A CRITICAL APPRAISAL OF LEGITIMACY AND LEGITIMATION UNDER NIGERIAN FAMILY LAW

  • Type: Project
  • Department: Law
  • Project ID: LAW0077
  • Access Fee: ₦5,000 ($14)
  • Chapters: 5 Chapters
  • Pages: 56 Pages
  • Format: Microsoft Word
  • Views: 2.3K
  • Report This work

For more Info, call us on
+234 8130 686 500
or
+234 8093 423 853

A Critical Appraisal Of Legitimacy And Legitimation Under Nigerian Family Law   Abstract

This long essay is concerned with the concept of legitimacy, which is an important concept, as it determines the status of a child in relation to the society, while a legitimate child is conferred with the rights and duties of a legitimate child, which includes right to maintenance, succession among other rights, an illegitimate child is denied of these right by virtue of the fact of his illegitimate birth and he remain so, until and unless he is legitimated either by the subsequent marriage of the parents, or by acknowledgement of paternity by the father, the absence of which the child will be regarded as an illegitimate child, with the resultant social discrimination that will be melted out on him by members of the larger society.

This essay is therefore poised to giving a voice to illegitimate children in the society, by examining the concept itself, and the discrimation which an illegitimate child is being faced with; it examines the ways of legitimating an illegitimate child, in order to remove the discrimination, so that he will be accorded with the same status as a legitimate child.

Chapter one gives a general introduction of the work, it traces the origin of illegitimacy which appearances can be seen in the Holy Bible and the Holy Qu’ran,and which also dates back to our traditional societies, where an illegitimate child is seen more or less like a social outcast, and is treated like the child of nobody, it also discusses all the variables necessary to fully appreciate the concept, while chapter two talked about the concept of legitimacy under both customary and English law, it discusses the importance of a legitimate status, it also discusses illegitimacy, and the need to legitimize an illegitimate child, in other to remove the social stigma attached to that status.

legitimization was specifically discussed in chapter three, which can either be by the subsequent marriage of the parents of the child which can either be by statutory law, or by customary law, and the necessary conditions which must be met, Acknowledgement of paternity as a means of legitimation was also discussed with the condition precedent before a child will be said to have been acknowledged by the father

Chapter four discusses the effect of legitimation on an otherwise illegitimate child, which includes the rights and the duties of a legitimized child to the parents and the rights and duties of the parents to a legitimated child as when there is a right there must be a corresponding duty. Chapter five which is the concluding part of the work contains the findings of the work and includes the necessary recommendations.

Table of Content

CONTENTS
COVER PAGE..................i
CERTIFICATION............ii
ABSTRACT......................iii
DEDICATION.............................................
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT.........................v
TABLE OF CASES.................................vi
TABLE OF STATUTES............................vii
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS...................viii
TABLE OF CONTENTS...........................ix

CHAPTER 1
GENERAL INTRODUCTION
1.0.0:INTRODUCTION 1
1.1.0:BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY 3
1.2.0:OBJECTIVE OF STUDY 5
1.3.0:FOCUS OF STUDY 6
1.4.0:SCOPE OF STUDY 7
1.5.0:METHODOLOGY 7
1.6.0:LITERATURE REVIEW 7
1.7.0:DEFINITION OF TERMS 12
1.8.0:CONCLUSION 15

CHAPTER 2
LEGITIMACY
2.0.0:INTRODUCTION 16
2.1.0:CONCEPT OF LEGITIMACY 16
2.2.0:LEGITIMACY UNDER NIGERIAN CUSTOMARY LAW 18
2.3.0:LEGITIMACY UNDER ENGLISH LAW 21
2.4.0:LEGITIMACY OF CHILDREN OF VOID MARRIAGE 22
2.5.0:LEGITIMACY OF CHILDREN OF A VOIDABLE MARRIAGE 24
2.6.0:ILLEGITIMACY 25
2.7.0:DIFFERENCE BETWEEN LEGITIMATE AND ILLEGITIMATE CHILD 28
2.7.0:OTHER INSTANCES OF LEGITIMACY 30
2.8.0: CONCLUSION 30

CHAPTER 3
LEGITIMATION
3.0.0:INTRODUCTION 32
3.1.0:LEGITIMATION BY SUBSEQUENT STATUTORY LAW MARRIAGE.33
3.2.0:LEGITIMATION BY SUBSEQUENT CUSTOMARY LAW MARRIAGE.36
3.3.0:LEGITIMATION BY ACKNOWLEDGEMENT 41
3.4.0:CONCLUSION 50

CHAPTER 4
EFFECT OF LEGITIMATION
4.0.0:INTRODUCTION 51
4.1.0:EFFECT OF A LEGITIMATION 51
4.2.0:RIGHTS OF A LEGITIMIZED CHILD 52
4.3.0:DUTIES OF A PARENT TO A LEGITIMIZED CHILD 55
4.4.0:DUTIES OF A LEGITIMIZED CHILD TO THE PARENT 64
4.5.0:CONSTITUTIONAL APPROACH TO LEGITIMATION 65
4.6.0:CONCLUSION 67

CHAPTER 5
GENERAL CONCLUSION
5.0.0:CONCLUSION 69
5.1.0:RECOMMENDATION 70
BIBLIOGRAPHY 73
BOOKS 73.

A CRITICAL APPRAISAL OF LEGITIMACY AND LEGITIMATION UNDER NIGERIAN FAMILY LAW
For more Info, call us on
+234 8130 686 500
or
+234 8093 423 853

Share This
  • Type: Project
  • Department: Law
  • Project ID: LAW0077
  • Access Fee: ₦5,000 ($14)
  • Chapters: 5 Chapters
  • Pages: 56 Pages
  • Format: Microsoft Word
  • Views: 2.3K
Payment Instruction
Bank payment for Nigerians, Make a payment of ₦ 5,000 to

Bank GTBANK
gtbank
Account Name Obiaks Business Venture
Account Number 0211074565

Bitcoin: Make a payment of 0.0005 to

Bitcoin(Btc)

btc wallet
Copy to clipboard Copy text

Details

Type Project
Department Law
Project ID LAW0077
Fee ₦5,000 ($14)
Chapters 5 Chapters
No of Pages 56 Pages
Format Microsoft Word

Related Works

ABSTRACT This long essay is concerned with the concept of legitimacy, which is an important concept, as it determines the status of a child in relation to the society, while a legitimate child is conferred with the rights and duties of a legitimate child, which includes... Continue Reading
ABSTRACT Insider trading has been understood to the act of dealing in unpublished price sensitive information and it is seen to go against the principle of equal access to information. This work made an unfair appraisal of the concept of insider trading in Nigeria in the course of the work. The origin of inside trading regulation was examined and... Continue Reading
ABSTRACT More than 100 years ago the UK house of Lords in the famous Solomon case established a maxism  that a company is a  separate legal entity distinct from its members. Thereby it determined the directions of modern company law and the nature of private limited companies similar doctrines are incorporated in the statutory provisions of... Continue Reading
  • Type:Project
  • ID:LAW0213
  • Department:Law
  • Pages:123
ABSTRACT More than 100 years ago the UK house of Lords in the famous Solomon case established a maxism  that a company is a  separate legal entity distinct from its members. Thereby it determined the directions of modern company law and the nature of private limited companies similar doctrines are incorporated in the statutory provisions of... Continue Reading
  • Type:Project
  • ID:LAW0584
  • Department:Law
  • Pages:127
There is no law that says the plaintiff or the prosecution must bring a million witnesses or evidence to court before he can succeed in his case. A court can convict on a single witness. A case is not decided by the numbers of witnesses, single credible convincing evidence is... Continue Reading
  • Type:Project
  • ID:LAW0005
  • Department:Law
  • Pages:110
ABSTRACT There is no law that says the plaintiff or the prosecution must bring a million witnesses or evidence to court before he can succeed in his case. A court can convict on a single witness. A case is not decided by the numbers of witnesses, single credible convincing... Continue Reading
  • Type:Project
  • ID:LAW0026
  • Department:Law
  • Pages:110
There is no law that says the plaintiff or the prosecution must bring a million witnesses or evidence to court before he can succeed in his case. A court can convict on a single witness. A case is not decided by the numbers of witnesses, single credible convincing evidence is enough to convict in a case but there are some exceptions. The... Continue Reading
  • Type:Project
  • ID:LAW0140
  • Department:Law
  • Pages:110
Critical Analysis Of Corroboration Under The Nigerian Law Of Evidence Abstract There is no law that says the plaintiff or the prosecution must bring a million witnesses or evidence to court before he can succeed in his case. A court can convict on a single witness. A case is not decided by the numbers of witnesses, single credible convincing... Continue Reading
  • Type:Project
  • ID:LAW0160
  • Department:Law
  • Pages:110
ABSTRACT There is no law that says the plaintiff or the prosecution must bring a million witnesses or evidence to court before he can succeed in his case. A court can convict on a single witness. A case is not decided by the numbers of witnesses, single credible convincing evidence is enough to convict in a case but there are some... Continue Reading
  • Type:Project
  • ID:LAW0169
  • Department:Law
  • Pages:110
ABSTRACT There is no law that says the plaintiff or the prosecution must bring a million witnesses or evidence to court before he can succeed in his case. A court can convict on a single witness. A case is not decided by the numbers of witnesses, single credible convincing evidence is enough to convict in a case but there are some exceptionsâ€.... Continue Reading
  • Type:Project
  • ID:LAW0271
  • Department:Law
  • Pages:100
Call Us
whatsappWhatsApp Us