He Married Her On Condition That He Would Divorce Her After Two Years; What Is The Ruling On His Marriage And What Must He Do?
Islamic Rulings -
Living Shariah Verdicts
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I am a Muslim student in a foreign land. I married a Muslim woman from this
country, with a valid marriage contract in the presence of witnesses. The
agreement between us was that this marriage would not be permanent, and both
parties agreed that I would divorce her after completing my studies, after two
years, and she herself agreed to that. Please note that this agreement was not
mentioned in the marriage contract at all; rather it was a valid marriage
contract. But I gave her a very small hope of the marriage being able to
continue in the future. Hence her guardian was the judge himself, because her
father and her paternal grandfather are both deceased, and none of her paternal
uncles attended because of the fear that the marriage would not continue in the
future. Therefore ours was a secret marriage.
Now we are still married, and it has been longer than two years, long after the
time when we thought we would separate. Now we intend to continue the marriage
indefinitely, like any normal couple, even though divorce (talaaq) occurred
once.
Is the marriage contract valid, despite what we agreed upon in the beginning of
making it temporary?
Is this marriage regarded as valid because the guardian was the judge? Does
divorce count in this case? What must we do now that we have decided to continue
the marriage?
Praise be to Allah
Firstly:
if there was agreement between the two spouses, or between the husband and the
woman's guardian, that the marriage would be temporary and last for a set period
of time, such as one or two years, or an unknown period of time, and that
agreement was at the time of the contract or before it, then the marriage is
invalid, because it is a mut'ah (temporary) marriage, even if all the necessary
conditions of marriage were fulfilled.
It says in al-Mughni (7/136): Mut'ah marriage is not permissible – what is meant
by mut'ah marriage is that the man marries the woman for a particular length of
time, such as if he says: I give you my daughter in marriage for a month, or a
year, or until the Hajj ends, or until the pilgrim returns, and so on, whether
the exact period is known or not. This is an invalid marriage, as was stated by
Ahmad who said: Mut'ah marriage is haraam.
This is the view of the majority of the Sahaabah and fuqaha'. Among those from
whom it was narrated that it is haraam were: 'Umar, 'Ali, Ibn 'Umar, Ibn
Mas'ood, and Ibn az-Zubayr. Ibn 'Abd al-Barr said: Maalik, the people of
Madinah, Abu Haneefah among the people of Iraq, al-Awzaa'i among the people of
Syria, al-Layth among the people of Egypt, and ash-Shaafa'i were of the view
that it is haraam. End quote.
Another example of mut'ah marriage is doing the marriage contract with a woman
on condition that he will divorce her when the stated period ends, whether it is
known or unknown.
It says in Kashshaaf al-Qinaa' (5/97): Mut'ah marriage is when a man marries a
woman for a certain period, whether it is known or unknown, such as if the
guardian says: I give you my daughter in marriage for a month, or for a year, or
I give her to you in marriage until the Hajj season ends, or until the pilgrim
returns, and so on, whether the period is known or otherwise.
If the husband stipulates in the marriage that he will divorce her at a certain
time, even if it is unknown, then this is like mut'ah, so it is not valid. End
quote.
See: al-Mawsoo'ah al-Fiqhiyyah (41/344)
Regardless of whether this condition is mentioned in the actual contract or not,
so long as there was agreement to that, or this is customary in such marriages,
then the ruling in all such cases is the same.
Shaykh al-Islam Ibn Taymiyah (may Allah have mercy on him) said, speaking about
the invalidity of tahleel marriages:
… and whether that is stipulated in the marriage contract, or was stipulated
before the marriage contract, or was not stipulated verbally, rather it was
known from the context of the proposal, the situation of the man and the woman,
and the mahr, which all may imply that it is a tahleel marriage.
End quote from Bayaan ad-Daleel 'ala Batlaan at-Tahleel (6)
And he said:
The conditions that come before the marriage contract should be treated like
conditions mentioned in the contract, if they are valid, and must be fulfilled.
If they are invalid, they will affect the validity of the contract. End quote.
(500)
See also al-Qawaa'id an-Nooraaniyyah (302-303)
Secondly:
Guardianship with regard to marriage of a woman belongs, in order of precedence,
to her father, then her grandfather, then her son, then her brother, then her
paternal uncle, then the next closest, then the next closest. If she has no
relatives, then the ruler may give her in marriage, because the Prophet
(blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) said: "The ruler is the guardian of
one who has no guardian."
Narrated by Abu Dawood (2083); classed as saheeh by Shaykh al-Albaani.
If the qaadi (judge) gives her in marriage when there is someone who is a
relative who is entitled to guardianship, then the marriage contract is not
valid, because it is a transgression against their rights.
Ibn Qudaamah said in al-Mughni (7/22): If the more distantly-related guardian
gives her in marriage, when there is a more closely-related guardian, and she
agrees to his giving her in marriage without the permission of the more
closely-related one, the marriage is not valid. This is the view of
ash-Shaafa'i. End quote.
Al-Hijaawi said in Zaad al-Mustaqni': If the more distant relative, or a
non-relative, gives her in marriage with no good reason, it is not valid.
Shaykh Ibn 'Uthaymeen (may Allah have mercy on him) said in ash-Sharh al-Mumti'
(12/45):
If the more distant relative, or a non-relative, gives her in marriage with no
good reason, it is not valid. That is, when there is one who is more
closely-related and is present, and is qualified to be her guardian. In that
case the marriage is not valid, because the words of the Messenger (blessings
and peace of Allah be upon him), "except with a guardian" refer to the position
of guardianship, which implies that the one who is most entitled to it is the
closest, then the next closest. End quote.
He (may Allah have mercy on him) was asked: A woman's son did her marriage
contract for her even though her father is still alive; what is the ruling on
this marriage contract?
He replied: we should see which of them is more entitled to give the woman in
marriage, her father or her son?
The answer is: her father is the one who should give her in marriage. If her son
gives her in marriage when her father is still alive, if her father is far away
and it is not possible to consult him, then there is nothing wrong with that, or
if the father would prevent her from marrying this person with whom she is
pleased, and he is compatible in terms of religious commitment and character,
then there is nothing wrong with her son giving her in marriage. But if the
father is present and would not refuse, then the marriage contract is not valid
and must be repeated.
End quote from Liqa' al-Baab al-Maftooh (no. 159).
Once it is established that the marriage is invalid, then the woman must leave
immediately. Then if each of them wants to marry the other, the marriage
contract must be repeated, fulfilling all the essential conditions of having a
guardian and witnesses.
For more information on the conditions of marriage, please see the answer to
question no. 2127.
Fourthly:
The divorce that occurred is to be counted among the number of divorces, because
he divorced her during a marriage that he believed was valid.
It says in Kashshaaf al-Qinaa' (5/237):
Divorce counts as such in a marriage concerning which there is a difference of
opinion as to whether it is valid, such as marriage done under the guardianship
of an evildoer, or marriage that was witnessed by two evildoers, or marriage to
a sister during the 'iddah of her sister who has been irrevocably divorced by
the husband, or a shighaar (quid-pro-quo) marriage, or marriage of a muhallil,
or the marriage done without witnesses or without a guardian and the like.
End quote.
Shaykh Ibn 'Uthaymeen (may Allah have mercy on him) said:
With regard to a marriage concerning which there is a difference of opinion (as
to its validity), it must be one of two things:
1. The one who got married thinks that it is valid; if he thinks that it is
valid, then his divorce counts as such and there is no difference of opinion
concerning that. For example, a man marries a woman who was breastfed three
times by his mother, and he thinks that the number of times of breastfeeding
that makes a person a mahram is five; in his view the marriage is valid, so any
divorce issued by him undoubtedly counts as such.
Similarly, if he marries a woman without any witnesses, but he thinks that
having witnesses present for the marriage contract is not a necessary condition.
In this case too, his divorce counts as such
2. The one who gets married does not think that the marriage is valid. The
scholars differed as to whether divorce in this case counts as such. Some of
them said that it does count as such and others said that it does not. Those who
said that it does not count as such said that is because divorce is connected to
marriage, and he does not think that the marriage was valid, so his divorce does
not count as such. This is a good argument and there is nothing wrong with it.
Those who said that it does count as such said: that is because, even if he does
not think that the marriage is valid, others may think that it is valid, so if
he separates from her without divorce, and another person comes along who thinks
that the marriage is valid, he will never marry her. So the divorce is valid in
the case of a marriage concerning which there is a difference of opinion as to
its validity, even if the one who issues the divorce does not think that it is
valid, because if he did not divorce her, this woman would be in limbo.
If someone were to say: why does divorce count as such when he does not think
that the marriage is valid, and divorce is connected to marriage? Our answer is:
so that he will not prevent the woman from marrying someone else, because
someone who thinks that the marriage is valid may want to marry her, so if that
husband does not divorce her, no one else will ever marry her, as he will think
that she is still married to him.
End quote from ash-Sharh al-Mumti' (13/ 24)
To sum up: you have to avoid this woman because the marriage is not valid. If
each of you wants to stay with the other, then you must do a new marriage
contract, meeting the necessary conditions, without divorcing her.
If there is no desire to do a new marriage contract, then you must divorce her
once, so as to make her permissible for someone else, based on what is mentioned
above.
And Allah knows best.
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