I did not do either but I recieved a letter from the title company stating that I did not sign over mineral rights (their mistake) and they included some paper work they wanted me to sign. I am thinking I do not want to sign them. Any thoughts?
If the paperwork is a correction deed, whereby you meant to retain the minerals, I'd sign. In a heartbeat.
It's amazing how many landowners 'think' they're retaining their minerals (in Texas) by not 'mentioning' them, when conveying land. I've dealt with a lot of unhappy clients when I told them they 'gave away' their minerals with their land (for less than what the minerals alone could be leased for).
If you'd sold to me, I'd be hesitant to return the minerals. In a lot of cases, the minerals are worth more than the land.
Good luck!
If it is a mineral servitude, 10 years in Louisiana unless there is a good faith effort to establish production (drill a well, even if it is a dry hole) will interrupt prescription on minerals and the prescriptive period begins anew.
If it is a mineral servitude, and there is production, the production interrupts the prescriptive period until production ends. Then the prescriptive period runs anew from the date production ends.
If it is a royalty only servitude, only actual production will interrupt prescription.
Best,
Buddy Cotten
In researching the decades-old Tuscaloosa Trend and the immense wealth it has generated for many, I find it deeply troubling that this resource-rich formation runs directly beneath one of the poorest communities in North Baton Rouge—near Southern University, Louisiana—yet neither the university ( that I am aware of) nor local residents appear to have received any compensation for the minerals extracted from their land.
This area has suffered immense environmental degradation…
ContinuePosted by Char on May 29, 2025 at 14:42
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