Description
Book description:
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Author's name: Burhan al-Din Ibrahim bin Muhammad Farhoon al-Maliki
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Number of pages: 596 pages
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The subject of the book: The Rulers' Insight into the Fundamentals of Judgment and Approaches to Rulings
The contents of the book:
Book sermon
The first section of the book is on the introductions to this science and includes chapters
Chapter One: The truth, meaning, judgment, and wisdom of the judiciary
Chapter Two on the virtues of the judiciary and the desire to do it justly
Chapter on how the request for a judge is divided into five sections
Chapter Three on the Judiciary
Dismissal of deputy judges in one of their jobs or at all
Separating the guardianship of the guardianship
Partial jurisdiction separation from the judiciary
Separating the arbitration mandate between the two litigants
Separating the guardianship of messengers and charity collectors
Kharas Mandate Chapter
Separating the mandate of the two judges
Separating the judgment of the two judges in the hunting penalty
Separation of guardianship over the disbursement of estimated expenses and duties
Separating the guardianship of the judge and the clerk
Chapter Four: The Words with which Mandates are Contracted
The judiciary is convened in one of two ways
Chapter The Imam appoints a man to the judiciary
Chapter Accepting the Judiciary from a Non-Just Amir
Separating the judge who is absent at the time of guardianship
The guardianship is not complete without three conditions
The judge is appointed by the Imam
Chapter Five: The six pillars of the judiciary
The first pillar of judicial requirements and judge's etiquette
Chapter Two Understanding the judgments necessary for a judge in his or her career
Chapter on what a judge needs to do for himself
Chapter What a judge needs to do
Separating a judge's livelihood from the Bait Al-Mal
Chapter and the salaries of the assistants that the judge directs in the interests of the people
The third chapter is about his council and his dwelling.
Chapter on the Judge's Residence
Chapter Four: The Judge's Behavior in Rulings
Chapter Five: What the Judge Initiates
Chapter Six: How he deals with adversaries
Question about the judge writing the testimony of the people in the book
Question: If the witnesses say to the judge, "Show me their testimony
Question of the judge's ruling on an absent person, then the absent person arrives and wants to start litigation
Chapter on the judge who hears the evidence of one of the parties and then wants to refer them to another judge
Question of resuming testimony before a second judge
A case is brought to the governor and the plaintiff brings one witness
The question of the humility of the opposing parties to the judge's arguments
Chapter Seven on the Succession of the Judge
Chapter Eight on Arbitration
The second pillar of res judicata
Chapter The judge was not an ijtihadist
Chapter The arbitrator does not have the right to choose an opinion by which to rule or rule
Chapter A muqaddid judge is obliged not to deviate from the famous
A chapter on whether a man who is not well versed in knowledge can give an opinion based on what he has seen
Chapter Whoever's fatwa is a transfer of his imam's doctrine
Chapter on what overturns a judge's decision
Chapter on judges overturning their own rulings
A judge rules for one of the litigants and then testifies for the other
Chapter on Judges overturning other judges' rulings
A chapter on what a judge's rulings can't be enforced and can be overturned if he learns about them
A house that is locked up for the poor is brought before a judge who sells it to the poor
Chapter on what is not considered in the actions of a judge if he is removed or dies
Chapter A judge should not enable people to dispute their judges
Chapter Whether a judge is removed by the same act of immorality or until the Imam removes him
Chapter on Removing a Judge by Choice
Chapter If a judge is dismissed and rules on things before the dismissal is finalized
Chapter If the judge admits that he ruled unjustly
Chapter on gathering jurists to consider a judge's judgment
Chapter on the request by the judgment debtor to annul the verdict
Third Pillar of Judgment
The Fourth Pillar of Res judicata
Chapter on the thing claimed
Fifth Pillar: The Respondent
Chapter on Types of Judgment
Chapter A judge does not judge his enemy
Chapter The judge does not judge anyone until he asks if you have any arguments left
A chapter on judging absentees
Chapter on Postponing the Hajj for Absentees
The Sixth Pillar of Judiciary
The first section on the behavior of rulers
Chapter One: How the Ruler Decides What is Reported to Him
Chapter Two: Behaviors of the Ruler that Require Judgment
Chapter: Where the actions of rulers are not rulings
A chapter on what is and is not required for a ruler's judgment
Chapter The bankruptcy of a person who is in debt is subject to the judgment of the governor
The second section is that which does not require the judgment of a ruler
The third section is that which differs in whether or not it requires a ruling
Fourth section on the places where the ruling enters independently or implicitly
A chapter on the difference between the words of judgment used in recordings
Chapter on what constitutes a validity judgment and a positive judgment
A chapter that may include both a positive and a negative judgment
Chapter on judging the meaning of the word
Chapter on the difference between proof and judgment
Chapter on the Meaning of Execution of Judgment
Chapter on the prohibition against enforcing what a dhimmi ruler has ruled
Chapter on What Indicates Judgment
A chapter on how legal judgment is a matter of the mind, not the tongue
Chapter on whether a judgment is a news item that can be true or false
Chapter If a man buys a house from a man and the seller denies it
Chapter A judge cannot register a debt against an absent person unless he is a member of his work force
A chapter on the judgment recipient who asks the judge to record what he has proven to him
Chapter If the judge registers between the two parties, he may mention the names of the witnesses in the book
Chapter Ordering his scribe to leave a blank space for the judge to complete in his own handwriting
A chapter on judgments that are contingent on the truthfulness of the plaintiff and the deferral of the opponent's argument
Second section on who is the plaintiff and who is the defendant
Chapter If a tanner and a tanner claim a skin
The third section on the types of lawsuits and their divisions
Chapter on How to Correct a Claim
Chapter Two: Division of Cases
Chapter Three: Division of Defendants
The third section of the lawsuit against an absent person
Fourth section: Claiming against the deceased
Chapter Four on the division of defendants and what is heard from their evidence
The second type of person who wants to prove the validity of what he claims for his client
The third type of person who wants to prove the validity of what he claims for his relative or neighbor
The fourth type of person who wants to prove the validity of his claim to the absent person
The fifth type of person who wants to prove the validity of his claim to a person under his jurisdiction
Chapter Five: Notification of provisions that require proof to hear the case
Chapter Six: The Ruling on Agency in Litigation
Question of a person who agrees to the validity of an agency before it is established
Chapter: Agency is permissible with or without compensation
Fourth section on the rule of answering the lawsuit
Chapter Claiming a property in the hands of another, claiming that it passed to him from someone who inherited it from him
Chapter He refrained from answering and was given time to consider an account and its likeness
A man claims a property and denies it by admitting it to someone else.
Fifth section on what to do with the excuse
Chapter One: Excuse and deferral of the argument for the absent
Separating the time of notice to the convicted person
A chapter in which the judge's council made an article and the council's witnesses testified to it
Chapter Two: The Faces of Postponement and Blame
Chapter Some deadlines are not subject to the ruler's judgment
Chapter The day on which the deadline is written is not counted and does not count
Chapter and Method in Term Writing
Chapter Three on Incapacitation
Chapter: Things a judge cannot fail to do
Chapter If the judge wants to register the person who incapacitated him
Chapter Notaries do not customarily assign a contract for insolvency
Fourth chapter on stopping the defendant, which is of three types
Chapter A single fair witness can testify to the value of items that are absent from the market.
Chapter Five: Suspending Absentee and Orphan Money
Separating what is submitted to judges from orphan funds
The sixth section on oaths, their description, time and place
Chapter Swearing at the pulpit in a quarter of a dinar of gold Carmonite
The chapter on swearing on the Qur'an
Separating the presence of the sworn party or his agent to administer the oath
Chapter A woman swears if she wants to divorce herself from him for lack of maintenance
Chapter No one who swears in oaths shall be brought to the wrong place, except in qiyamah.
Chapter on the Ruling on Failure to Oath
Chapter on Miscellaneous Issues Related to the Rule of Oaths
Chapter on the Ruling on Recanted Oaths and What is Related to Them
Chapter on claims that do not require an oath and the rule of mixture
Chapter on Mixed Oaths, what constitutes a mixed oath, and what constitutes an unmixed oath
Chapter Oaths are required by the mere allegation without mixing in certain situations
Section VII on Evidence
Chapter Two on the sections of the witness's knowledge base
Chapter Three: The Limits of Testimony, its Judgment, its Judgment, and what is obligatory in it
Separating the performance of a memorized testimony
Chapter on Attestation of Rights
The chapter on witnessing marriage, divorce and repudiation
The chapter on witnessing the return
Chapter Four on the ranks of witnesses in testimony
Chapter Five: Qualities of Rights and Degrees of Certificates
Separating the sections of testimonies in rights
Chapter As for the testimony that obligates the thing testified to with the plaintiff's oath
Chapter As for testimony that imposes a judgment but does not impose the thing testified to
The chapter on testimony that does not require the witness to testify and imposes a judgment on the witness
Separating testimony that does not entail anything at all
Chapter Six: Characteristics of the Witness and Contraindications to Acceptance
The second part of the impediments to the admissibility of testimony
Chapter Ten Matters Requiring Justification of Justice
Chapter 7: What witnesses should be aware of when bearing and giving testimony
Chapter A witness should not testify in a sealed book
Chapter The witness testified that the book has a hole in it
A chapter for the witness to look at the date and look at the number
Chapter If the witness writes in his testimony, "I bear witness to the acknowledgment of the declarants
Chapter I was called to testify in a marriage and the testimony was on identification
Chapter Avoid testifying to the death of an absent person by recognizing those who knew you
Chapter on the provisions of the document writer
Chapter The Sultan's Decision to Limit Documents to a Particular Person
Chapter on the Notary
Chapter A man and a woman come to the notary and claim to be married
Chapter A man and his wife came and asked him to write that she released him from the dowry
Chapter A woman comes in and wants to write a gift of some of her money
Separating the contract of substitution
Chapter A man came with a woman and stated that she was his wife and that he intended to divorce her
Chapter What a notary should watch out for
Separating the document writer if he writes the sale
Chapter on Writer's Fees
Chapter on Adjectives
Chapter Beginning with the age of the witness
A chapter on color
Chapter 8: What the judge should be aware of when administering testimony
Chapter If a witness testifies before the judge and the judge does not recognize the witness
Chapter on Testimony in Transactions
Chapter on testifying about entitlement and the like
Chapter on Issues in Judging and Testimony
Chapter on Testimony in Absence
Chapter on Testimony in Freedom
Chapter on Testimony in Loyalty
Chapter on Testimony in Usurpation
Chapter on Testimonies in Slander, Adultery and Sodomy
Chapter on Testimony in Theft
Chapter on Rationalization Testimony
Chapter on Testimony in modification and disqualification
Separating the number of people who accept a public recommendation
Chapter If the witnesses write their testimony in the contract of recommendation and testify to it
Chapter on the qualities of a modification certificate
Recommendation Before Testimony
Chapter on how to modify the secret
A chapter on what it means to testify to a slur
Chapter on Conflicting Witnesses of Recommendation and Injury
Chapter on the Testimony of Reclamation
Chapter on Testimony in Absence
Chapter If a document is erased, annotated, or multiplied in the wrong places
Chapter Nine: What happens after a witness testifies that invalidates his testimony
Chapter 10: The Characteristics of Testimony
The difference between a verb and an object and a noun and an adjective
The second part of the book is on the types of evidence
Chapter One: Judging by Four Witnesses
Witnesses attending the couple's cursing
Chapter Two: Judging by Two Witnesses
Chapter Whoever admits to the right that is testified against him
Chapter Three: Judging by two witnesses, a witness and two women, or a witness and an oath
Separating Oaths and Witnesses
Judging by two women and two oaths
Chapter Four: Judging by two witnesses and two women and the defendant's denial
Dismissal of the case if there is no evidence and the defendant refuses
Chapter Five: Judging by Full Evidence with the Judges' Oath
Hearing Testimony Chapter
Chapter A husband puts his wife's affairs in her hands if he is absent from her and testifies to this and is absent
Chapter The judicial oath is omitted in some cases
Dowry in the hands of an absentee
Chapter The Oath of Justice is not stipulated to be obligatory
Chapter Six: Judging the Defendant's Right of First Oath
Chapter 7: Judging by the witness of the ward's witness and the right of his guardian
Chapter Eight on judging by the witness of a slave and the oath of his master
Chapter Nine: Judging the Agent's Witness and the Principal's Oath
Chapter 10: Judging by the evidence of the principal and the agent's oath
Chapter Eleven: Judging the Bankrupt's Witness and the Creditors' Oath
Chapter Twelve: Judging by a witness and the oath of one of the plaintiffs
A man who bequeathed one-third of his estate to a man and found a book stating a right he owed to a man
Chapter Thirteen: Judging the Plaintiff's Evidence
Chapter Fourteen: Judging the words of a single man and the like
Chapter Fifteen: Judging the words of two women on their own
Chapter on the testimony of women about what happens between them at funerals and baths
Chapter Sixteen: Judging by the testimony of a woman and the plaintiff's oath
A woman's opinion on the sighting of the crescent moon
Single Woman Measurement Chapter
Chapter Eighteen: Judging by a witness, a woman, and the plaintiff's oath
Chapter Nineteen: Judging by the plaintiff's oath and the defendant's denial
Chapter Twenty on judging the plaintiff's oath and the defendant's refusal to take an oath
Chapter XXI: Judgment on the plaintiff's oath and the defendant's refusal to answer
Chapter Twenty-Two: Judging by Failure to Attend the Governing Council
Separating the lawsuit against the detainee in the Sultan's custody
Chapter on where it is obligatory to answer the ruler
Chapter on what is not obligatory to answer
Chapter Twenty-Three: Judgment by Alliance on Both Sides
Separation and annulment in marriage
Chapter Disputing a house that is not in their hands
Chapter The two makkaris differ in the amount of rent
The landowner and the laborer differ in the contracting of laborers and animals
Chapter A man owes another man two debts, one with a mortgage and the other without a mortgage
Chapter Twenty-four: Judging by hand and weighing it and the evidence
Chapter Two evidence conflicts and can be combined
Separating two conflicting statements cannot be reconciled
Chapter 25: Judging the plaintiff's statement
Chapter on Believing the Defendant and Relying on His Statement
Additional information
Additional information
Weight
3 kg
Dimensions
20 x 20 x 20 x 20 cm
Author of the book






