LHC upholds divorced woman’s right to house as dower

Published May 31, 2026 Updated May 31, 2026 06:56am
A file photo of the Lahore High Court building. — Photo courtesy LHC website/File
A file photo of the Lahore High Court building. — Photo courtesy LHC website/File

• Dismisses husband’s appeal against lower courts’ decisions
• Rules technical objections over ordinary stamp paper cannot defeat proven matrimonial rights

LAHORE: The Lahore High Court has upheld concurrent judgements of two lower courts granting a divorced woman possession of a house as dower (haq mehr), ruling that a separately executed dower agreement was valid and enforceable even though the property was not mentioned in the nikahnama (marriage certificate).

Justice Sajid Mehmood Sethi of the LHC dismissed a petition filed by Muhammad Khan, who had challenged decisions of a family court and an appellate court in Chiniot in favour of his former wife, Anwar Bibi.

The woman claimed that on the day of their marriage in 2017, the petitioner executed an agreement promising her a constructed five-marla house in Canada Colony, Chiniot, as dower and also undertook to pay Rs300,000 in the event of divorce.

After the marriage ended in 2021, she sought recovery of the house, its market value, maintenance for the iddat period and the contractual amount.

However, the husband denied executing the agreement, alleging that it was fabricated and asserting that the property belonged to his first wife. He argued that the agreement was written on ordinary stamp paper instead of an e-stamp paper and that the nikahnama mentioned dower of only Rs5,000.

Rejecting these arguments, Justice Sethi held that family courts have exclusive jurisdiction over dower disputes and observed that the agreement clearly fixed the house as haq mehr.

The judge noted that both attesting witnesses to the agreement testified in support of its execution and remained unshaken during cross-examination. He further observed that the petitioner opposed forensic examination of his signatures and thumb impression on the document, a conduct that justified drawing an adverse inference against him.

“The refusal of the petitioner to permit forensic examination substantially erodes the credibility of his plea of fabrication and lends support to the concurrent findings recorded by the courts below,” Justice Sethi held.

The judge ruled that under settled principles of Muslim law, dower may be fixed before, at the time of, or even after marriage, and may also be enhanced through a separate agreement. He said the nikahnama was not the exclusive record of dower arrangements and that a separate written instrument could validly coexist with it.

The judge also rejected the husband’s contention that the agreement was invalid because it had been executed on ordinary stamp paper, holding that technical objections regarding the form of documentation could not defeat substantive matrimonial rights once the transaction had been independently proved.

Justice Sethi observed that the argument that the woman did not assert her claim during the subsistence of marriage was legally untenable. “In the social realities of our society, many women refrain from demanding dower during continuance of marriage for emotional, domestic and societal reasons. Such restraint cannot legally be construed against them,” the judge maintained, adding that the right to recover dower survives dissolution of marriage and remains enforceable in accordance with law.

Finding no illegality, misreading of evidence or jurisdictional defect in the concurrent findings of the lower courts, the LHC judge dismissed the petition and maintained the decree awarding the house to the former wife as dower.

Published in Dawn, May 31th, 2026

Opinion

Editorial

The heat ahead
Updated 31 May, 2026

The heat ahead

Planning for hotter conditions is increasingly becoming a question of public health, economic resilience and public safety.
Dimming hopes
31 May, 2026

Dimming hopes

THE National Assembly opposition leader’s recent warning should give the ruling parties some pause. Once again, ...
No Tobacco Day
31 May, 2026

No Tobacco Day

THIS year’s World No Tobacco Day theme, announced by the WHO last October, is ‘Unmasking the appeal —...
Diplomatic resolve
Updated 30 May, 2026

Diplomatic resolve

Iran, too, must engage seriously and provide credible assurances about its nuclear programme if it wants sanctions relief and a more stable relationship with the outside world.
Weaponising water
30 May, 2026

Weaponising water

CLIMATE Minister Musadik Malik’s warning against what he described as “water aggression” indicates ...
Rabies toll
30 May, 2026

Rabies toll

EVERY year, rabies, the deadliest zoonotic disease, kills more than 59,000 people worldwide. In Pakistan, it is one...