Texas Administrative Code
Title 31 - NATURAL RESOURCES AND CONSERVATION
Part 1 - GENERAL LAND OFFICE
Chapter 9 - EXPLORATION AND LEASING OF STATE OIL AND GAS
Subchapter B - ISSUING EXPLORATION PERMITS AND OIL AND GAS LEASES
Section 9.22 - Leasing Procedures
Universal Citation: 31 TX Admin Code ยง 9.22
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
State property will be leased for the exploration and development of oil and gas under these procedures.
(1) Sealed bid leasing by the SLB.
(A) Lands affected. See §
9.21 of
this title, (relating to Leasing Guide) to determine which lands are leased by
sealed bid. Generally, this includes all lands owned in fee by either the PSF
or state agencies, except TPWD or TDCJ lands, and certain other lands in which
the PSF owns a mineral interest.
(B) Nominations, advertising, and awarding
leases. The SLB, GLO staff, or persons interested in leasing a specific tract
may nominate a tract for lease. Nominated tracts will be evaluated by GLO
geologists. The SLB will set the terms and conditions upon which tracts will be
offered for lease. These terms will be advertised and bids taken. The SLB shall
accept the best bid meeting the minimum requirements set by the SLB or by law,
or, reject all bids. See Chapter 151 of this title, (relating to Operations of
the School Land Board) for more details on the leasing procedure.
(2) Leasing of Relinquishment Act lands by surface owner as the state's agent.
(A) Lands affected. The leasing procedures as
set out in this paragraph apply only to the leasing of Relinquishment Act
lands.
(B) Identity of the state's
agent. The surface owner of Relinquishment Act land acts as the state's leasing
agent. A minor or a person of unsound mind, as these terms are defined in the
Texas Probate Code, cannot act as the state's agent. However, a person
authorized by law to act on such a person's behalf may do so. An agent of the
surface owner, including an attorney-in-fact, cannot execute a Relinquishment
Act lease, unless a power of attorney expressly authorizes the attorney-in-fact
to execute Relinquishment Act leases. Said power of attorney shall be submitted
to the GLO concurrently with the lease. Both the surface owner and
attorney-in-fact shall owe the state the full fiduciary duty discussed in
paragraph (2)(C) of this subsection, and as otherwise provided by law. If the
surface owner is a corporation, a Relinquishment Act lease may be executed by
any duly authorized officer or agent of the corporation.
(C) Authority and fiduciary duty of agent.
(i) Authority. The surface owner is
authorized to execute oil and gas leases on behalf of the state, unless a
surface owner's agency rights have been forfeited or waived. The surface owner
may not enter into a seismic option or any other contract to execute a
Relinquishment Act lease. As the state's agent, a surface owner owes the state
a fiduciary duty and the duty of utmost good faith. A surface owner must fully
disclose to the commissioner any facts affecting the state's interest and must
act in the best interest of the state. Any conflict of interest must be
resolved by putting the interests of the state before the interests of the
surface owner. In addition to these duties, the surface owner owes the state
all the common law duties of a holder of executive rights.
(ii) Consequences of a breach of the surface
owner's fiduciary duty or a violation of the prohibition against self-dealing.
When a surface owner engages in self-dealing by acquiring an assignment in a
lease executed by that surface owner, such lease is void as of the time of
assignment and the commissioner may forfeit the surface owner's agency rights.
When a surface owner breaches any duty or obligation owed to the state, the
commissioner may request that the attorney general file suit. A suit to enforce
the surface owner's duties and obligations or to forfeit the surface owner's
agency rights shall be filed in a district court in Travis County. See Texas
Natural Resources Code, §
52.188
and §
52.189.
(iii) Penalty assessment for breach of the
surface owner's fiduciary duty. A penalty of 10% shall be imposed on any sums
due the state because a surface owner breaches a fiduciary duty. The imposition
of this penalty does not limit the right of the state to obtain punitive
damages, exemplary damages, or interest. Any punitive damages or exemplary
damages assessed by a court shall be offset by the 10% penalty imposed by this
paragraph.
(D)
Prohibition against self-dealing. A surface owner as the state's agent may not
engage in self-dealing either directly or indirectly. Except as provided in
Texas Natural Resources Code, §
52.188(a)(b)
and (d) and §52.189(a)(3)(4), a surface
owner will be considered to have engaged in self-dealing if the surface owner,
either directly or indirectly, leases or assigns a lease executed by that
surface owner to themselves or to any of the following persons:
(i) a nominee;
(ii) any corporation or subsidiary in which
the surface owner is a principal stockholder or an employee of such a
corporation or subsidiary;
(iii) a
partnership in which the surface owner is a partner or an employee of such a
partnership;
(iv) if the surface
owner is a corporation or a partnership, a principal stockholder of the
corporation or a partner of the partnership, or any employee of the corporation
or partnership;
(v) a fiduciary
representing the surface owner, including, but not limited to, a guardian,
trustee, executor, administrator, receiver, or conservator; or
(vi) a person related to the surface owner
within and including the second degree of consanguinity or affinity, including
a person related by adoption, or;
(I) to a
corporation or subsidiary in which that related person is a principal
stockholder, or;
(II) to a
partnership in which that related person is a partner, or;
(III) to an employee of such a corporation or
subsidiary or partnership.
(E) Lease negotiation procedure.
(i) Subject to the limitations against
self-dealing, the surface owner is authorized to act as the state's leasing
agent with any person desiring to develop or explore for the oil and
gas.
(ii) The lease shall be on the
GLO lease form in use on the date of execution. This form will be prepared and
furnished by the GLO.
(iii) All of
the negotiated terms must be included in the lease instrument. No lease term or
provision may be included in a collateral contract or agreement.
(iv) The proposed lease shall be submitted to
the GLO for approval prior to recording the lease in the county records. The
proposed lease shall be accompanied by the processing fee required by §
3.31 of this
title, (relating to Fees).
(F) State approval and filing of lease.
(i) Any additions, modifications, deletions,
or changes to the GLO lease form must be approved by the
commissioner.
(ii) A lease must
adequately reflect the actual consideration paid or promised for the lease. The
state and the surface owner must share equally in all consideration paid under
the lease. However, the surface owner may waive or defer his or her share of
the bonus. At any time after preapproval and before filing with the GLO, the
adequacy of the consideration may be reassessed by the commissioner.
(iii) The commissioner may reject and refuse
to file any lease deemed contrary to the best interests of the state. If the
commissioner rejects a lease that has been recorded prior to submission to the
commissioner, a release of the lease must be filed in the appropriate county or
counties and a certified copy sent to the GLO.
(iv) If the commissioner rejects a proposed
lease, the prospective lessee will be notified of the reasons for the rejection
and any changes, deletions, or additions which would render the lease
acceptable. The prospective lessee may request reconsideration of a rejection.
This request shall be made to the commissioner.
(v) A Relinquishment Act lease may not
provide for a primary term of more than five years.
(vi) A Relinquishment Act lease may not
encompass more than four full sections or 2,560 acres. A "mother hubbard" or
"coverall" clause in the lease is not acceptable.
(vii) Private land and Relinquishment Act
land may not be included in the same lease.
(viii) A lease may encompass several smaller
tracts if they are contiguous or within 1/2 mile of each other.
(ix) A Relinquishment Act lease must provide
the state with a royalty of at least 1/16th and a delay rental during the
primary term of at least $.10 per acre per year to the state, or, on paid up
leases, a paid up payment of at least $.10 per acre per year in the primary
term.
(x) When a proposed lease
covering an undivided interest in Relinquishment Act land is submitted for
approval, the person submitting the lease shall inform the GLO of all remaining
undivided interest owners of that land. See also Texas Natural Resources Code,
§
52.190(k) and
(l).
(xi) Upon approval, the lease shall be
recorded in each county in which the land is located. Leases are not effective
until approved by the commissioner, and until a certified copy of the lease,
from each county in which it is recorded, has been filed with the GLO. Such
filing and approval of leases shall not limit, waive, or affect any lawful
claim or remedy available to the state. After a lease is properly filed, the
term of the lease shall be treated as beginning on the effective date stated in
the lease.
(xii) The state's share
of the bonus payment and the filing fee prescribed by §
3.31 of this
title, (relating to Fees) shall be submitted along with the certified copy or
copies of the lease.
(3) State as sole lessor of Relinquishment Act lands.
(A) Leasing procedure when surface
owner's rights (including the right to receive any part of the bonus, royalty
and other consideration relating to the lease) have been waived. A surface
owner may lease Relinquishment Act land from the state by complying with Texas
Natural Resources Code, §
52.190,
and any other relevant laws or regulations.
(B) Leasing procedure when surface owner
cannot be located. If a potential lessee cannot locate a surface owner, the
procedures set out in Texas Natural Resources Code, §
52.186,
shall be followed. The land will then be leased by sealed bid as provided in
paragraph (1) of this subsection. The state will receive all the consideration
paid under such a lease except as provided in Texas Natural Resources Code,
§
52.186(b)(4),
which concerns certain rights available to surface owners (and to owner's of an
undivided interest therein) who appear within two years after a lease has been
executed on their land and who are able to satisfy the conditions of the
statute.
(C) Leasing procedure when
surface owner's agency rights are forfeited.
(i) When a surface owner's agency rights have
been forfeited, the land shall be subject to lease by sealed bid as provided in
paragraph (1) of this subsection. The surface owner shall not be entitled to
share in the proceeds of such lease. Upon expiration or termination of such
lease, the surface owner's agency rights will be ipso facto
reinstated.
(ii) If no lease is
executed within one year of forfeiture, the surface owner's agency rights may
be reinstated at the commissioner's discretion.
(4) Leasing the state's free royalty interests.
(A) Lands affected. These leasing
procedures apply to free royalty lands.
(B) Leasing by executive right holder on
behalf of the state. The holder of the executive or leasing rights on free
royalty land shall act as the state's agent in executing oil and gas leases
covering the state's free royalty interest. In executing this lease, the
executive right holder owes the state a duty of good faith and any other
common-law duties which an executive right holder owes to a nonexecutive
mineral interest owner. A free royalty interest bears no costs of production,
including the costs of sale, treatment, transportation, gathering, compression,
or delivery.
(C) Filing with the
GLO. Leases covering the state's free royalty interest are not effective until
a certified copy is filed with the GLO.
(5) Leasing of highway rights-of-way by the SLB.
(A) Definitions. As used in this
paragraph, the terms "adjacent mineral owner", "highway right-of-way" and
"tract", have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates
otherwise.
(i) Adjacent mineral owner: a
person that owns the right to explore for, develop, and produce oil and gas
from a tract of land adjoining a highway right-of-way.
(ii) Highway right-of-way: a tract of land
owned by the state that was or may be acquired to construct or maintain a
highway, road, street, alley, or other right-of-way.
(iii) tract: a highway right-of-way subject
to lease under this paragraph.
(B) Lands affected.
(i) A tract may be leased if the state owns
the minerals under it and if the tract is not within 2,500 feet of a well which
was capable of producing oil or gas in paying quantities as of January 1, 1985.
A tract may also be leased if the state owns the minerals under it and if the
oil or gas is leased to facilitate the drilling of a horizontal well.
(ii) In its discretion, the SLB may establish
the size and the outer boundaries of each tract to be leased; however, the
lease extends only to the center of the width of the particular highway
right-of-way adjacent to the property in which the lessee is the mineral
owner.
(iii) The SLB may refuse to
lease a particular tract, either on its own or upon the request of the highway
department.
(iv) Tracts subject to
the Relinquishment Act shall be leased by sealed bid under paragraph (1) of
this subsection.
(C)
Preliminary leasing procedures.
(i) The SLB
may initiate the leasing of tracts by providing notice to adjacent mineral
owners in accordance with paragraph (6)(C)(iv) of this subsection.
(ii) Any outside party, including the
adjacent mineral owner, may apply to lease a tract by sending the following
materials to the GLO:
(I) a written
description of the tract sufficient for it to be located on the ground and a
map showing the tract's boundaries and dimensions;
(II) the names and addresses of all adjacent
mineral owners, as reflected in the tax assessor-collector's records and county
clerk's records in the county or counties where the tract is located;
(III) an affidavit stating either that there
was no well capable of producing oil or gas in paying quantities within 2,500
feet of the tract as of January 1, 1985, or that the lease is necessary to
facilitate the drilling of a horizontal well; and
(IV) the processing fee required by §
3.31 of this
title, (relating to Fees).
(iii) An applicant who is also an adjacent
mineral owner must also submit the following:
(I) a written waiver of the notice to which
the applicant as an adjacent mineral owner is entitled; and
(II) if the applicant is a lessee of the
adjacent tract,
(-a-) certified copy or a
reproduction of a certified copy of any recorded lease or leases on the land
adjacent to the tract. If the lease has not been recorded, an applicant must
submit a copy of the lease along with an affidavit stating that it is a true
and correct copy of the lease on the adjacent land; and
(-b-) a notarized affidavit stating the
consideration paid for any lease or leases on the adjacent land.
(iv) The GLO shall
notify each adjacent mineral owner, by registered mail, of the proposed leasing
of the tract. An adjacent mineral owner may waive this notice by providing a
written waiver to the GLO. If the person who initiates the leasing process
cannot determine the identity or address of an adjacent mineral owner from the
county records, notice shall be by publication as provided in Texas Natural
Resources Code, §
32.201(d).
(D) Preferential leasing right of
adjacent mineral owners.
(i) General rule.
Each adjacent mineral owner is entitled to lease to the center of the tract in
the same proportion as his or her ownership in the adjoining land. The
preferential right to lease under this paragraph must be exercised by the
adjacent mineral owner within 120 days of the actual notice (as defined by
Texas Natural Resources Code, §
32.201(d))
of the intention to lease, or such right is forfeited.
(ii) Examples.
(I) if the adjacent mineral owners on
opposite sides of a tract differ, each is entitled to preferentially lease to
the center of the tract, thereby leasing one-half of the tract.
(II) if the adjacent mineral owner on both
sides of a tract is the same person, he or she may lease the entire
tract.
(III) when the mineral
ownership of leased or unleased land adjoining one side of a tract is owned in
cotenancy among several adjacent mineral owners, each shall have a preferential
right to lease to the center of the tract in proportion to his or her interest
in the adjoining land.
(iii) Lease terms. Each lease issued on a
tract shall grant the lessee the authority to pool the acreage in accordance
with Texas Natural Resources Code, §
32.202. A certified copy
of the unit designation or the pooling agreement must be filed with the GLO.
Each lease shall also provide for the payment of compensatory royalty in
accordance with Texas Natural Resources Code, §
32.203. The
additional terms of a lease depend on whether lands adjacent to the tract are
leased. If the adjacent land is unleased, the SLB shall set the terms of the
lease. If the adjacent land is leased, the tract shall be leased upon terms at
least as favorable to the state as those of the most favorable lease held on
the adjoining land.
(iv) Lease
approval and payments. A lease will not be issued until the SLB approves the
lease and receives the bonus payment and the 1.5% sales fee provided by Texas
Natural Resources Code, §
32.110. If the
adjacent mineral owner does not tender such sums within 120 days of receipt of
notice under paragraph (4)(C)(i) of this subsection, the preferential right to
lease is forfeited.
(v) Waiver. Any
adjacent mineral owner may waive the preferential right to lease by filing with
the GLO a written waiver executed and acknowledged by the mineral owner or
their duly authorized agent.
(E) Leasing after forfeiture or waiver of
preferential leasing right.
(i) Generally.
Within 18 months of the forfeiture or waiver of the preferential right, the SLB
may lease the tract directly to an adjacent mineral owner prior to a public
offering to the highest bidder under a sealed bid sale.
(ii) Lease to adjacent mineral owners and
applicants.
(I) If the adjoining land on one
side of the tract is owned by several adjacent mineral owners in cotenancy, and
one or more of these adjacent mineral owners forfeits or waives his or her
preferential right, the SLB shall lease in equitable proportions to the
remaining cotenants who have applied to lease the tract.
(II) If the adjacent mineral owners on one
side of a tract waive or forfeit their preferential rights to lease, the SLB
shall lease in equitable proportions to the adjacent mineral owners on the
other side of the tract who have applied to lease such tract.
(III) If all or part of a tract is not leased
to an adjacent mineral owner, the SLB shall lease all or part of the unleased
tract to the first person who submitted an application to lease it.
(IV) The terms and conditions of a lease
issued under this subparagraph will be the same as those found in leases issued
to adjacent mineral owners. The SLB shall not lease to an applicant at a price
or terms which are less than those offered to the adjacent mineral
owner.
(V) A lease will not be
issued until the SLB approves the lease and receives the bonus payment and the
1.5% sales fee provided by Texas Natural Resources Code, §
32.110.
(iii) Lease by sealed bid. If all
or part of the tract is not leased to an adjacent mineral owner or to an
applicant, the SLB shall offer all or part of the unleased tract for lease by
sealed bid under paragraph (1) of this subsection.
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