How do I find out if, when I bought my land if the mineral rights were included? Do I contact the clerk of courts in the parish I bought the property? If so, do I need to contact them myself, or can my mom go and get my info if I call ahead of time and authorize her to get this info? Will there be a fee? I don't mind paying it, I just need to know.

Thanks!

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That does mean that there is no way he can get the mineral rights back even if there is a producing well.
Barry,
What I mean is that even if there is a producing well he may have mineral rights.
I have a friend that gets about $25 every year or 2 on her property for a well from a few years ago.
Most people wouldn't think it much of letting the minerals go in that case. Especially if it were a deal killer. Of course I am speaking BHS (BEFORE HANYESVILLE SHALE).
In Texas minerals can be severed from the surface title. Then you have to abstract the mineral title. Texas minerals do not revert back to the surface owner for lack of production.
Does your land have to be part of a Unitization Act for the "section" info to hold true. The owners of my land back when the area was unitized, did not sign up with it and I have always been under the impression that someone has to actually drill on my specific land for me to get anything. Does anyone know about this?
How could he get his mineral rights back if he did not retain them with when he sold the property. This took place before the Haynesville Shale announcment. The paperwork has already been sent to the oil company to change the name on the royalty check.
He could NOT get his mineral rights back if he did not reserve them.
HUMBLE OPINION HERE: HIRE A LANDMAN!

Most attnys are hiring guys like us to give them mineral opinions

from your friendly neighborhood Landman
HPB Question for the Landman.

Can a piece of property in one section be hbp by another property in another section? And if so under what circumstances.

If a property in Plain Dealing and a property in Elm Grove are both leased in 1940 and the Elm Grove produces could it HBP the Plain Dealing property?
Well Yes and No, this is a reason to have the Pugh Clauses present in the OGLs i.e. Horizontal and Verticle Pughs. It's all how the leases read in the 40s and since the Pugh Clauses did not really exist until the 80s (i think) then it could be HBP, UNLESS other language exists that addressed the issue of productivity and lands to be included (You see this alot in the International Paper leases that cover many acres in different parishes)

Generally speaking: the land must be contiguous to be HBP by a certain unit, but again it all depends on how the lease reads and the agreement between the two parties.
I know enough to know that I don't know it all.

I'm sorry but I keep getting iritated a some of these folks who think they are going to learn how to run title in 5 minutes. Or that someone at the Clerk's office should run it for them. THE CLERK'S OFFICE CANNOT GIVE A LEGAL OPINION.

If they are getting letters to lease they probably own the minerals. If they are not, they don't own them or are not in an area of interest.

I am not saying there is anything wrong with asking questions.

By some of the things that have come up (Colquit Road dispute and Brown dispute), even the professionals can have problems.
Pugh clause vs. depth restriction?

I have the following clause in a lease, is it a pugh clause?

"Notwithstanding anything to the contrary, it is agreed and understood by all parties that a well drilled or produced therefrom on any part of the land herein described will extend this agreement beyond the primary term only insofar as to the lands included in or pooled with a producing or proposed unit."
My lease now address it by stating that 100' below production would be released.

This lease was in place before I purchased this piece of property.

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