Prepare for court hearing
AP-20240000014155 19/12/2024 Tuhuna 12A1 block - Application for payment from the Māori Land Court SpecialAid Fund for reasonable legal costs.
PÄNUI
NO:
APPLICATION NO: SECTION: APPLICANT: SUBJECT:
36 A20210004326 18(1)(a)/93 Florence Burns Apikara Te Nohopani Moeke Rangi - Determination
of a Life Interest
TAIRÄWHITI continued
Hakihea / DECEMBER 2022 - NATIONAL PÄNUI 13
Applications Not Ready to Proceed
The applications listed below were received up to the closing date of this Pänui and are either not yet ready to
proceed to Court hearing or do not require a formal sitting.
a judge or judicial officer - to make a complaint about the conduct of a judge or judicial officer, go to: Judicial Conduct Commissioner
a member of a tribunal - see: Complaining about a member of a tribunal
a lawyer - contact the New Zealand Law Society: Lawyers Complaints Service
a legal aid lawyer – use the following form: Make a complaint about a legal aid provider
a Deputy Registrar when exercising their powers – see: Review of registrar’s...
This
programme of work is on-going.
Present day application records are (once concluded) filed both electronically by application number
in the MLIS and physically on a closed application file by the last minute book reference associated
with the application, or on the related Trust file (if the application related to a management
structure) or by personality or estate file (if the application related to a succession) in the district
registry offi...
Te rautaki Ao Māori
A te reo Māori resource for words
used in the Māori Land Court and
the Waitangi Tribunal
Ngā Kupu Māori mō te
Kooti Whenua Māori me
te Rōpū Whakamana i te
Tiriti o Waitangi
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acting prudently mahi i runga i te āta tūpato
acting reasonably mahi i runga i te āta whakaaro
acting competently mahi i runga i te matatau ki ngā mahi
acting in good conscience mahi i runga i te whakaaro pai
acting impartially mahi i runga i te tōkeke
active (as in inqu...
In the Urewera region, as
a result of special legislation enacted in 1896,
titles were initially investigated by the Urewera
Commission, a special tribunal, rather than by
the Native Land Court.