Oil & Gas Leasing in Ohio Seminar
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Created by Daniel L. Mathie & Clint M. Leibolt
Critchfield, Critchfield & Johnston, Ltd.

The Fracing Process

Scope of Seminar
- Focus on the Main Issues.
- Discuss general terms in oil & gas leases.
- REMEMBER: Every lease, person, company and piece of land is different. This seminar does not take the place of individualized legal advice from an experienced Oil & Gas attorney.
Be Careful-Leases Last a Long Time
- Don’t sign anything without doing your due diligence:
- Do not rush
- Talk with family and neighbors
- Research the Company
- Research the Market
- Realize that you are giving up some control of your land, perhaps for multiple generations
- Consult an attorney experienced in Oil & Gas law
What to Watch for
- Find out the Operator’s plans
- There is a big difference between a Shale Well and a Clinton Oil Sands Well.
- If Operator not interested in the Shale, then exclude the Shale from your lease.
- Ask if Operator would sign a lease for only one strata.
 
- “Intent to Lease”
- Really an Option Contract that is binding on Landowner.
- If the document is really non-binding, then why are we signing it?
- Assignment-Lease will usually be assignable. Company that you lease with can “sell” your lease. Who will your lease be “sold” to?
The Language of Leasing
- Lease Bonus-Dollars per acre paid to landowner when Lease takes effect.
- Landowner’s Royalty-Percentage of revenue that goes to landowner (generally 12.5-15%)
- Reduced by proportional share of a consolidated well unit. Ex: You own 80 acres of a 640 acre well unit, or 12.5% of unit, so you get 12.5% of 12.5% which is 1.56% of revenue.
- Be Careful: check whether your royalty is off the gross revenue of the well or if it includes costs of production, marketing, transportation, etc.
- Primary Term-Set number of years the lease is effective regardless of drilling or production.
- Secondary Term-after the primary term, the lease lasts “for as long as oil and/or gas are produced in paying quantities.”
- “Paying Quantities”-The Lessee is making any operating profit off of the well. Very low standard, so leases last a long time.
- Unitization/Pooling-Lessee’s right to combine your land with land owned by others to form a single well unit.
First Steps of Negotiation
- Don’t accept the “standard lease” because most terms are negotiable.
- The more land you have and the better the location, the stronger your negotiating position.
- Oil companies will move on so don’t needlessly drag your feet.
Problematic Lease Terms-Structures and Right of Ways
- Structures on Land and Right of Ways:
- Pipeline-bury
- Well Pad
- Fracing Pits
- Roads
- Tanks
- Electric Lines, Meters
- Negotiate extra compensation for oil and gas activities conducted on your property.
- Others in your well unit might not have any disturbance to the surface of their land, so you deserve more compensation.
- Consider non-drilling lease
- Require your consent as to where oil and gas activities are conducted on your property.
Problematic Lease Terms-Termination of Lease
- Remember that “Paying Quantities” can last a very long time.
- Set a minimum payment to protect yourself from very low production.
- How much time does the lease give lessee to remedy defaults?
- Notice of default
- Get specific language defining circumstances under which the lease ends.
Problematic Lease Terms-Unitization
- Share royalty proportionally with neighbors.
- Might only have a portion of your land included in the well unit.
- Does including a portion of your land in a well unit continue the lessee’s rights to all of your land or does the non-unitized portion revert back to you?
- Negotiate for reversion of non-unitized land.
Problematic Lease Terms-Warranty of Title
- Don’t accept warranty of title provisions requiring you to guarantee and defend title to your oil and gas rights.
- Lessee will pay for title work prior to paying you and drilling a well, they do not need your warranty.
Problematic Lease Terms-Environment
- Specify remedies for damage done to:
- Crops and trees
- Water supply
- Any limit to lessee’s use?
- Ditches, tile, drainage
- Soil, erosion
- Fences, buildings
- Reclamation at end of lease, set a timeline
- Remedies are only as good as the finances of the lessee.
Title: Do I own the mineral rights to my land?
- You own the surface, but mineral rights have been severed from surface and are owned by another.
- Your land is not leased
- Your land is leased but you are not receiving royalties or free gas
- Your land is leased and you are receiving royalties and/or free gas.
1. Severance of Mineral Rights from Surface Rights
- Ohio has Dormant Minerals Act
- If a 20 year period has gone by, mineral severances may be abandoned.
- Certain events like title transactions or mineral production prevent abandonment.
- Legal process of giving notice and filing an affidavit on record can reunite mineral rights with surface owner (except coal).
2. No Lease On Land
- If no leases cover your land, then you cannegotiate and sell your lease rights to an operator for a lease bonus plus a landowner royalty.
- Lease Bonuses are taxed as ordinary income and not as capital gains.
3. Land is Leased but no Royalties
- If the lessee is in breach of the lease, usually because lessee has not paid royalties or provided free gas, then:
- Statutory process of notice and filing an affidavit on record to cancel the lease.
- Lessee must be in breach of lease.
- Specific lease terms are important, so have an attorney review your lease.
- Then you can sell lease rights for a lease bonus and a landowner royalty.
4. Land is Leased and Receiving Royalties
- If your land is leased and the lessee is complying with that lease by paying you royalties, rental and/or free gas then:
- Lessee has right to assign/sell your lease to another operator and the lessee will profit from the lease bonus.
- Check terms of lease, there are exceptions.
- You will still receive landowner royalties per the original lease.
- If original lease has provision limiting the size of consolidated well units, you may be able to bargain for some compensation.
To view or download this file as a PDF, please click here.
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