Forgiveness in Ḥudūd: Allowed Before Court, Not After

Forgiveness in Ḥudūd: Valid Before Court, Not After​


By: Imrān Ayyūb Lāhorī


❖ Principle​


  • If the victim forgives the thief before the case reaches the ruler (ḥākim), the ḥadd is waived.
  • Once the case reaches the ruler, the ḥadd becomes obligatory and cannot be dropped by forgiveness.

❖ Evidence​


ʿAbd Allāh ibn ʿAmr (RA):
The Prophet ﷺ said:


“Taʿāfaw al-ḥudūd fīmā baynakum, fa-mā balaghnī min ḥaddin faqad wajab.”
“Forgive ḥudūd among yourselves, but once it reaches me, it has become obligatory.”
[Ṣaḥīḥ: al-Silsilah al-Ṣaḥīḥah: 1638; Abū Dāwūd: 4376; al-Nasā’ī: 8/70; al-Ḥākim: 4/383]


➋ When the Prophet ﷺ ordered the cutting of a thief’s hand, the owner of the stolen property said:
“I had already gifted it to him.”
The Prophet ﷺ replied:


“Halla kāna qabla an ta’tiyanī bihi?”
“Why did you not do that before bringing him to me?”
[Ṣaḥīḥ: Irwā’ al-Ghalīl: 2317; Abū Dāwūd: 4394; Musnad Aḥmad: 6/466; Muwaṭṭa’: 2/834; Ibn Mājah: 2595; al-Ḥākim: 4/380]


❖ Scholarly Opinions​


  • Abū Ḥanīfah (رحمه الله): Even after the case reaches the ruler, if the victim forgives, the ḥadd is dropped.
    [al-Mabsūṭ: 9/186]
  • al-Shawkānī (رحمه الله): The aḥādīth clearly refute this; once it reaches the authority, ḥadd is obligatory.
    [Nayl al-Awṭār: 4/582]

📌 Conclusion​


  • Before court: Forgiveness cancels ḥadd.
  • After court: Forgiveness no longer applies; the ḥadd must be enforced.
 
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