## Correct Answer: B. Child is delivered after death of biological father A posthumous child is one who is born after the death of the biological father. This is a critical legal and forensic concept in Indian jurisprudence, particularly relevant under the Indian Succession Act, 1925, and the Hindu Succession Act, 1956. The term "posthumous" derives from Latin "postumus" (after) and "humus" (earth/burial), literally meaning "after burial." In Indian law, a posthumous child has full inheritance rights as if born during the father's lifetime, provided the child is born within 300 days of the father's death (as per the Presumption of Paternity doctrine). This is crucial in succession cases, legitimacy disputes, and inheritance claims. The forensic significance lies in establishing paternity through DNA analysis when the father is deceased, and determining whether a child qualifies as posthumous for legal succession purposes. The definition is purely temporal—it depends solely on whether the child was born after the father's death, regardless of the circumstances of conception or delivery. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Delivery of a macerated fetus** — Maceration refers to the softening and disintegration of fetal tissues due to prolonged intrauterine retention after fetal death. This is a pathological finding in forensic pathology unrelated to the timing of birth relative to parental death. This option confuses fetal pathology with the legal definition of posthumous birth, which is purely temporal. **C. Child is abandoned by the parents** — Abandonment is a social/legal issue concerning parental responsibility and child welfare, not the definition of posthumous birth. A posthumous child can be well-cared-for, and an abandoned child may be born to living parents. This option conflates child protection law with succession law. **D. Child is born to an unmarried couple** — Marital status of parents is irrelevant to the definition of posthumous birth. A posthumous child can be born to married or unmarried parents; the defining criterion is birth after the father's death, not the legitimacy of the union. This confuses legitimacy law with succession law. ## High-Yield Facts - **Posthumous child**: Born after the biological father's death, with full inheritance rights under Indian Succession Act, 1925. - **300-day rule**: A child born within 300 days of father's death is presumed to be his legitimate child (Presumption of Paternity, Hindu Succession Act, 1956). - **Forensic relevance**: DNA paternity testing is used to establish paternity of posthumous children in succession disputes. - **Inheritance rights**: Posthumous children have equal succession rights as children born during father's lifetime in India. - **Legal definition**: Purely temporal—depends on birth occurring after father's death, independent of conception date or delivery circumstances. ## Mnemonics **POST-humous = AFTER burial** POST (after) + HUMUS (burial/earth) = child born after father's death. Remember: the father is already buried when the child is born. **300-day succession rule** Child born within 300 days (~10 months) of father's death = presumed legitimate posthumous child with full inheritance rights. Use this for succession case questions. ## NBE Trap NBE may pair posthumous with maceration (option A) to trap students who confuse fetal pathology with legal definitions of birth timing. The temporal nature of posthumous birth is often missed by those focusing on fetal condition rather than the father's death timeline. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian courts, establishing a child as posthumous is critical for inheritance disputes—a child born 280 days after the father's death automatically qualifies for succession rights without requiring DNA proof of paternity, whereas one born after 300 days must prove biological relationship. This distinction frequently appears in succession bench cases. _Reference: Parikh's Textbook of Medical Jurisprudence, Forensic Medicine & Toxicology (Ch. Sexual Jurisprudence); Indian Succession Act, 1925; Hindu Succession Act, 1956_
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