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SECTION APPLICANT SUBJECT DISTRICT
68 AP-20240000013570 113/93
118/93
Carol Jeanette
Turner
He tauatanga ki a Henare
Hartley
Succeed to the Māori land
interests of Henare Hartley also
known as Henry Hartley or
Tereina Henare Hartley or Henare
Tereina Hartley or Terena Henare
or Treanor Henare Hartle or
Treina Hartley or Henare Kia or
Triena Hartley
Taitokerau
Applications for Determination by a Registrar
which are considered SimpleandUncontested
Special fixtures are arranged and advertised in accordance
with the provisions of the Māori Land Court Rules 2011 and
they may not necessarily be listed in this publication.
If you are interested in, or affected by, one of these applications and wish to make submissions or provide evidence
concerning the application, you must notify the Registrar in writing by 4pm on the 1st day of December 2024
providing your name and address, telephone number, and email address (if any), and setting out your connection
to the application and brief details of your concerns.
Overall, the more simplified mediation process now included in the Act, premised on tikanga Māori and flexibility, is welcomed. The challenge now is to develop a robust and consistent framework, so that those owners of Māori Land who seek genuine resolution can use this service and avoid determinations that result in a winner and loser.
Overall, the more simplified mediation process now included in the Act, premised on tikanga
Māori and flexibility, is welcomed. The challenge now is to develop a robust and consistent
framework, so that those owners of Māori Land who seek genuine resolution can use this
service and avoid determinations that result in a winner and loser.
If you are interested in, or affected by, one of these applications and wish to make
representations concerning the application, you must notify the Court in writing by 4pm on the 1st day of
February 2024, providing your name and address, telephone number, and email address, if any, and setting
out your connection with the application and brief details of your concerns.
Certainly, some successions do not require judicial oversight. But many do, and the
key task in any reform of the Act will be to ensure that the Court retains an
appropriate adjudicatory and facilitatory function, and that the succession process
remains simpleand transparent, as Māori have come to expect.
Conversely, another ahu whenua trust with assets in excess of $10 million and income exceeding $300,000.00 has less than 20 owners, and all of their addresses are known by the responsible trustee so an in person, telephone or postal ballot is a simple process.