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SECTION APPLICANT SUBJECT
SP 7 10:00 AM AP-20240000001802 19(1)(a)/93 Deputy Registrar
c/- Ngati
Moerewa o
MHKM Māori
Incorporation
Ultimate Holding
Company,
Shearing
Services
Kamupene Ltd,
and Tarahau
Farming Ltd
Motatau 5E25F,
Maungakawakawa 20,
PT Motatau 5E12A,
Kotuku E, and Murihiku
– Injunction against any
person in respect of any
actual threatened
trespass or other injury
to any Māori land or
Māori Reservation
(Respondents: Attorney
General of N...
SECTION APPLICANT SUBJECT
SP 7 10:00 AM AP-20240000001802 19(1)(a)/93 Deputy Registrar
c/- Ngati
Moerewa o
MHKM Māori
Incorporation
Ultimate Holding
Company,
Shearing
Services
Kamupene Ltd,
and Tarahau
Farming Ltd
Motatau 5E25F,
Maungakawakawa 20,
PT Motatau 5E12A,
Kotuku E, and Murihiku
– Injunction against any
person in respect of any
actual threatened
trespass or other injury
to any Māori land or
Māori Reservation
(Respondents: Attorney
General of N...
Chief Judge Fox (Ngāti Porou, Rongowhakaata, Te Whānau a Apanui) is the 17th
Chief Judge of the Māori Land Court, and the first wahine Māori to hold the role.
A long-term pattern of poor returns from activities, such as farms that run at a loss.
The land is not being well managed.
Management is not providing shareholders with accurate and timely reports, e.g.
You will also need to be clear what the plan is for building on
the land, including who the housing is for.
Contact a Māori Land Court offices for further information
about building on Māori land.
Trusts can be 'interest based' or 'land based'. Interest based trusts hold interests (or shares in Māori land blocks, while ‘land based’ trusts may manage a Māori land block or blocks on behalf of landowners.
1
Māori Land Update –
Ngā Āhuatanga o te whenua
May 2023 | Haratua 2023
This update is issued by the Office of the Chief Registrar, Māori Land Court | Te Kooti Whenua Māori
as part of the ongoing efforts to help inform and assist owners, organisations and government
agencies about the characteristics of Māori Customary and Māori Freehold Land.
In his classic book Māori Land Tenure
(1977) Sir Hugh Kawharu wrote that the system
of Māori land tenure created by the Native Lands
Act of 1865 was an ‘engine of destruction for
any tribe’s tenure of land, anywhere’ (p 15).
For example, you will need to be able to record that a
surviving spouse is entitled to income from a land interest that
they do not own, and that some owners are not entitled to the
income from their land interest.
The changes affect all trusts,
including Māori land trusts created through the Māori Land Court
(such as ahu whenua, kaitiaki, and whānau trusts) and existing
trusts established before the law came into force.