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  1. #11
    ALWAYS TRYING HARDER Ah Pook's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Grant H. View Post
    I have to ask...

    Can you explain your comment about mineral rights owners usurping surface owners? The connotation of what you wrote is extremely misleading, and I figure I better ask what you mean before I ramble on about how that whole relationship actually works.
    Mineral owners can come onto a property and exercise their rights to extract minerals. I am no expert on this and do not know the details or procedures. Look at the oil/gas exploration in Weld and Larimer counties. It is common for land to be sold without the mineral rights intact.
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  2. #12
    "Beef Bacon" Commie Grant H.'s Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ah Pook View Post
    Mineral owners can come onto a property and exercise their rights to extract minerals. I am no expert on this and do not know the details or procedures. Look at the oil/gas exploration in Weld and Larimer counties. It is common for land to be sold without the mineral rights intact.
    Okay, so you don't understand what is happening, and by assumption used the word "usurp" which puts an incorrect connotation of "illegal" or "by force" on the concept.

    That was what I figured...

    Surface owners are made ABUNDANTLY clear what rights they are buying before purchase. Those rights may be limited to surface only, surface and water, or surface/water/mineral. If someone buys a parcel of land without mineral rights, they have to understand that someone else owns the mineral rights. If they don't, that's just a "head in the sand" attitude that will only harm them.

    Once the owner of the mineral rights decides to pursue producing them, they must work with the surface owner to come to a mutually acceptable agreement concerning the use of the surface for well heads, production assets, etc... Most often, this is handled in the form of a land lease for enough space to create an access road and a production pad. This will be a fairly small amount of space, but they are paid (monthly/annually/lump sum) for the use of that land. These agreements include details of all sorts, to include how the land will be returned to existing condition when the wells are P&A'd and the pad is removed (future).

    The surface owners have the right to refuse leasing their land to the production group, which often results in the production company making a deal with their neighbors to place the pad there, and then use directional drilling to develop their assets... This leads to a LOT of pissed off idiots who scream about how the O/G companies are "cheating them" and "not paying what they should be" etc... I call them idiots because they had their chance, said no, and then get pissed when their neighbor is getting paid for the land use. (I am friends with a family that did exactly this, and they are still bitter against the company despite having been offered the chance to make the money themselves.)


    ETA: I will throw this in there...

    Property buyers are made abundantly aware of what they are buying, whether they read the details or not. One of the current issues has some dumb broad who claims "she didn't know she owned mineral rights". This means that she didn't pay attention when purchasing her home however many years ago. It was all handled in the contract.

    ETA2: Buying and selling of mineral rights has been going on for a LONG time in the US, one of the last places on the earth where private individuals are allowed to own mineral rights. In the case of my friends family, their family bought a large piece of land several generations ago, and the forebear sold off the mineral rights for liquid capital to build a new shop and start a business out of it. There was a lot of anti-O/G whining from them when they found out they weren't going to be getting any royalties from the production, but they have no legal claim to it. Just because whoever sold them off doesn't own the property anymore doesn't negate the deal that was made for the mineral rights.
    Last edited by Grant H.; 03-04-2019 at 13:31.
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  3. #13
    CO-AR's Secret Jedi roberth's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ah Pook View Post
    Mineral owners can come onto a property and exercise their rights to extract minerals. I am no expert on this and do not know the details or procedures. Look at the oil/gas exploration in Weld and Larimer counties. It is common for land to be sold without the mineral rights intact.
    True.

    My boss was looking at a property that had a rig on it, the owner wanted to sell the house but retain the mineral rights and oil lease royalties.

  4. #14
    CO-AR's Secret Jedi roberth's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Grant H. View Post
    Okay, so you don't understand what is happening, and by assumption used the word "usurp" which puts an incorrect connotation of "illegal" or "by force" on the concept.

    That was what I figured...

    Surface owners are made ABUNDANTLY clear what rights they are buying before purchase. Those rights may be limited to surface only, surface and water, or surface/water/mineral. If someone buys a parcel of land without mineral rights, they have to understand that someone else owns the mineral rights. If they don't, that's just a "head in the sand" attitude that will only harm them.

    Once the owner of the mineral rights decides to pursue producing them, they must work with the surface owner to come to a mutually acceptable agreement concerning the use of the surface for well heads, production assets, etc... Most often, this is handled in the form of a land lease for enough space to create an access road and a production pad. This will be a fairly small amount of space, but they are paid (monthly/annually/lump sum) for the use of that land. These agreements include details of all sorts, to include how the land will be returned to existing condition when the wells are P&A'd and the pad is removed (future).

    The surface owners have the right to refuse leasing their land to the production group, which often results in the production company making a deal with their neighbors to place the pad there, and then use directional drilling to develop their assets... This leads to a LOT of pissed off idiots who scream about how the O/G companies are "cheating them" and "not paying what they should be" etc... I call them idiots because they had their chance, said no, and then get pissed when their neighbor is getting paid for the land use. (I am friends with a family that did exactly this, and they are still bitter against the company despite having been offered the chance to make the money themselves.)


    ETA: I will throw this in there...

    Property buyers are made abundantly aware of what they are buying, whether they read the details or not. One of the current issues has some dumb broad who claims "she didn't know she owned mineral rights". This means that she didn't pay attention when purchasing her home however many years ago. It was all handled in the contract.

    ETA2: Buying and selling of mineral rights has been going on for a LONG time in the US, one of the last places on the earth where private individuals are allowed to own mineral rights. In the case of my friends family, their family bought a large piece of land several generations ago, and the forebear sold off the mineral rights for liquid capital to build a new shop and start a business out of it. There was a lot of anti-O/G whining from them when they found out they weren't going to be getting any royalties from the production, but they have no legal claim to it. Just because whoever sold them off doesn't own the property anymore doesn't negate the deal that was made for the mineral rights.
    Thank you Grant H.

  5. #15
    Splays for the Bidet CS1983's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Grant H. View Post
    Okay, so you don't understand what is happening, and by assumption used the word "usurp" which puts an incorrect connotation of "illegal" or "by force" on the concept.

    That was what I figured...

    Surface owners are made ABUNDANTLY clear what rights they are buying before purchase. Those rights may be limited to surface only, surface and water, or surface/water/mineral. If someone buys a parcel of land without mineral rights, they have to understand that someone else owns the mineral rights. If they don't, that's just a "head in the sand" attitude that will only harm them.

    Once the owner of the mineral rights decides to pursue producing them, they must work with the surface owner to come to a mutually acceptable agreement concerning the use of the surface for well heads, production assets, etc... Most often, this is handled in the form of a land lease for enough space to create an access road and a production pad. This will be a fairly small amount of space, but they are paid (monthly/annually/lump sum) for the use of that land. These agreements include details of all sorts, to include how the land will be returned to existing condition when the wells are P&A'd and the pad is removed (future).

    The surface owners have the right to refuse leasing their land to the production group, which often results in the production company making a deal with their neighbors to place the pad there, and then use directional drilling to develop their assets... This leads to a LOT of pissed off idiots who scream about how the O/G companies are "cheating them" and "not paying what they should be" etc... I call them idiots because they had their chance, said no, and then get pissed when their neighbor is getting paid for the land use. (I am friends with a family that did exactly this, and they are still bitter against the company despite having been offered the chance to make the money themselves.)
    Slant drilling... Rumaila oil fields... HW stating, "If Iraq invades Kuwait, the US would consider that an Arab issue."... Iraqi Invasion of Kuwait... PR firm lying about Iraqi soldiers bayoneting babies in incubators in Kuwait City (who could it be now?)... The inspiration of UBL's hatred for the KSA and USA solidified... ... 9/11... perfect excuse to go into Iraq... med board... VA mortgage loan... paranoid refusal of oil/gas exploration w/ lease fee... slant drilling... MFW:

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  6. #16
    "Beef Bacon" Commie Grant H.'s Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by roberth View Post
    Thank you Grant H.
    Sure.

    I am all for property rights, which are rapidly being eroded in this country, but I hate seeing misinformation used to vilify the industry.
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  7. #17
    CO-AR's Secret Jedi roberth's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Grant H. View Post
    Sure.

    I am all for property rights, which are rapidly being eroded in this country, but I hate seeing misinformation used to vilify the industry.
    Private property rights trump almost all others. I'm trying to think what private property doesn't trump, can you help me?

    Consider this board, it is private property, there is freedom of speech here but there is a line too. Just like my home, if someone in my house exercises his first amendment rights in a manner I disagree with I can boot him out of my house.

    I can tell people visiting my home they can't their gun inside my doors, I can search anything I want within the confines of my own home. My house, my rules.

    If I go into someone else's house they can tell me no guns, I have a choice to make, go into their house w/o my gun or go someplace else.
    Last edited by roberth; 03-04-2019 at 13:59.

  8. #18
    "Beef Bacon" Commie Grant H.'s Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by roberth View Post
    Private property rights trump almost all others. I'm trying to think what private property doesn't trump, can you help me?

    Consider this board, it is private property, there is freedom of speech here but there is a line too. Just like my home, if someone in my house exercises his first amendment rights in a manner I disagree with I can boot him out of my house.

    I can tell people visiting my home they can't their gun inside my doors, I can search anything I want within the confines of my own home. My house, my rules.

    If I go into someone else's house they can tell me no guns, I have a choice to make, go into their house w/o my gun or go someplace else.
    Some levels of property rights are protected, like the ones you are suggesting.

    However, eminent domain is becoming widely used to the detriment of property rights, especially by for-profit companies.
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  9. #19
    CO-AR's Secret Jedi roberth's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Grant H. View Post
    Some levels of property rights are protected, like the ones you are suggesting.

    However, eminent domain is becoming widely used to the detriment of property rights, especially by for-profit companies.
    Eminent domain is theft.

    The SC earned my eternal animosity (unless they reverse it) after Kelo v. The thieving fucking assholes of New London.

  10. #20
    Paper Hunter
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    Some developers (builders) are retaining the mineral rights when they develop an area knowing that they can double dip on the property and are not very forthcoming with that information when the homes are sold. Anthem Ranch in Broomfield comes to mind. Huge developments are going up faster than drilling permits can be approved and the wells scheduled for drilling. That said, residents up in the Weld/Broomfield/Boulder county area were up in arms with the number of individual wells. The O&G companies said okay, we'll directional drill more wells from fewer locations which spun the people up even more because of the MEGA PADs. These are the same people that look at a rig and say 'they're fracking'. They refuse to educate themselves beyond reading MotherJones or accept that the developments are encroaching on an actively developing gas field faster than the wells can be finished. Nor do they want to accept the fact that O&G development companies commit a lot of money into the communities. Erie, Lafayette and surrounding areas have some pretty swanky community centers that were greatly helped by O&G.

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