Some of you guys might remember a rant several years ago about some Royalty interests that I had from my mother and they were lost. One of you guys responded within hours informing me that the royalty from my mother Elizabeth J. Starke as held my the Shelby County District Court He even gave the the Cause number. The whole nine yards.

To fast forward.

After stacks and stacks of forms, wills, probates, letters testamentary, etc etc, the Court finally released the money it had been holding. The oil companies however are still balking. Petrohawk has yet to reissue some returned checks and Classic has not re activated the Division Order. Who knows, the well might even be dried up at this date, although the well itself is part of a unit, so what the royalty will amount to it anyone,s' guess.

I do want to thank you guys for putting me on the track at any rate.I note that the original lease was for 3/16 ORRI and was wondering what the going rate is now. From the Go Haynesville website I see 1/4 which I assumed was an ORRI and not a WI. Classic sent me a copy of the lease last year and asked me to Ratify the it which I did not do in hope of a better ORRI. Still waiting for the Division Order to kick in. It has been five weeks since Isent them the request.

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John:

I do remember reading about this way back when; I went to search for the original discussion and found that many of the contributors had committed "shalecide" which eliminated their comments along with their accounts.

 

From what I recall, your mother had acquired royalty deeds; this would make her (and by extension, you) an owner of an NPRI (non-participating royalty interest) in these certain wells and units.  If she only bought royalties from the proceeds of the leases (not in the land, from the mineral owner), that could be a different animal entirely, as if the lease contract expires, your interest in those royalties would be dead, much the same as if she would have been assigned an overriding royalty interest (ORI or ORRI) by the owner of the lease (being a working interest owner, or WI).

 

If by chance your mother acquired NPRI from the mineral owner not bound by or contingent to the lease, you would still own these interests irrespective of the lease status, however, you would not possess the right to enter into such a lease yourself (you are not an owner in the minerals; NPRI owners lack executive rights, hence why they are "non-participating").  By ratifying the lease, you will receive the royalties to which you would be entitled; if you don't, you all but certainly won't.  As an NPRI owner, you would be entitled to receive royalty only up to the level to which you own interest; you can't force the O&G company to give you more.

 

To borrow from an analogy that a fellow landman once made, as an NPRI owner, you're in the passenger seat - you don't have the right to drive the car or say where it's going, but you have the right to go on the trip and the benefit of getting there, unless you want to give someone else your seat.  I would surmise you would also have the right to leave the seat empty (and not ratify the lease, in this analogy), but why?

 

As to anyone "not wanting to comply" - send them the copy of the judge's order vesting you with the interest and authorizing the release of funds; you may wish to have a nice letter drafted by an attorney attached to same on your behalf.  As to the rest, good luck to you.

Good answer, Dion.  I like the "passenger seat" analogy.  For the members, just to make clear the difference in the two royalties, definitions follow:

ROYALTY:    A percentage share of production, or the value derived from production, paid from a producing well.

OVERRIDING ROYALTY:  A percentage share of production, or the value derived from production, which is free of all costs of drilling and producing, and is created by the lessee or working interest owner and paid by the lessee or working interest owner.

Here's a synopsis of the various kinds of "royalty" that might shed light on the confusion. Link

Mom had the original mineral deed acquired when my dad was doing land work in the area in 1943.

When Grand Energy wanted a lease in 1998 they were not able to locate my mom who had moved so the Shelby County District Court signed one.After I finally trace the lease to them they told me that the money from mom and others had been pooled and that they were unable to determine how much was hers. So the court just kept it all. We finally got the money about two months ago, after 18 months of hassle.

Guess I had better ratify the lease then!

John:

Whoa, hang on...  You said "mineral deed" above.  But you have referred to this in the past as "royalty interest".  Does your mother's interest originate from a mineral deed (which means that she, or your father, or both, executed an oil and gas lease back in the 40's or 50's as well, in which a royalty was to be paid according to the terms and provisions of the lease), or is this strictly a royalty interest?  A mineral deed and a royalty deed are two totally different conveyances, and you end up with different "bundles of sticks" depending upon which deed has ultimately granted you your interest through inheritance.

 

Please don't take this as chiding; I (as well as Andrew above) are both concerned that you seem to be using certain terms interchangeably which are in fact not interchangeable. 

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