My family owns more than 40 acres in Mooringsport T20 R16 section 10. ANADRARKO's has applied to force pool the 960 acres that make up our section along with section 28 at 860 acres, section 4 at 960 acres and section and section 34 at 960 acres. We've been contacted by Mr Ryan Bean with Strata Acquisitions with an interest in leasing our mineral rights and needless to say, he appears to be trying to blind side us into signing a lease agreement proposed by him. After speaking with my attorney he is very skeptical about the terms of the lease agreement which are $500 per acre for three years with an option to lease at the end of the three year term for an additional two years at 500 per acre and a 22.5 percent royalty. My attorney strongly feels that he is low balling us and the are using the very real threat of being force pooled to get us to sign an agreement as quickly as possible. His advice is to wait. State law requires that ANADARKO notify all land owners/mineral owners of 1) the application to force pool and 2) the notice of the scheduled hearing. Several members of my family have not received any form of notification of either the application or the scheduled hearing. After speaking with Mr Bean this afternoon I became more concerned with regards to his honesty. I am very well aware thar there are many wonderful landmen who practice fair and honest business but I have no faith in Mr Bean. Having said this, my family has decided not to sign the lease agreement he proposed.

My sister and I will be attending the hearing on September 17 to do what we can, if anything to prevent being force pooled.

My attorney also noticed something unusual in the sample lease Me Bean sent me. The clause reads as follows " royalities on covered minerals produced and saved from the leased premises and used off the leased premises on lands pooled therewith or sold (weather to an affiliated or non-affiliated purchaser) shall be paid to lessor as follows: (a) For oil and other liquid carbons, the royalities shall be _____ of market value at the mouth of the well of such production. (B) For natural gas of any nature or kind (including casing head gas and all other covered materials (including liquid hydro carbons suspended in gas that are not separated at the primary serration facilities, royalities shall be ______ of the market value at the mouth of the well of such production. (C) goes on to say that the lessor can charge taxes as well as a proportionate share of costs etc.

If anyone else is in the forced pool application I strongly advise that you sign nothing until you speak with an attorney.

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(a) and (b) of the above royalities shame not implies that the royalties will be different for oil.

I concur with ShaleGeo.

Also, at the hearing you might want to bring your lawyer and as many other landowners in opposition as possible, if that's your intent.

Having stated that, I can only assume that if you are able to prevent Anadarko's plans, you do realize that such a tactic might stall the drilling completely for the foreseeable future.

Might.

Also, you haven't stated what your lawyer thinks about opposing APC's plans.  If he's a vetted O&G lawyer -- which I'm sensing he's not -- then that's yet another point to consider.

So, to be clear, IMHO, you don't want to deal with a middle-man . . . but probably will, at some point, want to sign a lease with a landman who's representing a legit operator such as APC.

Others might not agree.

Also, I agree you are wise to be using a lawyer.  Kudos, even if he's not an O&G attorney.

And as to the advice that you receive on GHS, you must remember that this is "free" advice.  And if some members go off in tangents, it doesn't take much effort to ignore their foibles, being as you're not paying them for their time.

Note:  Overall, you do appear to have a reasonable grasp of the general dynamics that your family is facing.  I might suggest that you also reach out to other landowners involved and ask them their thoughts on this and their intent.

Note:  I haven't told you what I would do, if I was in your shoes, about Anadarko's plans, whereas my family does own minerals in another, somewhat different proposed drilling situation with APC . . . which just had a hearing for 4 CUL's. 

Good luck.

Again, I concur with ShaleGeo.  He's offering some very well-seasoned, excellent advice from the facts that I know at this point in time.

Carol, Strata Acquisitions is one of four land companies working under contract for Anadarko E&P Onshore.  They have recorded a number of leases in the public records of Caddo Parish.  And there are recorded assignments of those leases to Anadarko in the public record so they are not a "flipper".  The lease offer you mention is the standard terms that have been offered by all of the land companies since early in 2012.  However just because others have leased for those terms does not mean that you should accept them but they are not low ball offers.  In the last few months Anadarko's land companies have begun to bid a quarter royalty on state lease tracts.  The bids are public record and include bonus amounts.  If your attorney is actually an O&G attorney he/she should know that.  If they don't, they are not paying attention.  If you attend the Commissioner's hearing in Baton Rouge you will find that there is little or no credence afforded mineral owner concerns of force pooling  If you do not have a geologic argument and an expert witness who can make it there is virtually zero chance of avoiding the approval of the unit.  If you don't care to deal with Mr. Bean you could ask to work with another Strata landman.  And you always have the option to decline a lease and be force pooled as a UMI (Unleased Mineral Interest).  You can explore the regulations governing UMI status by reading through KB's UMI Basics: 

http://www.gohaynesvilleshale.com/UMI-Basics

Carol,

Both Jay and Skip are offering good advice.

The following are my suggestions, nothing more: I would make it clear that you are interested in leasing. BUT, that the lease has to be right and you are not going to be pressured into signing.

That being said, among other things I would want a better definition of the royalty than they are giving in the lease for clause b. What they could do if I am correct is separate the NG liquids from the NG stream and pay you only for the gas not the liquids. The liquids would probably be valued at close to crude price. So that would be lagniappe for them. As for C, I would want that stricken and something along the lines of a no cost royalty clause inserted.  Also, again personally, I may sign a three year lease but I would not allow an option clause to be added. If they want to extend the lease after 3 years then it should be at market value not today's value. Also, since you only own 40 acres you need to put a no surface activities clause in. Again, I'm not telling you what to do just making suggestions. I think you are beginning to understand that the companies are going to try to take advantage of landowners with the "hurry up and do it now" approach and that in the long term may not be to your advantage. 

I hope this helps.

 

If you don't have an Oil & Gas Attorney (and it sounds like you don't) then get one!  A good Oil & Gas Attorney will have clients who have already leased to Anadarko with his help and will be very familiar (through his negotiation) with lease terms that are acceptable to both you and Anadarko.  You don't want to be a UMI, if at all possible.

Randall Davidson is excellent.

http://www.djslawfirm.com/

Ph: (318) 424-4342

Joe Aldridge,

While this is off the subject don't NGLs (propane/butane) trade below half the price of the spot price for oil? That is to say a bbl. of NGLs is percentages of butane methane propane thus a price difference.

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