
California Gov. Gavin Newsom has made his war on the state’s oil and gas industry a hallmark of his administration. In 2023, he declared that he “took on Big Oil and won,” after passing laws requiring refiners to publicize data as part of an effort to find evidence of price gouging, which turned up none. [some emphasis, links added]
After years of passing stringent regulations on the state’s oil and gas industry, refineries closed, and Chevron moved its headquarters to Texas.
While “Big Oil” has been Newsom’s primary target, individual mineral owners have been swept up in the governor’s effort to stamp out oil and gas production. A law Newsom signed in 2022 bans new oil and gas operations around “community spaces.”
This means California mineral owners who are near one of these areas can no longer use their property.
According to a lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California by two mineral owners in the state, this constitutes an unconstitutional taking of their property under the Fifth Amendment.
Creates “Health Protection Zones”
The law, SB 1137, bans new oil wells within 3,200 feet of “health protection zones,” which are areas around homes, schools, hospitals, and just about anywhere people live, work, or gather.
Sometimes, real estate has what is called a split estate, where the surface of the property has one owner and the minerals beneath the surface have a different owner.
Mineral rights owners can engage in the development of resources beneath the surface, such as mining or oil and gas production, and surface owners can build, rent, live on, or farm the land.
Not Big Oil Companies
According to their complaint, the Morgans’ grandmother passed some of Hancock’s mineral rights to the siblings via a trust.
The complaint adds that the Morgans were in talks with operators about drilling new wells or turning idle wells into producing wells. Both activities are now banned under SB 1137.

Since the siblings don’t own the surface rights, their property has now been rendered worthless, they say.
The Pacific Legal Foundation is representing the siblings pro bono. Jeff Jennings, an attorney with the foundation, told Just the News that the siblings are just ordinary people, as are most mineral owners.
“They’re not big oil companies. They had hoped to use these minerals to create wealth, to pass on a legacy. That’s really at the heart of the American dream, using natural resources on your property, developing them and benefiting society by creating energy for society – but also enjoying the fruits and passing that on to your posterity. I think that’s at the heart of this lawsuit,” Jennings said.
Many Mineral Rights Owners Impacted
While SB 1137 prohibits new wells near the zones, it doesn’t work both ways. Someone can, for example, place a mobile home on a piece of property, and all mineral property within 3,200 feet of the structure becomes worthless.
“They have a right under their zoning to put up that fruit stand or that mobile home or house, and I wake up, and my mineral rights are gone. There’s nothing I can do about it under the law other than to sue the state,” Ed Hazard, president of the National Association of Royalty Owners-California, told Just the News.
Hazard said the law has impacted many mineral owners, and the Pacific Legal Foundation decided the Morgans had the best case to challenge the constitutionality of SB 1137.
“There’s a lot of oil in California,” Hazard said, who is himself also a mineral owner impacted by the law.
The law doesn’t require anyone building a home, business, or other structure to notify mineral owners that the new construction will impact their mineral rights.
They never find out until they attempt to get a permit for drilling or other oil and gas activities.
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