كتاب 43
43
Book 43
(43)
Chapter 43
(43)
باب 43
Muwatta Malik 1709
Yahya related to me from Malik from Ibn Shihab from Said ibn al-
Musayyab and Abu Salama ibn Abd ar-Rahman from Abu Hurayra that the
Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, said,
"The wound of an animal is of no account and no compensation is due
for it. The well is of no account and no compensation is due for it.
The mine is of no account and no compensation is due for it and a
fifth is due for buried treasures." (Al-kanz:
see Book 17).
Malik said, "Everyone leading an animal by the halter, driving it, and
riding it is responsible for what the animal strikes unless the animal
kicks out without anything being done to it to make it kick out. Umar
ibn al-Khattab imposed the blood-money on a person who was exercising
his horse."
Malik said, "It is more fitting that a person
leading an animal by the halter, driving it, or riding it incur a loss
than a person who is exercising his horse." (See hadith 4 of this
book).
Malik said, "What is done in our community about a
person who digs a well on a road or ties up an animal or does the like
of that on a road used by muslims, is that since what he has done is
included in that which he is not permitted to do in such a place, he
is liable for whatever injury or other thing arises from that action.
The blood-money of that which is less than a third of the full blood-
money is owed from his own personal property. Whatever reaches a third
or more, is owed by his tribe. Any such things that he does which he
is permitted to do on the muslims' road are something for which he has
no liability or loss. Part of that is a hole which a man digs to
collect rain, and the beast from which the man alights for some need
and leaves standing on the road. There is no penalty against anyone
for this."
Malik spoke about a man who went down a well, and
another man followed behind him, and the lower one pulled the higher
one and they fell into the well and both died He said, "The tribe of
the one who pulled him in is responsible for the blood-money."
Malik spoke about a child whom a man ordered to go down into a
well or to climb a palm tree and he died as a result. He said, "The
one who ordered him is liable for whatever befalls him, be it death or
something else."
Malik said, "The way of doing things in our
community about which there is no dispute is that women and children
are not obliged to pay blood-money together with the tribe in the
blood-moneys which the tribe must pay. The blood-money is only
obligatory for a man who has reached puberty."
Malik said
that the tribe could bind themselves to the blood-money of mawali if
they wished. If they refused, they were people of the diwan or were
cut off from their people. In the time of the Messenger of Allah, may
Allah bless him and grant him peace, people paid the blood-money to
each other as well as in the time of Abu Bakr as-Siddiq before there
was a diwan. The diwan was in the time of Umar ibn al-Khattab. No one
other than one's people and the ones holding the wala' paid blood-
money for one because the wala' was not transferable and because the
Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, said, "The wala'
belongs to the one who sets free."
Malik said, "The wala' is
an established relationship."
Malik said, "What is done in
our community about animals that are injured is that the person who
causes the injury pays whatever of their value has been diminished."
Malik said about a man condemned to death and one of the
other hudud befell him, "He is not punished for it. That is because
the killing overrides all of that, except for slander. The slander
remains hanging over the one to whom it was said because it will be
said to him, 'Why do you not flog the one who slandered you?' I think
that the condemned man is flogged with the hadd before he is killed,
and then he is killed. I do not think that any retaliation is
inflicted on him for any injury except killing because killing
overrides all of that."
Malik said, "What is done in our
community is that when a murdered person is found among the main body
of a people in a village or other place, the house or place of the
nearest people to him is not responsible. That is because the murdered
person can be slain and then cast at the door of some people to shame
them by it. No one is responsible for the like of that."
Malik said about a group of people who fight with each other and when
the fight is broken up, a man is found dead or wounded, and it is not
known who did it, "The best of what is heard about that is that there
is blood-money for him, and the blood-money is against the people who
argued with him. If the injured or slain person is not from either of
the two parties, his blood-money is against both of the two parties
together."
حَدَّثَنِي يَحْيَى، عَنْ مَالِكٍ، عَنِ ابْنِ شِهَابٍ، عَنْ سَعِيدِ بْنِ الْمُسَيَّبِ، وَأَبِي، سَلَمَةَ بْنِ عَبْدِ الرَّحْمَنِ عَنْ أَبِي هُرَيْرَةَ، أَنَّ رَسُولَ اللَّهِ صلى الله عليه وسلم قَالَ
" جَرْحُ الْعَجْمَاءِ جُبَارٌ وَالْبِئْرُ جُبَارٌ وَالْمَعْدِنُ جُبَارٌ وَفِي الرِّكَازِ الْخُمُسُ " .
| Reference | : Muwatta Malik 1709 |
| In-book reference | : Book 43, Hadith 35887 |
| USC-MSA web (English) reference | : Book 7, Hadith 1709 |
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