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Rulings on seizing things wrongfully

Question: 10323

What is the ruling on taking another person’s property wrongfully (ghasb)?

Praise be to Allah, and peace and blessings be upon the Messenger of Allah and his family.

Ghasb in Arabic means to seize
something wrongfully. In Fiqh terminology, it means taking the property
of others wrongfully, by force.

 Ghasb is haraam according
to the consensus of the Muslims, because Allaah says (interpretation
of the meaning): 

“And eat up not one another’s
property unjustly (in any illegal way, e.g. stealing, robbing, deceiving”

[al-Baqarah 2:188]

Ghasb
is one of the worst kinds of eating up another person’s property unjustly,
because the Prophet

(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him)  said: “Your blood,
your property and your honour are sacred to you.” And he

(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “The property of a
Muslim is not permissible unless he gives his consent.” 

The property that is seized by
force may be real estate or it may be moveable goods, because the Prophet

(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “Whoever seizes a
handspan of land unlawfully, will surround him to the depth of seven
earths.”  

The one who has seized anything
unlawfully must repent to Allaah and return the seized property to its
owner and ask him for forgiveness. The Prophet

(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “Whoever has done
any wrong to his brother, let him seek his forgiveness today, before
there will be no dinar and no dirham [i.e., the Day of Resurrection],
when if he has any hasanaat (good deeds), some of his hasanaat will
be taken and given to the one who was wronged, and if he  does
not have any hasanaat, some of the sayi’aat (bad deeds) of the one who
was wronged will be taken and thrown onto him, and he will be thrown
into Hell,” or as he

(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him)  said it. If the seized
property is still there, it should be returned as it is, and if it is
not there, then he must replace it.  

Imaam al-Muwaffaq said: “The scholars
agreed that it is obligatory to return the seized property if it is
still in its original condition and has not changed.” 

Similarly, he is obliged to return
the seized property along with any increase, whether it is connected
to it or separate, because that is the growth of the seized property,
so it also belongs to the original owner. 

If the one who seized the property
has built anything or planted crops on the seized land, he has to remove
the buildings or crops if the owner asks him to, because the Prophet

(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said, “The sweat of the
evildoer counts for nothing.” (Narrated by al-Tirmidhi and others; classed
as hasan). If that has caused any damage to the land, he is to be penalized
for that damage. He also has to erase any traces of building or planting
that remain, so that the land may be given back to its owner in good
condition. 

He also has to pay rent covering
the period from the time when he seized the land to the time when he
gave it back, – i.e., the rent for a similar piece of land – because
he unlawfully prevented its owner from benefiting from it during this
time. 

If he seized something and kept
it until the price dropped, he has to make it up to the proper price,
according to the correct opinion. 

If he mixed the seized property
with something else that can be told apart from it – like mixing wheat
with barley – the one who seized it has separate it and return it . 
If he mixed it with something that cannot be told apart from it – such
as mixing wheat with wheat – then he has to give back the equivalent,
by volume or weight, without mixing it. If he mixed it with something
the same or better, or he mixed it with something different that cannot
be told apart from it, then the mixture should be sold and each of them
should take his share of the price, in proportion. If the value of the
seized goods is reduced in this fashion, and it sells for less than
what it would be sold for if sold on its own, then the one who seized
it has to make up the loss. 

The scholars also mentioned regarding
this topic that “all hands involved in seizing property by force are
responsible and must guarantee its return.” This means that all hands
which received the seized property from the one who seized it must all
guarantee to replace the property if it is damaged or destroyed. These
hands number ten: the hand of the one who buys it etc.; the hand of
the one who rents it; the hand of the one who takes it in order to possess
it without paying anything in return, such as one who receives it as
a gift; the hand of the one who obtains it to serve the interests of
one who is paying him, such as an agent; the hand of the one who borrows
it; the hand of the one who seizes it by force unlawfully; the hand
of the one who has it under his control such as one who seeks to use
it for trade; the hand of the one who marries a woman who was seized
by force  ; the hand of the one who takes it in return for something
without any financial transaction being involved; and the hand of the
one who destroys the seized property on behalf of the one who seized
it.  

In each of these cases, if the
second person knows the truth of the matter, and that the one who is
giving it to him is the one who seized it unlawfully, then he is also
responsible for replacing it, because he transgressed when he knew that
there was no permission from the owner of the property. If he did not
know the truth of the matter, then only one who seized it in the first
place is responsible for replacing it. 

If the seized property is of a
type that is usually rented out, then the one who seized it has to pay
rent for property of that type for the period during which he kept it,
because the benefit is something that is to be measured in monetary
terms, so he has to repay that as well as returning the property itself. 

All of the ways in which the one
who seized the property has disposed of it are null and void, because
he did not have the permission of the owner. 

If something is seized and the
owner is not known, and it cannot be returned to him, then he should
hand it over to the governor who can restore it to its rightful place,
or he can give it in charity on behalf of its owner; if he gives it
in charity then the reward for that will go to the owner. In this manner
the one who seized it wrongfully may be absolved. 

Wrongful seizure of property is
not restricted only to taking it by force; it may also include taking
it by way of false dispute or false oaths. Allaah says (interpretation
of the meaning):

“And
eat up not one another’s property unjustly (in any illegal way, e.g.
stealing, robbing, deceiving), nor give bribery to the rulers (judges
before presenting your cases) that you may knowingly eat up a part of
the property of others sinfully”

[al-Baqarah 2:188]

The matter is serious and the
reckoning will be severe. 

The Prophet

(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “Whoever seizes a
handspan of land unlawfully, will surround him to the depth of seven
earths.”

 And he

(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said:

 “If I decide in a person’s
favour mistakenly concerning that which is his brother’s right, let
him not take it, for I am giving him a piece of fire.” 

Source

From al-Mulakhkhas al-Fiqhi by Shaykh Saalih ibn Fawzaan ibn ‘Abd-Allaah Aal Fawzaan p:130

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