Due to limited access to the building, the Auckland Information Office is available by appointment only. Please contact us by email mlctamakimakaurau@justice.govt.nz or phone 09 279 5850 to make an appointment
For a
full explanation, please refer to either the Te Ture Whenua Maori Act 1993 | Maori Land Act 1993 or the
Māori Land Court Rules 2011
SECTION DESCRIPTION
11/1975 Exercise jurisdiction over ngā taonga tūturu
112/93 Transmitting Interests to Administrator
113/93 Determining persons entitled to succeed
113A/93 Simple and Uncontested
115/93 Determination of Whāngai of a Deceased Owner
117/93 Succession where Grant of Administration
118/93...
Māori Reservations is one of a series of Māori
Land Court booklets designed to help Māori
– and anyone else with an interest – to gain
a fuller understanding of current Māori land
matters.
The conduct of these proceedings would not have been possible without the foresight and commitment of landowners and the growing desire to have the status and role of te reo Māori recognised and living in all aspects of day-to-day life, including the Māori Land Court.
This does not
mean a trustee must treat all beneficiaries equally, but all
beneficiaries must be treated in accordance with the terms of
the trust.
5. Owner(s) of shares ofland held within a trust.
Only applications and sittings that were confirmed at the
time of this publication are listed. For more information,
please contact your local Mäori Land Court office.
The blocks ofland are no longer
separate (refer to section 307 of the Act).
4 Aggregation of titles occur when two
or more separate blocks ofland share a
common ownership list.
The blocks ofland are no longer
separate (refer to section 307 of the Act).
4 Aggregation of titles occur when two
or more separate blocks ofland share a
common ownership list.
Ngā tono $66
$66 applications
Succession to Māori land
Transfer of shares in Māori land
Establishment of a trust over Māori land
Adding, reducing, or removing trustees of a trust which manages Māori land
Determining the ownership of structures on Māori land
Occupation of Māori land
Ngā tono $220
$220 applications
Partition, subdivision, amalgamation and aggregation of Māori land
Anything related...
The court order
The court order is the document that confirms the legal change made to the ownership and/or statusof the whenua. The court order also informs the information we provide to Toitū Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand (LINZ) to ensure the changes in legal ownership are updated in their database.
Succession is one of a series of Māori Land
Court booklets designed to help Māori—and
anyone else with an interest—to gain a fuller
understanding of current Māori land matters.