Due to limited access to the building, the Auckland Information Office is available by appointment only. Please contact us by email mlctamakimakaurau@justice.govt.nz or phone 09 279 5850 to make an appointment
Apply online
Download the application form Transferring shares in an incorporation
If you want to sell or gift your shares in an incorporation and no member of the PCA is able to take or buy the shares, the incorporation may do so instead.
If the panel is considering you for the role, the hiring manager will check with your referees and do other background checks. If these raise no issues, the hiring manager will:
call you and offer you the role
confirm your salary, start date and other employment conditions with you
formally offer you the role.
Before
6 February 2021
Whānau are discouraged from building papakāinga housing
on marae and other Māori reservations because an occupation
license may only be granted by trustees for up to 14 years,
with no right of renewal.
From
6 February 2021
Occupation licenses for papakāinga housing can be granted
for more than 14 years, with a right of renewal.
However, having heard further evidence and submissions arising from the September 2008 meeting, the Māori Land Court decided that the majority of former trustees were no longer eligible to stand for election. The trustees appealed to the Māori Appellate Court, which annulled the Māori Land Court’s orders that a further meeting should be called and that the former trustees were ineligible for appointment.
Nō te rā nei i pānuitia e te Minita Tuarua mō te Whakawhanaketanga Māori, e Nanaia Mahuta ko Kaiwhakawā Caren Fox te Kaiwhakawā Matua hou o te Kooti Whenua Māori.
If the mediation is unsuccessful
Our dispute resolution process is considered 'unsuccessful' if no agreement is reached between the parties at mediation.
Ka āhei koe ki te heri mai i tō whānau i tō taha ki te kooti ki te tautoko i a koe me tō tono. Mēnā he whānau koe, nō te hapū rānei, ā, kāore koe i tuku i te tono engari kei te hiahia koe ki te kōrero i te Kooti, ka taea e koe te tuku tētahi ‘ Pānui i tō hiahia ki te kōrero mō te tono ’.
We suggest that you:
Find a quiet and appropriate room with no loud noises or distractions.
Dress appropriately, as you would when you’re appearing or attending a court sitting in person.