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Ngā puka taupānga me te puka Tarahiti
Succession and Trust application forms
Form 20: Certificate by administrator
Rule 10.2(3), Sections 111 or 113
(PDF 263 kb)
Form 21: Succession (grant of administration)
Rule 10.2(2)(a), Sections 113 and 117
(PDF 370 kb)
Form 22: Succession (no grant of administration)
Rule 10.2(1),(2), Sections 113 and 118
(PDF 371 kb)
Form 23: Application for whānau trust (with succession)
Rule 12.3, Section 214
(PDF 14...
Fee increase summary
Current rate New rate
$22 $23
$66 $68
$220 $228
$385 $399
Detailed fee list
Māori Land Court Current rate (inc
GST)
New rate
(inc GST)
Filing an application in respect of the following:
(a) hearing and determining any claim to recover damages from trespass or any other
injury to Māori freehold land
(b) hearing and determining any proceeding founded on contract or tort where debt,
demand, or damage relates to Māori freehold land
(c) any other de...
Archives New Zealand already holds records of non-Māori adoptions, and the recently completed
schedule for Courts case files recommends the retention as archives of non- Māori adoptions.
The Trustees may at any time apply to the Court to
vary this Order, PROVIDED THAT:
(a) the Beneficiaries have had sufficient notice of the variation and sufficient
opportunity to discuss and consider it; and
(b) there is a sufficient degree of support for the variation among the Beneficiaries.
A Court will not make a recommendation to set aside an urupā unless it is certain that the owners have had sufficient notice of the proposal and have had a reasonable opportunity to discuss and give their views on it.
PÄNUI
NO: APPLICATION NO: SECTION: APPLICANT: SUBJECT:
54 A20220007314 117/93 Wade Anthony
Gadsby
Topham Henry Gadsby - Succession
Applications which have been decided without notice
The following applications have been decided without prior notice in the Pänui.
More than 170 years after the Treaty, 'We still seem to bear the burden of mutually felt attitudes from
our colonial past', with Māori feeling that their culture is marginalised, while non-Māori fear that Māori
will acquire undeserved privileges at their expense.