Te Runanga O Ngati Manawa v CNI Iwi Holdings Limited

Case

[2013] NZHC 1398

12 June 2013

No judgment structure available for this case.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND WELLINGTON REGISTRY

CIV-2011-485-1233 [2013] NZHC 1398

BETWEEN  TE RUNANGA O NGĀTI MANAWA Plaintiff

ANDCNI IWI HOLDINGS LIMITED Second Defendant

TE KŌMITI NUI O NGĀTI WHAKAUE

TRUST

Third Defendant

TŪHOE ESTABLISHMENT TRUST
Fourth Defendant

TE MANA O NGĀTI RANGITIHI

TRUST

Fifth Defendant

TŪWHARETOA SETTLEMENT TRUST Sixth Defendant

RAUKAWA SETTLEMENT TRUST Seventh Defendant

TE PŪMAUTANGA O TE ARAWA

TRUST

Eighth Defendant

TE RUNANGA O NGĀTI WHARE
Ninth Defendant

Hearing:                   21 May 2013

Counsel:                  K L-A Ertel and R N Zwaan for Plaintiff

R B D Drummond for Second Defendant

J P Kahukiwa for Third Defendant (filing written submissions) F M R Cooke QC for Fourth, Fifth, Sixth & Seventh Defendants

J B M Smith and D H Stone for Eighth Defendant

J P Ferguson for Ninth Defendant

Judgment:                12 June 2013

TE RUNANGA O NGĀTI MANAWA v CNI IWI HOLDINGS LIMITED [2013] NZHC 1398 [12 June 2013]

JUDGMENT AND DIRECTIONS OF WILLIAMS J

In accordance with r 11.5, I direct the Registrar to endorse this judgment with the delivery time of 2.00pm on the 12th June 2013.

[1]      In  a  judgment  issued  on  2  November  2011,  I  made  orders  staying  this proceeding for four months.  I advised:[1]

If an extension [of the 2008 Settlement Act dispute resolution timeframe] is agreed in that time, the proceeding should be withdrawn or, in the absence of such withdrawal, further strike-out applications may be entertained.   If agreement is not reached, further directions will be required to set the litigation on a proper course, fully and properly pleaded.

[1] Te Runanga o Ngati Manawa v The Attorney-General HC WN CIV-201-485-1233, 2 November

2011 at [56].

[2]      An extension was indeed agreed and the time within which the alternative dispute resolution process as contained in the legislation was to be completed was extended until 1 July this year.   The parties are agreed that there is no prospect whatever of the necessary process being completed and allocations made by that new deadline.

[3]      Much of the intervening period has been taken up in the CNI iwi attempting to achieve a negotiated settlement of cross-claims, but to date at least, this has produced limited success.  The plaintiff has now withdrawn from such discussions and wants an adjudication as set out in the legislation.  This process is dubbed the mana whenua adjudication process.  Given that such a process cannot be constructed and completed in the time available prior to 1 July this year, the plaintiff now seeks leave to proceed with the current claim in this court together with timetabling directions.  Once bitten twice shy.

[4]      The second defendant, CNI Iwi Holdings Limited, opposes and asks instead that the stay be extended.  The second defendant is joined by the fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh defendants in that stance.  The parties whose interests are most aligned

with the plaintiff are the ninth defendant, the eighth defendant and perhaps the third

defendant.  These parties claim to represent the hapu with direct ancestral rights in the lion’s share of the land.

[5]      The ninth defendant, Te Runanga o Ngāti Whare, shares some of the concerns being expressed by the plaintiff, but is firmly of the view that litigation is not to be preferred over negotiation and adjudication within the terms of the settlement.  The eighth defendant, Te Pūmautanga o Te Arawa, is keeping its power to dry.   It too would prefer to see the matter dealt with in accordance with the mana whenua adjudication process, but indicated through counsel that  it wished to reserve its position with respect to the prospect of initiating its own proceedings if real progress toward a further extension and adjudication is not made.

[6]      Mr Smith argued that a proceeding in this court cannot be indefinitely stayed in any event and must be either struck-out or allowed to proceed.  He submitted that limited interlocutory steps should be timetabled: a requirement, in the first instance at  least,  that  the  plaintiff  replead  its  claim  and  the  defendants  file  defences. Ngāti Whakaue’s position was similar.

[7]      Mr Cooke QC for the opposing iwi parties simply argued that this proceeding was a waste of time.  It was misconceived in law he said, and incapable of producing a result any better than that able to be produced within the settlement legislation dispute resolution procedures.

[8]      For the plaintiff, Ms Ertel’s concerns related not just to the very limited progress made during the last extension period, but that various of the iwi parties (perhaps with CNI Iwi Holdings in support) have attempted to change the mana whenua adjudication rules so as to reduce the weight accorded to take tupuna and to introduce a population based criterion.   She pointed out that “mana whenua” as defined in clause 4(2) of the Second Schedule to the 2008 Settlement Act was the only agreed basis upon which CNI forest land would be allocated.   She says (essentially) that the larger neighbouring iwi with weaker ancestral rights are intent on avoiding an adjudicated outcome and so are doing all they can to delay because the current rules are likely to produce an outcome inconsistent with their interests.

[9]      The plaintiff points to a draft Action Plan for Mana Whenua Adjudication, a document appended to CNI Iwi Holdings’ submissions.  This document was put to all iwi at a hui on 7 May 2013 (except the plaintiff which had of course withdrawn entirely from the process). The draft included clause 4.4 as follows:

The quantum principle should fairly be represented in the decision.  All iwi have purchased the right and privilege for the adjudication process to occur. Similarly, the population of the iwi directly enabled settlement and the adjudication process to occur.  (my emphasis)

[10]     The plaintiff says  this  idea is  a direct  departure from  the mana whenua principle enshrined in the settlement.  Size becomes relevant in the allocation of land for the first time.  In response, Mr Drummond pointed to the terms of the relevant resolution passed at the 7 May hui and referred to in the draft minutes:

In principle all MW PSGE Reps present today are comfortable with the draft action plan with the exception of the following sections:  2.3, 3.11, 4.2, 4.3 and   4.4   which   will   require   further   iwi   feedback   and   rewording. (my emphasis)

[11]     Mr Drummond  (along with  other counsel)  also  agreed  that  the rules  for allocation as contained in Schedule 2 cannot be amended except with unanimity of iwi including the plaintiff.

[12]     One other point of background is worth noting.   In October 2012, all eight PSGEs passed a resolution “to extend the timeframe to complete the mana whenua process if the final allocation agreement cannot be completed by 1 July 2013.”  For its part, the plaintiff said that its agreement to that resolution was conditional upon the iwi representative at the hui, Maurice Toetoe, taking the matter back to the iwi for confirmation.   He deposed that, in the event, iwi confirmation was not forthcoming.   That, it was suggested, invalidated Ngāti Manawa’s conditional agreement.

[13]     That may well be, but there is a very subtle game of brinkmanship being played here on all sides in my perception.

[14]     Ngāti   Manawa   wholeheartedly  supports   a   mana   whenua   adjudication

proceeding by agreement on an extended timeframe, provided the CNI iwi stick to

the original rules.  There is, on the other side, it appears, a subtle attempt to amend them in a potentially significant way.  Ngāti Manawa no doubt feels that it is caught between a rock and a hard place.

[15]     It is in this broad context that Mr Smith for Te Pūmautanga o Te Arawa argues that leave should at least be given for small steps to be taken in this proceeding.   He argues that such steps will not overly distract from attempts to extend time for the mana whenua adjudication process or, if time is indeed extended on agreed terms, then for the process itself.

[16]     Mr  Cooke  QC  and  Mr  Drummond  on  the  other  hand  argued  that  this proceeding distracted unnecessarily from the adjudication process, was conceptually flawed, and amounted to a waste of time and iwi money.  Mr Cook pointedly noted that the only winners in this litigation would be the lawyers.

[17]     I  strongly  agree  with  the  last  point,  at  least  as  matters  are  currently positioned.   Having reviewed the evidence and heard submissions, it seems to me there is ample hope that the mana whenua adjudication process timeframe will be extended by further agreement on terms acceptable to all eight iwi.  Yet, as in the Tūwhare poem, this “canoe [still] teeters on inconclusive reefs of argument”.  We cannot yet know whether that will happen.

[18]     That being so, I agree with Mr Smith that steady progress forward in this current proceeding is now justified after a lengthy stand-down period.

[19]     There will be a direction that the plaintiff replead its claim by 8 July. And the defendants file amended defences by 5 August 2013.  A further judicial conference may be called at the instigation of any party once the pleadings are completed.

[20]     Finally, a word or two of caution if I may.  It will be important if the mana whenua adjudication process is pursued, that ample time is given for it to be completed.  The first extension was always going to be insufficient to complete the job.  The allocation of entitlements across such a large area of land will not be an easy or short process if all entitlements are contested.

[21]     Economy and expedition are of course important values in such a process but there must still be sufficient opportunity for all parties to put their evidence before the adjudicator and to make their arguments.  Innovative tikanga based procedures can of course be adopted but the process must still be robust enough to withstand later challenge in the mainstream courts.  Advice on this question from independent senior counsel may assist.

[22]     The product must also be able to withstand scrutiny.  If report writers are to be employed to assist the panel, they will need to be very experienced.   Good process and quality writers will tend to add to cost, but that is far preferable to

having to start again if the process or product are not up to scratch.

Williams J


Actions
Download as PDF Download as Word Document


Cases Citing This Decision

0

Cases Cited

0

Statutory Material Cited

0