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Successors are determined upon intestacy as set out in section 109 Te Ture Whenua Māori Act 1993.
6 Checklist of documents required:
7 Sharing of contact details
Contact information of potential owners for the SILNA blocks under the Ngāi Tahu Deed of Settlement, with permission, are
shared with Te Puni Kōkiri and Te Arawhiti (Office of Māori Crown Relations).
It is a
comprehensive guide to transferring
Māori land shares by a vesting order:
• when the ownership of a Māori land block
is held in shares by a group of owners
• when a land block is vested in a Māori
incorporation.
It is a
comprehensive guide to transferring
Māori land shares by a vesting order:
• when the ownership of a Māori land block
is held in shares by a group of owners
• when a land block is vested in a Māori
incorporation.
It is a
comprehensive guide to transferring
Māori land shares by a vesting order:
• when the ownership of a Māori land block
is held in shares by a group of owners
• when a land block is vested in a Māori
incorporation.
COMBINED PARTITION
An owner or group of owners may benefit by combining their
interests, held in two neighbouring blocks, into one block. For
instance, they may own block A and also have an interest in
block B.
In 2017 an article in Te Karaka , Te Rūnanga o Ngāi Tahu’s on-line magazine, noted: While work is almost complete on identifying successors for the Hāwea-Wānaka block, minimal mahi has been done for the Toitoi block and almost nothing for the remaining two blocks.