Search results for "Waiohiki Marae Board of Trustees"

Found 1110 items matching "Waiohiki Marae Board of Trustees".

MLC succession tereo

Ko te nuinga o ngā tāpaetanga moni ka whakatauhia kia mutu mēnā ka moe anō te pouaru. 19 Te whakapapa, kāwai heke, e hono ai taua tangata ki te whānau, tipuna rānei. 20 He kaitiaki – trustee or guardian. 21 He tamaiti whāngai Māori, ānō nei he tamaiti whānau tonu, engari kāore i whakamanahia te whāngai i rō kooti. 22 Ko ngā kaiwhiwhi rawa mai i te trust. 5 6 Hei whakarāpopoto, ko ngā whenua Māori me ngā hea kaporeihana Māori, ka āhei anake te waiho ki: • Ngā tamariki...

Documents/Guides-Templates-Factsheets/MLC-succession-tereo.pdf (1.2 mb)

S113 29 93 Appln to Determine Successors for SILNA Lands Hawea Wanaka

from Q6 Full name(s) of deceased Name(s) of children of deceased Sex (m/f) of children of deceased Age of children of deceased Postal Address (or date of death) If any of the above children is deceased, list his or her children on a separate sheet using the same table as above. 9 Did the deceased legally adopt any children into his or her family or w...

Documents/SILNA/S113-29-93-Appln-to-Determine-Successors-for-SILNA-Lands-Hawea-Wanaka.pdf (407 kb)

MLC Form 01 APPLICATION TO DETERMINE SUCCESSORS FOR SOUTH ISLAND LANDLESS NATIVES SILNA LANDS TOITOI

f) g) h) a) This form must be filed at the office of the Court at Christchurch; b) Please ensure that all information required on the form is completed; c) Where possible, please supply the names and contact details of the successors that are listed in this form; d) Due to the nature of these applications, and in terms of the Court’s inquiry under section 29 of Te Ture Whenua Māori Act 1993 and in recognition of the provisions of Part 15 ...

Documents/SILNA/MLC-Form-01-APPLICATION-TO-DETERMINE-SUCCESSORS-FOR-SOUTH-ISLAND-LANDLESS-NATIVES-SILNA-LANDS-TOITOI.pdf (263 kb)

South Island Landless Natives Act 1906 (SILNA): past, present and future

20 Jan 2021  |  News

Following the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840, the Crown negotiated several largescale purchases of land in Te Waipounamu (the South Island) whereby almost the entire land base of Ngāi Tahu, some 34.5 million acres of land, was sold for £14,750. 1 Ngāi Tahu’s landlessness was the subject of several Crown investigations in the mid-to-late nineteenth century.