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
Once created, the trust is a separate legal entity and is
required to have its own IRD number.
To find out more, visit ird.govt.nz (keywords: business
advisory) and ask a Kaitakawaenga Māori or Community
Compliance Officer to contact you.
Once created, the trust is a separate legal entity and is
required to have its own IRD number.
To find out more, visit ird.govt.nz (keywords: business
advisory) and ask a Kaitakawaenga Māori or Community
Compliance Officer to contact you.
External link
Mediation workbook
(PDF 343 kb)
Whakapā mai
Contact us
You can contact us through our new online portal, Pātaka Whenua, or by phone, email, or post.
Tono tuihono
Apply online
Submit your application online in Pātaka Whenua.
The project has proven, simply by the volume of work completed and by the number of title anomalies uncovered, that both title systems were in a parlous and unsatisfactory state.
First-name Last-name
māorilandcourt.govt.nz 10
Step 14
After submitting the application, a green banner will confirm the submission and provide you with
your application reference number.
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 Whanganui
Māori Land Court, Ingestre Chambers, 74 Ingestre Street, Whanganui
Tuesday, 22 April 2025
Judge A H C Warren Presiding
Join Via Zoom
Meeting ID: 879 6913 4540
PĀNUI
NO.
A shareholder will own a certain number of shares in an incorporation.
Ngā kaiwhaipānga
Beneficiaries
Beneficiaries are the people who benefit from any development(s) from a trust or block of land.
The idea was that an individual or a whānau could consolidate their shares across a large area and in a large number of blocks with many owners, down into a particular piece of land that they would call their own.
Within the Māori Land Court districts, average ownership numbers range from 51 owners per block in the Tākitimu district to 154 owners per block in the Waiariki district.