Supreme Court Invalidates Igbo Customary Law Denying Female child the Right to Inherit properties

For female children in Igbo land, it is cheering news as the Supreme Court has abolished an age long custom in the South East that stopped them from inheriting their fathers' property.

In a landmark judgement delivered last Friday, the apex court nullified the Igbo law and custom which prevented women from inheriting their father's estate.

The court ruled that the practice was discriminatory and conflicts with the provisions of the Nigerian Constitution.

The court specifically held that the practice was a breach of Section 42 (1)(a) and (2) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended).

The apex court's judgment was based on the appeal filed in 2004 by Mrs Lois Chituru Ukeje (widow of the late Lazarus Ogbonna Ukeje) and their son, Enyinnaya Lazarus Ukeje against Mrs Gladys Ada Ukeje (the deceased's daughter).

Gladys had sued the widow and son before the Lagos High Court, claiming to be one of the Ukeje's children and sought to be included among those to administer their father's estate.

The trial court affirmed that she was Ukeje's daughter and was therefore qualified to benefit from the estate of her father who died in Lagos in 1981.
At the Court of Appeal, sitting in Lagos, which Mrs Ukeje and his son rushed to, the decision of the trial court was upheld, prompting them to approach the Supreme Court.

In its judgment on July 1, 2016, the Supreme Court held that the Court of Appeal, Lagos was right in voiding the Igbo's native law and custom that disinherits female children.

Justice Bode Rhodes Vivour, who read the lead judgment held that no matter the circumstances of the birth of a female child, she is entitled to an inheritance from her later father's estate.

"Consequently, the Igbo customary law, which disentitles a female child from partaking in the sharing of her deceased father's estate, is a breach of Section 42(1) and (2) of the Constitution, a fundamental rights provision guaranteed to every Nigerian.

"The said discriminatory customary law is void as it conflicts with Section 42(1) and (2) of the Constitution. In the light of all that I have been saying, the appeal is dismissed.

In the spirit of reconciliation, parties to bear their own costs", Justice Rhodes Vivour ruled.

Justices Walter Samuel Nkanu Onnoghen, Clara Bata Ogunbiyi, Kumai Bayang Aka'ahs and John Inyang Okoro, who were part of the panel that heard the appeal, agreed with the lead judgment.

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