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
Nā reira, ko
ngā whenua o te Karauna, he whenua nō te
rangatira whai mana.
3 He pito whenua kua whakawehea, ā, kua
whakatahatia mō tētahi kaupapa motuhake.
4 He hapū, he whānau rānei e hono ana ki te
tipuna kotahi.
5 He pepa kua whakaritea, ā, kua hainatia e
te kooti hei whakamana i te whakahau a te
kaiwhakawā o taua kooti.
6 He tangata kua tohua hei māngai whenua
mō ngā kaipupuri, ngā kaiwhiwhi hua rānei.
Kei reira ngā kaimahi
hei āwhina i a koe.
www.justice.govt.nz/maorilandcourt
9
Ngā Tari o te Kooti
Whenua Māori
Te Rohe o Te Taitokerau
Tari Rēhita
Papa Tuarua, Manaia House, Rathbone Street
Pouaka Poutāpeta 1764, Whangārei 0140
W (09) 983 9940
Wh (09) 983 9941
Ī mlctaitokerau@justice.govt.nz
Te Rohe o Tāmakimakaurau
135 Kolmar Road
Pouaka Poutāpeta 23-358, Papatoetoe 2155
W (09) 279 5850
Wh (09) 279 5852
Ī mlcpapatoetoe@justice.govt.nz
Te Rohe o Waikato Maniap...
For
information about granting confirmation
of an instrument of alienation 1 or about
transfers of whole blocks of Māori land,
please contact a Māori Land Court office
(see page 6 for your nearest office).
2
Use of vesting orders
Except when Māori land 2 is vested 3 in a
Māori incorporation 4, Māori land shares can
only be transferred by a vesting order 5 made
by the Māori Land Court.
To find out more about how to set up a trust, visit
maorilandcourt.govt.nz/your-maori-land/trusts-and-
incorporations/creating-a-trust-or-incorporation/
Types of trustees
The Act recognises 3 types of trustee.
Land (other than Māori customary land and Crown land reserved for Māori)
that has not been alienated from the Crown for a subsisting estate in fee simple.
5. A person who has not yet reached the age of 20 years.
6.
NOMINATIONS
Anyone can be nominated as a trustee. The minimum number
of trustees for a reservation is two people (unless the trustee
is a body corporate6, such as a Māori trust board or a Māori
incorporation).
5.
When the High Court confirms the appointment of an executor to administer the
will of a deceased person, the authority for that person to act is given in a grant of
probate.
3.