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Usman Lawal Osula

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Usman Lawal-Osula

Full Name
  
Usman Lawal-Osula

Born
  
1910 (
1910
)
Benin City, Nigeria

Occupation
  
Businessman Arala of Benin

Spouse(s)
  
Lydia Modupe Lawal-Osula (January 26, 1950 – December 2, 1972; his death)

Died
  
2 December 1972, Benin City, Nigeria

Chief Usman Mofeyintioluwa Lawal-Osula (1910 – December 2, 1972) was a Nigerian businessman with interests across insurance, real estate and other industries. As a member of the Benin royal family, he held a hereditary traditional title as the Arala of Benin at the time of his death.

Contents

The case of the will of Chief U.M. Lawal-Osula has become one of the most notable family law cases taught around the world as final judgment came after 23 years of disputes and court battles. At the time of his death in 1972, a will written by Chief U.M. Lawal-Osula dated November 22, 1968 was found.

By the Benin native law and custom, a Benin traditional chief is succeeded by his eldest son at death but before the death of Chief U.M. Lawal-Osula, he made a will in which he made provisions for his wife and children. However, following the death of U.M. Lawal-Osula, a man who provisions were not made for in the will claimed to be the eldest son of the chief was the plaintiff and this caused controversy over the question of whether the wife and children (the defendants) in the will were, in fact, children of U.M. Lawal-Osula.

In 1986, the plaintiffs initiated an action in which they claimed against the defendants that the last testament of the testator dated November 22, 1968 is null and void in the Bendel State High Court despite the chief explicitly stating "...that nobody shall modify or vary this Will. It is my will that the native law and custom of Benin shall not apply to alter or modify this my will." However, in 1995, two years after the death of the 1st defendant, Mrs. Lydia Lawal-Osula, the Supreme Court of Nigeria made a ruling that the real estate and personal properties comprised in the estate of Chief Usman Mofeyintioluwa Lawal-Osula be handed over to his wife and children as stated in the will.

Personal life and death

Chief Usman Lawal-Osula died in his Benin City home on December 2, 1972, the day after returning from hospital in England, Great Britain. At the time of this death, he was survived by his wife, Lydia Modupe Lawal-Osula and his four daughters: Chief Dr. Irene Odaro, a retired Solicitor-General and former spouse of Moses Odaro, Hajia Morenike Ibrahim-Yahaya, Princess Iyabo Ifueko Akai and Princess Edugie Nzeribe, the wife of Senator Arthur Nzeribe.

Philanthropy

Chief Usman Lawal-Osula was an international art collector and sponsored the third floor of the Benin City National Museum.

Publications

Chief Usman Lawal-Osula had published several books and articles. A memoir of one of his visits to Great Britain is currently in a library at McGill University.

References

Usman Lawal-Osula Wikipedia