The foundational legal document of the U.S. oil and gas industry is the
oil and gas lease. Oil and gas producing companies do not always own the land they drill on. Often, the company (the
lessee) leases the
mineral rights from the owner (the
lessor). Major points in a lease include the description of the property, the term (duration), and the payments to the lessor. unless the lease specifies otherwise (a "no-surface access" lease).
Term of the lease A lease remains in effect for a certain period of time, called the primary term, as long as the lessee pays the annual rental. The lease expires after the primary term, unless drilling or oil and gas production has started on the lease. If production is established, the lease will remain in effect past the primary term, as long as the lease continuously produces oil or gas. The lease can however, be revived by virtue of delay rentals.
Delay rentals are fees paid to the lessor, to delay production or commencement of drilling, without terminating the lease. There are other clauses that also revive the lease. To commence drilling a well under the
habendum clause means that substantial preparations for such drilling has to be undertaken, as long as such measures have been commenced in
good faith and with
due diligence. The habendum clause sets out these terms, as well as most significantly, identifying the parties to the transaction and their interests in the conveyed real property. An oil and gas lease generally includes a
force majeure clause. Such agreement relieves the lessee from liability for breach, if the party's performance is impeded as the result of a natural cause that could not have been anticipated or prevented. This
Act of God must completely prevent performance and must be unanticipated. Courts often construe this clause very strictly and rarely enforce it. For example, a
tornado preventing performance in
Oklahoma would not trigger the
force majeure clause, since tornadoes are a common occurrence in Oklahoma. The Responsible Federal Oil and Gas Lease Act (2008), also called the "Use It or Lose It" bill (
HR 6251 IH), proposed prohibiting the
Secretary of the Interior from issuing new federal oil and gas leases to holders of existing leases who do not either diligently develop the lands subject to such existing leases or
relinquish such leases. This bill failed to pass in the House of Representatives.
Pugh clauses Unless specified otherwise, establishing commercial production from a single well within the lease will hold the entire lease as long as production continues. Language to the contrary is called a Pugh clause. The Pugh Clause is named after a Louisiana lawyer, Lawrence G. Pugh, who first used this kind of language in an oil and gas lease in 1947. In Texas, the clause is sometimes referred to as a "Freestone Riders" clause. A Pugh Clause is meant to prevent a lessee from declaring all lands under an oil and gas lease as being held by production, even if production only occurs on a fraction of the property. A Pugh clause may specify that a producing well may hold only a specified area around that well; after the primary term, the mineral owner is free to lease the rest of the land to others. Pugh clause can be either "vertical", "horizontal", or both. A vertical Pugh clause limits the lease to certain depths or certain geological formations. A horizontal Pugh clause severs a leasehold on the basis of horizontal planes, while a vertical Pugh clause severs based on vertical planes only.
Payments Payments to the lessor typically take three forms: bonus, rental, and
royalties, as negotiated between the parties. • The bonus is an up-front payment made at the time the lease takes effect. • The rental is an annual payment, usually made until such time as the property begins producing oil or gas in commercial quantities. The royalty is a portion of the gross value of any oil or gas produced from the lease that is paid to the mineral owner. It is not a portion of profits, for it is paid without deducting costs of drilling, completing, or operating the well. Whether or not the operator can deduct costs of treating, transporting, or marketing the oil and gas, if not specified in the lease, has been a matter of legal dispute. The traditional royalty rate for oil and gas in the United States was one-eighth (12.5 percent), although today it is often higher. Some states, such as Pennsylvania and West Virginia, have set the legal minimum royalty for private oil and gas leases to one-eighth. In an "unless-delay rental" lease, a lessee agrees to pay delay rentals so long as the lessee is not drilling on the property. An "unless" oil and gas lease terminates automatically, if the lessee fails to drill within the specified time or pay the delay rentals as called for in the lease. == Contract ==