Ohura A&P Showgrounds near Taumaranui is proving a legal battleground with dispute over who is in control of Ohura’s Agricultural & Pastoral Association coupled with allegations of a land grab engineered by locals Maria and Les Howe on behalf of local hapu Ngati Toi. Attempting to assert their control, Howes legal claims filed in the District Court were thrown out as either lacking the required detail or seeking remedies a District Court has no power to grant.
News reports tell of the Howe family gaining control of the Association at its August 2025 annual general meeting, voted in by supporters recently signed up as Association members.
Manner of their appointment is disputed.
The Howes sued in the District Court alleging the old guard, now supposedly out of office, were improperly retaining control of Association property.
Judge Rowe pointed out that District Courts do not have a general power to oversee governance of A&P Associations. That lies with the High Court.
The Howes specific claims that members of the old guard were liable for defamation, trespass, negligence, misrepresentation, invasion of privacy and breach of statutory duty were struck out.
Insufficient detail was provided to support these claims.
It is a basic tenet of New Zealand’s legal system that any claim must include sufficient detail enabling defendants to respond.
Judge Rowe questioned why the Howes included Ngati Toi as plaintiff in their claim.
Hapu and iwi do not have a legal existence separate from their members. Individual members cannot be dragged into court proceedings without their consent.
There was no evidence that the Howes had consent from individual Ngati Toi members to take legal action in their name, Judge Rowe said.
Howe v. Carmichael – District Court (9.02.26)
26.074