ORGANISATION MEMBERS (TRUSTEES)
Step 8
Below these sections, scroll down to access five tabs with further information, the tabs cover:
• Ownership
• Details
• Review details
• History
• Documents
Click through the headings to explore the additional information available and browse the
associated ownership documents for the management structure.
Where a determination or order has already been made by a registrar, affected persons may also
apply to the court to seek a review of that determination or order. A review must be lodged within 20 working days
after the determination or order is made or, at the satisfaction of a judge, within a longer period.
The Māori Land Court deals with applications for
new trusts, replacement trustees, variations to trusts,
reviews of trusts and formal complaints. The Māori Land
Court also receives trust reports and financial accounts.
The Māori Land Court deals with applications for
new trusts, replacement trustees, variations to trusts,
reviews of trusts and formal complaints. The Māori Land
Court also receives trust reports and financial accounts.
The Māori Land Court deals with applications for
new trusts, replacement trustees, variations to trusts,
reviews of trusts and formal complaints. The Māori Land
Court also receives trust reports and financial accounts.
Where a determination or order has already been made by a registrar, affected persons may also
apply to the court to seek a review of that determination or order. A review must be lodged within 20 working days
after the determination or order is made or, at the satisfaction of a judge, within a longer period.
The Tribunal concluded, after
an exhaustive review of the evidence, that the
‘gift’ was understood by Horonuku Te Heu Heu
to be an offer of a partnership with the Queen
as a joint trustee and custodian of the peaks.
What the Māori Freehold Land Registration Project has done has been to provide an invaluable updated base of knowledge for a new generation of policy makers keen to review and improve the manner in which owners, their whanau or hapu hold title.
In the issues paper produced
in April 2021 by the Law Commission entitled “Review of Succession: Rights to a person’s property on
death” the paper identifies a number of tikanga that I consider to be relevant and reproduce here.