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
Visit Community Law for information on free legal advice Ngā kōtitanga
Court hearings
See a list of court hearings coming up across all of our venues.
Te hono mamao ki te kōtitanga
Attending a court hearing remotely
Read our guidance for attending a court hearing remotely.
If you have a paid subscription to those databases you can look the case up. Te Kura Kaiwhakawā does not provide copies of cases or documents cited in the bench book.
By creating a free, culturally appropriate and safe process
outside of a court sitting, landowners and other Court users
can kōrero and wānanga about the dispute privately and
come up with their own workable solutions.
Who mediates?
māorilandcourt.govt.nz
To see all ownership information about a particular person you can click on a name from the summary screen to
bring up their information.
If there is information or documents stored for this person you will be able to access them here.
māorilandcourt.govt.nz 3
Step 1
On the ownership information page, in the top right area, click “Actions” and then select
“Reports” from the drop-down menu.
Step 2
A pop-up window will appear. Select “Ownership Detail Report”, then click the “Download”
button.
Issues Options that may be possible at mediation
6
What are the decisions you have made in the events leading up to now? For example, agreeing to attend
a mediation hui.
The matters that maybe dealt with by an Assembled Owners Meeting are set out in the schedule at the end of
of this form
HOW TO FILE AND COMPLETE THIS APPLICATION FORM
(i) This form must be accompanied with the
appropriate application fee and be filed with
the Registrar in the District in which the land is
located;
(ii) Please ensure that all information required
on the form is completed;
(iii) Where tick boxes are provided please
ensure you tick all those boxes that apply to
your...
The most significant of these was the Mackay Commission of 1886-1887, which found that Ngāi Tahu as an iwi and its members had been left without a sufficient land base. 2 In 1892, the Crown agreed to make certain lands available to South Island landless Māori. 3 Judge Mackay and Percy Smith, the Surveyor-General, compiled a list of landless Māori in the South Island and assigned sections of land to them, assisted by Tame Parata. 4 By 1905, 142,463 acres had been allocated to 4,064 people. 5...