Translation of
Malik's Muwatta:
Hudud
Section: Judgement on the Mudabbar
Book 40, Number 40.1.1:
Yahya related to me that Malik said, "What is done in
our community in the case of a man who makes his
slave-girl a mudabbara and she gives birth to children
after that, and then the slave-girl dies before the one
who gave her a tadbir is that her children are in her
position. The conditions which were confirmed for her
are confirmed for them. The death of their mother does
not harm them. If the one who made her mudabbara dies,
they are free if their value is less than one third of
his total property."
Malik said, "For every mother by birth as opposed to
mother by suckling, her children are in her position. If
she is free and she gives birth after she is free, her
children are free. If she is a mudabbara or mukataba, or
freed after a number of years in service, or part of her
is free or pledged or she is an umm walad, each of her
children are in the same position as their mother. They
are set free when she is set free and they are slaves
when she is a slave."
Malik said about the mudabbara given a tadbir while
she was pregnant, "Her children are in her position.
That is also the position of a man who frees his
slave-girl while she is pregnant and does not know that
she is pregnant."
Malik said, "The sunna about such women is that their
children follow them and are set free by their being set
free."
Malik said, "It is the same as if a man had bought a
slave-girl while she was pregnant. The slave-girl and
what is in her womb belong to the one who bought her
whether or not the buyer stipulates that."
Malik continued, "It is not halal for the seller to
make an exception about what is in her womb because that
is an uncertain transaction. It reduces her price and he
does not know if that will reach him or not. That is as
if one sold the foetus in the womb of the mother. That
is not halal because it is an uncertain transaction ."
Malik said about the mukatab or mudabbar who bought a
slave-girl and had intercourse with her and she became
pregnant by him and gives birth, "The children of both
of them by a slave-girl are in his position. They are
set free when he is set free and they are slaves when he
is a slave."
Malik said, "When he is set free, the umm walad is
part of his property which is surrendered to him when he
is set free."
Section: General Section on Tadbir
Book 40, Number 40.2.2:
Malik spoke about a mudabbar who said to his master,
"Free me immediately and I will give fifty dinars which
I will have to pay in instalments." His master said,
"Yes. You are free and you must pay fifty dinars, and
you will pay me ten dinars every year." The slave was
satisfied with this. Then the master dies one, two or
three days after that. He said, "The freeing is
confirmed and the fifty dinars become a debt against
him. His testimony is permitted, his inviolability as a
free man is confirmed, as are his inheritance and his
liability to the full hudud punishments. The death of
his master, however, does not reduce the debt for him at
all."
Malik said that if a man who made his slave a
mudabbar died and he had some property at hand and some
absent property, and in the property at hand there was
not enough (in the third he was allowed to bequeath) to
cover the value of the mudabbar, the mudabbar was kept
there together with this property, and his tax (kharaj)
was gathered until the master's absent property was
clear. Then if a third of what his master left would
cover his value, he was freed with his property and what
had gathered of his tax. If there was not enough to
cover his value in what his master had left, as much of
him was freed as the third would allow, and his property
was left in his hands.
Section: Bequests involving Tadbir
Book 40, Number 40.3.3:
Malik said, "The generally agreed-on way of doing
things in our community is that any setting-free which a
man makes in a bequest that he wills in health or
illness can be rescinded by him when he likes and
changed when he likes as long as it is not a tadbir.
There is no way to rescind a tadbir once he has made it.
"As for every child born to him by a slave-girl who
he wills to be set free but he does not make mudabbara,
her children are not freed with her when she is freed.
That is because her master can change his will when he
likes and rescind it when he likes, and being set free
is not confirmed for her. She is in the position of a
slave-girl whose master says, 'If so-and-so remains with
me until I die, she is free.' " (i.e. he does not make a
definite contract.)
Malik said, "If she fulfils that, that is hers. If he
wishes, before that, he can sell her and her child
because he has not entered her child into any condition
he has made for her.
"The bequest in setting free is different from the
tadbir. The precedent of the sunna makes a distinction
between them. Had a bequest been in the position of a
tadbir, no testator would be able to change his will and
what he mentioned in it of setting free. His property
would be tied up and he would not be able to use it."
Malik said about a man who made all his slaves
mudabbar while he was well and they were his only
property, "If he made some of them mudabbar before the
others, one begins with the first until the third of his
property is reached. (i.e. their value is matched
against the third, and those whose value is covered are
free.) If he makes the mall mudabbar in his illness, and
says in one statement, 'So-and-so is free. So-and-so is
free. So-and-so is free if my death occurs in this
illness,' or he makes them all mudabbar in one
statement, they are matched against the third and one
does not begin with any of them before the others. It is
a bequest and they have a third of his property divided
between them in shares. Then the third of his property
frees each of them according to the extent of his share.
"No single one of them is given preference when that
all occurs in his illness."
Malik spoke about a master who made his slave a
mudabbar and then he died and the only property he had
was the mudabbar slave and the slave had property. He
said, "A third of the mudabbar is freed and his property
remains in his possession."
Malik said about a mudabbar whose master gave him a
kitaba and then the master died and did not leave any
property other than him, "A third of him is freed and a
third of his kitaba is reduced, and he owes two-thirds."
Malik spoke about a man who freed half of his slave
while he was ill and made irrevocable his freeing half
of him or all of him, and he had made another slave of
his mudabbar before that. He said, "One begins with the
slave he made mudabbar before the one he freed while he
was ill. That is because the man cannot revoke what he
has made mudabbar and cannot follow it with a matter
which will rescind it. When this mudabbar is freed, then
what remains of the third goes to the one who had half
of him freed so as to complete his setting-free entirely
in the third of the property of the deceased. If what is
left of the third does not cover that, whatever is
covered by what is left of the third is freed after the
first mudabbar is freed . "
Section: A Master's Intercourse with His Slave-girl when
he has Made her Mudabbara
Book 40, Number 40.4.4:
Malik related to me from Nafi that Abdullah ibn Umar
made two of his slave-girls mudabbara, and he had
intercourse with them while they were mudabbara.
Book 40, Number 40.4.5:
Malik related to me from Yahya ibn Said that Said ibn
al-Musayyab used to say, "When a man makes his
slave-girl mudabbara, he can have intercourse with her.
He cannot sell her or give her away and her children are
in the same position as her."
Section: Selling Mudabbars
Book 40, Number 40.5.6:
Malik said, "The generally agreed on way of doing
things in our community about a mudabbar is that the
owner cannot sell him or change the position in which he
has put him. If a debt overtakes the master, his
creditors cannot sell the mudabbar as long as the master
is alive. If the master dies and has no debts, the
mudabbar is included in the third (of the bequest)
because he expected his work from him as long as he
lived. He cannot serve him all his life, and then he
frees him from his heirs out of the main portion of his
property when he dies. If the master of the mudabbar
dies and has no property other than him, one third of
him is freed, and two thirds of him belong to the heirs.
If the master of the mudabbar dies and owes a debt which
encompasses the mudabbar, he is sold to meet the debt
because he can only be freed in the third (which is
allowed for bequest) ."
He said, "If the debt only includes half of the
slave, half of him is sold for the debt. Then a third of
what remains after the debt is freed. "
Malik said, "It is not permitted to sell a mudabbar
and it is not permitted for anyone to buy him unless the
mudabbar buys himself from his master. He is permitted
to do that. Or else some one gives the master of the
mudabbar money and his master who made him a mudabbar
frees him. That is also permitted for him."
Malik said, "His wala' belongs to his master who made
him a mudabbar."
Malik said, "It is not permitted to sell the service
of a mudabbar because it is an uncertain transaction
since one does not know how long his master will live.
That is uncertain and it is not good."
Malik spoke about a slave who was shared between two
men, and one of them made his portion mudabbar. He said,
"They estimate his value between them. If the one who
made him mudabbar buys him, he is all mudabbar. If he
does not buy him, his tadbir is revoked unless the one
who retains ownership of him wishes to give his partner
who made him mudabbar his value. If he gives him to him
for his value, that is binding, and he is all mudabbar."
Malik spoke about the christian man who made a
christian slave of his mudabbar and then the slave
became muslim. He said, "One separates the master and
the slave, and the slave is removed from his christian
master and is not sold until his situation becomes
clear. If the christian dies and has a debt, his debt is
paid from the price of the slave unless he has in his
estate what will pay the debt. Then the mudabbar is set
free."
Section: Injuries Caused by Mudabbars
Book 40, Number 40.6.7:
Malik related to me that he heard that Umar ibn Abd
al-Aziz gave a judgement about the mudabbar who did an
injury. He said, "The master must surrender what he owns
of him to the injured person. He is made to serve the
injured person and recompense (in the form of service)
is taken from him as the blood-money of the injury. If
he completes that before his master dies, he reverts to
his master."
Malik said, "The generally agreed on way of doing
things in our community about a mudabbar who does an
injury and then his master dies and the master has no
property except him is that the third (allowed to be
bequeathed) is freed, and then the blood-money for the
in jury is divided into thirds. A third of the
blood-money is against the third of him which was set
free, and two-thirds are against the two-thirds which
the heirs have. If they wish, they surrender what they
have of him to the party with the injury, and if they
wish, they give the injured person two-thirds of the
blood-money and keep their portion of the slave. That is
because that injury is a criminal action by the slave
and it is not a debt against the master by which
whatever setting free and tadbir the master had done
would be abrogated. If there were a debt to people held
against the master of the slave, as well as the criminal
action of the slave, part of the mudabbar would be sold
in proportion to the blood-money of the injury and
according to the debt. Then one would begin with the
blood-money which was for the criminal action of the
slave and it would be paid from the price of the slave.
Then the debt of his master would be paid, and then one
would look at what remained after that of the slave. His
third would b be set free, and two-thirds of him would
belong to the heirs. That is because the criminal action
of the slave is more important than the debt of his
master. That is because, if the man dies and leaves a
mudabbar slave whose value is one hundred and fifty
dinars, and the slave strikes a free man on the head
with a blow that lays open the skull, and the
blood-money is fifty dinars, and the master of the slave
has a debt of fifty dinars, one begins with the fifty
dinars which are the blood-money of the head wound, and
it is paid from the price of the slave. Then the debt of
the master is paid. Then one looks at what remains of
the slave, and a third of him is set free and two-thirds
of him remain for the heirs. The blood-money is more
pressing against his person than the debt of his master.
The debt of his master is more pressing than the tadbir
which is a bequest from the third of the property of the
deceased. None of the tadbir is permitted while the
master of the mudabbar has a debt which is not paid. It
is a bequest. That is because Allah, the Blessed, the
Exalted, said, 'After any bequest that is made or any
debt.' " (Sura 4 ayat 10)
Malik said, "If there is enough in the third property
that the deceased can bequeath to free all the mudabbar,
he is freed and the blood-money due from his criminal
action is held as a debt against him which follows him
after he is set free even if that blood-money is the
full blood-money. It is not a debt on the master."
Malik spoke about a mudabbar who injured a man and
his master surrendered him to the injured party, and
then the master died and had a debt and did not leave
any property other than the mudabbar, and the heirs
said, "We surrender the mudabbar to the party," whilst
the creditor said, "My debt exceeds that." Malik said
that if the creditor's debt did exceed that at all , he
was more entitled to it and it was taken from the one
who owed the debt, according to what the creditor was
owed in excess of the blood-money of the injury. If his
debt did not exceed it at all, he did not take the
slave.
Malik spoke about a mudabbar who did an injury and
had property, and his master refused to ransom him. He
said, "The injured party takes the property of the
mudabbar for the blood-money of his injury. If there is
enough to pay it, the injured party is paid in full for
the blood-money of his injury and the mudabbar is
returned to his master. If there is not enough to pay
it, he takes it from the blood-money and uses the
mudabbar for what remains of the blood-money."
Section: Injuries Caused by the Umm Walad
Book 40, Number 40.7.8:
Malik said in the case of an umm walad who injured
someone, "The blood-money of that injury is the
responsibility of her master from his property, unless
the blood-money of the injury is greater than the value
of the umm walad. Her master does not have to pay more
than her value. That is because when the master of a
slave or slave-girl surrenders his slave or slave-girl
for an injury which one of them has done, he does not
owe any more than that, even if the blood-money is
greater. As the master of the umm walad cannot surrender
her because of the precedent of the sunna, when he pays
her price, it is as if he had surrendered her. He does
not have to pay more than that. This is the best of what
I have heard about the matter. The master is not obliged
to assume responsibility for more than an umm walad's
value because of her criminal action."
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