Should you or should you not sign the actual division order? Or should you attach a copy with just your name, social security, address? Just wondering, what IF, later on the actual percentages and/or description on the division order is found incorrect, is it legally binding?
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smith1,
Thank you for posting this question. As a "newbie" in this whole NG area, the legality of some things is still a ??? to me. The Slowww X-Mas mail is killing my X-Mas spirit (waitint on DO's in the mail)
In Texas, an operator can withhold royalty payments until it receives an executed division order, as long as the division order contains only the information specified in the Texas statutes. Here is the applicable statute (relevant part is in bold and italics, particular subpart (c) and (e)). According to the statute, DOs for oil payments can contain additional provisions that are not included in DOs for gas payments. The statute provides a sample DO for oil payments. :
Texas Natural Resources Code Sec. 91.402
Also, Texas law provides that DOs are legally binding until revoked by either party. However, that is tempered by the statutory language I set out in my last reply. If you sign a division order and the decimal interest is incorrect to your detriment, you can go back and recoup the underpayments but you might be limited to four years back from the date of your discovery of the underpayment. If the decimal interest is incorrect to your benefit, the operator likewise can sometimes come to you and recoup the overpayments.
Ben,
I know you are a Texas attorney, but what are your thoughts on an O&G operator sending royalty payments without a DO in Louisiana?
LA treats DOs differently, but I do not profess to understand it completely. My initial thought is an operator runs the risk of improper payment claims without a signed DO.
GoshDarn,
So, what are the chances of recieving a check with a DO??? It will be 120 days on the 24th. Just curious about mailbox $$$ for Christmas.
I've never heard of an operator sending the first check with a DO. They always require the DO to be signed first. The statute reads "120 days after the end of the month of first sale" which does not necessarily mean 120 days from the first month the well produced. It depends when the first sale was made.
Ben,
Thanks. Schuck's... From the looks of it I won't get the DO's till Jan anyway. So mailbox $$ in Feb. Think dude lied about date they were mailed. Would .0027... be somewhere within a normal percentage range?? Trying to make plans.
Depends on your royalty fraction in your lease, your net acreage in the unit and total unit acreage. Use this formula: your acreage in unit/total unit acreage x your lease royalty fraction.
Chesapeake sent out a royalty check before the division order was signed in Louisiana. They did withhold federal income tax. The check was sent out the next month if I recall correctly. There was no discussion with CHK, simply a delay in getting the DO signed.
The DO I got says the DO can be cancelled at any time by either party, effective at the start of the next month, or 30 days, or some such. I notice the Texas example above has similar terms.
Federal income tax is withheld unless they have a social security number. They didn't have one because the paperwork hadn't been processed.
Note the section in the division order form listed above. "Failure to furnish your Social Security/Tax I.D. number will result in withholding tax in accordance with federal law, and any tax withheld will not be refundable by payor."
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