Marriage of a Hindu female with a Muslim male’ is irregular (fasid) marriage but child born will be legitimate.

A
marriage of a Hindu woman with a Muslim man is ‘neither valid nor void, but it
is merely an irregular (fasid) marriage but the child born out of such wedlock will be legitimate.
It also said that the
legal effect of such an irregular marriage is that a wife is entitled to get
dower but cannot inherit the husband's property.
The court also held that the child born in an irregular marriage is legitimate just like in the case of a valid marriage and is entitled to inherit the property of the father.
A bench of justices NV
Ramana and MM Shantanagoudar upheld the order of the Kerala
High Court by which it was ruled that the son of a couple Mohammed
Ilias and Valliamma (who was Hindu at the time of marriage)- was legitimate and
was entitled for share in his father's property according to law.
"We conclude that
the marriage of a Muslim man with an idolater or fire worshiper is neither a
valid nor a void marriage, but is merely an irregular marriage.
Any child born out of such wedlock is entitled to claim a share in his father's property," the bench said.
The top court while
dismissing the appeal against the high court order said that since Hindus are
idol worshippers, which includes worship of physical images or statues through
offering of flowers and adornment,
it is clear that the marriage of a Hindu woman with a Muslim man is merely an irregular one.
It was hearing a
property dispute matter in which Shamsuddin, son of Ilias and Valliamma,
claimed share in the ancestral property through inheritance after the death of
his father.
It said, "The
legal effect of a irregular marriage is that in case of consummation, though
the wife is entitled to get dower, she is not entitled to inherit the properties
of the husband.
But the child born in that marriage is legitimate just like in the case of a valid marriage, and is entitled to inherit the property of the father."
The court said that on
other hand the effect of a void marriage is that it does not create any civil
right or obligations between the parties and the children born out of such
wedlock are illegitimate.
The bench said that under Muslim law, a marriage is not a sacrament but a civil contract, and there are three types of marriage - valid, irregular and void.
The court said that
high court relied on principles of Islamic law to conclude that such rules do
not treat the marriage of a Muslim with a Hindu woman as void, and confers
legitimacy upon children born out of such wedlock.
Referring to this law,
the bench said that a marriage, which is not valid, might be either void or
invalid.
"A void marriage
is one which is unlawful in itself, the prohibition against such a marriage
being perpetual and absolute. An invalid marriage is described as one which is
not unlawful in itself, but unlawful for something else...(like absence of
witnesses)," the bench said.
Shamsuddin's claim
over property was opposed by his cousins who alleged that his mother was not
the legally wedded wife of Ilias and she was a Hindu by religion at the time of
marriage.
They claimed that she had not converted to Islam at the time of her marriage, and thus Shamshuddin being the son of Valliamma, is not entitled to any share in Ilias's property.
The top court said
that it was not disputed that Valliamma was the wife of Ilias and contrary to
the claims, birth register records maintained by statutory authorities indicate
that Shamshuddin was their son.
"On the contrary,
he is the legitimate son of Mohammed Ilias, and consequently is entitled to
inherit the shares claimed in the estate of his father.
It said that it was
also not denied that Ilias and Valliamma were living together as husband and
wife at Thiruvananthapuram.
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