Muslim Law in India
means " that portion of Islamic Civil Law which is applied to Muslims as a
personal law". It consists of injunctions of Quran and has been further
supplemented and modified by state Legislation and modern judicial precedents
of the High Courts and the Supreme Court of India and also of the Privy
Council.
Marriage/'Nikah'
according to Muslim Law is a contract underlying a permanent relationship based
on mutual consent.
Essential Features Mohammedan Law
A Muslim
marriage requires proposal (Ijab) from one party and acceptance (Qubul) from
the other as is required for a contract. Moreover there can be no marriage
without free consent and such consent should not be obtained by means of
coercion, fraud or undue influence.
Just as in case
of contract, entered by a guardian, on attaining majority, so can a marriage
contract in Muslim Law, be set aside by a minor on attaining the age of
puberty.
The parties to a
Muslim marriage may enter into any ante-nuptial or postnuptial agreement which
is enforceable by law provided it is reasonable and not opposed to the policy
of Islam. Same is the case with a contract.
The terms of a
marriage contract may also be altered within legal limits to suit individual
cases.
Although
discouraged both by the holy Quran and Hadith, yet like any other contract,
there is also provision for the breach of marriage contract.
Muslim Marriage Requirements
The
solomonisation of marriage requires adherence to certain forms and formulas.
They are called the essentials of a valid marriage. If any of these
requirements is not fulfilled the marriage becomes either void or irregular, as
the case may be. Thus the essentials are as follows:
ü
Proposal and Acceptance
ü
Competent parties
ü
No legal Disability
ü
Procedure
Marriage like
any other contract is constituted by ijab-o-qabool, that is by declaration and
acceptance. One party to the marriage must make an offer (Ijab) to the other
party. The marriage becomes complete only when the other party has accepted the
offer.
According to
Muslim Law it is absolutely necessary that a man or someone on his behalf and
the woman or someone on her behalf should agree to the marriage at one meeting
and the agreement should be witnessed by two adult witnesses.
The Words
conveying proposal and acceptance must be uttered in each other's presence or
in the presence of their agents, who are called Vakil's.
The other
condition for a valid marriage is that the transaction must be completed at one
meeting. A proposal made at one meeting and an acceptance at another meeting do
not constitute a valid marriage.
There must be
reciprocity between offer and acceptance. The acceptance must not be
conditional
Under the Sunni
Law, the proposal and acceptance must be made in presence of two males or one
male and two female witnesses who are sane, adult and Muslim. Under Shia Law,
witnesses are not necessary at the time of marriage. They are required at the
time of dissolution of marriage.
The parties
contracting marriage must be acting under their free will and consent.
Competent parties & legal disabilities
The Parties to a
marriage must have the capacity of entering into a contract. They must be
competent to marry. Muslim who is of sound mind and who has attained puberty
may enter into a contract of marriage. The parties must be able to understand
the nature of their act.
Muslim Marriage Legal Disability
Means the
existence of certain circumstances under which marriage is not permitted. These
prohibitions have been classified into four classes:-
ü
Absolute incapacity or prohibition
ü
Relative incapacity or prohibition
ü
Prohibitive incapacity
ü
Directory incapacity
Absolute Incapacity Or Prohibition arises from:
ü
Consanguinity (blood relative)
ü
Affinity
ü
Fosterage
Consanguinity means blood relationship and
bars a man from marrying:
ü
ü
His mother or grandmother how highsoever,
ü
His daughter or grand-daughter how lowsoever,
ü
His sister whether full, consanguine or uterine,
ü
His niece or great niece how lowsoever,
ü
His aunt (fathers sister, mothers sister) or
great aunt, how highsoever, whether paternal or maternal A marriage with a
woman prohibited by reason of consanguinity is void. Issues from such marriage
are illegitimate.
ü
Affinity prohibits a man from marrying:
ü
His wife's mother or grand-mother how highsoever
ü
His wife's daughter or grand-daughter how
lowsoever
ü
Wife of his father or paternal grand-father how
highsoever
ü
Wife of his son or son's son or daughter's son
how lowsoever
ü
A marriage with a woman prohibited by reason of
affinity is void.
Fosterage means
when a woman other than its own mother has suckled a child under the age of two
years, the woman becomes the foster-mother of the child. A man may not, for
instance, marry his foster-mother or her daughter, or his foster sister.






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