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What state? If Ohio you can check online for existing well at ODNR. We had an existing lease/well that was not valid/producing but was not marked released and still listed as producing. Company did make some effort at shenanigans such as bringing a tank out to well swabbing it. We were able to get it taken care of due yo our knowledge we gained at various meetings and from others.
Do not sign anything cash anything or give anyone anything. Get an attorney.
It sounds like a con. Do not give them your SS# I would call the police.
You can call the assessor's office in the county where the property is. I think they keep track of wells and royalty property, at least they do in West Virginia. I agree with the advice not to sign anything or give out SS# etc unless you get to the bottom of this.
If this is WV I might be able to help direct you to places to check this out. If another state, I'll let someone else help; there are a lot of great people on this site, ready to help.
I would strongly suggest you have no phone contact with these people what so ever. If you did anything I'd maybe use their return envelope & request the API # of the well they're referring to as well as a copy of the lease they claim to be affecting your property. Keep a copy of any mailings for yourself.As stated above I too suspect fraud. Especially if you signed a lease & were paid. Do not, do not, give these people any personal identification information of any kind !
Another thought: the company who recently contacted you is definitely not the company you signed a lease with, correct? If not, you could ask the company you signed a lease with if they have any knowledge of a well involved with your property. Also, drilling units were not as common 40 years ago so that part sounds fishy too.
You are getting good advice here. Caualie had good ideas as well as Philip.
Driiling units in Ohio were common 40 years ago. Vertical well units sizes were based on well depth and whether it was a gas or oil well lease. My uncles had leases back 70's that did indicate the drilling unit size. They were not as large as today due to shallower depth and no horizontal drilling.
In Ohio you can go on ODNR web site, & with the API # zoom right in to the exact location of the well in question on their "map viewer". You can get the date it was drilled, who owns it, production history, etc., etc. However, understand that any shiester wanting to get personally identifiable information can also go to this web site, grab an API # from any well in your vicinity & use it for their con. As far as I know most of the title work done by the O&G's in recent times are pretty darn through & while possible, I doubt they missed your property being held by production, which seems to be what this out of the blue company is saying. Keep everything they send you, but I would not engage them in verbal conversation. Whoever they are I don't think they are concerned about your best interest.
Try using the ODNR Oil and Gas Well viewer. Just zoom in on your land and click on the Identify Button, then click on the well. Then click on the well summary report.
http://www2.dnr.state.oh.us/website/dog/oilgasviewer/index.html
You can also type in the API# into the search window.
It seems unreasonable to me that an oil/gas company, which would have performed a search on your property to see just exactly who is the actual/current owner of the minerals, would pay you lease money if the lease were held by some other company.
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