(Address to which documents or correspondence in connection with the application can be posted or delivered)
Phone Number(s):
Home: Work:
Mobile:
Email Address:
Provide this information for each person eligible to be funded from special aid who is not a lawyer.
8.
Any member of the preferred class of alienee who wishes to submit a tender for the purchase
of the said land can do so by contacting the vendors solicitor, being:
Paula J Wilson
Henderson Reeves
96 Bank Street
Whangārei
Email: paulawilson@hendersonreeves.co.nz
Tel: 09-430-4350
If no notice is filed by the date set out above, the Court may proceed to consider the
proposed application for alienation of the land.
That written notice must be filed in the
Māori Land Court not later than 4pm, 9 January 2026
Any member of the preferred class of alienee who wishes to submit a tender for the purchase
of the said lands or enquire as to the terms of sale can do so by contacting the vendors
solicitor, being:
Connect Legal Taranaki
136 Powderham Street,
New Plymouth Central
New Plymouth 4310
If no notice is filed by the date set out above, the Court may confirm the alienation of the l...
That written notice must be filed in the
Māori Land Court not later than 4pm, 9 January 2026
Any member of the preferred class of alienee who wishes to submit a tender for the purchase
of the said lands or enquire as to the terms of sale can do so by contacting the vendors
solicitor, being:
Connect Legal Taranaki
136 Powderham Street,
New Plymouth Central
New Plymouth 4310
If no notice is filed by the date set out above, the Court may confirm the alienation of t...
Any member of the preferred class of alienee who wishes to submit a tender for the purchase of the said land can do so by contacting the vendors solicitor, being:
Paula J Wilson Henderson Reeves 96 Bank Street Whangārei Email: paulawilson@hendersonreeves.co.nz Tel: 09-430-4350
If no notice is filed by the date set out above, the Court may proceed to consider the proposed application for alienation of the land.
In this context, tikanga-based means that the process is guided by your values, beliefs and practices as a whānau or hapū. Tikanga can influence who’s involved, where the dispute can be settled, and how mediation is conducted.
The Act now clarifies that Māori Land Court judges will follow
the tikanga of the hapū or iwi associated with the land being
succeeded to when deciding whether whāngai can succeed to
a land interest.
This means that in some cases whāngai may succeed to land
interests as if they were a birth child or grandchild of the
person who has passed.