I roto i ngā whakaratonga
tono whakawehenga, me pono rawa te
Kooti Whenua Māori, kua whai wā te Kāhui
Taumata Kaiwhakawehe ki te whakaae, ki te
whakahē tuatahi rānei i taua tono.
Select the statement that applies.
I am/We are* the owner/owners* of the block named above and hold [number of shares] _____________shares
out of a total of [total number of shares] _______________ shares in that block.
Use this form when transferring interests in Māori Land by sale or gift between owners in the same block, owners and
their children or owners and any other member of the preferred class of alienee.
Use this form to create an Ahu Whenua Trust (a land trust) by vesting one or more land blocks in trustees to
manage, as set out in a trust deed/order on behalf of the beneficial owner(s).
For further information, please contact the Office of the Chief Registrar in Wellington, quoting the
appropriate application number at:
Physical address: Postal address:
L7, Fujitsu Tower, 141 The Terrace DX Box SX11203
WELLINGTON WELLINGTON
Phone: 04 914 3102
Fax: 04 914 3100
Email: mlc.chief-registrars.office@justice.govt.nz
STEVEN DODD
Chief Registrar, Māori Land Court and Māori Appellate Court
2
APPLICATION NO:
SECTION:
APPLICA...
Land Management Structures
Note: This includes management structure types of Ahu Whenua Trusts, Whenua Tōpū Trusts, Māori Incorporations, Māori Reservations,
and trusts that are a sole owner of a block. See excluded land types on page 2.
Much like a partition, an amalgamated block is dependent on:
agreement or sufficient degree of support from the owners
the value of each land block and the shares (before amalgamation)
the value of the new land block (after amalgamation)
access arrangements to the new land block, and
new shareholding, based on the value of the pre-amalgamation shares, in the new land block.
By this means, there is an equitable integration of utilisation of the block with the respective shareholdings of the estate’s beneficiaries and the other owners.