Title 30 › Chapter CHAPTER 12— - MULTIPLE MINERAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE SAME TRACTS › § 527
An applicant, offeror, permittee, or lessee under the mineral leasing laws may ask the Secretary of the Interior to publish a public notice about their application, offer, permit, or lease. Before asking, they must have filed a county record about it at least 90 days earlier. The request for publication must include a certified copy of that county record, sworn statements by people over 21 who checked the land about who is actually occupying or working it, and a certificate from a title company, abstractor, or attorney showing anyone who appears to have an interest under any unpatented mining claim. The Department will publish the notice in a local paper (daily: the Wednesday issue for nine consecutive weeks; weekly: nine consecutive issues; semi/triweekly: the same weekday for nine weeks). The notice will describe the land and tell anyone claiming rights under an unpatented mining claim to file a verified statement at the office named in the notice within 150 days of the first publication. That verified statement must give the claim’s date of location, book and page of recordation, survey section(s) or unsurveyed tie, whether the claimant is a locator or purchaser, and the claimant’s name and address and any known others. Within 15 days after first publication the requester must deliver or mail copies by registered or certified mail to people shown by the affidavits or title certificate and file an affidavit proving delivery. If a claimant fails to file the required verified statement within 150 days, they will be treated as having waived any right, title, and interest in Leasing Act minerals for those lands, will be deemed to consent that the claim and any patent be subject to the reservation in section 524, and will be barred from later asserting such mineral rights. If a verified statement is filed, the Secretary will set a hearing in the county to decide the claim, following the Department’s contest rules; a final decision that upholds the claimant protects that claimant from later actions under this rule. A claimant may file in the county a request to receive copies of such notices; that request must list name and address and certain claim details but does not affect title or give legal notice. If the requester fails to personally deliver or mail required copies, the publication is ineffective as to any person not properly notified and that person’s rights are not harmed by failing to file.
Full Legal Text
Mineral Lands and Mining — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
30 U.S.C. § 527
Title 30 — Mineral Lands and Mining
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73