Call Our Firm:   605.385.0330

Commercial Transactions & Litigation, Environmental Law, Natural Resources Law, & Energy Law

Archive for the ‘Mineral Interests’ Category

Well-known Attorney David Ganje to speak at land and water rights seminar in Pierre

Posted on: April 26th, 2018
by David Ganje

Well-known natural resources Attorney David Ganje will conduct a seminar on mineral rights and water rights in Pierre on May 18th. The seminar is sponsored by the Capital Journal.

Ganje was born and raised in Aberdeen, South Dakota, and handles matters throughout South Dakota related to mineral law, environmental law, oil and gas law, energy law and water rights/water law in his natural resources practice.

Capital Journal Publisher John Clark said Ganje has been writing regular columns in the Journal and other statewide publications. Topics include South Dakota land and water rights, non-meandering waters (including hunting and fishing restrictions), mineral rights, natural resources and property issues. “Now our readers will have a chance to meet David and ask him firsthand about some of these timely topics,” said Clark. “This is a great opportunity to draw upon his wealth of knowledge about issues that affect our livelihoods and quality of life here in South Dakota,” he added.

Ganje graduated from Central High School in Aberdeen and received both his BA and JD degrees from the University of South Dakota. His practice includes representation before local and federal regulatory bodies. In his commercial law and commercial litigation practice, Ganje represents businesses and individuals in trans-actional and business litigation matters as well as serving as local counsel for individuals and institutions.

Ganje has held many teaching positions including faculty of Law Guest Lecturer, Masaryk University, Czech Republic, former Adjunct Professor of Law, Albany Law School, Union University, former Adjunct Visiting Professor, Augsburg University School of Law, Augsburg, Germany, former Adjunct Faculty Member, School of Business and Industry, Northern State University, Aberdeen.

He is a former arbitrator, Commodity Futures Trading Commission, former United States Department of Justice Chapter 7 bankruptcy trustee, consultant to the South Dakota Real Estate Commission as well as the Illinois Section American Water Works Association.

The seminar will be held in the amphitheater 1 at the Ramkota Inn, 920 W. Sioux Ave., Pierre, from 1:00 p.m. until 4:00 p.m. Admission is $20 in advance or $25 at the door. Tickets are available at the Capital Journal. Phone 605-224-7301 for more information.

How not to transfer real estate and mineral interests

Posted on: November 1st, 2017
by David Ganje

It’s not your father’s Oldsmobile anymore: the world of real estate and mineral interests has changed. Yet, in the law, adherents to customs abound aplenty. Keeping, transferring and ‘devising’ real estate and mineral interests is not what you were taught. Following long-standing old usages can result in modern mistakes. Let me provide but a few examples.

1. Old practices die hard. The old practice of a current deed simply cutting and pasting some prior deed language is risky business. A prior deed holder’s assertion in a deed that he owned something does not make it so. In a case this year the SD Supreme Court ruled that current property owner’s reliance on their deed and on prior recorded deeds which asserted that an easement existed was wrong. The reason? Historically no party had ever properly created or declared the so-called easement. That’s a big problem for the current owners. Do not blindly rely upon the historical chain of title. Just because your father told you Oldsmobiles are the best cars made, you had better check. Oldsmobiles aren’t made anymore.

2. Christmas gifts and girlfriends. In South Dakota you cannot convey to a purchaser but still reserve back as a Christmas gift an interest in the property in favor of your current or future girlfriend. Yes, this has happened. Reservations in a deed in favor of a third party do not work. Nevertheless there are modern statutes authorizing the use of a deed outside of probate by which you can designate recipients to the property upon the expiration of your ‘credit card.’ When done correctly it is an alternative to
formal estate planning. This procedure is not used enough although it is less expensive than other estate planning tools.

3. Caveat Emptor is for fools. All buyers require special attention. I insist that my commercial and ag sellers comply, at a minimum, with similar a disclosure report following the disclosures required for residential sales. I also require that a buyer of property which includes mineral interests make a representation that he has himself researched the value of the interests. When selling real estate do not allow for a small item to become a deal breaker. Over-disclose. I know of a transaction where the seller did not disclose that an end-of-life event had occurred in the cistern of a property. This could have canceled the deal. On the obnoxiously humorous side, in a large transaction involving land and buildings, the buyers at the closing table were petty and complained about holes in the wall of the residence. The small holes were caused by the removal of the seller’s hanging pictures. At the closing table I volunteered that the holes came with the sale. This comment could have canceled the deal. Disclose. Disclose. Disclose. A transaction is not the same as a first date when one suggests to the date that he is a professional baseball player. Disclose and be truthful.

4. Getting title insurance is daredevil business. The use of title insurance is common today. Advising a land or commercial client to only obtain standard title insurance is to invite a malpractice claim. Under South Dakota law standard title insurance insures against “loss by encumbrance, or defective titles, or invalidity, or adverse claim to title.” Standard title insurance has significant limitations. Generally speaking, title insurance covers only whether the owner has good ‘legal title’ to the land. Title insurance will not cover the physical state or condition of the land. Mineral interests and mineral ownership are not covered by title insurance. The existence of environmental contamination is not an insured event. The existence of zoning laws or related

covenants which restrict the use of property are not an insured condition. One court has held that, “zoning or environmental laws of general application, which are not recorded against specific parcels of property, are generally excluded from standard form ALTA title insurance policies . . .” There is an important difference between having good legal title — and the physical condition of the land itself. One can obtain perfectly good insured legal title to valueless property. That’s why you hire a lawyer.

David Ganje of Ganje Law Offices practices in the area of natural resources, environmental and commercial law.

Dewey Burdock Opinion Piece

Posted on: August 30th, 2017
by David Ganje

Powertech (USA), Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Azarga Uranium Corp., is a uranium company with pending applications to South Dakota, the EPA and the NRC for the development of an in situ uranium mine operation in Custer and Fall River Counties. This project, known commonly as the Dewey Burdock project, would be the most significant mining operation in the state in the last twenty years.  The project is an in situ mining operation which would use two different groundwater aquifers in the course of uranium extraction and in the subsequent disposal of process related liquid waste.  I will refer to the company as the developer.  I do not represent any of the parties in the matter.

South Dakota contains several distinguishable aquifers.  These aquifers are usually horizontal in nature.  Aquifers are separated by confinement zones of rock which prevent an aquifer’s waters from flowing to the one above it or to the aquifer below it.  The developer’s project involves a number of pending permit and licensing requirements.  In this opinion piece I discuss one aspect of the project:  the waste water injection permit which would grant the right to construct and operate injection wells for the disposal of treated waste water into the Minnelusa aquifer.  This permit application is under consideration by the EPA.  The EPA has not approved or rejected the application.

The Minnelusa is a major aquifer that encircles the Black Hills and spreads out in all directions radially for some goodly distance.  The aquifer also runs eastward under all of western South Dakota. Minnelusa groundwater near the project area is hard.  It is not used for domestic, municipal or irrigation purposes near the project area. Nevertheless in other areas numerous parties including the city of Rapid City draw upon the Minnelusa aquifer for domestic, municipal, industrial or irrigation use.

The Madison aquifer lies beneath the Minnelusa.  Aquifers are separated by confining zones.  The Madison is used for drinking water and other similar uses more often than the Minnelusa because its water qualities are better.  One issue concerning the use of the Minnelusa as an injection zone for waste water is the question of leakage between aquifers. This is also called hydraulic connection.  If a confinement zone is substantial, leaking is less possible.  If a confinement zone, or its surrounding geological features such as faults, is less substantial, leaking between aquifers is possible. The developer in its water rights application stated, based analysis of groundwater from wells and springs in the general region, that some areas’ geologic features may mean water movement between the Madison and Minnelusa aquifers.

The permit application did not provide the developer’s own studies or any hired tests for the immediate project site that address the issue of possible leakage. Unrelated government studies have been done of other geographic areas of the Minnelusa, for example in 2002 and 1985.  These studies indicate that leakage from or into the Minnelusa in those geographic areas is possible. “In the eastern part of the study area, water may be leaking from the Minelusa to both the Inyan Kara and Madison aquifers.”  -1985 USGS study.  A 2014 article in the Journal of the South Dakota Academy of Science discussing the Dewey Burdock project stated, “There is the possibility that the Madison aquifer could become contaminated with this waste.”

In a waste injection permit application an applicant is required to provide information on the mineral composition and texture of aquifer confining zones. The developer stated in its application papers that there is no evidence of communication between the Madison and Minnelusa in the vicinity of the project area based on water quality differences.   This statement is true based on generally available information, but the developer did not hire out or prepare tests for the immediate project area.
In its June 2012 Water Permit Application the developer acknowledged that there are no aquifer tests in the project site.  The developer also stated that more information will be available when the first deep wells are drilled on site and pumping tests are conducted.  The EPA record  shows no tests done by the developer regarding the confining zones and aquifers in the immediate project area.  The EPA’s pending draft permit, if granted, requires the developer to provide information about  aquifers and confining zones at the site before injection could begin.

Geologic testing and sampling are essential to a mining project.  This is technical project due diligence.  Analysis of a mine’s immediate geology and water quality are also relevant to an agency’s rules and requirements.  To determine whether estimates, other nearby geologic features or other historical data are consistent with the immediate geology and water quality within a designated project site, a developer completes sampling and secures test results from within the project site.  Perhaps one could argue it is better or more economic for a developer to ‘wait and see.’  Regulations allow for such a delay.  However, early presentation of material information to agency decision makers and to the pubic makes sense for a regulated mining project that requires public input and agency approvals. Providing material information at the application stage is more likely to overcome objections.  Providing a developer’s test results from the designated project site early would also produce fewer challenges.  Such test work was not performed by the developer before or during the waste water permit application process on the Dewey Burdock project.  All project due diligence is not required by law.  Yet even so, due diligence is used by a developer to avoid risks, to prevent harm and to substantiate a publicly regulated project.

David Ganje of Ganje Law Offices practices in the area of natural resources, environmental and commercial law.

Free Land – South Dakota Style

Posted on: October 22nd, 2016
by David Ganje

Water and land do not mix well in South Dakota. In the last few days South Dakota gave up on its disputed claim to a 500 acre three-mile-long island known as Goat Island located in the Missouri River.  The state conceded jurisdiction over the claimed island giving control to the federal government. The lack of media coverage analyzing the pros and cons of this recent withdrawal of South Dakota’s disputed Goat Island land claim is disappointing. The state had argued that Goat Island was on the South Dakota side of the river when Lewis and Clark mapped the river in 1804. This is a public matter involving a state claim to land on the Missouri River. What were the reasons for the settlement of the claim? How is it good for South Dakota? The media did not ask. The government press releases did not say. Now the island is in the hands of the feds. The hand of government did this deal, but we know not the reasons for the decision.

Property boundaries matter when your land is next to a river or a body of water.  If the river deposits land onto your riverfront by “accretion”, then who owns it?   Accretion is the gradual increase to land, notably riparian land, stemming from the movement of water.  A meandering river has no master.  Certainly man-made law has not corralled a meandering river with anything close to perfection, or to some landowners, with any degree of satisfaction. Questions come up when riverfront boundaries naturally shift due to erosion or accretion.

South Dakota has enacted several laws regarding accretion rights.  The first important section states that when land forms from natural causes gradually over time next to a stream or river such land belongs to the owner of the bank, and it does not matter whether the water is navigable or not.  The second concerns avulsion, or the violent or sudden carrying away of land by a river or stream to another part of the river or opposite bank. Under the statute the owner of the original land may reclaim the land within one year of the new owner taking possession.  And the US Supreme Court has gotten into the act by ruling in the 1970s that the doctrine of accretion applies to changes in the river caused by both artificial as well as natural causes.

One lesson to learn from old man river is:  Don’t use fuzzy boundaries for the legal description in your deeds and contracts.  That is, do not let your lawyer describe the boundaries of your land by reference to a body of water. 

It must be wonderful to be the state.  South Dakota can give land away, and it can receive control of newly formed lakes for free. In a recent law case involving a dispute over the ownership of three newly-formed lakes in the state, the state Supreme Court ruled that effective ownership of these three newly formed lakes, all on privately owned land, should be held in the name of the state.  The Parks case ruling stated the lakebeds would continue to be owned by the private landowners but the lakes and water of the lakes are to be controlled by the state for the benefit of the people of the state.  The result:  more than two thousand surface acres of land, now in the form of lakes, would be controlled and supervised by the state and not the landowners.  Surprisingly, no mention of compensation to the landowners was made for this taking. The state taketh and the state giveth away. It is wonderful to be the state.

David Ganje practices law in the area of natural resources, environmental and commercial law.

DON’T LOOK FOR THE GOLD, LOOK FOR THE GRAVEL

Posted on: March 9th, 2016
by David Ganje

In the natural resources, mining and geological fields, the ‘experts’ are reluctant to call gravel a mineral.  It matters not whether they are a lawyer, judge or geologist.  But I set aside this ridiculous game of semantics.  I deal with reality.  My clients deal with reality.  So we start with the wisdom of my grandfather who was a farmer.  He said, “Don’t look for the gold, look for the gravel.”  What mineral has an immediate, practical and economic benefit regardless of where used, how used, or where located?  Gravel.

Gravel is everywhere – in South Dakota alone, there are more than 1,800 permits for gravel mining on file with the Department of Mining and Natural Resources. States have inconsistent histories with regard to whether or not gravel should be considered a ‘mineral’ requiring mining permits. As a result, the term ‘mineral’ will sometimes be construed so as to include gravel, and other times to exclude gravel. For this reason, those interested in gravel in South Dakota should be aware of the inconsistent legal nature of the commodity.

On private land, gravel rights are managed by the state. The SD legislature has passed statutes defining the term ‘mineral’ broadly when dealing with situations such as damages from mining, oil, and gas development, mineral exploration (but not mining), and abandoned mineral interests. In these statutes, gravel is included within the term ‘mineral’ – in fact, often ‘mineral’ is defined as expansively as “any substance with economic value, whether organic or inorganic, that can be extracted from the earth, including oil and gas, but excluding water” and in some cases, uranium. In these situations, then, there is no question that gravel is included. For example, like oil and gas, mineral interests in gravel are only abandoned if left unused for a period of twenty-three years, unless a statement of claim is made according to SD law.

Unfortunately, the South Dakota Supreme Court has implied that these definitions only fit the situations that their respective statutes dictate and, cannot always help define ‘mineral’ at other times. It would be easy if rights holders could look at these statutory definitions of the term ‘mineral’ universally. In South Dakota no statute provides a definition for ‘mineral’ or ‘mineral interest’ with the purpose of explaining existing mineral interests or leases. For example, North Dakota law states that “conveyances of mineral rights…in real property in this state…shall not be construed to grant or convey to the grantee any interest in any gravel…unless specifically included by name in the deed, grant, or conveyance.” South Dakota has nothing so specific, so the matter must fall to the courts.

As a result, the SD Supreme Court has instead chosen to handle the matter on a case-by-case basis. Those wishing to claim that gravel is included under their mineral interest or mineral right must show the court that gravel’s inclusion in a warranty deed was intended by all parties at the time the interest or right was created; if not, taking gravel from land on which you have mineral rights may well be prohibited, as the interest in the gravel remains with the surface estate. The SD Supreme Court has expressed concern about possible damage to the surface estate by removing subsurface or surface objects that the grantor did not intend to be removed – like gravel. When surface damage is likely to occur from deeding to the grantee an interest in gravel, courts will demand even a stringent showing of the grantor’s “intent.”

On federal land, where the federal government has reserved mineral interests, the analysis is similarly convoluted. The Supreme Court of the United States has held gravel to be included in a federal reservation of “all the coal and other minerals in the lands so entered” under the Stock-Raising Homestead Act of 1916, but more recently held gravel to not be included with the federal reservation of “all the coal and other valuable minerals” under the Pittman Act of 1918. Lest we feel comfortable that all federal reservations of regular minerals will include gravel, and all federal reservations of valuable minerals will exclude gravel, a two-justice concurrence in the Pittman Act case disparaged the “faulty reasoning” of the SRHA case, and implied that they might consider overturning that holding at some point in the future. This may indicate that whether or not a specific federal mineral reservation includes gravel can depend heavily on the composition of the court at the time of the case.

For those who are interested not in interpretation of current mineral interests, but rather the creation of future mineral interests, the key is clear and careful writing. When mineral reservations and interests are written so as to explicitly include gravel as a mineral, or there is some compelling evidence that the grantor intended to include gravel within the grant, then courts will uphold the granting deed as including gravel. Sadly, the issue can become a grantee interpretation versus grantor interpretation, with the grantor likely to win. This is largely because SD law states that “a reservation in any grant. . . is to be interpreted in favor of the grantor.” This road is a little rocky.

David Ganje. David Ganje of Ganje Law Offices practices in the area of natural resources, environmental and commercial law in New York. The website is Lexenergy.net