On 23 March 2020, Chief Judge Isaac released a protocol advising that all scheduled Māori Land Court hearings and other events would be adjourned, to be rescheduled once we ceased to be at Level 4. 2 Any applications for urgent injunctive or other relief filed with the Court during this period were directed to the Chief Judge to address. A significant number of applications were adjourned during this period - in April alone approximately 500 cases were notified in the National Pānui, a...
In some instances this is because the land has only one or just a few owners, or because the land is unsuitable for any form of development and owners have decided to leave it in its natural state. However, a number of blocks of Māori land held in multiple ownership that are suitable for development are also without any governance entity.
Once created, the trust is a separate legal entity and is
required to have its own IRD number.
To find out more, visit ird.govt.nz (keywords: business
advisory) and ask a Kaitakawaenga Māori or Community
Compliance Officer to contact you.
Once created, the trust is a separate legal entity and is
required to have its own IRD number.
To find out more, visit ird.govt.nz (keywords: business
advisory) and ask a Kaitakawaenga Māori or Community
Compliance Officer to contact you.
Once created, the trust is a separate legal entity and is
required to have its own IRD number.
To find out more, visit ird.govt.nz (keywords: business
advisory) and ask a Kaitakawaenga Māori or Community
Compliance Officer to contact you.
The project has proven, simply by the volume of work completed and by the number of title anomalies uncovered, that both title systems were in a parlous and unsatisfactory state.
The idea was that an individual or a whānau could consolidate their shares across a large area and in a large number of blocks with many owners, down into a particular piece of land that they would call their own.