Title 43 › Chapter 29— SUBMERGED LANDS › Subchapter III— OUTER CONTINENTAL SHELF LANDS › § 1335
Allows certain state-issued mineral leases on outer Continental Shelf lands to stay valid if the leaseholder meets a list of steps and conditions. The lease (or a true copy) must be filed with the Secretary within 90 days from August 7, 1953 (unless the time is extended). The lease must have been issued before December 21, 1948 and would have been in force on June 5, 1950 if the State had had authority. The filer must give a state certificate or other proof that the lease was in force. All unpaid rents, royalties, and similar sums from June 5, 1950 to August 7, 1953 must be paid to the Secretary within the same filing time, and payments after August 7, 1953 must go to the Secretary. The lease must not have been obtained by fraud. Leases issued on or after June 23, 1947 must have been awarded by competitive bidding. Royalties must be at least 12½ percent for oil and gas and 5 percent for sulphur, unless the holder agrees in writing to raise a lower rate. The holder must also pay amounts equal to state severance or production taxes for the June 5, 1950 to August 7, 1953 period and thereafter pay an equivalent amount as an extra royalty. The lease must end within five years from August 7, 1953 if there is no production or drilling, unless the holder agrees in writing to a longer period. The Secretary may require a surety bond and other protections. If the Secretary finds those conditions are met, the holder may keep and operate the lease under its terms for area, minerals, rentals, royalties (subject to the rules above), and remaining term. The Secretary will issue any needed regulations within 90 days after that finding. Special rules limit how long sulphur rights continue unless sulphur is being produced in paying quantities or approved operations are under way; in one case such sulphur rights can continue for 24 months from August 7, 1953. Keeping a lease does not waive any U.S. claims for sums or actions before August 7, 1953. A person who disagrees with a negative decision by the Secretary can ask the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to review it by filing within 60 days of notice. If a lease covers both navigable waters and outer Continental Shelf lands, these rules apply only to the outer Continental Shelf part.
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Public Lands — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
43 U.S.C. § 1335
Title 43 — Public Lands
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60