Ordinance for Quieting Titles to Land in the Province of New Ulster




(92)

Governor or other Officer was duly authorised and empowered to make such grants, in the name and on behalf of the Crown, and whether such grants were, otherwise, made in conformity with the Regulations for the time being in force in that behalf: And whereas numerous Grants of land claimed, under the provisions of the Land Claims Ordinance, Sect. 1, No. 2, have also been made, wherein the land of which the Grantee is recited to be entitled to a grant forms a part only of the whole quantity claimed to have been purchased by him from the aboriginal native owners, and is not particularly set forth and described in such Grant; and it is doubtful in point of law whether by reason of such uncertainty, any or what portion of land is validly conveyed by such Grants: And whereas certain cases have already been submitted to the Judgment of the Supreme Court, but it is essential to the prosperity of the Colony that such doubts should in all cases be removed with the least possible delay:—Now, therefore, for the more speedy removal of such doubts, and as far as may be in conformity with such Judgments as aforesaid, and for the effectual quieting of Crown Titles, Be it enacted and declared by the Governor-in-Chief of New Zealand, with the advice and consent of the Legislative Council, as follows:—

  1. Every Grant of Land within the Province of New Ulster, sealed with the Public Seal of the Colony or Province, and made before the passing of this Ordinance, in the name and on the behalf of the Crown, by the Governor, Lieutenant-Governor, or other the Officer administering the Government for the time being, shall be deemed and taken to be a good, valid, and effectual conveyance of the land purported to be conveyed by such Grant and of the estate or interest purported to be conveyed thereby as against Her Majesty, Her Heirs and Successors, and against all other persons whatsoever, and as if the same had been a valid Grant of the Demesne land by the Crown—any Law, Ordinance, Custom, Usage, or Instruction to the contrary notwithstanding.

  2. Compensation to be made in case Native Title not fully extinguished.

    Provided always, and it is hereby further enacted, that if at any time before the 1st day of January, 1856, it shall be proved to the satisfaction of a Judge of the Supreme Court that the Native Title to the land comprised in any such Grant hath not been fully extinguished, it shall be lawful for any such Judge to award to the Native Claimant, or Claimants, proving title to the same (not being a party or parties to the original sale of such land) such sum or sums of money in satisfaction of the claim so to be substantiated as aforesaid, as shall appear to such Judge to stand with equity and good conscience.

  3. Such Compensation to be payable out of General Revenue of Province.

    All sums of money so to be awarded as aforesaid, shall be paid by the Colonial Treasurer, on demand, to the person or persons in whose favor such award shall be made, and shall be payable out of, and be charged, and chargeable upon, the General Revenue of the Province of New Ulster.

  4. The operation of certain Grants to confer a right of Selection.

    And be it further enacted, that until it shall be amended, as hereinafter provided, every such Grant as aforesaid which shall recite that the Grantee is entitled to receive a Grant of a specified quantity of Land, but which shall not set forth and describe the particular piece or parcel of land intended to be thereby conveyed, shall be deemed and taken to vest in and confer upon the said Grantee, his Heirs, and Assigns, the right of selecting out of the whole of the land included within the boundaries named in the Grant, the quantity of land to which he may be so recited to be entitled: Provided always that such right of selection shall be exercised before the 1st day of January, 1856, and that the particular portion of land so to be selected shall be in one block.

  5. Right of Selection, how to be exercised.

    Such right of selection, as aforesaid, shall be deemed to have been exercised by every such Grantee, his Heirs and Assigns, so soon as he or they shall have furnished to the Surveyor-General a description in writing, particularly setting forth the boundaries of the land to be selected under the authority hereof, together with a map or plan of the same, which shall have been executed by a Surveyor, licensed by the Surveyor-General, and may be approved by that officer.

  6. Map or Description of Boundaries to be indorsed on Grant.

    It shall be the duty of the Surveyor-General, and he is hereby required to ascertain that the land so chosen forms part of the land reported by the Land Claims Commissioners to have been purchased from the natives, and if he shall be satisfied of the sufficiency of such map or plan, and description, to cause a copy of the same to be indorsed upon the Deed of Grant relating thereto, and to certify such description, by subscribing his name to the same.

  7. Grant to be valid when endorsement shall have been signed by Governor.

    It shall be lawful for the Governor, or other the Officer administering the Government of the Province, for the time being, to countersign such description. And every Deed of Grant so countersigned as aforesaid, shall be deemed and taken to be a good, valid, and effectual Conveyance of the land so described thereupon to the Grantee named therein as against her Majesty, her Heirs and Successors, and all other persons whatsoever.

  8. In certain cases land may be granted in exchange.

    Provided always, and it is hereby further enacted that in case the person or persons entitled to such right of selection shall meet with any serious obstruction in the exercise of the



Next Page →



Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF New Ulster Gazette 1849, No 16





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🏛️ Ordinance for Quieting Titles to Land in the Province of New Ulster (continued from previous page)

🏛️ Governance & Central Administration
Ordinance, Land Titles, New Ulster, Crown Grants, Native Title