Hi Sherry. All companies/lease language varies regarding reference(s) to a unit. In my case, my lease has several provisions covering unit details. I would recommend you review your lease for such reference. Again, in my case, due to my lease language, I received written notification, which included legal papers signed/executed by the Company legal reps., a copy of the unit declaration filed with Ohio, a copy of the unit area/range filed with Ohio, and a listing showing the other landowners who are included in the unit, along with details on how many acres each landowner had captured in the unit. Example: while Mr. & Mrs. Smith leased 130 acres to ABC company, ABC only included 41 acres of that 130 into the unit. There are additional legal documents that had to be filed with Ohio not included in my letter of unit notification but I was able to find those on-line via the Ohio web-site and captured those for my files.
Regarding your second question on royalties, again, I would point you to your lease language. Mine does in fact contain references to vertical vs. horizontal drilling approaches. Your question may be more direct when you say "no matter which way they drill." They do not have to drill under your property - you would receive royalties as simply being part of the unit. But again, the lease language rules and if it contains references to royalties (some people did not agree to royalties but settled for larger, up-front signing bonuses) you should review what stipulations are in your lease document. Hope that helps!
We found out that we were in a unit by looking at the pre-made label on the certified letter from Weston Water who is testing wells for CHK. You are in a unit if the well permit shows a drill bit passing under your property. You can use the well name at the bottom of the Weston Water label, below your address and after the well is permitted you can go on ODNR website Emergency "Well Locator" and see the results of where the drill bit will pass under your property. I beleive it was a member who calls himself Marcellus who described how the unit is a rectangle that follows the drill bit. An individual who has been drilled under told me the details of how a unit is being formed by CHK in Columbiana County and Marcellus who works in the industry confirmed what he described. Search using Marcellus and you can read what he has posted. Good Luck. Ron
Kathleen: thank you for the additional explanation. You are right. It's pretty simple: if you're in a unit, you're in a unit - matters not where they drill as long as it's within the unit parameters/boundries.
Please refer back to my explanation when you start receiving royalties for a percentage of your parcel and wonder why you aren't getting credit for all the acres you thought were in the unit. Thanks
So if you are put into a production unit are you getting paid for your whole amount of acreage in the unit or just for the lateral that was drilled through the entire unit?
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