We have been receiving royalty payments for about 7 months from Petrohawk, then we receive letter re: Suspension of Royalty Payment due to the conflict of the vicinity of the bed of Lake Bistineau around first of June 2012. They did not direct deposit our June 2012 payment. We e-mailed them and requested copies of the "meander line", surveys, etc. Next thing we know, our check was direct deposited into our account. Great,,,,,,,,we thought......Several of our neighbors notified us that they had also received letters that the "suit" had been settled and they would also begin receiving their royalties. Well, I checked my online checking account and to my amazement and horror, Petrohawk had reversed the direct deposit (WITHOUT any notice whatsoever to us!!). It was a considerable amount of $$$$. I think that Petrohawk could have notified us before the reversal of payment,,,,,,,,,,,,We had already paid this $$$$ out. What a problem this has created for us. Not sure what or if it this has happen to anyone else? I can only assume that there is not much we can do at this point except let the attorney that did our O & G lease handle it......
Tags: Bistineau, Conflict, Lake, Petrohawk, Suspension, of, payments, royalties
GoshDarn, You seem to have explained it best to me.............But I don't understand (1) why they paid us a HUGE bonus in 2008 without determining this (2) why they paid us for almost 8 months before realizing this (3) why other landowners are still being paid.............but still all we can do ............is wait for our attorney to advise us.....As always,,,,I appreciate everyone's comments here.
smith1--- sorry my comments were of no help to you so I will sign off from this tread and leave it to GoshDarn to answer you last 3 questions-- good luck
adubu. your comments were very helpful, I've actually done several things you mentioned! again, thanks.
smith1-- your welcome--hope you get problem resolved
smith1:
I can only guess, but such isn't that totally uncommon. Happens more than you would think, and I speak from having experienced it recently myself (yet not involving the laws governing lake minerals). And lucky for me (and my family), the operator finally admitted the mistake after five months of error. We'd also been in pay, but with the new horizontals, the operators have to go back and make sure they have each title trace nailed down -- and sometimes the abstractors and lawyers can make mistakes.
So specifically, I would assume that your situation involves the complexity of interpreting the laws as to the mineral rights of property right next to the lake and the issue of cyclical cycles of up and down water levels being a determinate on ownership (again, just guessing).
So, an abstractor or title lawyer could've made a mistake and missed it the first time (in your favor).
Now, the other landowners may have servitude that's set fractionally back, even a few feet -- so as to not make it an issue; and this is quite possible when it comes to complex old state title laws as it involves bodies of water.
Thus, it's best to assume the negative and prepare for the worst (or at least prepare for an extended fight). Plus, you need to try to nail down the wording of the law yourself and really, really get a good map as to where your land is and where the shoreline is (or whatever is the legal determinate of mineral servitude in this case). Take the time and try to understand the water levels.
Note: I know very, very little about such "water" legalities, and I'm only generalizing per basic common sense via applying a basic understanding of La. mineral law. (And I mean very, very basic, too.) So don't put much worth in my advice.
Ergo, you absolutely need a good lawyer.
Oh, back in the early 60's -- those camps around the west shore of Lake B. were fun hangouts for rambunctious young teens.
The stories I could tell.
Best of luck.
I am familiar with this same situation and even if technically allowed (not commenting on your situation, just saying "if") it is still unfortunate on the company's part.
As GD said, it is not uncommon to lease for big money in the Haynesville only to later find out that some may be in suspense. Lease title and division order title opinion title are two different animals. But the issue that bothers me about this suit and the specifics of Bistineau is that the companies involved know the lines that have been in dispute in this case and are basically behind surveying them out and deciding which acreage they are willing to pay and which they are not.
Now the State and Fed have settled as to one contour line but I believe the issue now is that the Fed's are preserving a claim up to another line further inland which is causing conflicts between private owners and the Fed in title and therefore royalty in suspense. IMHO, the companies could have been out front on this and at minimum not put themselves in the position of reversing or adjusting already paid royalty.
But what is so frustrating is that no one (and it's been almost a month since we received the certified letter), can tell us any specifics,,,,,,the landman that we got the letter from keeps telling us he will email us, but we have heard not a word from anyone. We call and no one calls us back! Seems like Petrohawk could at least give us an explanation WHY they just suddenly stopped paying royalties? We had already paid $$$'s out for that deposited check from Petrohawk. And for them just to reversed the deposit without so much as a notice to us ---well that just seems like---not real decent (that's the only word I could think of?).
smith1:
HK (Petrohawk) was recently acquired by BHP Billiton (i.e., a huge mega conglomerate out of OZ {Australia}).
There's been some consolidation and upheaval in the workforce to achieve worker-bee efficiencies.
Note: BHP's online royalty interface (which includes HK and KCS) has been being farmed out to PDS Energy (a TX company located in Austin, the last time I spoke to 'em).
So, there's a lot of musical chairs (bad term) going on with HK right now (more or less).
Sidebar note: When it comes to legal cases, sometimes employees are specifically instructed not to go on the record per the legalities of doing so. But that may not be the issue in your case. It just might be the whirlwind of delay in the overall pullback and money crunch that operators are presently facing per low NG prices (along with the BHP consolidation) (but this is truly just a general guess and not a nailed down fact).
can you please advise section / township / range etc. we have well 16n-10w, section 28, that is mostly in lake bed. I have several properties, some in the lake bed and some not. when HK surveyed for the actual acerage the new lake bed level was used and several persons found out they did not have near the land that they thought and in fact are paying taxes on.
so far as far as i know our royalty payments have been steady. but after hearing your story, nothing would surprise me, as we have fought this battle over titles, mortgages etc with some property in the new lake level / changing elevation line.
thanks
larry
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