All perfect praise be to Allaah, The Lord of the Worlds. I testify that there is none worthy of worship except Allaah, and that Muhammad is His Slave and Messenger.
Islam legislates marriage for there to be fondness, love and compassion between the spouses, so one should endeavor to do anything to help achieve that. It is permissible for either spouse to stipulate conditions that serve their interests but do not contradict the purpose of the marriage contract. Then, if the other party accepts these conditions, he/she is obliged to fulfill them according to the strongest opinion held by scholars. This is in general. Now, let us look at each of the mentioned terms separately and we will elaborate on them in the following points:
- If a man finalizes a marriage contract with a woman, she becomes his wife, and so, he is permitted to do with her what a husband is permitted to do with his wife. However, the guardian of the bride may stipulate a condition that the consummation of the marriage be delayed for some interest, such as consideration for prevalent customs of that country. Hence, this condition does not contradict the purpose of the marriage contract, so the husband is obliged to fulfill it. For more benefit on the conditions in marriage, please refer to Fataawa 224677 and 91942.
- The stipulation for the divorce to be under the authority of the wife is a void condition according to most jurists as it contradicts the purpose of the marriage contract. This is because Allaah says (what means): {Men are in charge of women by [right of] what Allaah has given one over the other and what they spend [for maintenance] from their wealth.} [Quran 4:34] Divorce is part of man being in charge of his wife. Therefore, in principle, divorce is in the hands of the husband, and the bride or her guardian demanding that the divorce be in her hands is not a binding condition.
- The stipulation that the husband will give the wife a quarter of his income after marriage and half of it in case of divorce is a void condition because the amount and time of obligation are both undetermined. However, it does not affect the validity of the contract. The Kuwaiti Fiqh Encyclopedia reads: “In case of Gharar [an unknown or uncertain item of a contract] in the dowry at the marriage contract, it does not affect [the validity of] the contract because marriage is a contract that is not invalidated by the compensation [i.e. dowry] being unknown. The jurists have mentioned some forms of Gharar in dowry, like, as cited in the Hanafi School of jurisprudence, that the specification of the dowry is invalid if the type specified is unknown, like if he marries her for "a riding animal", "a garment" or "a house". (This specification is void as the type is exceedingly unknown. In that case, the husband is obliged to pay a dowry like that of the women who are in the same social status as her.)”
The fact that the husband agreed to those terms under disciplinary pressure from the bride's guardian does not relieve him of the obligation to fulfill those conditions that he is obliged to fulfill since he has agreed to them.
Allaah Knows best.