A grandparents’ duty to
support their grandchild.
These are
the legal principles:
·
Both parents are jointly obliged to
support their child on his birth. This common-law obligation is called the ‘the
parental duty’ to support children, proportionately to their respective means.
In other words, the parent that earns more, would pay more child maintenance;
·
The duty exists, irrespective of
whether a child is born in or out of wedlock or is born of a first or
subsequent marriage;
·
A parent’s duty to support ends when the
child becomes self-supporting (even if the child becomes a major), dies or
marries;
·
If parents are not able to support
their children, the duty to support falls on paternal and maternal grandparents.
The support is based on the child’s needs and the grandparents’ ability to pay;
·
Paternal grandparents have a duty of
support towards a grandchild despite the child being born out of wedlock;
·
When a parent dies, his or her
obligation to support the child will not cease, but will lie against the estate
of the deceased parent;
·
Where there are not enough funds in
the deceased parent’s estate to provide for the child’s support, the duty to
support will fall upon the child’s maternal and paternal grandparents, jointly;
·
If the spouse cannot support his
wife, her parents may be called on to support her, but they have a right to
recover their maintenance from the spouse;
·
The duty to support may also cease if
the child is ‘guilty of a cause of ingratitude towards him from whom he desires
maintenance such that he could even be justly disinherited on account of it’. This
still must be ruled upon by our courts.
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