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Footnotes
3
4
After the hearing
The minutes (record of the hearing) will be
typed from a recording made at the hearing
and will be signed by the Judge.
So we are dealing with multiple owners averaging 85 owners per title – the lowest 10% averaging 1 owner to each title, and the highest 10%, averaging 629 owners in each title.
The order will be written up in the Court titlerecords if it
affects land, and sent to every person who has to act on it,
for example, to the Māori trustee if they’ve been ordered to
pay money they’re holding, or a Māori incorporation5 if the
order affects shares in that incorporation.
It can only recommend
to the Chief Executive of Te Puni Kōkiri that
the Māori reservation be established.
Gazette notice
The Chief Executive of Te Puni Kōkiri creates a
Māori reservation by issuing a gazette notice in
the New Zealand Gazette.
A beneficiaries’ meeting must also be called if a requisition
has been signed by the number of beneficiaries stated in the
trust order.
GIVING NOTICE
Adequate notice must be given. For practical reasons, it
is advisable that at least two to three weeks’ notice of a
beneficiaries’ meeting be given to all beneficiaries and
trustees.
On this page
Records available for viewing
Making copies of the court recordRecords available for viewing
Most of the record is available to the public for viewing in hard copy.
NOTICE TO PREFERRED CLASSES OF ALIENEES AS TO RIGHT OF FIRST REFUSAL
Te Ture Whenua Maori Act 1993, Sections 147A and 152
In the Māori Land Court
of New Zealand
Aotea District
Subject of application
Kai Iwi 5D1A2 (Record of Title 1038392)
Notice
I, Donald Brent Richards, have applied to the Māori Land Court at Whanganui for confirmation of a sale of the above Māori freehold land.