Access to Māoriland was generally considered when the title of the land was originally issued and in many cases:
a roadway would have been created to give access to the land
there may have already been a public or private roadway servicing the land, or
a right of way to access land, across a neighbouring property, may have been put in place.
For a
full explanation, please refer to either the Te Ture Whenua Māori Act 1993 | MāoriLand Act 1993 or the
MāoriLand Court Rules 2011
SECTION DESCRIPTION
4/55 Governor-General in council may declare land to be a Māori reserve
6/1983 Determine succession to Titi Islands lands (order)
12/75 Determination of ownership of taonga tūturu found
18(1)(a)/93 Exercise general jurisdiction of court
18(1)(b)/93 Determine the relativ...
Special fixtures are arranged and advertised in accordance
with the provisions of the MäoriLand Court Rules and they
may not necessarily be listed in this publication.
AP-20240000013830 70(3)(a)/93
98(9)(c)/93
Deputy
Registrar
Kai Iwi 1G2 Block (Kai Iwi 1G2 Māori
Reservation) - Injunction against any person in
respect of any actual threatened trespass or
other injury to any Māoriland or Māori
Reservation.
Any final terms of trust are subject to confirmation by the MāoriLand Court in accordance
with sections 214 or 244 of Te Ture Whenua Māori Act 1993.
5.
As a result, from time to time the MāoriLand Court receives applications to extend existing urupā, or to set aside Māori freehold land, or sometimes General land owned by Māori, as new urupā reservations.
For a
full explanation, please refer to either the Te Ture Whenua Māori Act 1993 | MāoriLand Act 1993 or the
MāoriLand Court Rules 2011
SECTION DESCRIPTION
4/55 Governor-General in council may declare land to be a Māori reserve
12/75 Determination of ownership of taonga tūturu found
18(1)(a)/93 Exercise general jurisdiction of court
19/93 Application for injunction
19(1)(a)/93 Issue injunction in respect of trespass or other inju...
It would be interesting to see the response if our MāoriLand Court required the parties’ written submissions in upcoming cases to be uploaded to the Māoriland Court website prior to hearings.
Special fixtures are arranged and advertised in accordance
with the provisions of the MäoriLand Court Rules and they
may not necessarily be listed in this publication.
The changes affect all trusts,
including Māoriland trusts created through the MāoriLand Court
(such as ahu whenua, kaitiaki, and whānau trusts) and existing
trusts established before the law came into force.