LAW 737 ISLAMIC LAW OF TRANSACTIONS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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LAW 737 ISLAMIC LAW OF TRANSACTIONS

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Title: LAW 737 ISLAMIC LAW OF TRANSACTIONS


1
LAW 737 ISLAMIC LAW OF TRANSACTIONS
  • QUESTION 9
  • GHARAR - THE DIFFERENT VIEW OF JURISTS
  • PRESENT BY
  • MUNA FARHANA BT. HALIM
  • NORHANISAH BT. JOHAR
  • NUR LIYANA BT. MOHD. ANUAR

2
INTRODUCTION
  • The prophet prohibited the pebble sale and the
    gharar sale
  • Abu Hurayra
  • What is Gharar?
  • Gharar has many definitions which can be
    summarised under 4 headings-
  • - Hanafi and Shafie
  • - Zahiri
  • - Most Jurists (Jumhur)
  • - Al-Sarakhsi

3
  • Hanafi and Shafie
  • - Gharar means doubtfulness or uncertainty.
  • - Ibn Abidin defines Gharar as uncertainty
    over the existence of the subject matter of
    sale.
  • Zahiri
  • - Gharar means ignorance.
  • - Ibn Hazm defines Gharar in sale occurs when
    the purchaser does not know what he has bought
    and the seller does not know what he has sold

4
  • Most Jurists (Major)
  • - means combination of both ignorance and
    uncertainty.
  • - accepted by the majority (Jumhur).
  • Al-Sarakhsi
  • - defines Gharar in contract or transaction
    occur when the consequences are concealed or
    unknown to the contracting parties.

5
  • Gharar occurred when-
  • The consequences are totally concealed.
  • 2) The probability of existence is equal to
    the probability of non-existence.
  • 3) The non-existence of the subject matter
    outweighs its existence

6
Prohibition of Gharar
  • Reliable sources have reported through a number
    of the Prophets companions that the Prophet
    (S.A.W) has forbidden Gharar in trading.
  • The Hadith is considered as one of the cardinal
    principles of sale's law and the groundnorm of
    all rules governing Gharar contract.
  • Muslim Jurists agree that excessive Gharar is
    prohibited as it impairs the validity of the
    contract.

7
Types of Gharar
  • Gharar is divided into two namely
  • (i) Gharar saghir - minor or slight gharar.
  • (ii) Gharar kabir -major or excessive
    gharar.
  • The gharar that causes a contract to be invalid
    is major gharar.
  • In general terms major or excessive gharar is
  • - an uncertainty which is so great that it
    becomes unacceptable, or
  • - it is so vague that there is no means of
    quantifying it.

8
  • More specifically excessive gharar arises out of
    one of the following
  • - Asset or merchandise does not exist.
  • - Asset or merchandise cannot be delivered.
  • - Asset or merchandise is not according to
    specifications.

9
Prohibition of Gharar
  • The examples agreed upon excessive Gharar
  • 1. The Pebble touch and toss sale.
  • 2. Selling the unborn animal without its
    mother.
  • 3. Selling the fetuses and embryos.
  • 4. Selling fruit before its emergence.
  • 5. Selling the find of the diver in advance.
  • 6. Selling the unborn animal (Habal-al-Habalah).
  • 7. Selling the object of unknown identity
    without the buyer having the right to specify
    it.
  • 8. Selling an object of unknown genus.
  • 9. Deferment of the price to an unknown future
    date.

10
GHARAR AND THE INVALIDITY OF A CONTRACT
  • Gharar in a contract can refer to
  • (i) uncertainty towards the existence of the
    subject matter. (ii) uncertainty towards
    the possession/ ownership of the subject
    matter. (iii) uncertainty towards the price.
  • (iv) uncertainty towards the payment of the
    price.
  • (v) ignorance (jahalah).

11
  • THE VIEW OF ISLAMIC JURISTS
  • PAST AND PRESENT

12
VIEW OF PAST ISLAMIC JURISTS
  • HANAFI SCHOOL
  • - AI-Sarakhsi - Gharar as something with
    unknown
  • consequences.
  • - AI-Kasani - Gharar that refers to
    suspicion. Gharar is the
  • potential risk faced
    by a person, with a 50
  • possibility that the
    goods mayor may not
  • eventually exist
    (syak). To AI-Khasani, gharar
  • is the suspicion that
    a good may not exist.

13
  • For the Hanafi mazhab, such a trade is lawful
    because the buyer is given the right to make a
    choice after he has viewed the goods. This view
    is based on the Prophet s.a.w. hadith ??
    ????? ???? ?? ??? ??? ??????? ??? ???
    Meaning "Whosoever buys something that
    has not been viewed, he has khiyar (choice to buy
    or reject) after viewing it".

14
  • SYAFIE SCHOOL
  • - Gharar as khatar (of high risks).
  • AI-Shirazi - Gharar as something whose
    condition
  • and consequence
    are unknown.
  • AI-Ramli - Gharar is something that has
    two
  • assumptions, positive
    and negative, with the
    negative being bigger.
  • AI-Sharqawi and AI-Qalyubi -
  • Gharar as something whose consequence is
    unknown and has two assumptions, positive and
    negative, the negative outweighing the
    positive.

15
  • ZAHIRI SCHOOL
  • Gharar also means ignorance and this can be when
    the subject matter of sale is unknown. This view
    is adopted by the Zahiri School alone.
  • - Ibn Hazm
  • Gharar in sale occurs when the purchaser does
    not know what he has bought and the seller does
    not know what he has sold.

16
VIEW OF PRESENT ISLAMIC JURISTS
  • MUSTAFA AL-ZARQA'
  • - Gharar is a fraud through words or deeds
    to attract someone to perform aqd.
  • - Divided Gharar into 2 forms-
  • i) Gharar Qauli
  • ii) Gharar Fi'li

17
VIEW OF PRESENT ISLAMIC JURISTS
  • - Gharar qauli
  • a fraud committed verbally by a seller relating
    to price and method. For example, a seller says
    to a buyer "The same product can be found
    elsewhere but we offer the lowest price." These
    words attract a buyer to perform 'aqd with the
    seller.

18
VIEW OF PRESENT ISLAMIC JURISTS
  • - Gharar fili
  • a fraud committed by a seller relating to the
    features of the product, by his action. For
    example, a shepherd who wants to make his goat
    saleable by displaying a l arge pouch of milk.
    This would attract the buyer to assume the goat
    produces a lot of milk when it does not.

19
VIEW OF PRESENT ISLAMIC JURISTS
  • MUHAMMAD BELTAJI
  • - It is impossible for the buyer and
    seller to avoid gharar completely.
  • - 3 requirements in declaring something as
    gharar that can be excused
  • i. The gharar is minor and small.
  • ii. Such trading is needed by society.
  • iii. The gharar cannot be avoided
    without masyaqqah(hardship) that is recognised
  • by Syara'.

20
THE EXTENT OF PERMISSIBLE GHARAR
  • Gharar is prohibited by the law but to certain
    extent,it is permissible.
  • Some of the examples to show that it is
    permissible under minor gharar such as-
  • Salam
  • Ijara
  • Juala
  • Shirka
  • Mudaraba
  • Bay al-Istisna

21
Permissible Gharar
  • Salam
  • - a sale contract where delivery is delayed
    until a prefixed future time.
  • - Believers! When you contract a debt for a
    fixed period put it in writing
    (Al-Baqarah282)
  • - prefixing the future date of delivery will
    render the contract to be valid.

22
Permissible Gharar
  • Ijara
  • - a contract of hire or lease for a service or
    for a use of certain moveable and immoveable
    property for a consideration.
  • - "... one of the girls said father! take this
    man into your service (ista 'jir-hu), men who
    are strong and honest are the best that one can
    hire (khayra man ista'jar-ta). (Al-Qasas 26)

23
Permissible Gharar
  • Ju 'ala
  • - a contract for a reward made to the world at
    large for returning of a lost property.
  • - This contract is risky and uncertainty because
    the reward is not paid to the offeree until the
    work is completed, the nature of the work is
    not certain and precise and no condition of
    pre-payment is permitted.
  • - they said we have lost the kings cup, and
    he who brings it shall have a camel-load...
  • (Surah Al-Yusuf72 )

24
Permissible Gharar
  • Shirka
  • - A contract of partnership to engage in
    trading or enterprise in the view of sharing
    the profit secured from the trading or
    enterprise.
  • - Because of the amount of profit and the
    nature of presentation and surety ship are not
    precisely known causing the contract containing
    the element of gharar.
  • - "they (the heirs) are the sharers (shuraka')
    of one third.
  • (Al-Imran24)

25
Permissible Gharar
  • Mudaraba
  • - the capital is the combination between cash
    and effort.
  • - the contract is void because the work done by
    the entrepreneur is not precise and the profit
    is not guaranteed and unknown.
  • - In order to make this contract effective the
    capital and the distribution of profit must be
    made certain.

26
Permissible Gharar
  • Bay' al-istisna'
  • - a contract to manufacture, where a customer
    will place an order to an artisan to make a
    specific kind of article like shoes, furniture,
    and the like for a price paid in full or none at
    the inception of the contract.
  • - contract of a nonexistent void
  • - This contract was allowed because the people
    are in the extreme need of it.

27
CONCLUSION
  • Ibn Juzain stated that-
  • - gharar is prohibited by the hadith and sunnah.
  • - it must be avoided as it render the gharar in
    contract as null and void.
  • - unless gharar is very minor gharar, it is
    tolarable.

28
CONCLUSION
  • Form of gharar or uncertainty prohibited in the
    Islamic is a vindication of the viability and
    infallibility of the Islamic injunctions that are
    derived from the Holy Quran and the Tradition of
    the Prophet.
  • But to the certain extent, it is permissible
    under the Islamic law as if it is a minor gharar.

29
  • This is a kind of reminder that Man needs the
    guidance of his creator as he fulfils his role as
    a vicegerent of God on earth and without this
    guidance he is always subject to being lead a
    stray by his whims and desires or the limitation
    of his mind and experiences as attested to by the
    many failures of our time in all spheres of
    life.
  • Thank you.
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