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January 3, 2008
Inheritance by Non-Marital Children
Browne Lewis (Visiting Professor, University of Pittsburgh School of Law) has recently published her article entitled Children of Men: Balancing the Inheritance Rights of Marital and Non-Marital Children, 39 U. Tol. L. Rev. 1 (2007).
Here the conclusion to her article:
In the current climate in the United States, marriage is not a requirement for procreation. A woman has various reproductive options. She can have a child from a non-marital sexual relationship or through the use of artificial insemination. Thus, the number of children being born out of wedlock has increased. Historically, non-marital children were not permitted to inherit from their fathers. The U.S. Supreme Court and various state legislatures have taken actions to expand the inheritance rights of non-marital children. Unfortunately, those procedures are complicated and require non-marital children to depend upon the affirmative actions of their parents. The UPA introduces a system that allows non-marital children to inherit from their fathers on mostly equal terms with marital children, but further improvements are needed to fairly treat non-marital children for inheritance purposes. My proposed system gives the probate court flexibility to balance the interests of the state, non-marital children, and marital children. This system addresses the proper inclusion of non-marital children in intestacy statutes, but would need to be uniformly adopted by the states to accommodate family mobility and promote fairness among the states.
January 3, 2008 in Articles, Intestate Succession | Permalink
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