Death of the Breadwinner and the Continuation of the Duty of Spousal Support: Discrepancies and Inequalities for Different Categories of Surviving Partners

This note considers the extension of the duty of spousal support after the death of the breadwinner by comparing the rights of different categories of surviving maintenance claimants, who tend to be mostly women: widows of the deceased, unmarried intimate partners of the deceased and ex-wives and e...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Elsje Bonthuys
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: North-West University 2020-12-01
Series:Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.assaf.org.za/index.php/per/article/view/7996
id doaj-23d87cc0fef74bf9ba91e7b6ff767ae8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-23d87cc0fef74bf9ba91e7b6ff767ae82021-01-21T06:00:14ZafrNorth-West UniversityPotchefstroom Electronic Law Journal1727-37812020-12-012310.17159/1727-3781/2020/v23i0a7996Death of the Breadwinner and the Continuation of the Duty of Spousal Support: Discrepancies and Inequalities for Different Categories of Surviving PartnersElsje Bonthuys0WITS This note considers the extension of the duty of spousal support after the death of the breadwinner by comparing the rights of different categories of surviving maintenance claimants, who tend to be mostly women: widows of the deceased, unmarried intimate partners of the deceased and ex-wives and ex-partners of the deceased. Financial support can be provided from the deceased estate in the form of a right to share in the joint matrimonial estate, a right to intestate succession, a right to claim from the estate in terms of the Maintenance of Surviving Spouses Act and a right to claim for loss of support from third parties who who caused the death of the deceased breadwinner. Comparing different categories of women, it becomes clear that the law disproportionately benefits widows over other partners and that the rights of ex-spouses are being gradually eroded by the jurisprudence. There is also a discrepancy between rights to claim against deceased estates, which favours widows, on the one hand, and rights to claim against third parties, which is available to a far larger group of surviving maintenance claimants, on the other hand. The note analyses the gendered causes and consequences of these differences.  https://journals.assaf.org.za/index.php/per/article/view/7996spousal duty to maintainunmarried intimate partnerswidowsex wivesaction for loss of supportmaintenance
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elsje Bonthuys
spellingShingle Elsje Bonthuys
Death of the Breadwinner and the Continuation of the Duty of Spousal Support: Discrepancies and Inequalities for Different Categories of Surviving Partners
Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal
spousal duty to maintain
unmarried intimate partners
widows
ex wives
action for loss of support
maintenance
author_facet Elsje Bonthuys
author_sort Elsje Bonthuys
title Death of the Breadwinner and the Continuation of the Duty of Spousal Support: Discrepancies and Inequalities for Different Categories of Surviving Partners
title_short Death of the Breadwinner and the Continuation of the Duty of Spousal Support: Discrepancies and Inequalities for Different Categories of Surviving Partners
title_full Death of the Breadwinner and the Continuation of the Duty of Spousal Support: Discrepancies and Inequalities for Different Categories of Surviving Partners
title_fullStr Death of the Breadwinner and the Continuation of the Duty of Spousal Support: Discrepancies and Inequalities for Different Categories of Surviving Partners
title_full_unstemmed Death of the Breadwinner and the Continuation of the Duty of Spousal Support: Discrepancies and Inequalities for Different Categories of Surviving Partners
title_sort death of the breadwinner and the continuation of the duty of spousal support: discrepancies and inequalities for different categories of surviving partners
publisher North-West University
series Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal
issn 1727-3781
publishDate 2020-12-01
description This note considers the extension of the duty of spousal support after the death of the breadwinner by comparing the rights of different categories of surviving maintenance claimants, who tend to be mostly women: widows of the deceased, unmarried intimate partners of the deceased and ex-wives and ex-partners of the deceased. Financial support can be provided from the deceased estate in the form of a right to share in the joint matrimonial estate, a right to intestate succession, a right to claim from the estate in terms of the Maintenance of Surviving Spouses Act and a right to claim for loss of support from third parties who who caused the death of the deceased breadwinner. Comparing different categories of women, it becomes clear that the law disproportionately benefits widows over other partners and that the rights of ex-spouses are being gradually eroded by the jurisprudence. There is also a discrepancy between rights to claim against deceased estates, which favours widows, on the one hand, and rights to claim against third parties, which is available to a far larger group of surviving maintenance claimants, on the other hand. The note analyses the gendered causes and consequences of these differences. 
topic spousal duty to maintain
unmarried intimate partners
widows
ex wives
action for loss of support
maintenance
url https://journals.assaf.org.za/index.php/per/article/view/7996
work_keys_str_mv AT elsjebonthuys deathofthebreadwinnerandthecontinuationofthedutyofspousalsupportdiscrepanciesandinequalitiesfordifferentcategoriesofsurvivingpartners
_version_ 1724330216000585728