tlb wrote:From Wikipedia:On 27 June 2016, Grant Bavister, Assistant Register to the Baronetage at the Ministry of Justice, entered Sir Ronald Steuart Pringle and his son Sir Norman Murray Pringle onto the Official Roll of the Baronetage, as the 9th and 10th de jure Baronets. He also removed the de facto 9th and 10th Baronets, Norman Hamilton Pringle and his son Steuart Robert Pringle, from the Roll, in accordance with the Royal Warrant of 1910. Certificates of succession to this effect were issued to Sir Norman Murray Pringle on 1 July 2016.
ThinksMarkedly wrote:I think the case that cthia is creating is even more complicated than this, and is something where science is outpacing the law. Today.
Let's start with the uncontroversial case: man and woman are married, man gives permission to use his frozen sperm to impregnate the woman. Child is legitimate heir.
Now let's say this woman does not get permission and impregnates herself anyway. I'd say it's still uncontroversial: the child is legitimate and an heir. But the woman may get in trouble for stealing the sperm (if she wasn't a co-owner anyway).
What if the man has passed away? Even assuming theft, the child itself is blameless and probably an heir, though it might be difficult to redistribute the assets if the will was executed a long time before. Note I said "an heir" not "a legitimate child," since there may still be provisions in the law about children born outside of marriage as illegitimate (bastards).
What if the woman that gets impregnated was never married to this man in the first place? How is this different from an anonymous sperm donor?
I don't know the answers to any of those questions. Just asking them.
tlb wrote:A child born where the sperm donor was not married to the mother is not legitimate for purposes of inheriting a title.
Whether or not she had permission to use the sperm, if it demonstrably occurred after the sperm donor was dead, then she was not married to the donor and so the child was illegitimate. Therefore the child cannot inherit the title under English law (Manticore is modeled in many ways on England).
My charge was a lot smarter than all of the Youngs collectively. She would have thoroughly looked into the matter. As a result, if Manticoran law says she had to be married at the time and Stefan had to be alive, then she would have had herself impregnated while he was alive and had the child tubed. Then she could have elected to have the embryo placed back inside of her at her earliest convenience. All potential problems of inheritance solved.
She could have done the same thing while she was with Pavel, meaning both kids are in line for inheritance.
BTW, a legal will can be written on a napkin.