Using Mineral Trusts

To Trust Or Not To Trust

Placing mineral interests and mineral royalty rights or interests in a “mineral trust” is an economic and efficient way for a current or future transfer of mineral rights to family members or beneficiaries in order to independently own and manage such rights. Mineral trusts are sometimes called a ‘Family Mineral Trust’ but can be used for more than conveyances to family members. When one creates a mineral trust one is creating it to convey to the trust all or a portion of one’s ownership in mineral rights. A mineral trust has a number of advantages over a traditional last will and testament. Assets held in a mineral trust are not included in an individual’s taxable estate. These trust assets are in effect owned and managed independent of any other property of the granting owners. The value of mineral interests, due to production increases or the changing market value of the minerals, may also increase dramatically. If a mineral trust is to be considered, it is important that these assets are included in a mineral trust as early as possible. This is done ideally prior to an increase in value in any royalties to avoid estate taxes. Mineral trusts may also take advantage of gift tax rules by gifting early in the ownership or value of the mineral interest and thereby shifting income and value to the trust rather than the original grantor.

A trustee is the “manager” of the trust property. The trustee is given his marching orders by the written terms of the trust instrument. It is said, ‘The trust controls the trustee.’ A designated trustee in a mineral trust handles all decision making concerning multiple mineral interests or multiple beneficiaries as a single operating unit. This can make for more efficient decision making and collection of royalty rights.

Fractionalized mineral interests (smaller multiple interests) can often be lost in the shuffle and sometimes forgotten by later generations of beneficiaries. When a mineral trust is created, the earnings from royalties, leases and other income based payments, are held in perpetuity if an heir is lost, until that heir is located. Unlike abandoned property, with privately created mineral trusts beneficiaries are able to collect on past proceeds when they claim ownership.

Mineral trusts keep the beneficiaries invested in the asset(s). Without a mineral trust, ownership sometimes becomes unmanageably fractionalized. In a large family situation, or when the ownership transfers to third and fourth generation, an individual ownership percentage may be small. The cost of managing minerals can also increase when each individual must be consulted or when multiple small beneficiaries are receiving separate royalties based on their individual ownership. However when a trustee is managing the unit as a whole, the cost of managing is less expensive and the individuals usually have a better ability to monitor the trust asset.

Reconstructing and consolidating several divided mineral interests is an onerous process. This may be avoided by creating a mineral trust early on. It is also intended beneficiaries by proper drafting of the ownership terms in a mineral trust. Creating sound asset management to eliminate disagreement or confusion among owners and beneficiaries, a mineral trust agreement enables the trust maker to detail explicit rules. All beneficiaries are placed on notice of the trust terms which will designate how the trustee will manage the assets and income derived from royalties or income. Unlike a will, a trust does not have to be filed publicly. Using this type of trust allows individuals to maintain privacy.

David L Ganje
Ganje Law Offices
Web: lexenergy.net

605 385 0330

701 355 6885

518 437 9000
[email protected]ff

It sounds good but trustees taking their marching orders from how the trust is written means it's just a suggestion unless you are willing to sue the trustee.

Trustees often have conflicts of interest or just make really bad decisions against good advice and you will be stuck with the decision. I would only want a trust if a beneficiary could take their interest at any time and walk away. Personally I intend to deed my interests to my beneficiaries and reserve a life estate because after I am gone, I hope they will do well with it but if they want to blow it all on a huge party, I don't care, it's their money. I don't want to try to manage things from beyond the grave.

Then there is the matter of who the trustee is. I was personal representative in my fathers probate, kept my brother fully informed by copying him all e-mails, made sure he received copies of all correspondence on paper and called him once a week to inform him how things were proceeding and when completed, the idiot accused me of stealing his birthright until I put the papers in his hand that said he inherited one half. When it comes to being trustee, I know I can be trusted but who else? As with my brother, "I trust me and thee, but sometimes I wonder about thee". Trying to do my brother out of his inheritance never crossed my mind, now I am not so sure about his mind.

I heard the tale of one who was trustee of a Family Mineral Trust in the Bakken. This trustee leased the family's 5 sections on one lease form early on for $75 per net mineral acre and 15% royalty with no pugh clause. They got one of the early mediocre wells, and then no more drilling for years because the 5 sections were held by production and they surely missed out on at least one round of lease bonuses at much higher bonus and royalty rates. Their 15% royalty is lower than my statutory 16% royalty as non-consent. The trustee did seek legal advice and the lawyer who read their lease for a fee of $200 handed it back and said "yeah, you can sign that". The trustee should not have gone to a friend who just happened to be a lawyer. The trustee who would not listen to family members advice should have sought professional business advice, at the very least. The trustee says family barbeques are real interesting. This is only one of several Family Mineral Trusts I have heard of that went badly wrong, it's the one that comes first to mind though. It's what can happen if all your eggs are all in one basket and you let the wrong person hold the basket, even if they have good intentions.