27 June 2012

Maori: Paki v. Attorney-General


Water rights for generating hydroelectric power will become an issue following a landmark Supreme Court decision on the ownership of river beds.  With thousands of riverside landowners now becoming the surprised owners of adjoining riverbeds, expect moves to negotiate a share of the economic benefits reaped from water passing over their riverbed land.
An obscure Maori Treaty of Waitangi claim has opened up to Maori and Pakeha alike the possibility of claiming economic rents for water flowing over their land and into hydroelectric plants.
This Treaty issue arose in litigation by the Pouakanui hapu over ownership of a 32 kilometre stretch of the Waikato River near Mangakino.  The hapu claims that they did not understand and that the Crown did not tell them that sales of hapu land to the Crown in 1887 and 1899 also included sale of the riverbed adjoining the land sold.  There is a strong cultural attachment within Maoridom to rivers and streams within tribal areas.  The Pouakanui hapu argues loss of 32 kilometres of riverbed resulted in a serious loss of mana.
Lower courts ruled that any claim by Pouakanui was defeated by 1903 legislation which nationalised the riverbeds of all navigable rivers.  Ownership rights were lost to all riverside landowners, not just Pouakanui.
These lower court rulings assumed that the Waikato River at Mangakino is navigable.  The Supreme Court overturned the traditional legal view of “navigable”.
Legal argument centred on a “whole of river” approach compared with a “part of river” argument.  The traditional legal view in New Zealand has been that if any part of a river is of sufficient width and depth for use in trade and commerce then the whole of the river is to be treated as navigable for purposes of the 1903 legislation, whether in fact it is or is not navigable on any particular stretch of river.  The Supreme Court ruled instead in favour of a “part of the river” approach.  Questions of riverbed ownership depend upon whether a particular stretch of river is in fact navigable, or not.
Construction of hydroelectric dams along the length of the Waikato River has changed the river’s topography markedly since the 1890s.  The Supreme Court said questions of navigability for the Pouakanui claim depended on the state of the river as at 1903, the date of legislation nationalising navigable riverbeds.
Evidence was given that the river adjoining Pouakanui lands then had little smooth water being a succession of turbulent rapids together with the high cliffs and steep canyons of the Whakamaru and Maraetai Gorges.  Through this area, the river fell through one of its steepest gradients at approximately 1:200; exceeded only by a steeper gradient at Aratiatia Rapids and Huka Falls near Taupo.  Historical evidence indicated there was little transport on the Waikato River above rapids near modern day Cambridge.  What water transport there was above Cambridge tended to be family excursions and picnics together with some rudimentary ferry crossings, privately operated.
Where different landowners own land on opposite banks of a “non-navigable” river, each owns that part of the riverbed from their land to the centre of the river.
Sales of Maori customary land to the Crown in the nineteenth century have been the subject of much complaint.  Yet to be finalised in this case is whether Pouakanui’s land sales to the Crown in 1887 and 1889 also transferred ownership to the Crown of the riverbed to the centre of the river, and, if so, is Pouakanui entitled to any compensation for its claimed loss of mana.
 Paki v. Attorney-General – Supreme Court (27.06.12)
12.016