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The Marriage Contract
Goals of this Chapter
-
Definition of some important fiqh terms
including arkaan, shuroot, sahih, baatil and
faasid.
-
The
different conditions and/or prerequisites needed for a
marriage contract to be considered valid, enforceable
and binding.
-
In
particular, the importance of the guardian (wali),
witnesses (shuhood) and the dowry (mahr).
-
General
concepts concerning conditions or stipulations in any
type of contract and the ruling regarding adding such
stipulations into a marriage contract in particular.
-
The
ramifications and effect on the contract when certain
conditions are not properly met.
Introduction
Marriage in Islam is a contract. Thus, as in any
contract in Islam, there are elements which are
considered essential to its existence, called arkaan,
the possibility of stipulations of different kinds,
legal effects of the contract, etc. Each of these
should be understood properly in order to ensure that
the marriage has been performed in the proper manner and
the rightful effects of the marriage are granted to each
of the participating partners.
Definition of
Rukn and Shart
Rukn (plural: arkaan) can be
translated as "pillar" and is an essential part of the
legal reality of something. Without it, that legal
reality does not exist.
Shart (plural: shuroot) can be
translated as "prerequisite" or "condition" is a
requirement for the legal reality/validity of something
but 1) is external to it and/or 2) does not completely
void the legal reality if not found.
Az-Zuhaili writes:
"According to the Hanafis, a rukn is something
upon which the existence of something else is dependent,
however it is also part of that thing which is dependent
on it. A shart for them is a prerequisite upon
which the existence of something else depends but it
does not form a part of that other thing.
For the majority (of the scholars), a rukn is
the thing upon which something and its existence rests,
it cannot be in reality without it or it is something
which is a must. Their famous expression is "It is a
thing by which the shari'a reality of a thing
will not exist except with it." That is the case
regardless of whether it be an actual part of the thing
or something separate from it. A shart for
them is something upon which another thing is dependent
but which does not form part of it." (Wahbah Az-Zuhaili,
Al-Fiqh Al-Islami wa Adillatuhu (Berut: Dar Al-Fikr,
1985) vol. 7 p. 36)
The following example will demonstrate the different
between the Hanafi approach and that of the rest of the
schools of thought. The actual existence of the girl
that is to be wed is something external to the process
of the marriage contract. Therefore, since it is
external, the Hanafis would not call it a rukn
although, obviously, no marriage would actually take
place without her existence. This makes it a shart
in their terminology. In the other schools of thought,
the fact that no marriage can occur without the
existence of the girl getting married is sufficient to
call her existence a rukn of the marriage
contract even though her existence is external to the
actual contract process itself.
The Arkaan of a
Marriage Contract
All the scholars agree that "offer and acceptance" (Al-Ijaab
wa al-qubool) is among the arkaan of a
marriage. There is a difference of opinion concerning
the other arkaan as discussed below:
The Arkaan of a
Marriage According to the Hanafis
Offer and acceptance are the only arkaan of
the marriage contract in Hanafi fiqh due to their
definition of rukn as explained above.
Furthermore, in Hanafi fiqh, the offer/acceptance can
begin from either party.
The Arkaan of a
Marriage According to the Jamhoor (Majority of
Scholars)
1.
Offer and acceptance are among the arkaan.
For most of these scholars, the offer must be from the
woman's side and the acceptance from the man.
2.
The two parties to the contract: the prospective
husband and the guardian of the woman.
Some also count the following among the arkaan,
although the majority of these scholars count them among
the shuroot:
The Wording of the Contract
There are a variety of opinions as to exactly which
phrases are valid in the transaction of the marriage
contract. Of all these opinions, it seems clear that
the best of them is that any wording that makes the
intent of the contract clear to all involved should be
considered a valid marriage, while the best format would
be that actually used by the Prophet (sas) and his
companions. Also, it is considered best if the contract
is executed in spoken form. However, due to need or
necessity, it may be done through writing or signing.
Among the different possible phraseology, the very
clear terms such as "I marry you" as accepted by all.
Anything which indicates a temporary nature of the
contract is forbidden. In others there is some
difference of opinion such as "I present to you", "I
give to you", "I sell to you", etc.
The Hanafi and Maliki Approach
This opinion says that any term which is clear by
itself or by the context and in this way implies
marriage would be considered valid if the witnesses and
the parties understand it as such. This supported by
the following segment of along verse in which Allah
mentions all of the categories of women which are halal
for the Prophet (sas):
{...Wa imra'atan in wahabat nafsahaa lin Nabiy in araada
an-nabiy an yastankihahaa khaalistan laka min duni al-mu'mineen...}
{...and a woman who gives herself to the
Prophet if the Prophet wishes to marry her - exclusively
for you and not the [rest of the] believers...}
Al-Ahzaab:50
It is also reported that the Prophet (sas) himself
used the following expression in performing a marriage:
"Qad
mallaktukahaa bima ma'aka min al-qur'an."
"I have put her in your possession for the
Qur'an which you possess." Al-Bukhari
The Hanbali and Shafi'iy
Approach
This opinion says that the marriage is not proper
unless it uses forms of the following words which are
found in the Qur'an and hadith: nikah or
zawaaj. Their response to the above evdience is
that since the verse clearly applied to something given
specifically to the Prophet (sas) it is not applicable
here and that the actual words of the hadith are from
the narrator who may not have transmitted it exactly.
Bottom line: Marriage is a contract and, like any other
contract if the intention and goal of the contract is
clear to all parties, there need not be any additional
restrictions on the actual words used. On the other
hand, due to the seriousness of this contract, there is
no hardship in sticking to the original words used most
commonly by the Prophet (sas) and his companions.
Does it Have to be in
Arabic?
According to the majority of the scholars, it is not
necessary for the marriage contract to be transacted in
Arabic, even for those who have the ability to speak
Arabic. Those in the Hanbali school who required the
use of forms of the words nikah or zawaaj
also required that the contract be transacted in Arabic
for this reason.
The Different Types of
Shuroot (Conditions or Prerequisites)
At this point, we need to learn the definition of
some general terms in Islamic fiqh which come
up in many subject areas, including the one at hand.
Sahih
(Sound). A contract
which fulfills all of the arkaan and the
shuroot and has full effect in the law.
Baatil
(Void). A contract
that has failed to fulfill specific arkaan or
vital shuroot. A contract which is baatil
is the opposite of one which is sahih and has
no legal effect at all. If a marriage contract is found
to be void, even if it is only discovered after
consummation, the legal condition will be as if it never
happened at all. The lineage of the father will not be
established and there is no waiting period ('iddah)
upon the woman. An example of this would be if a man
married a woman who was married to someone else at the
time.
Faasid
(Defective).
This is a contract which fails to
fulfill some of the shuroot, but not the
arkaan. For non-Hanafis, faasid and
baatil have the same meaning. In Hanafi fiqh, a
marriage which was faasid has some legal
ramifications, especially if it was consummated.
With respect to marriage, there are four different
kinds of conditions which must be met:
-
Conditions Required for Initiating the Contract (shuroot
al-in'iqaad).
These are the conditions that must be present with
respect to the arkaan or fundamentals of the
marriage contract.
-
Conditions Required for the Soundness of the Contract
(shuroot as-sihha).
These are
conditions which must be fulfilled in order for the
marriage to have its proper legal effect. If these
conditions are not met, the contract is "defective" (faasid),
according to Hanafi fiqh, "void" (baatil)
according to the others.
-
Conditions Required for the Execution of the Contract
(shuroot an-nifaadh).
These are
conditions which must be met for the marriage to have
actual practical effect. If these conditions are not
met, then the marriage is "suspended" (mauqoof)
according to Hanafi and Maliki fiqh. For
example, a minor girl until she reaches puberty.
-
Conditions Required for Making the Marriage Binding (shuroot
al-luzoom).
If these
conditions are not met, then the marriage is
non-binding meaning that either of the two parties or
others may have the right to anull the marriage. If
they accept the marriage with such shortcomings, it
becomes binding.
First: Shuroot
Required for Initiating the Contract
In this category, there are conditions concerning the
two who are getting married as well as the form in which
the contract takes place.
Concerning the Two Getting
Married
The two people must meet the qualification of legal
competence, i.e, they must be adult and sane. If they
are not, the marriage will be invalid.
Secondly, the woman cannot be from those categories
of women that are forbidden for a man to marry. For
example, suppose a man married a woman and later
discovered that they had been breastfed by the same
woman. In this case, it is as if the marriage never
took place because those two were not qualified or
allowed to marry each other and the marriage becomes
null and void.
Concerning the Contract
There is near complete agreement on the following
conditions relating to the transaction of the marriage
contract:
- The offer and
acceptance must be done in one sitting. In general,
this means that the response must be immediate.
Exactly what is considered a "sitting" depends on
custom and related factors.
- The
acceptance must correspond to what is being offered.
If the guardian says: "I marry you to Khadijah", a
response of "I accept Fatimah as my wife" would not
constitute a valid contract. An exception to this is
if the wali mentions a specific dowry amount
and the groom responds with a higher amount. It is
regarded that there is no reason for dispute since it
is assumed that a higher dowry will be acceptable.
- The wali
cannot rescind the offer. Unlike transactions of
selling, neither party can say "I have changed my
mind" once they have uttered the offer/acceptance. It
is immediately binding. In a sale, they both continue
to have the option to change their mind until the
"sitting" is over and they part.
- The marriage
must be effective immediately. If the wali
says "I will marry her to you after one month", there
is not marriage and the two remain unmarried.
Note that the custom of saying "I accept" three times
common in some Muslim cultures has no legal
significance. Once the first "I accept" has been
uttered, everything after that is meaningless - whether
positive or negative.
Adding Stipulations to the
Marriage Contract
This is where one party states a stipulation binding
on the other party for specific reasons or goals. The
offer/acceptance are tied to this stipulation by
mention. There is a difference of opinion among the
scholars concerning the validity of conditions of this
nature.
Conditions of contracts are two types: 1) those
imposed directly by the shari'a and 2) those
drawn up by one or more of the parties. When any
contract is entered into, the first type of conditions
are covered automatically even if they are not stated in
the contract.
Understood Conditions Based
on what is Customary
It is a general principle in fiqh that
customs can take the status of law. It becomes
understood that people are going to behave in a certain
fashion. Since that is understood, one party has the
right to ask it of the other even if it is not stated in
the contract. In the area of marriage, there are some
stipulations that are known by custom. These do not
have to be mentioned in the contract to be considered
binding. However, there are some strict conditions that
must be met before a customary act is considered
something equivalent to a legal stipulation. These
conditions are as follows:
- The customary
practice cannot contravene or contradict anything
expressly laid down by the shari'a. For
example, it is custom in some parts of the world for
the woman to pay dowry to the man. In other parts, it
is customary to prepare two or three times amount of
food that the guests could possibly eat at the
walima (wedding feast). Neither party has the
right to demand of the other the fulfillment of such
customs.
- The customary
act must be common, well-known and universal and not
something practiced only by some portions of the
population.
- The custom
must have been in existence and known before the
marriage contract took place.
Other conditions Laid Down
by the Two Parties
Any condition which contradicts, compromises or
nullifies the main goals and purposes of the marriage
contract itself are rejected and, even if stated, are of
no legal consequence. For example conditions which
state that the woman receives no dowry or that he does
not have to support her or that they will not consummate
the marriage are all null and void and of no effect
whatsoever.
Such conditions must be stipulated and agreed upon at
or before the time of the offer/acceptance. Even those
scholars who accept such stipulations do not accept them
if they are made after the offer/acceptance.
Sound and Acceptable
Stipulations
There are two types of sound and acceptable
stipulations:
- Those
embodied in the contract even if they are not stated.
This includes conditions known from the shari'a
as well as those known from custom as discussed
previously. The Prophet (sas) said:
"Ahaqqu maa aufaitum min ash-shurooti maa
istahlaltum bihi al-furooj."
"The conditions which you have the most
duty to fulfill are those by which you have made
marital relations lawful." Bukhari &
Muslim
Many scholars understand this hadith to be
referring to these kinds of conditions only, that is,
those that are covered by the shari'a in the
first place. This is the view of the shafi'i
school. They do no allow any additional stipulations
to be added to the marriage contract.
- Those
conditions not covered by the essential nature of the
contract but which are agreed upon by the contracting
parties. These are those stipulations that do not
contradict the general goals of the contract, do not
bring harm to anyone and which apply to things which
are permissible and within the right of the person to
agree - that is something that does not go against the
shari'a. They are laid out in the beginning
to avoid any conflict or hardship in the future.
In General, Muslims Must
Fulfill Their Agreements
Generally speaking, Muslims must comply with any
agreements that they make. Allah said about the
believers:
{...Wa al-moofoona fi 'ahdihim idhaa 'aahadoo...}
{...And those who fulfill their pacts when
they make one...} Al-Baqara:177
{Yaa
ayyuhaa alladhina aamanoo aufoo bi al-'uqood...}
{O you who believe fulfill your
contracts...} Al-Ma'idah:1
The Prophet (sas) said:
"Al-muslimoona 'alaa shurootihim."
"Muslims are bound by their stipulations."
Abu Daud & Al-Hakim (sahih)
During the time of Umar ibn Al-Khattab, a man married
a woman upon the condition that he would not move her
from his house. The time came when he wanted to move
her. They took their dispute to Umar and he said:
"She has the right to her stipulation." The man said,
"In that case, they will certainly end the marriage."
He said, "The rights are broken off due to the
stipulations." This was the view of many of the
Companions, Followers and scholars including Saad ibn
Abi Waqqas, Mu'awiyah, Amr ibn Al-Aas, Shuraih, Umar ibn
Abdul Aziz, Tawoos, Al-Awzaa'i and Ishaq.
There is another opinion which says that external
stipulations - those not covered by the nature of the
contract itself - carry no weight and need not be met.
This was the opinion of Abu Hanifa, Ash-Shafi'i, Malik,
Az-Zuhri, Qatada, Al-Laith, Ath-Thauri, Ibn Al-Mundhir
and has been narrated from Ali.
The Proofs of Those Who Say
that Such Stipulations are Neither Binding nor Valid
"Kullu
shartin laisa fiy kitaabi Allahi fahuwa baatil wa in
kaana mi'atu shartin."
"Every stipultion which is not in the book
of Allah is void even if it be one hundred
stipulations." Muslim & Bukhari
They also cite the following extension to the hadith
mentioned earlier about stipulations:
"Al-Muslimoon 'alaa shurootihim illa shartin ahalla
haraaman au harrama halaalan."
"Muslims are bound by their stipulations
except for a stipulation which makes the unlawful lawful
or makes the lawful unlawful."
However, this version of the hadith with the added
sentence is weak and cannot be used as evidence. As for
the hadith mentioned earlier that "The
conditions which you have the most duty to fulfill are
those by which you have made marital relations lawful.",
they claim that this only applies to the conditions
which are essential parts of the nature of the contract
itself.
Response to Those Arguments
The scholars who permit such stipulations in the
marriage contract have responded to the above. As for
the hadith "Every stipulations which is not in
the book of Allah...", they say that for a
woman's wali to make some conditions to her
advantage is something permissible and does not go
against the Book of Allah.
Actually, such conditions do not violate the Book of
Allah and do not make anything forbidden permissible,
etc. They simply give the woman the right to annul the
marriage if the condition is not satisfied.
Also, there remains no real meaning to the hadith "The
conditions which you have the most duty to fulfill..."
if one says that it only applies to conditions
that are already in force due to the nature of the
contract anyway.
The Crux of this Difference
of Opinion
This discussion boils down to the understanding of
two seemingly contradictory hadith:
"Every stipulation which is not in the book of
Allah is void even if it be one hundred stipulations."
Muslim & Bukhari
"The conditions which you have the most duty to
fulfill are those by which you have made marital
relations lawful." Bukhari & Muslim
It seems clear from the second hadith along with the
fatwa of Umar mentioned earlier that there is some room
for adding stipulations to a marriage contract. It also
seems clear from the first hadith that there are limits
on what can be stipulated. Specifically, any
stipulations which go against the basic goals and
principles of the marriage contract and not allowed and,
if stated, are null and void. Thus, the only remaining
problem is understanding exactly how this principle
applies in practical situations.
For those scholars who don't accept such external
stipulations at all, they have no effect, are not
binding, and don't affect the validity of the underlying
contract. For those who accept them, they give the
woman the option to annul the marriage upon he request
if the condition is violated. We only mention the woman
because the man can divorce at any time with or without
a particular cause and so has no need of such an
option. Notice that even in the fatwa of Umar, he
didn't require the man to fulfill the condition, rather
he allowed that she could end the marriage if she so
demanded.
Conditions for Which there is
Agreement that they are Invalid
Even those who accept these stipulations all agree
that certain conditions are not allowed. Among them are
the following:
- Nikaah
Ash-Shighaar. This is
where the two dowries are stolen and "exchanged". For
example a man marries his son to another's daughter in
"exchange" for the other marrying his daughter to the
first one's son. Neither woman receives their dowry.
- Nikaah
Al-Mut'a. Any kind of
marriage with a stipulated time limit.
- Nikaah
At-Tahleel. A woman
who has been divorced three times and wishes to return
to her first husband marries a man on the condition
that he divorce her. If this is discovered or if
this is her intention, the first husband still does
not become lawful for her in spite of this marriage.
Second: Conditions for the
Soundness of a Marriage Contract
There are ten conditions (shuroot) in this
category. Some are agreed upon by virtually all the
scholars while others are the subject of some
disagreement.
- The
woman is permissible to the man.
i.e., that she is not
one of those forbidden to him by relation, nursing or
other existing and conflicting marriage. Some would
consider this on of the arkaan (pillars) or
one of the conditions for initiating the contract. In
any case, this condition must definitely be met.
- The
offer and acceptance is of a permanent nature and not
temporary.
All forms of temporary
marriage are forbidden in Islam. If anything stated
in the offer and acceptance indicates a temporary
nature, the marriage is not valid.
- Two
non-discredited witnesses.
There is some difference
of opinion on this issue, but in the final analysis,
the hadith is clear.
Ibn Taimia mentioned four existing opinions on this
issue:
(1) The marriage must be announced and made public,
regardless of whether the contract was actually
witnessed or not. This was the opinion of Malik as
well as the scholars of hadith, the Dhaahiris and one
opinion reported from Ahamd.
(2) It is obligatory to have witnesses, regardless of
whether the marriage contract is made public or not.
This was the view of Abu Hanifah, Ash-Shafi'iy and
another opinion reported from Ahmad.
(3) Both witnesses and a public announcement are
necessary. This is a third narration from Ahmad.
(4) Either one of the two is necessary. This is a
fourth narration from Ahmad.
Ibn Taimia himself felt that the second opinion (only
witnesses required) is weak. He claimed that there
was no authentic source for same and that it was not
widely known among the Muslims. Instead, what is
required is the public pronouncement letting the
people know that the parties got married. He says
that if a marriage takes place without witnesses or
public announcement it is definitely invalid, if it
takes place with witnesses but no announcement it is
questionable and if it takes place with both it is
definitely valid.
The portion of Ibn Taimia's opinion which finds the
witnesses NOT a requirement must be rejected, because
the hadith on this subject has been found to be sahih:
"Laa nikaaha illa bi waliyin wa shaahidaiy 'adlin"
"No marriage except with a guardian and
two non-discredited witnesses."
So the bottom line here is that BOTH the witnesses AND
the public announcement are required. In fact,
regarding public announcement, the Maliki school says
that if the other parties ask the witnesses to keep it
silent that the marriage is not valid and the two are
to be separated - PERMANENTLY! The Hanbali school
holds that such a marriage is not invalid although it
is disliked to do so. The witnesses must be two adult
and sane Muslim men whose testimony has not been
previously discredited.
- Both
parties to the contract and the bride have willingly
accepted the marriage.
The Hanafis say that
this is not a condition, but their position is
unacceptable and rejected because of ample evidence
from the Qur'an and the Sunnah to the contrary. In
the jahiliya, Arabs used to "inherit" (i.e.,
forcibly marry) their brothers wives if they died.
Allah forbid this saying:
{Yaa ayyuhaa alladhina
aamanoo, laa yahillu lakum an tarithoo an-nisaa'a
karhan...}
{O, you who
believe, it is not lawful for you to inherit women
against their will...}
An-Nisaa:19
There are also two sound
and very clear hadith on this matter:
"Laa tunkahu al-ayyimu hatta tusta'mara wa laa
tunkahu al-bikru hatta tusta'dhana qaaloo yaa rasoolu
Allahi kaifa idhinihaa? Qaala: an taskut."
"A previously married woman
cannot be married until her order is sought and a
virgin cannot be married until her premission is
sought. They said: How does she give permission? He
(sas) said: If she keeps quiet."
Bukhari & Muslim
"'An ibn Abbasin anna jaariyatan bikran atat an-nabiyya
(sas) fa dhakarat lahu anna abaaha zawwajahaa wa hiya
kaariyatun fa khayyarahaa an-nabiyyu (sas)"
"From Ibn Abbas that a virgin girl came to
the Prophet (sas) and mentioned that her father had
married her against her will and so the Prophet (sas)
gave her the choice." Abu Daud & others
(sahih)
Many early scholars allowed this in only one
case: a father or grandfather marrying a girl below
the age of puberty without her consent. According to
them, she has no right to refuse the marriage upon
becoming mature. This position is clearly
unacceptable and rejected based on the above verse and
ahadith.
- The
bride and groom are specifically identified and known.
-
Neither of the two contracting parties are in a state
of ihraam.
- The
marriage must be with a dowry (mahr).
It does not have to be
exactly specified nor does it have to change hands,
but it has to be there. More is coming on this
subject later.
- The
parties and witnesses are not bound to keep it quiet.
It is not allowed to
make attempts to keep a marriage a secret. The
universal custom of the Arabs before Islam was to have
marriages very publicly where all around became aware
of its existence. Islam confirmed this practice and
it is the only acceptable way of marrying. As we have
seen, the Maliki school takes this so seriously that
they separate the two parties permanently. Some other
scholars said that it was a wrong practice, but didn't
necessarily invalidate the marriage.
- No
party is on his/her deathbed.
The "parties" intended
here are the bride and the groom. This is because of
possible injury to the heirs because of another person
becoming entitled to inheritance.
- The
presence of the guardian or representative (wali)
of the woman.
The wali is a
Muslim man charged with marrying the one under his
charge to a man who will be good for her. There is no
disagreement that the first wali is her
natural father if he is Muslim and that the last in
line is the ruler. Between those two, there is some
disagreement about the order but agreement that they
come from the girl's fathers relatives - no one from
her mother's side enters into the picture. The order,
according to many is: father, paternal grandfather,
son, grandson, full brother, paternal half-brother,
paternal uncle. The wali is an absolute
requirement for a marriage, and any marriage done
without him is null and void according to the
following hadith:
"Laa nikaaha illa bi waliyyin wa as-sultaanu
waliyyu man laa waliyya lahaa."
"No marriage except with a guardian and
the ruler is the guardian of she who has no
guardian." Abu Daud & others (sahih)
"Ayyumaa imra'atin nakahat bi ghairi idhni
waliyyihaa fa nikaahuhaa baatilun fa nikaahuhaa
baatilun fa nikaahuhaa baatilun."
"If any woman marries without the
permission of her guardian, then her marriage is void,
then her marriage is void, then her marriage is
void." Abu Daud & others (sahih)
It is the job of the wali to marry her to
the best possible husband. He must not be guided by
his desires nor by her desires. If the person is
acceptable in both his religion and his character and
appropriate to her in some other way discussed by the
scholars, then he must facilitate the marriage and not
refuse it for his own desires or biases. If the
conditions are not right, then he must refuse the
marriage, even if both the woman under his charge and
the man desire it. This is a grave trust and he must
do his best to fulfill it properly and not bring harm
to the woman and/or to society. Allah said:
{Yaa ayyuhaa alladhina
aamanoo laa takhunoo Allaha wa ar-rasoola wa takhunoo
amaanaatikum wa antum ta'lamoon.}
{O, you who
believe, do not commit treachery against Allah and
against the Prophet (sas) nor betray your trusts
though you know.}
Al-Anfaal:27
What about the case
where the wali refuses someone on a
non-Islamic basis? As was stated earlier, it is the
job of the wali to act in the best interest
of the woman according to the standards established by
Islam. If a qualified person asks to marry the woman
and he turns him down, then he is not doing his job.
In such a case, the woman can complain to the judge or
ruler and have her wali "fired" (removed).
The scholars then differ as to who becomes her new
wali, the next male relative in line or the
ruler.
The wali must be the same religion as the
woman. A non-Muslim father cannot be the wali
for his Muslim daughter.
A Rejected Opinion of the
Hanafi School
In the Hanafi school of thought there is an opinion
that the wali is not a requirement for the
validity of the marriage. They even claim to have an
argument from Aisha, the one who narrated the hadith:
"Laa
nikaaha illa bi waliyyin wa as-sultaanu waliyyu man laa
waliyya lahaa."
"No marriage except with a guardian and the
ruler is the guardian of she who has no guardian."
Abu Daud & others (sahih)
They say that: "Aisha married the daughter of her
brother, Hafsa bint Abdul Rahman while Abdul Rahman was
gone to Sham. When Abdul Rahman returned he was upset
but he did not wish to undo what Aisha had done do he
left his daughter with her groom, Al-Mundhir ibn
Az-Zuhair."
Other scholars responded to their argument: It seem
from other narrations of the same incident that Aisha
simply set up the arrangement but did not actually
perform the marriage. Also, it was Aisha herself who
said that "Women cannot perform marriages." In this
way, she did not contradict what she herself narrated
from the Prophet (sas).
Being Serious is NOT a
Condition for the Soundness of a Marriage Contract
Note that marriage is not a laughing matter and is
very serious. Therefore, the mere words make the
marriage happen and intention is not required. Also, as
we have seen, there is no khiyaar al-majlis (a
choice to back out until the sitting is concluded and
the parties part ways) in marriage as there is in sales
and other contracts. The Prophet (sas) said:
"Thalaathun
jidduhunna jiddun wa hazluhunna jiddun: an-nikaahu wa
at-talaaqu wa ar-ruj'atu."
"Three things which when serious are serious
and when vain are serious: marriage, divorce and
returning (to one's wife after a divorce)."
Ahmad & others (sahih).
Third: Conditions for the
Execution of a Marriage Contract
- The bride and
groom must be legally capable for such a marriage,
i.e., sane, conscious, past the age of puberty, etc.
The contract can take place earlier than this, but the
execution must wait until the time that they can
actually enter into the marriage relationship.
- The wali
who performed the marriage was not a more distant
wali while a closer one was alive and reachable.
For example, if the woman's uncle married her to
someone, the marriage would not be valid unless and
until the woman's father's consent was verified. In
such a case, the contract could be executed.
Fourth: Conditions for the
Marriage Contract to be Binding
If these conditions are met, neither party has the
right to anull the marriage.
- If the
marriage of an underage or insane person is done by
other than the father or the grandfather, then the
father or grandfather has the right to annul it.
- That the
husband is socially compatible and qualified for the
woman.
- That the
dowry is at least equivalent to those similar to her.
- That there is
no defect in either spouse. Included in this category
would be the case where the woman was said to be a
virgin but is then discovered to be otherwise or where
either spouse is not physically capable of marital
relations.
If, after being married, any of these conditions are
not met, both parties (bride and groom) would have the
right to annul the marriage. The matter would be taken
to a judge or one in authority. However, this is a
right or an option. Once the parties accept the
marriage with the deficiency it contains, they will
after that be bound to such a marriage.
Effects of the Various
Conditions on the Marriage Contract
Based on which conditions above are or are not
fulfilled, the ruling concerning the validity and legal
effect of the marriage contract differs among different
schools of fiqh. In the hanafi
school, a contract may fall into one of five categories:
sound and binding, sound and non-binding, suspended,
defective and void. For most of the other scholars, the
marriage contract will fall into one of three
categories: sound and binding, sound and non-binding
or void.
The following table describes the effect of failure
to meet certain conditions on the legal effect or
conclusion concerning the contract itself:
Effects on the Marriage
Contract of Failing to Meet Conditions
|
|
Contract
fails to meet the arkaan (pillars)
|
Contract
fails to meet the conditions for its Initiation
|
Contract
fails to meet the conditions for its Soundness
|
Contract
fails to meet the conditions for its Execution
|
Contract
fails to meet binding conditions.
|
Contract
meets all necessary conditions
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The
contract is null and void. This is actually a moot
point since in reality there WAS no contract if
essential components are missing.
|
The
contract is completely void.
|
Hanafi school: the contract is "defective" and
hence has some legal effect.
|
In
Hanafi and Maliki fiqh, such a contract is
considered "suspended" or on hold until such
conditions are met.
|
The
contract is sound but non-binding. The affected
party has the right to annul the contract.
|
Contract is sound and binding.
|
|
Others: The contract is null and void.
|
Civil Marriages in Countries
Which Do Not Apply the Shari'a
In the light of what has been discussed, a very
important question arises for Muslims living in lands
where the Shari'a is not the law of the land.
For Muslims to marry in such situations under the
"auspices" of such governments will often involve
serious flaws in both the execution and the legal
effects of the non-Islamic marriage contract. For
example:
- No proper
wali. Many such secular laws may not require the
woman to have a wali at all or the one
appointed may not be the rightful one in the
Shari'a.
- The secular
law may not require two witnesses,
- Witnesses may
be required but not qualified such as non-Muslim
witnesses.
- The marriage
establishes various property rights, inheritance
rights etc. both during and after the marriage for
which Allah sent no authority. (Avoiding the harm of
such issues while living in a non-Islamic society is a
much larger issue and involves many things besides
marriage.)
- The civil
marriage may cause additional marriages by the husband
to be a crime punishable by a prison sentence.
Because of these and other issues, a secular marriage
contract is not sufficient for two Muslims to be
considered married Islamically. In fact, they should be
avoided if possible. In any case, it is the Islamic
marriage with its prerequisites and conditions which
makes the two married before Allah. Whether or not a
civil marriage should also be undertaken is a case of
weighing the harms and benefits involved.
Regarding these "marriages", the following important
points should be noted:
- If such a
marriage was entered into by non-Muslims who later
became Muslim, they are considered married and there
is not need whatsoever to have another marriage
contract.
- If they were
Muslim but married in a secular manner out of extreme
ignorance, it would be best for them to redo the
marriage. However, the first marriage could be
considered valid and any children resulting from it
would be both of their children Islamically.
- If two
Muslims marry in such a manner knowingly, for example
to circumvent the objections of her wali,
then the marriage is null and void and they are
committing fornication.
Review Questions
- What would be
the ruling for the following case: A man and a woman
are married for ten years and then discover that they
were breastfed by the same woman.
- What is the
ruling concerning a marriage contract in which the
woman did not have a wali? What was the
Prophet's (sas) statement about such a marriage (2
hadith).
- Discuss the
different opinions concerning whether or not it is
allowed to add stipulations to the marriage contract.
For those who allow them, what exactly is their effect
and which conditions are allowed? Which are not
allowed?
- Give
definitions for the following important fiqh
terms: rukn, shart, sahih, faasid and
baatil.
- Is it
necessary to have witnesses for a marriage contract?
What are some of the different opinions on this matter
and what is the conclusive evidence from the sunnah?
- What be the
ruling on the following case: A man claims that the
marriage contract he just made is not valid because he
was only joking when he did it?
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