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I'm no expert, but if a well has been drilled and fracked I would assume their existing lease will stay in force. Leases that I've seen specify that if a well is drilled on the leased land or land with which it is unitized or pooled, that locks in the existing terms. Next step is for a unit to be declared, in my case that was done four months after the well was completed but have heard from some that it took six months for the papers to be filed. Actually getting production may take a while, I've been waiting two years for a gathering line to get put in.
GM612,
The lease remains in force, no need to spend money on legal advice.
To quote from the standard language on most leases, "Lease Term: This Lease shall remain in force for a primary term of (x) years from (date) to (date) and shall continue beyond the primary term as to the entirety of the Leasehold if any of the following is satisfied:" Goes on to list things like start of operation, unitization, etc. So from what you have said, the conditions have been satisfied and even though the end date for the "primary term" of the lease may arrive the current lease will not expire and they will not be able to renegotiate.
If the pad and first well were completed within the term of the original lease than the lease will now stay in effect as long there are operations going on, gas is being produced or the well is 'shut-in". If the well is shut in, that means the company plans to develop the property at a later date but has essentially done enough production by building a pad and drilling a well to hold the lease in force. This is known as Held by production. (However if the company fracked the well, then I would guess they will start selling gas from at least that well- then your in-laws would begin receiving royalty payments.)
Short answer: The lease stays in force basically from here on.
If held by production most leases call for a small token payment, a few bucks per acre after there has been no activity for a certain amount of time (6mos, or a year).
You may want to have an atty review the lease any way to ensure your elderly in-laws are getting what their lease calls for, i.e. potential payment to have the actual pad on their property, gathering lines, pipelines etc. what about a water impound? Did they get that and did they get paid for damages? May or may not favor them but all of this stuff is likely spelled out in the lease. Hope this helps. Good luck.
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