Thursday, 4 January 2018

Pay your Mother $1 Million For Raising you, Taiwan Court Orders Man

a woman standing on a sidewalk: Mother_Son_China


The highest court in Taiwan has ordered a man to pay his mother almost $1 million (£740,000) for raising him and paying for him to attend dentistry school.
The mother, identified only by her surname Luo, sued her second son for breaching a contract the duo signed in 1997.
Her son, Chu, was 20 years old when he signed the financial support agreement that stated he would pay his mother 60 percent of his monthly income after qualifying from his dentistry training, reported Taiwan News.
After graduating, Chu refused to abide by the terms of the contract. He argued that it his mother should not receive financial compensation for raising her biological child and that he was only a sophomore when he signed the agreement therefore it should be deemed invalid, according to Taiwan News.
After a rigorous legal battle, the Taiwanese Supreme Court ruled that the contract was valid and Chu was ordered to pay $1 million in back payments and interest to his mother.
In Taiwan, an adult offspring is legally obligated to provide for their elderly parents. Generally, however, most parents do not sue if their children breach this civil code, according to the BBC.
Luo held that she accrued more than $675,800 in debt after raising her two sons as a single parent. She made her sons sign a contract because she feared that they would not fulfil their social obligation to take care of her, reported the BBC.
During the hearing, Chu held that the terms of the agreement said that he was liable to pay back all the expenditure his mother incurred raising him and extra money to compensate her for the time spent nurturing him.
He then made a case for how the contract should be deemed void as these stipulations were against social morals and public customs.
The court rejected these claims and ruled that Chu was an adult under the eyes of the law when he initially signed the contract and it was thus a valid agreement.
 - Newsweek
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