

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Military and Veterans Code. Section 435.
View Official Source