The MāoriLandCourt is notifying all owners of the above block about the following meeting of
assembled owners:
Whenua: Otonga 3
DATE: Saturday 16 August
TIME: 2 pm Chatham Islands time (1:15pm New Zealand time)
VENUE: The Den, Norman Kirk Memorial Reserve, Chatham Islands
Kaupapa:
The Seymour whānau resolve to seek the full partition of the Otonga 3 block into 2 separate
titles, as represented on the sketch plan provided.
TAKE NOTICE that Philip Seymour has made application to the MāoriLandCourt at Te
Waipounamu for a meeting of assembled owners seeking a partition of the Otonga 3 block.
Page 1 For more information visit www.māorilandcourt.govt.nz MLC 04/26 -53
The MāoriLandCourt of New Zealand / The Māori Appellate Court of New Zealand
(Please select the name of the MāoriLandCourt District in which some or all of the lands or the subject matter of the application is located)
Please select one District Taitokerau Waikato Maniapoto Waiariki
Tairāwhiti Tākitimu Aotea Te Waipounamu
1.
FEE: $ 228.00
CHECKLIST OF DOCUMENTS REQUIRED:
List of owners, trustees and their addresses
Statement setting out how the alienee is a member of one of the preferred classes of alienees (if applicable),
including any necessary whakapapa details
Roll valuation or special valuation of the land and any improvements to it by a registered valuer (as applicable)
MĀORILANDCOURT CONTACT DETAILS
Applications should be lodged with the Registrar in the MāoriL...
FEE: $228.00
NOTE: Information provided in all applications forms part of the Court’s permanent record under rule 7.19 of the MāoriLandCourt Rules 2011.
This brought the MāoriLandCourt record into the computer age with details of Māoriland blocks and their owners being accessible nationwide, without owners having to travel to the MāoriLandCourt where the land was located to get information.
Accessing Pātaka Whenua
Step 1
In your web browser, visit the MāoriLandCourt website www.māorilandcourt.govt.nz and click
the green tab in the top right area labelled“Pātaka Whenua – our online portal”.
Ngā whenua kua whakamahia hei rori manakore
Land used as an unofficial road
There may already be a formed roadway through Māoriland, although there has been no formal roadway order.
The MāoriLandCourt In 2003, the Minister of Māori Affairs applied to the MāoriLandCourt for an inquiry pursuant to s 29 TTWMA as to successors to the four remaining SILNA blocks.