ILLEGITIMACY AND THE RIGHT TO INHERITANCE OF PROPERTY
Abstract
The provisions of Section 39(2) of the 1979 Constitution (now Section 42(2) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended) altered the dynamics and changed the landscape of our law with respect to the issue of legitimacy in relation to right to succession. The rule in Alake v. Prattand Cole v. Akinyeleerstwhile regulated and guided our courts in determining the status of a child born outside wedlock and as a corollary, his right to inherit the property of the intestate father. Thus a child who was born out of wedlock, but whose paternity was not acknowledged by the putative father or was acknowledged but by the rule in Cole v. Akinyelesuch acknowledged was a nullity, could not partake in the inheritance of his late father’s estate. This paper seeks to argue that in the light of the provisions of Section 42 (2) of the 1999 constitution, that the principle in Cole v. Akinyeleor any other principle of law predicating the right to inheritance on any form of acknowledgment cannot be the barometer in determining the status of a child born outside wedlock in relation to his right to share in the inheritance of his biological father’s estate.It is further argued that public policy which has served as an anchorage for some of these erroneous judicial decisions is itself a continuum; to be applied with great circumspection and should be juxtaposed with contemporary civilized norm.
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