NO SEPARATE LICENSE REQUIREMENT - 1994

NO SEPARATE LICENSE REQUIREMENT - 1994 somebody

NO SEPARATE LICENSE REQUIREMENT - 1994

Since January 1, 1994, an M.O.G. broker license is no longer required to allow anyone who is a licensed real
estate broker or salesperson to engage in M.O.G. transactions. Those who hold M.O.G. licenses may continue
to do so, and may renew their licenses, but no new M.O.G. licenses are issued. Instead, the definition of a real
estate broker has been expanded to include mineral, oil and gas transactions.

Transactions Requiring a Real Estate License

A real estate broker, or a salesperson duly employed by a broker, may now solicit, negotiate and broker the
sale, purchase or exchange of mineral, oil or gas properties. A licensee may also solicit borrowers or lenders,
negotiate loans, service loans, lease, rent and collect rents or royalties relating to M.O.G. properties.

A real estate license is also required to assist or offer to assist another in filing an application for the purchase
or lease, or to locate or enter upon mineral, oil or gas properties owned by the state or federal government.

Persons who act as principals in the purchase, lease or taking of an option on mineral, oil or gas land or
property must obtain a real estate license if the purpose of the transaction is to then sell, exchange, lease,
sublease or assign a lease on all or part of the property to another. Any person acting as a principal who offers
mining claims for sale or assignment must also have a real estate license.

Exempt Transactions

A real estate broker’s license is not required to engage in the following activities with respect to a mineral, oil
or gas property:

• acting as a depository under an oil and/or gas lease if it is not for the purpose of a sale;

• engaging in a transaction subject to a court order;

• engaging in the business of drilling for or producing oil or gas, or in the business of mining for or
producing minerals;

• negotiating leases or agreements between owners of mineral, oil or gas lands, leases, or mineral rights, and
specified production businesses, or entering into leases or agreements with owners on behalf of such
production businesses; and

• dealing with mineral rights or land, other than oil or gas rights or land, as the owner of the rights or land.

Mineral, Oil and Gas is a Technical Field

Mineral, oil and gas brokerage is a specialized branch of the general real estate brokerage business. The
primary prerequisites for success are a broad knowledge of the elementary principles of geology relating to this
field and sound knowledge of the fundamentals of real estate practice and ethics.

A person interested in focusing on M.O.G. transactions should develop a working knowledge of the technical
subject matter with particular emphasis upon the functions and duties of a real estate broker as they relate to
practice in the field of mineral, oil and gas brokerage.

Study References

Given the nature of this Reference Book and the relatively few persons specializing in this field, an extended
discussion of mineral, oil and gas subject areas is not warranted. There are a number of geology text books
available in bookstores, including California’s Changing Landscapes by Gordon B. Oakeshott, which focus on
the geology of California.

Considerable information concerning the oil and gas fields of this state, their structural conditions, importance,
quality of oil or gas produced, etc., may be obtained in various publications of the California Division of Oil,
Gas, and Geothermal Resources of the Department of Conservation. The California Geological Survey of that
Department also has publications and resources of value regarding mineral, mining, and geological matters.

Mineral, Oil and Gas Subdivisions

Mineral, oil and gas subdivisions are those created for the sale, lease or financing of 5 or more speculative
parcels of land for mineral, oil or gas purposes. The subdivision laws apply and there is no exemption for lots
of 160 acres or more. The property may be located in California or in any other state. If the developer proposes
to make sales in this state, the Department assumes jurisdiction.

No mineral, oil or gas subdivisions have been filed with the Department for a number of years, perhaps because
of the stringent conditions which must be met under the law and the widespread prospecting activities of the
major oil companies. Anyone interested in filing a mineral, oil or gas subdivision with the Department may
obtain details from the Subdivisions Technical Section in Sacramento.
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