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The first step should be for the producer to provide you with a copy of the lease. Then you should check your title to see if the minerals were ever severed or reserved in your chain of title. The standard unites in ohio ar based on well depth. 20, 40 and 80 acres. see ODNR rules for the required acreage but the leases may include larger unites. Never provide SS # or bank account information. If you get no response see a good real estate lawyer or your title insurance company. If the minerals were severed from the surface estate they could have been retained with the rest ( lager parcels) of a previous owner.
Have them ( the producer) provide you with a recorded copy of the lease, well plat and compare them to the lease on record in the courthouse and the plat on file for the well in DNR records. Then get good legal advice from a knowledgeable attorney on a set fee basis.
I hope someone from Ohio can help, but I think you could inquire to someone in the Ohio DNR about this situation, and find out what they think.
Yes, I'd write to ODNR & simply ask for all records for well # whatever it is, & say nothing more for the time being & see what they send you. I don't know how many acres you have, but producing gas wells are somewhat hard to hide. Sounds like maybe an old well was once there & was plugged & abandoned years ago & the site restored. Just a guess. This smells very bad & I certainly wouldn't cash any checks they may send, just hold onto anything they send you & see where they go with it, while doing a little research on your own with ODNR & maybe the title guarantee company who did the work when you bought it. Any neighbors get any similar letters ? Just keep in mind that there are a lot of very clever people around who will do most anything to make a dollar as long as they don't have to get up & go put in a days work.
they call them --politicians--
While the status may be producing, that may not meet the legal requirement under the dormant minerals statutes for production. If the production record shows several consecutive years of 0 reported oil and gas since 1986, you may have your mineral rights under the dormancy rules. Whether the filing for stripper well status affects your claim is a question for a lawyer with oil and gas experience. If the abandonment order was signed by a state official, I believe the old lease would be cancelled, whether the well was properly abandoned or not. You could discuss your findings with your current lessee who has paid for your most recent lease to get their opinion, depending on the lease terms, they may be the ones who would proceed in court. However, if it were me, I would discuss this with a lawyer who is representing my sole interests first. It may be extra expenses, but an experienced oil and gas attorney should be able to tell you whether the alleged old lease is valid, or if this is a land grab attempt.
Did you see any indication of the current owner? Using GPS coordinates can you find any remnants such as pipe etc where the well was. Call ODNR and see if the well was actually plugged. Ask the inspector from ODNR in your area to meet you at site and see what you can find. You need plug and abondoned confirmed. If it has not been pluggeg then you need to demand that current owner plugs it and updates ODNR status.
You need a copy of original lease. You can find that in recorders office. Staff can help you. It needs to be stamped released. Current well owner must do this. ODNR inspector or someone in office can explain the other papers you described.
Current owner may be on well card. If they are who applied for plug and abandon. and also if you can follow lease trail in recorders office ... old lease not your current one the owners name will be there.
We had similar issue with well from the 70's that said producing on odnr map but it was not. Lease was not stamped released. Three plug and abadon permits on file. Company told us they find well. We said bs meet us there we will find it for you dumba$$es. We did get ours fixed w/o attorney.
Also do you mind saying what county? Someone on here may be able to help with recorders office. I am pretty familiar w two counties.
Talk to ODNR. Confirm it was never plugged. I am assuming the company you got letter from is new owner. These companies aquire leases in big bunches and they get some like yours with dead wells. They do not like plugging them because it costs money. Once you confirm it has plug and abandoned that was never completed at ODNR you TELL them dont ask demand the plug and abandoned be completed. They will need to get a new permit as the old one is expired more money for them. Our well had three plug and abandon permits on file at ODNR that had never completed then a fourth that was actually completed. Demand they update the status on ODNR. File release in recorders office. Reclaim any damage to land while doing the plug. Put in writing certified letter. Also talk to neighbors as you have 22 acres of a sixty acre lease. They may have been approached too. Our well was 160 acre lease smaller drilling unit, well on neighbors property because uncle died and land was split up then later sold. The activity near our well was brought to our attention by another neighbor who saw the company out there bringing a tank and other equip yo the site. We shut them down fast. Our well and still "active" lease affected about 10 neighbors potentially. When I got the lease marked released I sent a copy to these neighbors. I knew my uncles name and knew he signed the lease so finding the original was easy for us. Do you have any names of previous owners.
I am a little unclear about "owner". You signed a lease. With Intervest or someone else?
You said Inervest sent you a letter about a well and previous lease that is not active but apparently well has not been plugged and lease has nof been released.
How did the company you leased with recently miss this?
I guess my point is the "owner" of said well must plug it. If this well was used at ond time by landowner for domestic gas could he have purchased it ... challenged the plug and abandoned .... you mentioned a challenge to something. If so that landowner is the well owner and must plug it.
ODNR Inspector can help you I think. Ours was helpful. On odnr oil and gas website on left hand side click on contact and about us. Click on field inspectors. Click on your county. Email addresses are given.
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