Goo Hara's mother loses her deceased daughter's fortune and the court decides to abandon the child without taking care of him and deprive him of inheritance.



It's an inheritance battle between brother and mother that has been on hold for a long time after the recent death of popular idol Goo Hara, the court decided that he was the biological mother and he couldn't get an inheritance because he left his children all the time and never looked at them.

Goo Hara made the decision to end her life from this world in November 2019. After that, her real brother who grew up together having to fight with his real mother who came to use their original right to claim the property that was their daughter's inheritance that they left for themselves

After 5 years, the Constitutional Court issued an order preventing family members who do not fulfill their duties in caring for a deceased family member from receiving the inheritance.

On April 25, the Constitutional Court issued a unanimous decision on Article 112, Section 4 of the Civil Code. Which violates the Constitution and stipulates that civil law allows family members to obtain part of the inheritance under any circumstances. However, the court ruled that the siblings have the right to receive the deceased's inheritance. If you do not own any part in this property

At the same time, the Constitutional Court ruled that Article 112, paragraphs 1 to 3 of the Civil Code, which allows the transfer of inheritance to parents, children and spouses of the deceased, is unconstitutional. This means that family members who neglect or mistreat the deceased are contrary to justice and common sense. Therefore, there is no right to receive the deceased's inheritance.

As a result of this ruling, Goo Hara's real mother, who went out to fight for her daughter's inheritance rights, must return home empty-handed. At this event, netizens applauded loudly. Thank you to the court that still enjoys justice. Because Goo Hara's mother abandoned her and didn't care about the female idol at all, just attend the funeral before claiming your deceased daughter's inheritance.

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