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Ngā puka taupānga me te puka Tarahiti
Succession and Trust application forms
Form 20: Certificate by administrator
Rule 10.2(3), Sections 111 or 113
(PDF 263 kb)
Form 21: Succession (grant of administration)
Rule 10.2(2)(a), Sections 113 and 117
(PDF 370 kb)
Form 22: Succession (no grant of administration)
Rule 10.2(1),(2), Sections 113 and 118
(PDF 371 kb)
Form 23: Application for whānau trust (with succession)
Rule 12.3, Section 214
(PDF 14...
This is in
case an appeal is lodged against the judge’s decision.
The order will be written up in the Court title records 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.
Use this form to create an Ahu Whenua Trust (a land trust) by vesting one or more land blocks in trustees to
manage, as set out in a trust deed/order on behalf of the beneficial owner(s).
I have advised the owners:
(a) That an occupation order may pass by succession; YES NO; and
(b) that an occupation order may be for a definite term
or until a specified event;
YES NO; and
(c) of the term for which the order is sought; YES NO
6.
This is
in case any appeal is lodged to contest the
decision made by the Judge.
The order will then be written up in the
Court title records if it affects land, and
will be sent to any party who has to act
on it, for example the Māori trustee if
the Māori trustee has been ordered to
pay money he/she is holding, or a Māori
incorporation if the order affects shares in
that incorporation.
This model for the utilisation of multiply-owned Māori land had its origins in Taitokerau in 1989 where, under s 438 of the Māori Affairs Act 1953, a block was vested in a trust with exclusive use areas identified in a schedule to the trust order for whānau shareholding groups.
Their powers, rights, and obligations are set
out in the trust order.
Trustees must not spend money unnecessarily or without
proper authority, as this is a breach of the trust order.
Their powers, rights, and obligations are set
out in the trust order.
Trustees must not spend money unnecessarily or without
proper authority, as this is a breach of the trust order.
Their powers, rights, and obligations are set
out in the trust order.
Trustees must not spend money unnecessarily or without
proper authority, as this is a breach of the trust order.
Ngā kaiwhaipānga
Beneficiaries
Beneficiaries are the people who benefit from any development(s) from a trust or block of land.
Ngā tukunga
Vest/vestedVest/vested is when a legal change of ownership from one person to another is made.