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
The minute books, that is, the books or binders containing the hard-copy record of the
proceedings of the Court; and
B. The files of the Court containing the hard-copy applications and other documents or
materials compiled by the Court in respect of each proceeding; and
C.
The Land Status Report the Tasman District Council received in 2004.
12 Helen Murdoch, “Māori Mull Land Options” Nelson Mail, 19 July 2012.
b. A draft Māori Land plan by a surveyor. The surveyor was to review the
plans and maps of the area and be available to appear as an expert
witness if required, lodge a survey plan for approval and provide any
other advice required.
3.
Footnotes
3
4
instance, they may own block a and also
have an interest in block B. With the consent
of the other owners of both blocks, and by
making an application to the Māori Land
court for a combined partition, the interests
could be combined to create the new
block Z. in all partition cases, the general
procedure for a partition application should
be followed.
Footnotes
3
4
instance, they may own block a and also
have an interest in block B. With the consent
of the other owners of both blocks, and by
making an application to the Māori Land
court for a combined partition, the interests
could be combined to create the new
block Z. in all partition cases, the general
procedure for a partition application should
be followed.
If the Court considers that the order should be
completed without delay/issued without the appeal
period, the Court will declare the order to be
"completed without delay" and then the order can
be released immediately (Rule 7.5(2)(b) of the
Māori Land Court Rules 2011)
IWI
The traditional Māori tribal hierarchy and social order
made up of hapū (kin groups) and whānau (family
groups), having a founding ancestor and territorial
(tribal) boundaries.
Instead, the key test is quite appropriately that there is no “meritorious
objection” to the formation of the trust (s 215(4)(b)). The drafters of the Act clearly
understood the dynamics of Māori land and Māori land owners.
Wehenga ā-rōpū
Ka whai hua he kaipupuri, he rōpū kaipupuri
whenua rānei mēnā ka honoa ā rātou
rawa, mēnā e rua ngā poraka whenua ka
whakakotahitia hei poraka kotahi, arā mēnā
nō rātou a poraka a, ā, ka whai pānga anō
rātou ki roto i te poraka B. Ka āhei rātou
ki te tono mō tētahi wehenga ā-rōpū ki te
Kooti Whenua Māori, mēnā ka whakaae
ētahi atu o ngā kaipupuri o ngā poraka e
rua, kāti kua hangaia ko poraka Z. i roto i
ngā take wehenga katoa, me āta whai i ngā
huarahi tuku ton...