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
If an owner with Māori Land interests is deceased, and a succession has not previously been dealt with by the Court or a
Registrar, you can use this form to seek a determination from the Court as to those persons entitled to a deceased’s
Māori Land interests and an order transferring the interests to those entitled.
External link
Māori Occupation Orders Regulations 1994
Sets out what information you need to supply with any application for an occupation order under our Act.
The judge may also order any person to provide copies of records, reports, and reasons for decisions related to the incorporation, and to assist the examining officers with their review.
Pātaka Whenua is the online portal that holds the Māori Land Court electronic record, which includes minutes and orders. In Pātaka Whenua you can search and access Māori land information, make an enquiry and file an application from anywhere at any time.
The “exceptional initiatives” (as I term them) that do require Court orders are sales,
long-term leases, change of status, title reconstruction and improvement, and
occupation orders.
For more information visit www.māorilandcourt.govt.nz
APPLICATION FOR VESTING ORDER
Te Ture Whenua Māori Act 1993
Section 164
Form 30
Rule 11.13(1)
Office use:
Application: ACCEPTED / REFUSED
Dated: ..............................................................
Persons who are not allowed to be trustee:
3.8 The following are persons not entitled to act as trustees:
3.8.1 Persons under 18 years of age;
3.8.2 Undischarged bankrupts;
3.8.3 Persons subject to a Compulsory Treatment Order under part 11 of the Mental Health Act 1992;
3.8.4 Persons convicted of an offence punishable by imprisonment for a term of 6 months and whose
sentence has not yet been served;
3.8.5 Persons disqualified as a director of a company registered under the...
The judge or registrar may issue an order giving the whāngai child the right to occupy a family home on the land, or to receive all or part of any income from the land interest, or both.