Wanted to see if anyone has heard of this company or dealt with them before, though I didn't find anything negative from a quick search. We received an unsolicited offer from them to purchase one of our producing oil rights. Thanks in advance.
He Who Shall Be Unnamed said:
I've never understood why someone would sell mineral rights, unless they are about to die and have no heirs or favorite charities.
EnronAg said:
Same as tlh - should probably hear them out to just end the harassment. But I'm sure the offer will be garbage…and less than my WWR holdings.
I get them all of the time for mineral rights I own. I have a special place I put them before I take the rest of the mail inside. They also call my cellphone. So annoying.NE PA Ag said:He Who Shall Be Unnamed said:
I've never understood why someone would sell mineral rights, unless they are about to die and have no heirs or favorite charities.
I'm mostly curious about what they might offer, but I tend to agree.
Not anywhere close to what they're worth. These unsolicited offers are always pennies on the dollar in offers, they have no interest in paying full value, and are hoping to land a sucker or someone desperate for money. Never ever ever sell mineral rights - unless you've got no heirs and a good attorney who knows what they are worth.NE PA Ag said:He Who Shall Be Unnamed said:
I've never understood why someone would sell mineral rights, unless they are about to die and have no heirs or favorite charities.
I'm mostly curious about what they might offer, but I tend to agree.
I did that once just for fun and the guy tried everything from bull**** to bullying to name calling. They are predators.EnronAg said:
Same as tlh - should probably hear them out to just end the harassment. But I'm sure the offer will be garbage…and less than my WWR holdings.
Had a client with substantial real estate holdings as well as substantial mineral interests. Land rich, cash not so much. He got in a bind for needing cash, not in a hurry for it, but known in advance. He talked to me about the taxation of selling some of his mineral interests. I told him that I would not and suggested that he sell some of the scattered real estate holdings, most of which he had not set foot on in two decades and much of which he had never set foot on (he was a lawyer, and most of the real estate he inherited from his dad who also was a lawyer and had acquired these tracts mostly from legal work he had done). Seems like he needed $50k to $75k to make the issue go away.He Who Shall Be Unnamed said:
I've never understood why someone would sell mineral rights, unless they are about to die and have no heirs or favorite charities.
Yep, that and older people on limited income that see it as a chance to get some money for something they don't know the value of. I think they are comfortable getting a little cash and still owning the surface.Diggity said:
these are the kinds of situations that the folks cold calling dream about
I bleed maroon said:
Is there a statewide database with mineral rights ownership clearly stated? Or is it up to each county? I'm thinking like a county tax assessor's searchable site.
That's what I suspected. It seems to me that this would be a good grass-roots non-partisan property rights reform issue that most Texans could get behind. The oil & gas lobby probably likes the opaque nature of the status quo, so I doubt they would get behind it, and obviously the scam artists that prey on sheep would be loudly against it.Charismatic Megafauna said:I bleed maroon said:
Is there a statewide database with mineral rights ownership clearly stated? Or is it up to each county? I'm thinking like a county tax assessor's searchable site.
Nope. In most cases you go to the county courthouse and follow the chain of title back as far as you can, to find all the points at which minerals could have been fully or partially severed from the surface estate
I bleed maroon said:That's what I suspected. It seems to me that this would be a good grass-roots non-partisan property rights reform issue that most Texans could get behind. The oil & gas lobby probably likes the opaque nature of the status quo, so I doubt they would get behind it, and obviously the scam artists that prey on sheep would be loudly against it.Charismatic Megafauna said:I bleed maroon said:
Is there a statewide database with mineral rights ownership clearly stated? Or is it up to each county? I'm thinking like a county tax assessor's searchable site.
Nope. In most cases you go to the county courthouse and follow the chain of title back as far as you can, to find all the points at which minerals could have been fully or partially severed from the surface estate
As a practical example, I have a couple of pieces of property that I am unsure if I have any portion of the mineral rights. My bad on not investigating, but it should be easier to figure out than the current situation.
Funding it is likely a big objection. How about using a small part of the "rainy day fund" to prime the pump to set up a system maintained with county tax assessors, and then have a small transaction "recording fee" for mineral rights transfers going forward (user fee)?
Fair point. But why then do we taxpayers foot the bill for a database tracking cars, real estate, and business personal property?TxAg20 said:I bleed maroon said:That's what I suspected. It seems to me that this would be a good grass-roots non-partisan property rights reform issue that most Texans could get behind. The oil & gas lobby probably likes the opaque nature of the status quo, so I doubt they would get behind it, and obviously the scam artists that prey on sheep would be loudly against it.Charismatic Megafauna said:I bleed maroon said:
Is there a statewide database with mineral rights ownership clearly stated? Or is it up to each county? I'm thinking like a county tax assessor's searchable site.
Nope. In most cases you go to the county courthouse and follow the chain of title back as far as you can, to find all the points at which minerals could have been fully or partially severed from the surface estate
As a practical example, I have a couple of pieces of property that I am unsure if I have any portion of the mineral rights. My bad on not investigating, but it should be easier to figure out than the current situation.
Funding it is likely a big objection. How about using a small part of the "rainy day fund" to prime the pump to set up a system maintained with county tax assessors, and then have a small transaction "recording fee" for mineral rights transfers going forward (user fee)?
Oil companies have to pay landmen and title attorneys to come up with all of this info for each well they drill. The oil and gas lobby would absolutely support the offloading of these costs to the states taxpayers, but why is it taxpayers responsibility to research what you do or do not own?
Charismatic Megafauna said:
Mineral ownership is so contentious that most (all?) states don't charge property tax on mineral interest, presumably because it's such a tangled web. An oil company i used to work for was part of a consortium that had a goal to capture and track mineral rights using blockchain technologies, not sure if that has any momentum or not but there is definitely an initiative
He Who Shall Be Unnamed said:
I've never understood why someone would sell mineral rights, unless they are about to die and have no heirs or favorite charities.