China Daily (Hong Kong)

Love nets kind villager 500,000 yuan

- By MA ZHENHUAN in Hangzhou mazhenhuan@chinadaily.com.cn Cai Jingwen contribute­d to this story.

A selfless villager who looked after an elderly, childless neighbor for almost 30 years — and even paid her nursing home bills — has received a windfall of 500,000 yuan ($75,500) from her estate.

The story of 66-year-old Xu Huiming from Shandong village, Ningbo, Zhejiang province, has touched netizens who agreed he should be rewarded for the kindness he showed the late Su Meiyun.

However, his entitlemen­t to a share of her estate was clouded by the lack of a signed will.

Xu started looking after his neighbor a few years after her husband died in 1988. “My family took her in as a family member,” Xu said.

In 2008, Su’s house, which had fallen into disrepair, was demolished. She was registered by the village authoritie­s as a person without a home and applied for an 80-square-meter plot of land.

In the meantime, Xu rented accommodat­ion for Su until she was put into a nursing home in 2012.

Hong Qiuguo, Party secretary of Shandong village, said, “Su showed trust in Xu, and Xu was on call at all times when the nursing home had something to tell him about.”

Su died in 2016, age 92, and her land applicatio­n was approved by the village authority a year later. Earlier this year, the land was valued at more than 1 million yuan after it was earmarked for a rural relocation program.

The village committee agreed that Xu deserved Su’s estate as he had looked after her for nearly 30 years.

However, the estate could not be transferre­d to Xu as he was not a legitimate heir and did not have valid legal documentat­ion.

According to Hong, Su had written a will that all her property be bequeathed to Xu upon her death on the condition he took care of her outstandin­g debts and funeral expenses.

However, neither side signed the document as Xu thought Su had no assets or debts.

Xu followed Hong’s advice and took the case to the Jiangbei District People’s Court in Ningbo, which recently ruled he was entitled to half Su’s estate.

“The rural homestead l and applied for by Su should belong to the collective since it is neither inherited nor bequeathed,” said Zhang Haijuan, a judge of the court.

“But an appropriat­e portion of the estate may be given to a person other than the heir, who gave more support to the deceased, according to related laws and regulation­s.”

Xu received 40 sq m of land, the village authority collective 28 sq m and Su’s nephew, Su Weiju, 12 sq m.

Xu received his share of the estate on Oct 22.

In order to promote benevolent behavior like Xu’s, the amount allocated to the village will be used to buy gifts for the elderly, the Ningbo Evening News reported.

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