Aleem v. Aleem

947 A.2d 489, 404 Md. 404, 2008 Md. LEXIS 246
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 6, 2008
Docket108, September Term, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 947 A.2d 489 (Aleem v. Aleem) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aleem v. Aleem, 947 A.2d 489, 404 Md. 404, 2008 Md. LEXIS 246 (Md. 2008).

Opinion

CATHELL, J.

Farah Aleem filed suit for a limited divorce from her husband, Irfan Aleem in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County. The husband thereafter filed an Answer and Counterclaim. He raised no jurisdictional objections. Without, however, any advance notification to the wife, and while the Montgomery County action was pending (between the filing of the action for a limited divorce and the filing of the amended complaint for an absolute divorce), the husband, a Muslim and a national of Pakistan, went to the Pakistan Embassy in Washington, D.C., and performed talaq 1 by executing a written document that stated:

*407 “Now this deed witnesses that I the said Irfan Aleem, do hereby divorce Farah Aleem, daughter of Mahmood Mirza, by pronouncing upon her Divorce/Talaq three times irrevocably and by severing all connections of husband and wife with her forever and for good.
“1. I Divorce thee Farah Aleem
“2. I Divorce thee Farah Aleem
“3. I Divorce thee Farah Aleem.... ”

Petitioner posits that the performance by him of talaq under Islamic religious and secular Pakistan law, and the existence of a “marriage contract,” deprived the Circuit Court for Montgomery County of jurisdiction to litigate the division of the parties’ marital property situate in this country. 2 The trial court found that the marriage contract entered into on the day of the parties’ marriage in Pakistan specifically did not provide for the division of marital property and thus, for that reason alone, the agreement did not prohibit the Circuit Court for Montgomery County from dividing the parties’ marital property under Maryland law. The Court of Special Appeals agreed and stated “[t]hus, the Pakistani marriage contract in the instant matter is not to be equated with a premarital or post-marital agreement that validly relinquished, under Maryland law, rights in marital property.” Aleem v. Aleem, 175 Md.App. 663, 681, 931 A.2d 1123, 1134 (2007). The Court of Special Appeals further stated:

“If the Pakistani marriage contract is silent, Pakistani law does not recognize marital property. If a premarital or post-marital agreement in Maryland is silent with respect to marital property, those rights are recognized by Maryland law.... In other words, the ‘default’ under Pakistani law is *408 that Wife has no rights to property titled in Husband’s name, while the ‘default’ under Maryland law is that the wife has marital property rights in property titled in the husband’s name. We hold that this conflict is so substantial that applying Pakistani law in the instant matter would be contrary to Maryland public policy.”

Id. at 681, 931 A.2d at 1134.

Petitioner presents two questions 3 for our review:
“1. [Did] the Court of Special Appeals disregard[ ] fundamental principles of international comity and conflicts of laws in refusing to recognize a Pakistani divorce because Pakistan and Maryland employ different ‘default rules’ for the division of property between spouses[?]”
“2. [Did] the Court of Special Appeals disregard[ ] fundamental principles of international comity and conflicts of laws in concluding that Pakistan lacked jurisdiction to dissolve the parties’ marriage because the parties resided in Maryland on diplomatic visas[?]”

The Relevant Facts

The parties, both citizens of Pakistan, were married in Pakistan in 1980. The marriage was arranged by the families of the parties. In accordance with Pakistani custom there was a written agreement presented to the wife on the day of the wedding for her to sign. At that time she was 18 years old and her husband was 29 years old. She had just graduated from high school and he was a doctoral candidate at Oxford University in England. The agreement provided as follows:

*409 “TRUE TRANSLATION 4

(URDU TO ENGLISH)

FORM NO. 2.

(See Rules : 8 & 10) Under Rules: 8 & 10 of Muslim Family Laws Ordinance, 1961 (VIII of 1961)

FORM

MARRIAGE CERTIFICATE/ CONTRACT

1. Name of the Ward . Saddar TownAJnion: 7 3 Tehsi!/ ATTESTED

Police Station ; saddar and District Karachi Where the marriage took place

2. Neme of the bridegroom & His father, with their respective residence: IRFAN ALEEM S/o DR. ABDUL ALEEM QURESHE, 3-B,South Circular. Avenue, Defence Soceity, Karach i.

3. Age of the Bridegroom: 2 9 ysar<! .

4. Name oftha Bride &herfather, with their farah mirza d/o MEHM00D mirza,

respective residence: A-100, umt-3, Latifabad, Hyderabad.

Not previously married

5. Whether the Bride Is VlrgOft a Widow or a

Divorced Wife: virgin

6. Age of the Bride : IS years.

7. Name oftheVaMl.ifany, appointed by the muhammad sultan mirza s/o mühammad ahmfid mjrza Bride, his father's name and his residence : d-20, p.e.c.h.s., Karachi. "

3. Names of the Witnesses to tie appointment i) of Bride’s Vakil, with their father's name, their residence and the relationship with the 2) Bride. MUJAHID FAROOQI S/o KAZAHARUDDIN FAROOQI B-20, Gizn Boulevard, Karachi. ZUBATR HASAN RIZVI S/o NAWAB ABDUL QASIM Rizvi, R-78, Block-5, F.B. Area, Mansoora,

9. Name of the Vakil, if sny, appointed by the Bridegroom, his father's name and his / / / residence:

10. Names of the Witness to the appointment of the Bridegroom’s Vakil with their father’s / / / names and their residence.

11, Name8oftheWitnes8e8totheMarriage. i)bashir akmed s/o s.m. ibrahim, 21 Khayabantheir father’s names and their residence: e-Mujahid, Defence society, Karchi. 2) ABDUR RAZ2AQ DESAN S/o DAWCOD, No.6, Jinnah Society, Shahoed-e-Millat Road, Karachi.

12 Date on which the marriage was solemnized: July 16, 196U

*410 13. Amount of Dower: Rs.51,000/-{Rupees Fifty One Thousand only)

14. How much of the Dower is Mu’ajjal (Prompt) and how much Mu’wajjal (Deferred): Deferred

15. Whether any portion of the dbwerwas paid at the time of marriage, if so, how much: Ilf

16. Whether any property was given in lieu of the whole or any part of the dower, wifi specification of the same and its valuation 111 agreed to between the patties:

17. Special conditions, If any: / / / [This area contains Seats and Stamps]

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Bluebook (online)
947 A.2d 489, 404 Md. 404, 2008 Md. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aleem-v-aleem-md-2008.