In Bahá’í law each individual believer, whether man or
woman, is responsible for paying Huqúqu’lláh on the
property he or she owns or acquires; this presumes the right of
individual ownership of property. In the case of a married couple,
however, the Universal House of Justice has indicated that they may
choose to pay their Huqúqu’lláh jointly, if they so
wish, and there is no prohibition against joint ownership, whether by a
couple or by two or more business partners. Each individual is under
the obligation of making a will. In the Questions and Answers no. 78 we
read that, in the case of intestacy, apart from used clothing, whatever
there may be among the husband’s possessions, whether jewellery or
otherwise, belongs to the husband, “except what is proven to have been
gifts to the wife”. Similarly, in a letter written on behalf of the
Guardian in Persian we find the following: “You have asked concerning
the division of furniture and property, after the completion of the year
of waiting…. The Guardian stated that whatever belonged to the wife
and constituted her personal property remains hers and that no one has
any right to interfere.”