Contract Muamalat
Contract Muamalat
Contract Muamalat
Bai al-istijrar is an Arabic term that means recurring sale or repeat sale or supply
contract.
Condition / Features
In the case where the seller discloses the price of goods at the time of each deal/transaction
the sale becomes valid only when the buyer takes possession of the goods. The amount is
paid after all transactions have been completed.
If the seller does not disclose each and every time to the buyer the price of the subject
matter, but the parties concerned know that it is being sold on market value and the market
value is specified and determined in such a manner that it does not vary and it does not
lead to differences of the parties.
If at the time of taking possession, the price of the subject matter is unknown or the parties
agree that whatever the price shall be, the sale will be executed. However, if there is any
difference with the market price, the sale will not be valid until settlement of the payment is
made. After the payment of price the buyer's usage of the subject matter will be valid from
the time of taking the possession.
The Bank enters into agreement separately with the suppliers and the clients to purchase
and sell the goods/commodities at predetermined/agreed price on the basis of Istijrar.
The supply and delivery will be made in phases with in the specified time period.
It is permissible to take cash/collateral security from the client to guarantee the
implementation of the promise/agreement or to indemnify the damages.
It is also permissible to obtain mortgage/guarantee/cash security to secure the investment
under Istijrar.
Availability of the goods as per specification of the client is a basic condition for
agreement under Istijrar.
signing an
The Bank or the suppliers as per order of the Bank shall deliver the specified goods to the
Client within the stipulated period and at a specified place as per Contract.
The Bank shall sell the goods at a higher price (Cost + Profit) to earn profit. The cost of
goods sold and profit agreed upon therewith shall separately and clearly be mentioned in
the Bai-Istijrar Agreement. The profit agreed upon may be mentioned in lump sum or in
percentage of the purchase/cost price of the goods. But, under no circumstances, the
percentage of the profit shall have any relation with time or expressed in relation with time,
such as, per month, per annum etc.
The price once fixed as per agreement and deferred cannot be increased further.
It is permissible for the Bank to authorise any third party to buy and receive the goods on
Bank's behalf. The authorisation must be under separate contract
Modul Operandi
Condition Mudarabah
2. Entrepreneur (amil/mudarib)
3. Capital
4. Currency or not
The contract will be invalid if the capital injected into the business is in the form of debt
Contracting parties must have the knowledge as to the proportion of profit percentage by
the parties or otherwise the contract will be invalid
The profit will be shared between the rabb al-mal and the mudarib according to a predetermined profit sharing ratio
Reserve the right to change the ratio of distribution of profit at any time and to define
the duration for which the aggreement to be valid
the contract will be rendered void had the mudarib be held liable to the loss incurred
The contract only becomes void to the extent the mudarib be held liable bearing the loss
while the rest of the contract remained intact.
Requirement of ijab and qabul are needed in forming the contract of mudarabah
Application of Mudharabah
The Islamic banks use this product to finance capable professionals such as physicians,
engineers, traders or craftsmen. The bank provides required finance as a capital owner in
exchange for a share in the profit to be agreed upon.
It is worth noting that this mode carries high risk for the bank because the bank delivers
capital to the Mudharib who undertakes the work and management and the Mudharib is held
responsible for loss only in case of negligence. The Islamic banks take necessary
precautions to minimize risk and to ensure better execution of Mudharabah transaction.
rahnu ( morgage )
Definition Ar- rahnu (morgage)
Ar-Rahn is a permissible contract in Shariah. It is known from the Sunnah that when the
Prophet of Allah, Muhammad (SAW), passed away, his shield was with a Jewish man in
Medina as a collateral.
CONDITIONS OF AL-RAHN
1. The indebted party cannot be coerced into putting up a collateral;
2. An orphans property cannot be put up as a collateral by the trustee, unless under
exceptional circumstances;
3. The property held as collateral must be liquid;
4. The property held as collateral must be distinct from other properties;
5. The ownership does not change, therefore the owner is responsible for the cost of upkeeping
the property even when it is pledged as a collateral. Likewise, the owner continues to enjoy
any secondary benefits to the property;
6. There is disagreement among the scholars on whether the property pledged as a collateral
can be used. Many of the scholars say that the property cannot be used by either the debtor
or the borrower, while many argue that the owner (the borrower in this case) can continue
to use the property;
7. If the property held as collateral is lost or damaged while in possession of the trustee,
without any negligence on his part, there is no guarantee by the trustee;
8. The ownership of the property cannot be transferred until the debt is settled or the debtor
allows for such a transaction;
9. If the borrower cannot pay back at the expiry of the term, the judge will order the property
pledged as collateral to be sold in the open market, even if it is the residence of the
borrower
Ar-Rahnu Transaction
One who wants to borrow money from Ar-Rahnu provider just needs to bring with him or her
valuables such as gold or jeweleries as mortgage of money that he or she borrows. Amount
of borrowing is based on the percentage of the valuables or marhun. Usually between 50 to
70 per cent. Customer will be charged based on the worth of wealth of valuable based on
principle of Al-Wadiah Yad Dhammanah. Fees of keeping the valuables is based on worth or
value of gold (marhun) but not based on total borrowing. More often than not gold is used as
guarantee of borrowing because gold is easy to sell back, chances to auction if the borrower
could not settle their loans. Apart from that genuineness of valuables can be easily
determined and the risk of misvalue of pawn items can be easily dealt with (Skully, 1994).
Modul Operandi
The Vendor
The Bank
The Customer
Property documents
Vehicle papers
Sukuk
Shared
Wakalah ( Agency )
Definition Wakalah (agency)
Wakalah as the delegation of one person (the principle) for another (the agent) to take his
place in a known and permissible dealing.
AAOIFI shariah standard has also defined agency as the act of one party delegating the
other to act on his behalf in what can be subject matter of delegation
This is a contract whereby a person (principal) asks another party to act on his behalf (as his
agent) for a specific task. The person who takes on the task is an agent who will be paid a
fee for his services.
For example, A customer asks a bank to pay someone under certain terms. The bank is
therefore the agent for carrying out the financial transaction and the bank will be paid a fee
for its services.
Modus operandi
1. The customer deposit some amount of money
2. The bank invest the fund
Types of Wakalah
Wakalah can be divided as follows;
(al-Wakalah al-`Ammah) General Wakalah
This refers to a general delegation of power. For example, if the principal says: I delegate
to you all my affairs. In this case, the principal has transferred and delegated the power to the
agent. The exemption of the delegated power covers harmful things to the principal like gift
(hibah) or divorce. Thereby, the agent has no authority to divorce the principals wife unless the
later specifically mentioned that in the contract.
(al-wakalah al-Khassah) Specific Wakalah
Particular wakalah is made only for certain known transactions for example, buying or
selling certain known house or a car. The agent is bound to sell or buy that particular house
or car.
(al-Wakalah al-Muqayyadah) Restricted Wakalah
This is wakalah where the agent has to act within definite conditions. For example, I
delegate you to buy a house at such a price, or until such a time or based on instalments.
The agent has to strictly observe these conditions. If the conditions are not met, the
transaction is not binding on the principal.
(al-Wakalah al-Mutlaqah) Unrestricted Wakalah
This is where there is no condition put in place for the transaction. For example, if the
principal says to his agent: I delegate you to buy a land. Without mentioning specific price
or type, in this case, according to the majority of jurists and two companions of Abu Hanifah,
( Abu Yusuf and Muhammad al-Shaibani). the agent has the authority to buy land within
the prevailing practices and customs. And if he acts contrary to the custom, then the
transaction depends on the approval of the principal Meaning to say, the agent has to buy
that land in such a way that the principal will not be cheated. However, Abu Hanifah argues
that an agent is not bound by the customs as custom differs from one place to another
Conditions Wakalah
The agent must be someone that is capable of performing the responsibility and fulfill the
minimum requirement
The wakalah contract ends with the accomplishment of the entrusted task or mission.
Modern Application
Modus Operandi
1. Ijab (offer)
2. Qabul (acceptance)
How it works:
1. You place money in a bank and the bank guarantees to return the money to you.
2. You are allowed to withdraw the money anytime.
3. Bank may charge you a fee for looking after your money and may pay hibah (gift) to you if it
deems fit.
4. This concept is normally used in deposit-taking activities, custodial services and safe deposit
boxes.
Condition Al-Wadiah
Conditions for contracting parties
Al-muwaddi is the depositer or the owner of the property
Al-wadi is the depositee or the custodian of property
Both parties must be person of sound mind and eligible to do a contract (ahliyaah al adaa)
Both parties must be eligible to be a wakil (agent) and trustee
Al-wadi must ensure his capability to safe-keep the deposit
Conditions for wadiah (deosited property)
It must be valuable from shariah view point, must be owned and deliverable
It must be a form of property that can be possessed physically
Types of Wadiah
Wadiah can be classified into 2 types namely: wadiah yad amanah (trust) and wadiah yad
dhamanah (guarantee)
1-Wadiah Yad Amanah ( Safe Custody based on trust)
The custodian should keep the deposits as if he is keeping and taking care of his own
property.
The custodian should not reponsible for any damage of the property so far it has not
resulted from his negligence
The custodian is not entitled to any profits gained from the contract.
The wadiah is based on guarantee whereby the evidences custodian guarantees the refund
of the property kept with him and ensures to refund the item upon request.
The custodian is entitled to use the deposited property for trading or any purposes
The custodian has a right to any income derived from the utilization of the deposited item
and liable for any damages or loss
The custodian owns the profit and under his discretion to give some portion of it as a
gift(hibah) to the depositor. The gift cannot be in the form of a pre-agreed agreement.
The custodian must return the deposited property to the owner at any time upon the
request of the depositor
DISCRETIONARY REWARD
Under the contract of Wadiah, the custodian i.e. the Bank is not allowed to mention or to
promiseany reward on the deposit received.
The owner/depositors too cannot demand any rewards or return from their Bank on their
savings.
Wadiah is purely a contract on safe custody of goods without any promise on rewards or
returns.
An act to waive certain rights of claim in favour of another party in a contract. In Islamic
finance, applied where the right to share some portion of the profits is given to another
party.
Can be defined as cessation of the right to claim
Can also be defined as isqat al-haq, which means to drop claims of a right.
In islamic finance, it is applied where the right to share some portion of the profit is given to
another party.
Example
For example, in a mudarabah contract, the capital providers may agree to limit the rate of
return to a defined percentage whereby the excess can be given to the manager as an
incentive or performance fee.
The decision of the investors to waive their right to the profit is based on the principle of
tanazul, which is specified as a condition of the contract to waive such a right.
Principle of tanazul
+ Involves the waiving of rights in favour of someone else
+ Often seen where the capital providers agree to waive their right to a portion of the profits in
a venture in favour of a manager on the project.
Condition of tanazul
+ that any condition stipulated shall be given effect as long as it does not transgress the
rulings in the Quran and Sunnah
+ that are stipulated by the parties to the contract, the intention of which is to protect thier
right (or one of them), or to secure certain benefit to both of them (or only one of them)
+ which only allows one partner to gain profit whilst the other suffers the loss
+ when all profit is agreed to be given to one party, then such condition is against muqtada
'aqad, and the contract is nullified