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These are:
• when the administration of an estate was
granted by the High Court before 1 July
1993, or
• when a person died before 1 July 1994
leaving a will dated before 1 July 1993.
E whai nei:
• ko te whakahaere rawa i whakamanahia e te
Kooti Teitei i mua i te 1 o Hōngongoi 1993.
• i mate rānei he tangata i mua i te 1 o
Hōngongoi 1994, ā, ko te wira nō mua kē
i te 1 o Hōngongoi 1993.
Māori
land is deemed to be held “in common”
unless otherwise determined by the Court.
5
4
instance, they may own block a and also
have an interest in block B.
For
information about granting confirmation
of an instrument of alienation 1 or about
transfers of whole blocks of Māori land,
please contact a Māori Land Court office
(see page 6 for your nearest office).
2
Use of vesting orders
Except when Māori land 2 is vested 3 in a
Māori incorporation 4, Māori land shares can
only be transferred by a vesting order 5 made
by the Māori Land Court.
An administrative structure similar to a company for managing Māori land vested
in it by the Māori Land Court.
5. An order of the court that vests land interests in someone other than the existing
owner(s), therefore affecting the ownership.
6.
• You should also have time to read and check the
submission prepared by your case manager.
1. A claim or liability attached to property, for example a lease, a mortgage or a
charge.
2.
There are two types of grant: (a) Where a person dies leaving a valid will, a grant
of probate may be made to the executor(s) named in the will (although in rare
cases, formal administration may be granted to someone other than the named
executors); (b) Where a person dies intestate (without a will), a grant of letters of
administration is obtained.
5.