Wai Number: 45

Renewed Muriwhenua Land Inquiry

StatusPlanning and research

 

The district of the Renewed Muriwhenua Land Inquiry (Wai 45) is in the far north of the North Island. The Tribunal has confirmed 34 claims as eligible to participate. See the list of eligible claims Wai 45, #2.789(a) [PDF, 143 KB].

 

Map showing official inquiry district boundary

 

View map

Inquiry progress

Start-up phase

During the start-up phase, the Tribunal confirmed which claimants were eligible to participate in the Renewed Muriwhenua Land Inquiry and established its scope and design. The Renewed Muriwhenua Land Inquiry will be conducted in two stages:

  • Stage One: a district inquiry to establish whether the claims are well-founded and to determine the extent of the resulting prejudice suffered as a result of any well-founded claims.
  • Stage Two: a remedies inquiry into whether binding recommendations are appropriate in order to remedy the prejudice caused by any Crown breaches.

Throughout 2020 and 2021, the Tribunal considered the scope of Stage One in light of existing evidence and findings and the need to progress to the remedies phase as soon as possible (see Wai 45, #2.748, Wai 45, #2.821 and Wai 45, #2.861).

The claimants will have the opportunity to link their claims to the pre-1865 findings of the Muriwhenua Land Report 1997. However, the Tribunal has said that a full inquiry will still be necessary because:

The High Court judgment in Mercury NZ Limited v Waitangi Tribunal [2021] NZHC 654 made findings about the law relating to the Waitangi Tribunal’s remedies jurisdiction. The High Court’s interpretation of the relevant law was narrower than the original Muriwhenua Land Tribunal interpretation of the same law. Consequently, the findings in the Muriwhenua Land Report 1997 may not be sufficient for the purpose of remedies proceedings under the current law.

The claims in the original Muriwhenua Land Inquiry were brought by Te Rūnanga o Muriwhenua, which represented the five Te Hiku iwi collectively. Accordingly, the findings of the Muriwhenua Land Report 1997 address these claims collectively rather than by individual iwi and hapū.

Accordingly, Stage One of the Renewed Muriwhenua Land inquiry will be a full inquiry into both pre-1865 and post-1865 claims of the claimants now before the Tribunal.

 

Stage One: the district inquiry

The Renewed Muriwhenua Land Tribunal is currently in the research phase of Stage One. Some research for Stage One has now been completed:

'Social issues report for the Renewed Muriwhenua Land Inquiry (Wai 45), 2002 – 2020' by Brittany Whiley, February 2023 (Wai 45, #T15)

'Muriwhenua Environmental Issues 1840 – 2022' by Dr Tanja Rother, August 2023 (Wai 45, #T16)
The Tribunal is currently undertaking preparatory work to commission reports on the history of the land blocks in the Renewed Muriwhenua Inquiry district. Once commissioned, this work is expected to take 9 to 12 months to complete (see Wai 45, #2.912).

In addition to this Tribunal-commissioned research, claimants have signaled they will undertake various research projects over the same time period.

Next steps

The research for Stage One is currently progressing with a view to starting hearings in 2025.

Inquiry history

The original Muriwhenua Land Inquiry inquired into 24 claims brought primarily by five Te Hiku (Far North) iwi: Te Rarawa, Ngāi Takoto, Te Aupouri, Ngāti Kurī and Ngāti Kahu. At that time, all the Te Hiku iwi were part of Te Rūnanga o Muriwhenua. The original Tribunal’s approach was to focus on the collective under the rūnanga rather than inquiring closely into the groups’ separate interests. The exception was Ngā hapū o Whangaroa, about whose claims the Tribunal made separate findings.

The original Muriwhenua Land Inquiry focused on the alienation of Māori land before 1865. Fifteen hearings were held from 1990 to 1994, and the Tribunal released the Muriwhenua Land Report in 1997. It found the claims of the Muriwhenua iwi were well-founded.

It was expected that the Tribunal’s report would give the Crown sufficient grasp of the extent of the Treaty breaches in that early period to proceed to settle the claims. In 1998, the Tribunal called for submissions on whether it should proceed to make remedy recommendations, whether it should continue with a Tribunal inquiry into the post-1865 aspects of parties’ claims, or whether the parties wished to enter negotiations with the Crown. Ultimately, the Muriwhenua claimants opted to pursue settlement negotiations with the Crown.  

The five Te Hiku iwi embarked on several years of engagement with the Crown to settle their claims. Sometimes they negotiated collectively and sometimes separately.

Four of the five Te Hiku iwi (Te Rarawa, Ngāi Takoto, Te Aupouri, and Ngāti Kurī), eventually arrived at settlements with the Crown that culminated in 2015 in the passage through Parliament of Settlement Acts for each iwi.  

Ngāti Kahu also entered settlement negotiations with the Crown, but in 2007 filed an application with the Waitangi Tribunal seeking a remedies stage of the inquiry into their claims. This application was then adjourned when Ngāti Kahu agreed to return to settlement negotiations with the Crown.

In 2011, Ngāti Kahu revived their remedies application. The Tribunal embarked on a remedies stage of the inquiry into their claims and in 2013 released The Ngāti Kahu Remedies Report.

In that report, the Tribunal found that redress for the wrongful dispossession of Ngāti Kahu lands before 1865 was long overdue. However, it found that the circumstances of wider Treaty settlement negotiations in the far north did not warrant the use of its binding powers. The report found that binding orders to return those properties to Ngāti Kahu would have upset the fine balance of existing agreements and impending Treaty settlements of other Te Hiku iwi.

In addition, the Tribunal found it was unable to recommend a total settlement package in the order of that sought by Ngāti Kahu, which was in excess of settlements already achieved up and down the country.

The Tribunal also found that, because Ngāti Kahu had suffered significant prejudice through Crown Treaty breaches, non-binding recommendations were warranted. The Tribunal recommended a package of redress including various forms of cultural redress, a commercial quantum, and the return of a series of properties of commercial and cultural value within their rohe.

The Tribunal recommended that the Crown should seek to re-engage with Ngāti Kahu and make an offer based on the range of redress proposed in the report.

Ngāti Kahu decided to challenge the Waitangi Tribunal’s approach to the remedies they sought. In 2015, they filed in the High Court an application for judicial review of the Tribunal’s decision not to make binding recommendations in favour of Ngāti Kahu.

In Flavell v Waitangi Tribunal [2015] NZHC 1907, the High Court found the Tribunal erred in law in two respects: for treating its resumption powers as effectively being remedies of last resort; and for not separately considering whether to return a part of the lands sought.

In Attorney-General v Haronga [2016] NZCA 626, the Court of Appeal upheld the High Court’s judgment and affirmed that section 8HB(1) of the Treaty of Waitangi Act 1975 obliged the Tribunal to make a recommendation if the prerequisites are met. The Tribunal was found to have erred by adopting the middle ground urging the parties to negotiate settlement of their differences themselves.

The Court of Appeal ordered the Tribunal to reconsider the application for remedies and make fresh decisions about what recommendations to make.

In 2017, following the judgment of the Court of Appeal, the Tribunal issued directions reconvening the remedies inquiry (see Wai 45, #2.558).

Later in 2017, after the original panel recused themselves, the Chairperson appointed Judge Wainwright as Presiding Officer of the Renewed Muriwhenua Land Tribunal (see Wai 45, #2.584).

In January 2018, the Renewed Muriwhenua Land Tribunal considered the effects of the judicial review proceedings and its capacity to rehear the application for remedies. The Tribunal found it was a new inquiry and not a continuation of the original Muriwhenua Land Tribunal. Accordingly, the Tribunal could not proceed immediately to a remedies inquiry, but it could rely on – and familiarise itself with – the findings of the original Muriwhenua Land Tribunal up to the point where Ngāti Kahu sought binding recommendations in 2007 (Wai 45, #2.641).

In April 2018, Ngāti Kahu challenged this decision in further judicial review proceedings in the High Court.

In April 2019, the High Court dismissed Ngāti Kahu’s application in Mutu v Chairperson of the Waitangi Tribunal [2019] NZHC 647.

MAJOR ISSUES COVERED
Pre-1865 Crown land purchasing
Old land claims
Nineteenth century land alienation
Environment
Socio-economic
Native Land Court

Previous Event

25
May
2023
Renewed Muriwhenua Land
WAI: 45
Event
Judicial Conference
Judge
Wainwright
Location
Online

Inquiry Timeline

1997
Muriwhenua Land Report
Read the report
2013
Ngāti Kahu Remedies Report
Read the report
2015 - 2017
Judicial Review
2017
Renewed Muriwhenua Land Tribunal Appointed

Current panel members

Judge Carrie Wainwright
Presiding Officer
Read more
Tania Simpson ONZM
Member
Read more
Dr Ruakere Hond
Member
Read more

Reports and Publications

18 Oct 2021
Size: 520KB
18 Oct 2021
Size: 324KB
1.1.006(a)
Amendment To SOC

Amendment, 21 Oct 87

18 Oct 2021
Size: 1.36MB
1.1.006(b)
Amendment To SOC

Amendment, 26 Jan 88

18 Oct 2021
Size: 146KB
1.1.006(d)
Amendment To SOC

Amendment, 7 Nov 89

18 Oct 2021
Size: 494KB
18 Oct 2021
Size: 795KB
1.1.006
Statement of claim (SOC)

Statement of claim regarding Kaitaia Lands, 4 Sep 87

18 Oct 2021
Size: 4.54MB
1.1.003(c)
Amendment To SOC

Amendment, 15 Sep 88

18 Oct 2021
Size: 366KB
20 Sep 2021
Size: 17.9MB
1 ... 7 8 9 ... 12