Question:medium

A Muslim can marry any number of wives not exceeding four. If a Muslim marries a fifth wife, the nature of such a marriage shall be?

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Remember: If a mistake can be "fixed" (like divorcing one wife to make room for the 5th), it is Irregular. If it can never be fixed (like marrying a sister), it is Void.
Updated On: Jun 30, 2026
  • Valid
  • Irregular
  • Void
  • None of these
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The Correct Option is B

Solution and Explanation

Step 1: Recall the Muslim personal law rule on polygamy.
Sunni Muslim personal law permits a Muslim man to have a maximum of four wives simultaneously, subject to the condition that he treats them all equally and justly.
Step 2: Distinguish Void (Batil) from Irregular (Fasid).
A Void (Batil) marriage has a permanent absolute prohibition, such as marriage with a blood relative; an Irregular (Fasid) marriage has a removable or temporary prohibition - the marriage is not valid but can become regularised if the impediment is removed.
Step 3: Apply to the fifth wife situation.
Marrying a 5th wife is prohibited because four wives already exist, but this prohibition is NOT permanent; if one wife is divorced, the impediment is removed and the 5th marriage becomes regularised - therefore the 5th marriage is Fasid (Irregular), not Batil (Void).
\[ \boxed{\text{Irregular}} \]
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