MC1560 wrote:ThinksMarkedly wrote:Why the hell not? Emily and Honor were legally married, so inheritance should go to their children regardless of who bore them.ThinksMarkedly wrote:Indeed. De jure they are Harringtons. Since inheritance is law, that should suffice.
So, if Katherine was born first, all of the Harrington lands/titles would go to her while Honor's biological son is left out?
Does that sound right to you?
Assuming that's how inheritance law works, yes. Honor would have known ahead of time that was a possibility. But we don't know the law.
It's also possible that the titles and lands associated with each are indivisible, but multiple titles belonging to one person or people can be bequeathed to different offspring.
Usually, though, when one renounces a title, they renounce for all their children too, so if Hamish renounced the White Haven Earldom, it would pass to Willie.
Is Ruth in line for the throne? Ahead of other biological Winton's?
If a widower with children remarries a women with children who are older than his own, do they get placed ahead in the line of succession?
Ruth is not because of a law specifically passed that she isn't. The fact that there is a law indicates that either she would be or that it's sufficiently unclear that she or someone else on her behalf could make the case.
As for whether pre-existing children would enter the inheritance line ahead of someone else, depends on the terms of the marriage. Today, in a marriage of full communion, all pre-existing assets belong to the couple, regardless of who owned what at the time of the marriage. This type of marriage isn't very common these days because of divorces, but it exists and that's how my parents married. It's also possible this type of marriage no longer exist in the future (forbidden by law to prevent Black Widow[er] scams).
In a marriage of partial communion, all pre-existing assets belong solely to their original owner, but anything acquired during the marriage belongs to both.