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Transferring shares to trustees
Māori land shares can be transferred, by a
vestingorder, to a trustee from a person who
owns, or is entitled to own, Māori land shares.
Page 3 For more information visit www.māorilandcourt.govt.nz MLC 07/25 - 34
CHECKLIST OF DOCUMENTS REQUIRED:
List of owners present at the gathering
Statement setting out how the alienee is a member of one of the preferred classes of alienees (if applicable),
including any necessary whakapapa details
Roll valuation or special valuation of the land and any improvements to it by a registered valuer (as applicable)
Minutes of the family gathering or, if no minutes were kept, a stateme...
Provisions regarding landlocked land have also been updated. The Court can take account
of a broader range of factors when granting an order for reasonable access to landlocked
Māori land, which can help whānau gain access to their whenua.
(Address to which documents or correspondence in connection with the application can be posted or delivered)
PHONE NUMBER(S):
Home: Work:
Mobile: Fax:
Email Address:
NOTE: Where fax or email addresses are given these may be used as a means of notice and service.
There are those that came and assisted with their ideas, those that then had thoughts different to others, those with their own opinions on how to enhance the day, and those with their suggestions on how to make it even better.
Where the consent to the exchange has been given by a resolution passed under Part 9 of the Act
by the assembled owners, a copy of the resolution passed.
Whakapapa of any person who is receiving shares in Māori land.
Explanatory Notes
Where undivided interests or shares in Māori land are to be exchanged the Court has no power to make an order
unless the person receiving the shares in a block is either -
(i) a child or remoter issue of the owner in that block of the s...
You can contact any office of the court to seek
copies; however, if these are not available in the
court’s document management system, you will need
to contact the office in which those records are
located so they canreview the physical file and
where possible copy the physical record.
Occupation orderscan
now be granted not only to the landowner or any person
entitled to succeed to their interest, but also to beneficiaries
of the whānau trust that holds a beneficial interest in the
land.