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The failure to do so is a breach of the duty to be active.
3. While the Trust Landand Trust Property is to be held and used for the benefit of the Beneficial
Owners, the Beneficial Owners are not the legal ownersand they have no right (legal or
otherwise) to instruct the Trustees how to manage and deal with Trust Landand Trust Property.
Comment Box
While the landand any other property vested in the trust is held and used for the benefit of the beneficial
owners, the beneficial owners are not the legal owners.
The beneficiaries are called the beneficial
owners.
11 To postpone a court sitting, or any meeting,
to another date and/or location.
12 In broad terms, land that is not Māori landand is not Crown land.
6
2 Arrange a landowners’ meeting.
The beneficiaries are called the beneficial
owners.
11 To postpone a court sitting, or any meeting,
to another date and/or location.
12 In broad terms, land that is not Māori landand is not Crown land.
6
2 Arrange a landowners’ meeting.
Land whose beneficial ownership the Māori Land Court has determined by
freehold order (that is, the Court has created a title for the landand determined the
beneficial owners to that land).
Prepare for court hearing
AP-20230000028255
A20130010257
17/11/2013 CJ 2013/42 - Erana Aperahama - and a succession order made at 72 Northern MB 468 on 20 March 1942, and Mere Hori - and a succession order
made at 3 Kaikohe Succession MB 64-65 on 25 August 1999, and 5 Others - Application to the Chief Judge
45/93 Registrar (Maori Land Court) 5.
That Court agreed with the Māori Land Court and ordered a further meeting of owners but endorsed the Māori Appellate Court’s decision that all of the trustees were eligible for reappointment.
Land whose beneficial ownership the Māori Land Court has determined by
freehold order (that is, the Court has created a title for the landand determined
the beneficial owners to that land).
In recognition of the principles of the Act
that land is taonga tuku iho, of special
significance, and to promote the retention
of the land in the hands of its ownersand
their whānau and hapū, the Judges usually
require that an owner wishing to gift or sell
an interest first consult with their children
and whānau.