Want this question answered?
Gas rights are separate from mineral rights. They can be sold together or separate depending on the seller and buyer.
You can buy mineral rights anywhere in the U.S. (except in National Parks), just like you can buy the surface land.
A mineral rights conveyance involves the minerals below the surface of the land, not the surface land itself.
The original author retains rights in the work, and has the exclusive right to authorize translations. The translator retains rights on the new material only.
No. Water rights are in a different category than mineral rights. There are different types of water rights: surface and subsurface. Those rights are treated differently. A landowner has a more exclusive right to subsurface water. When purchasing land in some areas where the water and mineral rights have been separated from the land rights it is extremely important to have the title examined by a professional culminating in a detailed report of the status of all those rights.
no. if you own the surface rights they cannot have a road, tanks, pump, or road with out your approval.
Unless it is stated in the deed that the mineral rights are reserved in some manner then any mineral rights not previously reserved pass to the grantee. If you have any questions about mineral rights or you have mineral rights for sale please contact me and I will be glad to help. I have been a buyer of minerals or mineral rights for many years. See my bio page.
Every acre of land has "mineral rights", that is, the ownership of any and all minerals under the surface of the land. Some own land that has the mineral rights, and in some cases the mineral rights have been sold off in earlier years. A lot of mineral rights are owned by oil companies and a lot are owned by individuals and a lot are owned by state governments and a lot by the federal government. Gathering up these "mineral rights" is the job of Petroleum Land Specialists, some of which work for oil companies and some of which are independent.
It means they could potentially harm the surface of your property and you could do nothing about it. If they wanted to drill for minerals on your land, they could do so...without compensating you.
The wife would have the right to grant mineral lease, receive bonus/rental money & potential royalties on her undivided 50% interest and the husband could do same with his 50% interest. The rights are owned separately and each party can do as they wish.If the usufruct is over the mineral rights and not only the surface, the situation would be different. If need more information, visit me at louisianaenergy.ning.com
20th Century Fox retains the rights to the Charlie Chan franchise .
Read the deed to the property. Unless mineral rights are excluded, you have them.