كتاب 31
31
Book 31
(31)
Chapter 31
(31)
باب 31
Muwatta Malik 1436
Malik related to me from Yahya ibn Said from Abu Bakr ibn
Muhammad ibn Amr ibn Hazm from Umar ibn Abdal-Aziz from Abu Bakr ibn
Abd ar-Rahman ibn al-Harith ibn Hisham from Abu Hurayra that the
Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, said, "If
anyone goes bankrupt, and a man finds his own property intact with
him, he is more entitled to it than anyone else."
Malik spoke
about a man who sold a man wares, and the buyer went bankrupt. He
said, "The seller takes whatever of his goods he finds. If the buyer
has sold some of them and distributed them, the seller of the wares is
more entitled to them than the creditors. What the buyer has
distributed does not prevent the seller from taking whatever of it he
finds. It is the seller's right if he has received any of the price
from the buyer and he wants to return it to take what he finds of his
wares, and in what he does not find, he is like the creditors."
Malik spoke about some one who bought spun wool or a plot of land,
and then did some work on it, like building a house on the plot of
land or weaving the spun wool into cloth. Then he went bankrupt after
he had bought it, and the original owner of the plot said, "I will
take the plot and whatever structure is on it." Malik said, "That
structure is not his. However, the plot and what is in it that the
buyer has improved is appraised. Then one sees what the price of the
plot is and how much of that value is the price of the structure. They
are partners in that. The owner of the plot has as much as his
portion, and the creditors have the amount of the portion of the
structure."
Malik said, "The explanation of that is that the
value of it all is fifteen hundred dirhams. The value of the plot is
five hundred dirhams, and the value of the building is one thousand
dirhams. The owner of the plot has a third, and the creditors have
two-thirds."
Malik said, "It is like that with spinning and
other things of the same nature in these circumstances and the buyer
has a debt which he cannot pay. This is the behaviour in such cases."
Malik said, "As for goods which have been sold and which the
buyer does not improve, but those goods sell well and have gone up in
price, so their owner wants them and the creditors also want to seize
them, then the creditors choose between giving the owner of the goods
the price for which he sold them and not giving him any loss and
surrendering his goods to him.
"If the price of the goods has
gone down, the one who sold them has a choice. If he likes, he can
take his goods and he has no claim to any of his debtor's property,
and that is his right. If he likes, he can be one of the creditors and
take a portion of his due and not take his goods. That is up to him."
Malik said about someone who bought a slave-girl or animal
and she gave birth in his possession and the buyer went bankrupt, "The
slave-girl or the animal and the offspring belong to the seller unless
the creditors desire it. In that case they give him his complete due
and they take it."
وَحَدَّثَنِي مَالِكٌ، عَنْ يَحْيَى بْنِ سَعِيدٍ، عَنْ أَبِي بَكْرِ بْنِ مُحَمَّدِ بْنِ عَمْرِو بْنِ حَزْمٍ، عَنْ عُمَرَ بْنِ عَبْدِ الْعَزِيزِ، عَنْ أَبِي بَكْرِ بْنِ عَبْدِ الرَّحْمَنِ بْنِ الْحَارِثِ بْنِ هِشَامٍ، عَنْ أَبِي هُرَيْرَةَ، أَنَّ رَسُولَ اللَّهِ صلى الله عليه وسلم قَالَ
" أَيُّمَا رَجُلٍ أَفْلَسَ فَأَدْرَكَ الرَّجُلُ مَالَهُ بِعَيْنِهِ فَهُوَ أَحَقُّ بِهِ مِنْ غَيْرِهِ " .
| Reference | : Muwatta Malik 1436 |
| In-book reference | : Book 31, Hadith 35614 |
| USC-MSA web (English) reference | : Book 7, Hadith 1436 |
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