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Family Law II

Q1. Discuss the concepts of Maternity and Paternity under Muslim Law. How does the doctrine of Acknowledgment (Iqrar) differ from Legitimacy?

  1. Introduction

Under Muslim law, parentage is the legal relationship between a child and their parents. It is divided into Maternity (legal relationship with the mother) and Paternity (legal relationship with the father). The rules governing these differ significantly between the Sunni and Shia schools.

  1. Maternity and Paternity
  • Maternity: In Sunni (Hanafi) law, maternity is established strictly by the fact of birth, irrespective of whether the child is legitimate or illegitimate. An illegitimate child can inherit from the mother and her relations. In Shia law, an illegitimate child has no legal parentage at all—neither maternity nor paternity is established, and they inherit from no one.
  • Paternity: Paternity can only be established by a valid (Sahih) or irregular (Fasid) marriage between the parents at the time of conception. Paternity cannot be established through a void (Batil) marriage or Zina (fornication/adultery).
  1. Legitimacy vs. Acknowledgment (Iqrar)
  • Legitimacy: This is the status of a child born during a lawful wedlock. Muslim law presumes legitimacy if a child is born after 6 months of marriage and within 2 years (Hanafi) or 10 months (Shia) after the dissolution of marriage. (Note: In India, Section 112 of the Indian Evidence Act/Section 116 of the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam usually overrides this, presuming legitimacy for any child born during a valid marriage or within 280 days of dissolution).
  • Acknowledgment (Iqrar): When the paternity of a child is unknown or uncertain, a Muslim man can legally acknowledge the child as his legitimate offspring.
    • Crucial Rule: Acknowledgment is not “adoption” or “legitimation.” It cannot make an illegitimate child (born of Zina) legitimate. It merely provides a legal presumption of a valid marriage where the marriage is unproven but not disproved.
  1. Requisites of a Valid Acknowledgment (Case Law)

In the landmark case of Habibur Rahman v. Altaf Ali (1921), the Privy Council laid down the essentials:

  1. The acknowledgment must be of legitimate paternity, not merely of biological descent.
  2. The ages of the acknowledger and the child must admit of a father-child relationship (minimum 12.5 years gap).
  3. The child must not be the known legitimate child of another man.
  4. The child (if of mature age) must not repudiate the acknowledgment.