What It Is:
Professional preparation and recording of the legal document that transfers ownership of your mineral rights.
WHAT YOU GET::
- Review of your current ownership to confirm what you can transfer
- Properly drafted legal description of the minerals being conveyed
- Granting clause, warranty provisions, and reservations
- Deed document preparation
- Recording in all Texas counties where the minerals are located
- Operator notification after recording
When You Need Review:
- Advice on whether selling or transferring is the right decision
- A full title opinion on the entire ownership chain (separate service)
- A guarantee that prior title issues will not surface later
Timeline:
Typically 7-10 business days
A Mineral Deed Is Permanent. One Mistake Lasts Forever
When you transfer mineral rights in Texas, the document you sign becomes part of the title chain and is reviewed by operators and title companies for decades. The Daughtrey Law Firm prepares mineral deeds with the specific knowledge of what operators and title examiners look for, and what they reject.
Texas-Wide Services
Handle all counties Recording Requirement
Landowner-Only
Never Represent Operators
Complete Package
Drafting to Recording
Title Knowledge
20+ Years Landman Experience
What Makes a Mineral Deed Different From a Surface Deed
You might be thinking: ‘A deed is a deed. Why do I need someone who specializes in mineral deeds?’
Surface deeds transfer the land. Mineral deeds transfer what is beneath it. Those are legally separate estates in Texas, and operators, title companies, and future buyers treat them that way.
A mineral deed that is unclear about what is being conveyed creates a title defect. That defect goes into the county records. Every title examiner who reviews that chain afterward will flag it. Operators may suspend royalty payments. Buyers may refuse to close. Title insurance may be unavailable for the affected interests.
Getting a mineral deed right the first time is significantly less expensive than correcting one after it has been recorded and relied upon.
WHEN YOU NEED MINERAL DEED PREPARATION SERVICES
Transferring Minerals to Family During Your Lifetime
Parents who want to pass mineral rights to their children before death can do it through a deed transfer. Done correctly, this avoids probate for those interests when the time comes. The deed must be properly drafted, signed, notarized, and recorded, an unrecorded deed is not effective against third parties, including operators.
Selling Mineral Rights Separately from Surface Rights
Texas allows you to sell or keep your mineral rights independently from the surface land. Selling the surface without the minerals requires a clear reservation in the deed; selling only the minerals requires a separate mineral deed. Imprecise language in either situation can transfer more or less than you intended.
Transferring Minerals Into a Trust or LLC
Placing mineral interests into a revocable trust or family LLC requires a properly prepared deed that correctly identifies the receiving entity. Operators also need to be notified when minerals move into an entity, or royalty payments continue going to the prior owner of record.
Splitting Mineral Interests Among Heirs
When multiple family members inherit fractional shares, each heir's specific interest must be accurately conveyed in the deed. Percentage errors, description errors, or overlooked prior conveyances can create overlapping claims. Getting the fractions right requires knowing the full ownership history, not just the most recent generation.
Consolidating Scattered Mineral Interests
Some mineral owners have accumulated interests across multiple tracts and counties over years or generations. Each interest may require a separate deed, and every deed must accurately describe the specific tract and interest being conveyed. Errors at this stage can create the same title problems the consolidation was meant to solve.
Clearing or Correcting a Prior Mineral Deed
A prior deed may have contained an error in the legal description, an incorrect fraction, or unclear language about what was reserved versus conveyed. The right correction depends on how the original error occurred and how much time has passed. Getting it wrong a second time compounds the problem.
Reviewing a Deed Sent to You for Signature
Operators, buyers, and landmen sometimes present landowners with deeds drafted by their own attorneys. That document was written to protect someone else's interests. Before you sign any deed transferring your mineral rights, have it reviewed by an attorney who represents only you.
WHAT PROFESSIONAL MINERAL DEED PREPARATION INCLUDES
Title Research, Legal Description, and Granting Clause
Before any deed is drafted, we confirm your chain of title, verify the interest you are legally authorized to transfer, and identify any liens, leases, or prior conveyances that affect what can be conveyed. The legal description must precisely identify every tract being transferred, and the granting clause must be unambiguous about what is actually conveyed. Errors in either create title clouds that may require court action to resolve.
Warranty Provisions and Reservation Language
A general warranty deed warrants title against all prior claims; a special warranty deed covers only claims from the grantor’s own actions; a quitclaim deed conveys only what the grantor has with no warranty at all. The right warranty type depends on your situation and your confidence in your chain of title. If you are retaining any portion of your mineral interest or reserving minerals while conveying the surface, that reservation must be explicitly stated in the deed.
Recording in All Applicable Counties
A deed that is not recorded is not constructive notice to third parties, including operators. When minerals span multiple counties, the deed must be recorded in each county where the minerals are located. We handle recording logistics and fees across all applicable Texas counties.
Operator Notification
After recording, we notify any active operators of the ownership change. That notification, accompanied by a copy of the recorded deed and a new W-9, is what triggers updated division orders and redirected royalty payments.
WHY OPERATORS REJECT GENERIC MINERAL DEEDS
You might think a simple deed form from an online template would be sufficient. Title examiners reviewing a chain of title for a producing lease think differently.
Title examiners look for specific elements: a confirmed grantor interest, an accurate legal description matching the lease, proper execution, notarization meeting Texas requirements, and recording in the correct county. Generic forms often fail on one or more of these elements.
When a title examiner flags a deficiency, the operator may place royalties in suspense until ownership is confirmed. Clearing that suspense requires curative work that costs more than proper preparation would have cost in the first place.
Attorney Daughtrey spent years on the other side of that review process, finding exactly these deficiencies. Mineral deeds prepared by this firm are drafted to pass the same scrutiny operators apply to every lease
COMMON QUESTIONS ABOUT MINERAL DEEDS IN TEXAS
Does a mineral deed have to be notarized to be valid in Texas?
Yes. Texas requires that a deed transferring real property, including mineral interests, be signed in front of a notary public to be eligible for recording. An unnotarized deed may be valid between the parties but cannot be recorded in county deed records. Recording is what provides constructive notice to third parties.
Can I transfer only part of my mineral interest?
Yes. Texas allows fractional transfers of mineral interests. You can transfer a specific percentage of your minerals while retaining the rest, or transfer minerals in one county while retaining those in another. The deed must precisely state what fraction or portion is being conveyed.
What happens to my existing oil and gas lease when I transfer minerals?
An existing lease typically transfers with the minerals unless the deed specifically provides otherwise. The new mineral owner steps into your position as the lessor under the existing lease. Royalty payments follow the ownership. Operator notification after recording is how the transition gets implemented.
The Landowner's Perspective on Mineral Deeds
Most people who prepare their own mineral deeds do not realize there is a difference between a document that looks correct and one that actually works when it matters.
The difference shows up years later, when a title examiner runs the chain, or when an heir tries to sell, or when a new operator needs to confirm ownership before issuing a division order.
This firm works exclusively for the property owner side. When operators present deeds for your signature, those documents were written by attorneys who represent operator interests. When you are transferring, selling, or protecting your mineral rights, the document should be prepared by someone who represents only you.
Get Your Mineral Deed Prepared
The Daughtrey Law Firm handles mineral deed preparation for Texas property owners. Before founding this firm, Attorney Nixon Daughtrey spent nearly a decade working inside oil companies as a licensed attorney and landman. His job was finding title problems so companies could drill. Now that knowledge works exclusively for the property owner side.
We never represent operators, buyers, or parties adverse to your interests.
EXPLORE OTHER ENGAGEMENT OPTIONS
Lease Review
Division orders must comply with lease terms. If you didn't have your lease professionally reviewed, errors in the lease language may be compounded by errors in division order calculations.
Title Work
Division order calculations start with title research. If ownership percentages are wrong, it's often a title issue. Our landman with 40+ years experience can address title problems affecting your division order.
Payment Disputes
If you've been receiving incorrect payments for months or years, correcting the division order is just the first step. You may be entitled to back payments for underpayments caused by division order errors.