It is from these initiatives that we are see-
ing an increased use of te reo Māori within the
Court, and of course, this has seen a large volume
of new words being used that relate to the work
that we do.
He pānuitanga tēnei kia mōhiotia ai ka tū Te Kooti Whenua
Māori ki te whakawā, ki te uiui hoki, i ngā tikanga o ngā tono
a muri ake - Nau mai, haere mai
A Special Sitting
At Tūrangi
Māori Land Court
Ngawaka Boardroom
Tūrangi Customer and Visitor Information Centre
1 Ngawaka Place
Tūrangi 3335
Thursday 10 July – Friday 11 July
(Over the course of 2 days)
Judge A M Thomas Presiding
Join Via Zoom
Meeting ID: 816 4215 0647
PĀNUI
NO....
The question is
whether the mediation process will allow for mediators to have these agreements signed by
the parties, to provide extra protections to them above those provided under the Act. That
will of course depend on how the mediator appointments are managed.
The question is whether the mediation process will allow for mediators to have these agreements signed by the parties, to provide extra protections to them above those provided under the Act. That will of course depend on how the mediator appointments are managed.
I am the 114th Judge of the Maori Land Court. But, of course, I am not the first graduate from this university to be appointed to the Maori Land Court bench.
Generally, these interests will be such that
they are unlikely to be affected by a particular piece of litigation and they are commonly
disregarded. The preferable course is for a judge to disclose any such interest to parties
in a proceeding and to seek the views of parties before making any final decision on
recusal.