Granted occupation rights on very favourable terms over Maori land near Port Waikato, Gary Stock and Faith Rapana were described as acting in bad faith with their self-serving behaviour seeing their occupation rights subsequently invalidated by the Maori Land Court.
Mr Stock’s supposed licence to occupy was granted by trustees of neighbouring land, not owners of the land he came to occupy. It gave him an eighty year right of occupation at a token rental of ten dollars per week, with his spouse given a life interest should he pre-decease her.
The Maori Land Court was told he has continued to use adjoining land for grazing, despite cancellation of his grazing lease. The Court was further told his relocatable house shifted onto the site has been burnt down, allegedly as part of his ongoing dispute with current beneficiaries of the Maori customary land he occupies.
Ms Rapana’s licence to occupy was granted on supposed grounds of ancestry, with claims of whakapapa links to the land. The Maori Land Court ruled she did not produce sufficient evidence of ancestral links; at best, she could identify an ancestor in common with current beneficiaries going back five generations; far too distant a whanau connection justifying rights as a current beneficiary, Judge Mullins ruled.
Her eighty year licence to occupy, coupled with annual rentals of $1040, was invalidated.
The Court was told she has been occupying a greater area of land than that specified by the now-invalidated licence to occupy.
Judge Mullins was very critical of the manner in which each arranged for approval of their disputed licences to occupy.
She emphasised that trustees holding customary Maori land on behalf of beneficiaries must comply with Trusts Act rules: act honestly; avoid conflicts of interest; not exercise trustee powers for their own benefit; and importantly, act within terms of the trust.
Ms Rapana was a trustee of the Pakau Trust granting occupation rights to her. There was a clear conflict of interest, Judge Mullins said. She should never have taken part in Trust discussions. Ms Rapana should have excused herself from the meeting and not be present when discussions took place, Judge Mullins said.
In any event, not being a Pakau Trust beneficiary, she had no rights to the land.
Mr Stock’s licence to occupy was over Pakau Maori Reservation Trust land. Mr Stock is a trustee.
The Maori Land Court was told this Trust has been inoperative for years: trustees have died and not been replaced; other trustees dis-engaged.
Judge Mullins ruled that Mr Stock engineered a solution for his own benefit; having the separate Pakau Trust supposedly approve his licence to occupy, even though it was not Pakau Trust land.
She removed Mr Stock and Ms Rapana as Pakau Trust trustees, with immediate effect.
Other Pakau Trust trustees were left in office, remaining until a special Trust meeting is called to elect new trustees.
Rau v. Stock – Maori Land Court (27.11.25)
26.028