I purchased 24 acres in Denmark Twp. There is an existing but probably no longer producing well on the property. My deed says the seller is to recieve royalties from "only exisitng wells". I was told by the title company that I own the mineral rights to everything but that one well. Does anyone know if this will hamper signing a lease with a gas company or even signing up with a landowner group??
Thanks,
Ed Ovian
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If the lease is inactive you may be able to have it released. Check with an oil and gas lease attorney to see if your old lease is eligible to be released.
http://cotthosting.com/ohashtabula/LandRecords/protected/SrchQuickN...
The above link may give you a preliminary idea of the status of any lease on your property.
Thanks Jackie , I will check out the link
Thanks Mark,
There really isn't much to read. The front page just simply states the grantor retains royalties as to exisitng oil and gas wells for a period of ten years starting from Feb 9th. of 2006.
The rest of the deed is just outlining the property boundry.
I have no problem scanning it or any other documents and emailing to you if you wish to read them.
If you haven't received any royalty checks then you may be able to file an affidavit of non compliance. Check with attorney. Jerry Lemire in Jefferson is very well versed in these gas and oil leases. He'd be able to advise you I'm sure.
You can search for leases on that site with owner name or parcel number.
ODNR is a good place to look too. Have you received any royalty payments for your current lease?
Be careful when searching by parcel#. If that parcel was split out of a larger one, a lease would only show up for the original parcel and may not be listed for the newer, smaller parcel.
The same could apply if someone bought two adjacent, but previously separate parcels and later had them re-platted as one new parcel. Documents that applied to one of them individually may not show up on the newer combined parcel.
When searching for an old lease by name, you need to know the name of the historical owner who signed the lease. This can be difficult to determine at times for very old leases, especially if a property has changed hands a few times. A thorough title history will reveal all but can involve a lot of work to dig out all the related information.
Yes a thorough title search is the only way to know for certain. Title company will be happy to assist.
Does it bring up your mortgage, etc? It should bring up every thing thats attached to the property. Liens, leases, etc.
I don' think you can see the actual documents from there only the basic information. With that information you can go to the courthouse and find and see the documents. I think thats how it works.
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