Land Information New Zealand

07/22/2021 | News release | Distributed by Public on 07/21/2021 20:21

The Auckland High Court has ordered Clevedon Kawakawa Road Limited (CKRL) to pay $160,000 in penalties and $15,000 in costs for not seeking approval for a sensitive land[...]

22 July 2021

The Auckland High Court has ordered Clevedon Kawakawa Road Limited (CKRL) to pay $160,000 in penalties and $15,000 in costs for not seeking approval for a sensitive land purchase it made on behalf of an overseas investor.

This is the first time the court has considered a penalty against an associate of an overseas investor.

In February 2013 businessman Mr Zhaorong Mai agreed to purchase two adjoining properties totalling just over 87 hectares in Clevedon. The land is categorised as sensitive land as it is non-urban land exceeding five hectares and one of the properties adjoins the foreshore at Kauri Bay and Kahuru Point in Auckland.

Mr Mai nominated CKRL to complete the purchase before the transaction was settled.

CKRL has conceded it acted as Mr Mai's associate when it purchased the land and that it failed to seek Overseas Investment Office (OIO) consent, which is a breach of the Overseas Investment Act 2005.

Justice Katz said in her judgment: 'CKRL's culpability is not materially reduced by its associate status. On the contrary, there is a strong need to deter breaches of the Act by associates of overseas persons, given that breaches of the Act by associates of overseas persons had the potential to alienate sensitive New Zealand land in a way that is potentially difficult to monitor and detect.'

OIO Group Manager Anna Wilson-Farrell says the regulator will pursue associates for breaches of the Act as actively as overseas investors directly making purchases.

'It is a privilege for overseas people to invest in New Zealand and we will continue to investigate when investors fail to seek consent to buy sensitive land.

'This is the eleventh case in which the court has awarded penalties for the purchase of sensitive land without consent.

'We will continue to focus on the use of associate relationships as part of our ongoing compliance efforts, and we will take enforcement action whenever we see a breach of the Act. The court decision recognises this,' says Ms Wilson-Farrell.

Enforcement action summary including the CKRL judgment

Contact

Sarah Turnbull
[email protected](link sends e-mail), 027 566 5251

About the Overseas Investment Office (OIO)

The OIO is part of Toitū Te Whenua Land Information New Zealand. As a regulator we are responsible for applying the Overseas Investment Act (2005) to overseas investment in New Zealand's sensitive land, significant business assets and fishing quota for the benefit of all New Zealanders.