The lowest common denominator of the four judgments is “crystal clear”: property rights cannot be extinguished by a “side wind”."
Elias CJ Chief Justice Sian Elias addressed four main points in her judgment. Firstly, Elias CJ addressed the issue of who at
common law owned the foreshore and seabed and held, In response to arguments by
the Crown that there is a presumption of Crown ownership of the foreshore and seabed, Elias CJ cites a number of examples of nineteenth century legislation and evidence from
Chief Justice Fenton acknowledging Maori
customary rights below the low water mark. Secondly, the judgment rejected the argument that the Maori Land Court did not have jurisdiction to determine the status of the foreshore and seabed because this area is not land. Elias CJ notes that, "Both lake beds and river beds have been the subject of claims to the Maori Land Court without jurisdictional impediment [...]. Much legislation concerned with “land” applies to seabed and foreshore". Thirdly, Elias CJ dismisses suggestions by the Crown that Maori customary interests have been expropriated by the Harbour Acts, Territorial Seas Acts or
Resource Management Act. Finally, the judgment dealt with the precedent created in
In Re the Ninety-Mile Beach [1963] NZLR 461 (CA) that, "any Maori customary property in the foreshore had been extinguished once the contiguous land above high water mark had lost the status of Maori customary land". Elias CJ held, "an approach which precludes investigation of the fact of entitlement according to custom because of an assumption that custom is displaced by a change in sovereignty or because the sea was used as a boundary for individual titles on the shore is wrong in law."
Gault P The judgment of
President Gault is the only dissent from the majority's overruling of
In Re the Ninety-Mile Beach. Gault P's argument is that, However Gault P notes that if land investigated by the
Native Land Court was described as not bordering the sea, the Maori Land Court would have jurisdiction to rule on the status of the strip between land and sea.
Keith and Anderson JJ The decision of Keith and Anderson JJ was delivered by
Justice Keith. The judgment of Keith and Anderson JJ concurs with that of Elias CJ that at common law pre-existing native title and rights continues to exist despite the conferring of radical title in the Crown. The judgment also notes that under New Zealand property law, "property in sea areas could be held by individuals and would in general be subject to public rights such as rights of navigation". On
In Re the Ninety Mile Beach, their judgment also notes that it is wrongly decided; "Whether the foreshore was also investigated and was determined to be the Crown's in the course of a particular process is a matter of fact, not a matter to be assumed." On the Territorial Sea Acts they additionally observe, "legislative measures claimed to extinguish indigenous property and rights must be clear and plain".
Tipping J Justice Tipping joined with the majority of the court in overturning
In Re the Ninety Mile Beach, and with the whole of the court in declaring that there was no barrier stopping the Maori Land Court from investigating Maori customary rights in the foreshore and seabed. Tipping J restates the problem with the reasoning in
In Re the Ninety Mile Beach, ==References==