In Islamic estate planning, the question of how to distribute wealth is not confined to what happens after death. The faraid system — the fixed Islamic inheritance rules — governs how a Muslim’s estate is divided among heirs after death, and its application is mandatory. But faraid applies only to what remains in the estate at the point of death. Assets that have been validly given away during the donor’s lifetime, through an instrument known as hibah, do not form part of the estate and are not subject to faraid distribution.
Hibah is one of the most important and most commonly used instruments in Islamic estate planning in Malaysia. Understanding what hibah is, what makes it valid, and how it should be properly documented is essential for any Muslim family thinking seriously about wealth succession.
What Is Hibah?
Hibah (هبة) is an Arabic term meaning gift. In Islamic jurisprudence, hibah is a voluntary, unconditional transfer of ownership of an asset from one person (the donor, or wahib) to another (the recipient, or mawhub lahu) during the donor’s lifetime, without any payment or counter-value in return.
The defining characteristic of hibah is that it is an inter vivos transaction — a gift made during life, not a bequest taking effect after death. Once a valid hibah is completed, the asset belongs to the recipient. It is no longer part of the donor’s estate and will not be subject to faraid upon the donor’s death.
This makes hibah a powerful planning tool. A parent who wishes to provide for a particular child, or to make provision for a non-heir (such as an adopted child or a non-Muslim spouse who would not inherit under faraid), or simply to ensure that certain assets reach certain people without being divided according to the fixed faraid shares, can use hibah to achieve these objectives during their lifetime.
The Legal Framework
Hibah in Malaysia is governed by Islamic law as administered through the Syariah courts. In Sabah, the applicable enactment is the Islamic Family Law Enactment (Sabah) 2004 and the relevant provisions of Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh) as applied by the Sabah Syariah courts. The civil courts generally do not have jurisdiction over hibah matters involving Muslims, which fall within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Syariah courts under the Federal Constitution.
For hibah involving assets that are registered under civil law — land registered under the Land Ordinance (Sabah Cap. 68), shares in companies registered under the Companies Act 2016, or bank accounts — the documentation and registration of the hibah must comply with both the requirements of Islamic law and the applicable civil registration requirements. This intersection of Syariah and civil law is one of the practical complexities of hibah documentation in Malaysia.
The Requirements for a Valid Hibah
Under the majority position in Islamic jurisprudence (and as applied in Malaysian Syariah courts), a valid hibah requires the following elements:
Offer and acceptance (ijab and qabul) — The donor must make a clear offer of the gift, and the recipient must clearly accept it. Both the offer and acceptance must be expressed — verbal or written — and must correspond.
The donor must have legal capacity (ahliyyah) — The donor must be of sound mind, of legal age, and must not be acting under duress or undue influence. A hibah made by a person who lacks mental capacity, or who is compelled to make it, is invalid.
The subject matter must be clearly identified — The asset being given must be specifically identified. A hibah of “some of my property” without identifying which property is insufficiently certain.
Delivery (qabd) — This is the element that gives rise to the most practical difficulty. Under the classical position in Islamic jurisprudence, a hibah is only completed — and ownership only passes to the recipient — upon actual delivery (qabd) of the asset to the recipient. Without delivery, the hibah remains incomplete and revocable.
For tangible movable assets, delivery is straightforward — handing over the item completes the hibah. For immovable property, the question of what constitutes delivery is more complex. Malaysian Syariah courts and scholars have grappled with this question, and the approach varies depending on the school of jurisprudence applied and the specific circumstances. In practice, execution of a formal hibah deed and taking steps towards registration in the recipient’s name are treated as evidence of completed delivery for land hibah purposes.
Hibah Amanah: Hibah with a Trust Element
A significant development in Malaysian Islamic estate planning is the instrument known as hibah amanah — a hibah combined with a trust arrangement. Under a hibah amanah, the donor makes a gift of assets to a trustee (typically Amanah Raya Berhad or a licensed trust company) to be held on trust for specified beneficiaries, with distribution occurring upon the donor’s death or upon other specified trigger events.
Hibah amanah combines the advantages of hibah — removing assets from the faraid estate — with the management and control features of a trust. The donor can specify the terms of distribution, the conditions attached to beneficiaries’ entitlements, and the trustee’s powers of management. It is particularly useful for:
- Providing for minor children whose share would otherwise need to be managed through the Syariah court or the wali (guardian)
- Making provision for beneficiaries who might not inherit under faraid or who would receive a smaller share than the donor intends
- Ensuring that business assets or investments are managed professionally during any transition period
Hibah amanah products are offered by Amanah Raya Berhad and certain takaful operators and Islamic financial institutions in Malaysia, though the specific terms and conditions vary between providers.
Documentation: Why It Matters
A hibah that is valid under Islamic law but poorly documented can create serious practical difficulties. The recipient may find it difficult to establish their entitlement against other heirs who dispute the hibah, to register the asset in their name, or to deal with third parties such as banks and land registries.
Proper documentation of a hibah serves several purposes:
Evidence of the transaction — A written hibah deed records the offer, acceptance, the asset transferred, the date of the transaction, and the identity of the parties. It provides clear evidence that the hibah took place and of its terms.
Facilitating registration — For land hibah, a properly documented hibah deed is required to support an application to transfer the registered title from the donor to the recipient under the Land Ordinance (Sabah Cap. 68). Without proper documentation, registration of the title transfer will be difficult or impossible.
Preventing disputes — A clear, witnessed, and documented hibah is much harder to challenge than an undocumented or informally documented transaction. Disputes among heirs about whether a hibah was validly made, what was transferred, and whether delivery occurred are a common source of Syariah court litigation. Proper documentation at the time of the hibah significantly reduces this risk.
Syariah court endorsement — In some cases, particularly for high-value assets or where there is a risk of future dispute, obtaining a Syariah court endorsement or declaration in respect of the hibah provides additional legal certainty. This is not always necessary but may be advisable in complex cases.
Hibah and Faraid: Planning Considerations
Hibah is a lawful instrument in Islamic law, and using it to manage the distribution of assets is entirely permissible. However, there are ethical and jurisprudential considerations that conscientious Muslim families should bear in mind.
Islamic scholars have discussed the use of hibah to circumvent faraid — for example, giving away almost the entire estate during one’s lifetime to avoid the fixed inheritance shares. While hibah is generally valid if properly completed during the donor’s lifetime, using it solely to defeat the legitimate expectations of heirs raises ethical questions that families and their advisers should consider carefully.
The doctrine of ru’u (revocability) is also relevant: under certain schools of jurisprudence, a hibah may be revocable in certain circumstances — for example, by a parent who made a hibah to a child. Understanding the revocability rules applicable in Sabah’s Syariah courts is important for anyone relying on a hibah as part of their estate plan.
Practical Steps
For Muslim families in Sabah considering hibah as part of their estate plan:
- Identify clearly which assets are to be the subject of the hibah and to whom they are to be given
- Ensure the hibah is properly documented in a formal hibah deed, executed before witnesses
- For land, take steps to register the transfer under the Land Ordinance promptly after the hibah deed is executed
- Consider whether a hibah amanah structure is more appropriate than a direct hibah, particularly for larger or more complex asset transfers
- Seek advice from both a Syariah-qualified adviser and a civil law solicitor familiar with Islamic estate planning, to ensure that the hibah is valid under both legal frameworks and properly registered
This article is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Hibah and Islamic estate planning involve complex questions of Islamic jurisprudence and civil law, and individual circumstances vary considerably. Readers are encouraged to seek qualified legal advice — both from Islamic law and civil law perspectives — specific to their situation. Nothing in this article is intended as advertising or solicitation of legal services, in compliance with the Sabah Advocates Ordinance.