Status of Māori land and role of the Māori Land Court
Māori land has a unique legal status in New Zealand. The definition of Māori land is provided by section 129 of Te Ture Whenua Māori Act 1993. The Act recognises Māori land as ''taonga tuku iho'', a treasure to be handed down. The Māori Land Court promotes the retention and use of Māori land; and facilitates the occupation, development and use of that land. The Māori Land Court is the specialist court of record in New Zealand that hears matters relating to Māori land. The key aim for the Māori Trustee is to manage the adverse effects of fragmented and multiple ownership of Māori land.Crown acquisition and fragmentation of Māori land
Before the arrival of European settlers, Māori had collective ''kaitiakitanga'' (guardianship) for the whenua (land) in their territory. Collective ownership meant that no one person had ownership rights, and everyone was responsible for ensuring its protection and sustainability for the future. The arrival of European settlers from the early 1800s meant that Māori land was in high demand. However, the European concept of outright ownership caused confusion and conflict. Following the signing of theNative Trustee established
In 1920, the Native Trustee Act established both the Native Trustee and the Native Trustee Office. The purpose of this was to help Māori better manage the remaining Māori land. The rate of Māori land acquisition slowed markedly after Gordon Coates replaced W. H. Herries as native minister in 1921. The Native Land Court changed its focus to helping to develop Māori land and the Native Trustee was able to loan money to individual Māori. Under the influence of Sir Apirana Ngata, the Native Trustee funded a series of large land development schemes in rural areas. Responsibility for administering Māori land moved from theNative Trustee renamed to Māori Trustee
The Native Department was renamed the Department of Māori Affairs in 1947 after Prime Minister Peter Fraser, who was also Minister of Native Affairs, passed legislation substituting the word Māori for Native wherever it occurred. The Native Trustee became the Māori Trustee.Māori Trustee regains independence and office becomes Te Tumu Paeroa
In 2009, amendments to the Māori Trustee Act 1953 resulted in the disestablishment of the former Māori Trustee Office, and the Māori Trustee regained independence from the Crown. Section 5 of the Māori Trustee Act 1953 included that "the Māori Trustee must act independently, free from any direction or instruction from the Crown". This led to the establishment of Te Tumu Paeroa as a standalone organisation supporting the Māori Trustee to provide professional trustee services.Māori Trustee acquires interests in Māori land
The Māori Affairs Act 1953 aimed to force unproductive Māori land into use. It enabled the Māori Trustee to purchase uneconomic interests (defined as any share in Māori land that was valued at less than £10, later changed to £25), and make the shares available for purchase by other owners in the land block. The acquisition of uneconomic interests was known as "compulsorily acquired shares". From the late 1950s to the mid 1960s Māori Trustee acquired substantial interests in Māori land, both through compulsory acquisition and through voluntary sale.Māori Trustee and issues with perpetual leases
Perpetual leases were established from the late 1800s and apply to Māori land reserves or land that was returned to Māori as compensation, and then leased by the Public Trustee under perpetual leases. In 1955, the Māori Reserved Land Act continued the system of perpetual leases for Māori land that were originally established by the Public Trustee. This Act empowered the Māori Trustee to convert any outstanding fixed term leases to leases in perpetuity. The legislation continued to allowed to Māori Trustee to acquire uneconomical interests or purchase any interest that the beneficiary or beneficiaries in question wished to sell, and to sell that land under such terms as the Trustee saw fit. In 1996, Māori Reserved Land Amendment Bill aimed to restore balance to the relationship between owners and lessees. To achieve this the Act required rents to increase to the market rate and to be reviewed every seven years. This had led to significant rent increases on Māori reserved land every seven years.References
{{reflist Law of New Zealand Treaty of Waitangi