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Analysis of the Nigerian Supreme Court's constitutional duty regarding women's inheritance right under customary law

Customary law existed before the enactment of formal laws to govern the affairs of Nigerians. It started as behavioural norms that grew to be widely accepted by the community and became law. Inheritance rights are recognised under Nigerian customary law. Most customs provided for a way in which a pe...

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Main Author: Aladetola, Opeyemi
Other Authors: Young, Cheri-Leigh
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Private Law 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Aladetola, Opeyemi
author2 Young, Cheri-Leigh
author_browse Aladetola, Opeyemi
Young, Cheri-Leigh
author_facet Young, Cheri-Leigh
Aladetola, Opeyemi
author_sort Aladetola, Opeyemi
collection Thesis
description Customary law existed before the enactment of formal laws to govern the affairs of Nigerians. It started as behavioural norms that grew to be widely accepted by the community and became law. Inheritance rights are recognised under Nigerian customary law. Most customs provided for a way in which a person's properties could be distributed upon his death. However, most of these customs did not make provision for women in the distribution of a deceased estate. This disparity between the inheritance right of a man and woman was very prominent in the distribution of landed properties. Upon the demise of a man, his estate becomes family property and his eldest male child inherits it on behalf of other male members of the family. Where the deceased dies without a son, his brother inherits the estate. Notably, the Constitution did not abolish laws that existed prior to its enactment. It provides that these laws shall continue to exist subject to its provisions, the Constitution provides for its supremacy over every other law, and that the court has a duty to invalidate any law that is inconsistent with its provisions. The Court found the opportunity to alter the unfair discriminatory position against Nigerian women and develop customary law in line with Constitution in the case of Anekwe v Nwekwe. Here, the defendant (brother of the deceased) sought to evict the plaintiff (widow of the deceased and her female children) from the property of the deceased because she had no male child. He claimed that based on their customary law female children are excluded from inheriting property. The Supreme Court then invalidated this customary law of male primogeniture for being repugnant to natural justice, equity and good conscience. Although the decision of the court solved the problem of discrimination, it failed to develop customary law by invalidating only the discriminatory aspect of the customary law. Lessons can therefore be drawn from the minority decision of the South African Constitutional Court in the case of Bhe v Magistrate of Khaylistha, where recourse to developing the customary law was posited. This study will examine to what extent the court has applied customary law to bring it to conformity with the Constitution, drawing from other African countries especially South Africa. It utilises literature review and case law analysis, arguing that the court needs to review the Anekwe v Nwekwe case and make a more declarative position that brings customary law up to date with modern realities. It will recommend that the courts should in consultation with the people develop the customary law of inheritance.
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/24935 Analysis of the Nigerian Supreme Court's constitutional duty regarding women's inheritance right under customary law Aladetola, Opeyemi Young, Cheri-Leigh Customary law Customary law existed before the enactment of formal laws to govern the affairs of Nigerians. It started as behavioural norms that grew to be widely accepted by the community and became law. Inheritance rights are recognised under Nigerian customary law. Most customs provided for a way in which a person's properties could be distributed upon his death. However, most of these customs did not make provision for women in the distribution of a deceased estate. This disparity between the inheritance right of a man and woman was very prominent in the distribution of landed properties. Upon the demise of a man, his estate becomes family property and his eldest male child inherits it on behalf of other male members of the family. Where the deceased dies without a son, his brother inherits the estate. Notably, the Constitution did not abolish laws that existed prior to its enactment. It provides that these laws shall continue to exist subject to its provisions, the Constitution provides for its supremacy over every other law, and that the court has a duty to invalidate any law that is inconsistent with its provisions. The Court found the opportunity to alter the unfair discriminatory position against Nigerian women and develop customary law in line with Constitution in the case of Anekwe v Nwekwe. Here, the defendant (brother of the deceased) sought to evict the plaintiff (widow of the deceased and her female children) from the property of the deceased because she had no male child. He claimed that based on their customary law female children are excluded from inheriting property. The Supreme Court then invalidated this customary law of male primogeniture for being repugnant to natural justice, equity and good conscience. Although the decision of the court solved the problem of discrimination, it failed to develop customary law by invalidating only the discriminatory aspect of the customary law. Lessons can therefore be drawn from the minority decision of the South African Constitutional Court in the case of Bhe v Magistrate of Khaylistha, where recourse to developing the customary law was posited. This study will examine to what extent the court has applied customary law to bring it to conformity with the Constitution, drawing from other African countries especially South Africa. It utilises literature review and case law analysis, arguing that the court needs to review the Anekwe v Nwekwe case and make a more declarative position that brings customary law up to date with modern realities. It will recommend that the courts should in consultation with the people develop the customary law of inheritance. 2017-08-23T12:54:06Z 2017-08-23T12:54:06Z 2017 Master Thesis Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/24935 eng application/pdf Department of Private Law Faculty of Law University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Customary law
Aladetola, Opeyemi
Analysis of the Nigerian Supreme Court's constitutional duty regarding women's inheritance right under customary law
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Analysis of the Nigerian Supreme Court's constitutional duty regarding women's inheritance right under customary law
title_full Analysis of the Nigerian Supreme Court's constitutional duty regarding women's inheritance right under customary law
title_fullStr Analysis of the Nigerian Supreme Court's constitutional duty regarding women's inheritance right under customary law
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of the Nigerian Supreme Court's constitutional duty regarding women's inheritance right under customary law
title_short Analysis of the Nigerian Supreme Court's constitutional duty regarding women's inheritance right under customary law
title_sort analysis of the nigerian supreme court s constitutional duty regarding women s inheritance right under customary law
topic Customary law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/24935
work_keys_str_mv AT aladetolaopeyemi analysisofthenigeriansupremecourtsconstitutionaldutyregardingwomensinheritancerightundercustomarylaw