The presumption of death: a comparative appraisal from the perspective of the common law, Malaysian law and shariah

Section 108 of the Evidence Act 1950 states ‘When the question is whether a man is alive or dead, and it is proved that he has not been heard of for seven years by those who would naturally have heard of him if he had been alive, the burden of proving that he is alive is shifted to the person who af...

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Main Authors: Shair Mohamad, Mohd Akram, Ramlee Saad, Zulfakar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Serials Publications 2015
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Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/48516/1/article_dr_zulfakar.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/48516/
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Institution: Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
Language: English
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spelling my.iium.irep.485162017-11-27T02:03:58Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/48516/ The presumption of death: a comparative appraisal from the perspective of the common law, Malaysian law and shariah Shair Mohamad, Mohd Akram Ramlee Saad, Zulfakar KPG Malaysia Section 108 of the Evidence Act 1950 states ‘When the question is whether a man is alive or dead, and it is proved that he has not been heard of for seven years by those who would naturally have heard of him if he had been alive, the burden of proving that he is alive is shifted to the person who affirms it.’ This section reflects the English common law. In other words, if a person has not been heard of for at least seven years both the Evidence Act 1950 and the common law create a rebuttable presumption of law that, that person is dead, and the burden of proving that he is alive is shifted to the other side. However, the exact date of death after the expiry of seven years period is not a matter of inference but a matter of evidence. Under the common law, there are two views as to the date on which the fact of the death may be presumed. The stricter view says that the fact of death may be presumed retrospectively, while the laxer view suggests that the fact of death may be presumed prospectively. Unlike the English common law which accommodate both views but prefers the laxer view, so far the Malaysian and Indian courts followed the stricter view. Shariah law too recognises the concept of presumption of death but wisely it is not stuck with the common law and Evidence Act notion of not less than seven years. Interestingly, it has followed the earlier view of four years period. However, it shares the common law view that there is no presumption as to the exact date of the fact of death. Serials Publications 2015 Article REM application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/48516/1/article_dr_zulfakar.pdf Shair Mohamad, Mohd Akram and Ramlee Saad, Zulfakar (2015) The presumption of death: a comparative appraisal from the perspective of the common law, Malaysian law and shariah. Journal of Islamic Law Review, 11 (1). pp. 59-76. ISSN 0973-2918 http://serialsjournals.com/archives.php?journals_id=272
institution Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
building IIUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider International Islamic University Malaysia
content_source IIUM Repository (IREP)
url_provider http://irep.iium.edu.my/
language English
topic KPG Malaysia
spellingShingle KPG Malaysia
Shair Mohamad, Mohd Akram
Ramlee Saad, Zulfakar
The presumption of death: a comparative appraisal from the perspective of the common law, Malaysian law and shariah
description Section 108 of the Evidence Act 1950 states ‘When the question is whether a man is alive or dead, and it is proved that he has not been heard of for seven years by those who would naturally have heard of him if he had been alive, the burden of proving that he is alive is shifted to the person who affirms it.’ This section reflects the English common law. In other words, if a person has not been heard of for at least seven years both the Evidence Act 1950 and the common law create a rebuttable presumption of law that, that person is dead, and the burden of proving that he is alive is shifted to the other side. However, the exact date of death after the expiry of seven years period is not a matter of inference but a matter of evidence. Under the common law, there are two views as to the date on which the fact of the death may be presumed. The stricter view says that the fact of death may be presumed retrospectively, while the laxer view suggests that the fact of death may be presumed prospectively. Unlike the English common law which accommodate both views but prefers the laxer view, so far the Malaysian and Indian courts followed the stricter view. Shariah law too recognises the concept of presumption of death but wisely it is not stuck with the common law and Evidence Act notion of not less than seven years. Interestingly, it has followed the earlier view of four years period. However, it shares the common law view that there is no presumption as to the exact date of the fact of death.
format Article
author Shair Mohamad, Mohd Akram
Ramlee Saad, Zulfakar
author_facet Shair Mohamad, Mohd Akram
Ramlee Saad, Zulfakar
author_sort Shair Mohamad, Mohd Akram
title The presumption of death: a comparative appraisal from the perspective of the common law, Malaysian law and shariah
title_short The presumption of death: a comparative appraisal from the perspective of the common law, Malaysian law and shariah
title_full The presumption of death: a comparative appraisal from the perspective of the common law, Malaysian law and shariah
title_fullStr The presumption of death: a comparative appraisal from the perspective of the common law, Malaysian law and shariah
title_full_unstemmed The presumption of death: a comparative appraisal from the perspective of the common law, Malaysian law and shariah
title_sort presumption of death: a comparative appraisal from the perspective of the common law, malaysian law and shariah
publisher Serials Publications
publishDate 2015
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/48516/1/article_dr_zulfakar.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/48516/
http://serialsjournals.com/archives.php?journals_id=272
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