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  2. Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maintenance_and_Welfare_of...

    It makes it a legal obligation for children and heirs to provide maintenance to senior citizens and parents, by monthly allowance. It also provides simple, speedy and inexpensive mechanism for the protection of life and property of the older persons. After being passed by the Parliament of India, it received President's assent on December 29, 2007.

  3. Hindu Succession Act, 1956 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hindu_Succession_Act,_1956

    If there are no heirs in Class II, the property will be given to the deceased's agnates or relatives through male lineage. If there are no agnates or relatives through the male's lineage, then the property is given to the cognates or any relative through the lineage of females. There are two classes of heirs that are delineated by the Act.

  4. Estate (law) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estate_(law)

    Superimposed on the legal estate and interests in land, English courts created "equitable interests" over the same legal interests. These obligations are called trusts which will be enforceable in a court. A trustee is the person who holds the legal title to property, while the beneficiary is said to have an equitable interest in the property.

  5. Inheritance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inheritance

    In law, an "heir" (FEM: heiress) is a person who is entitled to receive a share of property from a decedent (a person who died), subject to the rules of inheritance in the jurisdiction where the decedent was a citizen, or where the decedent died or owned property at the time of death.

  6. Male heir - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Male_heir

    A male heir (sometimes heirs male)—usually describing the first-born son (primogeniture) or oldest surviving son of a family—has traditionally been the recipient of the residue of the estate, titles, wealth and responsibilities of his father in a patrilineal system. [1]

  7. Advancement (inheritance) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advancement_(inheritance)

    Advancement is a common law doctrine of intestate succession that presumes that gifts given to a person's heir during that person's life are intended as an advance on what that heir would inherit upon the death of the parent. Not to be confused with an advance of someone's expected distribution from an estate currently in probate.

  8. Operation of law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_of_law

    Rights that arise by operation of law often arise by design of certain contingencies set forth in a legal instrument. If a life estate is created in a tract of land, and the person by whose life the estate is measured dies, title to the property reverts to the original grantor – or, possibly, to the grantor's legal heirs – by operation of ...

  9. Thesavalamai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thesavalamai

    Thesavalamai is the traditional law of the Sri Lankan Tamil inhabitants of the Jaffna peninsula, codified by the Dutch during their colonial rule in 1707. The Thesawalamai is a collection of the Customs of the Malabar Inhabitants of the Province of Jaffna (collected by Dissawe Isaak) and given full force by the Regulation of 1806.