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AN ACT
RELATING TO THE PRODUCTION OF OIL AND GAS; ENACTING THE
SURFACE OWNERS PROTECTION ACT; STATING CERTAIN DUTIES OWED BY
OIL AND GAS OPERATORS TO SURFACE OWNERS; REQUIRING NOTICE TO
THE SURFACE OWNER OF OIL AND GAS OPERATIONS; REQUIRING A BOND
OR OTHER SURETY IN CERTAIN CIRCUMSTANCES; PROVIDING FOR THE
AWARD OF TREBLE DAMAGES IN CERTAIN CIRCUMSTANCES.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO:
Section 1. SHORT TITLE.--This act may be cited as the
"Surface Owners Protection Act".
Section 2. APPLICABILITY.--The Surface Owners
Protection Act applies to:
A. private fee surface land; and
B. leasehold interests in any land on which oil
and gas operations are conducted when the tenant incurs
damages to leasehold improvements as a result of oil and gas
operations.
Section 3. DEFINITIONS.--As used in the Surface Owners
Protection Act:
A. "oil and gas operations" means all activities
affecting the surface owner's land that are associated with
exploration, drilling or production of oil or gas, through
final reclamation of the affected surface;
B. "operator" means a person with the legal right
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to conduct oil and gas operations and includes the agents,
employees and contractors of that person;
C. "reclaim" means to substantially restore the
surface affected by oil and gas operations to the condition
that existed prior to oil and gas operations, or as otherwise
agreed to in writing by the operator and surface owner;
D. "surface owner" means a person who holds legal
or equitable title, as shown in the records of the county
clerk, to the surface of the real property on which the
operator has the legal right to conduct oil and gas
operations;
E. "surface use and compensation agreement" means
an agreement between an operator and a surface owner
specifying the rights and obligations of the surface owner and
the operator concerning oil and gas operations; and
F. "tenant" means a person who occupies land or
premises belonging to another in subordination to the owner's
title and with the owner's assent, express or implied.
Section 4. COMPENSATION FOR OIL AND GAS OPERATIONS.--
A. An operator shall compensate the surface owner
for damages sustained by the surface owner, as applicable, for
loss of agricultural production and income, lost land value,
lost use of and lost access to the surface owner's land and
lost value of improvements caused by oil and gas operations.
The payments contemplated by this section only cover land
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affected by oil and gas operations.
B. An operator shall not be responsible for
allocating compensation between the surface owner and any
tenant, except that an operator shall compensate a tenant of
the surface owner for any leasehold improvements damaged as a
result of the operator's oil and gas operations if the
improvements are approved and authorized by the surface owner.
The compensation shall equal the cost of repairing or
replacing the improvements.
C. An operator shall reclaim all the surface
affected by the operator's oil and gas operations.
Section 5. NOTICE OF OPERATIONS--PROPOSED SURFACE USE
AND COMPENSATION AGREEMENT.--
A. Prior to initial entry upon the land for
activities that do not disturb the surface, including
inspections, staking, surveys, measurements and general
evaluation of proposed routes and sites for oil and gas
operations, the operator shall provide at least five business
days' notice by certified mail or hand delivery to the surface
owner.
B. No less than thirty days before first entering
the surface of the land to conduct oil and gas operations, an
operator shall, by certified mail or hand delivery, give the
surface owner notice of the planned oil and gas operations.
The notice shall include:
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(1) sufficient disclosure of the planned oil
and gas operations to enable the surface owner to evaluate the
effect of the operations on the property;
(2) a copy of the Surface Owners Protection
Act;
(3) the name, address, telephone number and,
if available, facsimile number and electronic mail address of
the operator and the operator
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s authorized representative; and
(4) a proposed surface use and compensation
agreement addressing, at a minimum and to the extent known,
the following issues:
(a) placement, specifications,
maintenance and design of well pads, gathering pipelines and
roads to be constructed for oil and gas operations;
(b) terms of ingress and egress upon
the surface of the land for oil and gas operations;
(c) construction, maintenance and
placement of all pits and equipment used or planned for oil
and gas operations;
(d) use and impoundment of water on the
surface of the land;
(e) removal and restoration of plant
life;
(f) surface water drainage changes;
(g) actions to limit and effectively
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control precipitation runoff and erosion;
(h) control and management of noise,
weeds, dust, traffic, trespass, litter and interference with
the surface owner's use;
(i) interim and final reclamation;
(j) actions to minimize surface damages
to the property;
(k) operator indemnification for injury
to persons caused by the operator; and
(l) an offer of compensation for
damages to the surface affected by oil and gas operations.
C. The notices required by this section shall be
given to the surface owner at the address shown by the records
of the county clerk at the time the notice is given. If legal
title and equitable title are not held by the same person,
notice shall be given to both the holder of legal title and to
the holder of equitable title at the addresses shown by the
records of the county clerk at the time the notice is given.
D. Upon receipt of the notice required by
Subsection B of this section, the surface owner may:
(1) accept the proposed surface use and
compensation agreement within twenty days; or
(2) reject the proposed surface use and
compensation agreement; provided that, failure to accept the
proposed agreement within twenty days shall be deemed to be a
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rejection by the surface owner. If the proposed agreement is
rejected, the surface owner may enter into negotiations with
the operator, including, if the parties agree, binding
arbitration or mediation.
E. Notices required by the Surface Owners
Protection Act shall be deemed to have been received five days
after mailing by certified mail or immediately upon hand
delivery.
F. The operator and the surface owner may enter
into a mutually acceptable agreement that sets forth the
rights and obligations of the parties with respect to the
surface activities conducted by the operator.
Section 6. ENTRY WITHOUT AGREEMENT--BOND.--If, after
thirty days from a surface owner receiving notice pursuant to
Subsection B of Section 4 of the Surface Owners Protection
Act, no surface use and compensation agreement has been
entered into, the operator may enter the surface owner's
property and conduct oil and gas operations:
A. after depositing a surety bond, letter of
credit from a banking institution, cash or a certificate of
deposit with a New Mexico surety company or financial
institution for the benefit of the surface owner in the amount
of ten thousand dollars ($10,000) per well location. The
surety bond, letter of credit, cash or certificate of deposit
shall only be released by the surety company or financial
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institution if:
(1) the surface owner provides notice that
compensation for damages has been paid;
(2) the surface owner and the operator have
executed a surface use and compensation agreement or otherwise
agreed that the security should be released;
(3) there has been a final resolution of the
judicial appeal in any action for damages and any awarded
damages have been paid; or
(4) all wells have been plugged and
abandoned and the operator has not conducted oil and gas
operations on the surface owner's property for a period of six
years; or
B. after posting a blanket surety bond, letter of
credit from a banking institution, cash or a certificate of
deposit with a New Mexico surety company or financial
institution in the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars
($25,000) subject to the following criteria:
(1) the surety company or financial
institution shall hold the corporate surety bond, letter of
credit, cash or certificate of deposit for the benefit of the
surface owners of this state and shall ensure that such
security is in a form readily payable to a surface owner
awarded damages in an action brought pursuant to the Surface
Owners Protection Act;
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(2) the bond, letter of credit, cash or
certificate of deposit shall remain in full force and effect
as long as the operator continues oil and gas operations in
New Mexico;
(3) the bond, letter of credit, cash or
certificate of deposit shall not be released until six years
after the operator has deposited with the surety company or
financial institution a certified statement from the oil
conservation division of the energy, minerals and natural
resources department that, according to the records of the
division, the operator is not the operator of record of any
well in New Mexico and does not hold any outstanding drilling
permits in New Mexico; and
(4) in the event that, pursuant to a
judgment, all or a portion of the bond, letter of credit, cash
or certificate of deposit has been used to pay a surface
owner, the operator shall immediately post additional security
so that the total amount posted equals twenty-five thousand
dollars ($25,000) and, if the operator does not post the
additional security, the surety or financial institution shall
publish notice to that effect in a paper of general
circulation in each county of the state in which oil or gas is
produced.
Section 7. DAMAGES.--In an action brought pursuant to
the Surface Owners Protection Act, if the court finds that
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compensation is owed under Section 3 of the Surface Owners
Protection Act, the court may also award the prevailing party:
A. attorney fees and costs if:
(1) the operator conducted oil and gas
operations without providing notice as required by Subsection
B of Section 4 of the Surface Owners Protection Act;
(2) the operator conducted oil and gas
operations without a surface use and compensation agreement
and before depositing a bond or other surety as required by
Section 5 of the Surface Owners Protection Act;
(3) the operator conducted oil and gas
operations outside the scope of a surface use and compensation
agreement and, when entering into the agreement, knew or
should have known that oil and gas operations would be
conducted outside the scope of the agreement; or
(4) the surface owner failed to exercise
good faith in complying with the provisions of the Surface
Owners Protection Act or the terms of a surface use and
compensation agreement; or
B. attorney fees, costs and treble damages if the
court finds, by clear and convincing evidence, that:
(1) the operator willfully and knowingly
entered upon the premises for the purpose of commencing the
drilling of a well:
(a) without giving notice of the entry
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as required by Subsection B of Section 4 of the Surface Owners
Protection Act; or
(b) without a surface use and
compensation agreement with the surface owner and before
depositing a bond or other surety pursuant to Section 5 of the
Surface Owners Protection Act; or
(2) either the surface owner or the operator
willfully and knowingly violated the surface use and
compensation agreement.
Section 8. REMEDIES NOT EXCLUSIVE.--The remedies
provided by the Surface Owners Protection Act are not
exclusive and do not preclude a person from seeking other
remedies allowed by law.
Section 9. EMERGENCY SITUATIONS.--Notwithstanding any
provisions of the Surface Owners Protection Act to the
contrary, no notice, surface use and compensation agreement or
bond shall be required in emergency situations for activities
to protect health, safety or the environment.
Section 10. TEMPORARY PROVISION--APPLICABILITY.--The
provisions of the Surface Owners Protection Act apply to all
oil and gas operations commenced on or after July 1, 2007
except:
A. maintenance and ongoing production activities
related to an oil or gas well producing or capable of
producing oil or gas on June 30, 2007 for which the operator
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has a valid permit from the oil conservation division of the
energy, minerals and natural resources department, provided
that:
(1) reentries, workovers and other oil or
gas operations are subject to that act if the activities
disturb additional surface; and
(2) the duty to reclaim, as stated in
Subsection C of Section 3 of that act, is applicable to such a
well that is not plugged and abandoned on July 1, 2007; and
B. oil and gas operations conducted within the
scope of an agreement, entered into prior to July 1, 2007,
between a surface owner and an operator that sets forth the
rights and obligations of the parties with respect to surface
activities conducted by the operator.
Section 11. EFFECTIVE DATE.--The effective date of the
provisions of this act is July 1, 2007.
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