“…The law in Persia, and, indeed, among Musulman
peoples in general, consists of two branches: the religious,
and the common law that which is based upon the Muhammadan
Scriptures, and that which is based on precedent; that
which is administered by ecclesiastical, and that which
lv
is administered by civil tribunals. In Persia, the former is
known as the
Shar’, the latter as the ‘Urf. From the two is
evolved a jurisprudence which, although in no sense scientific,
is yet reasonably practical in application and is roughly accommodated
to the needs and circumstances of those for
whom it is dispensed. The basis of authority in the case of
the
Shar’, or Ecclesiastical Law, consists of the utterances of
the Prophet in the Qur’án; of the opinions of the Twelve
Holy Imáms, whose voice in the judgment of the
Shí’ah
Muhammadans is of scarcely inferior weight; and of the commentaries
of a school of pre-eminent ecclesiastical jurists.
The latter have played much the same part in adding to the
volume of the national jurisprudence that the famous juris
consulti did with the Common Law of Rome, or the Talmudic
commentators with the Hebrew system. The body of law
so framed has been roughly codified and divided into four
heads, dealing respectively with religious rites and duties,
with contracts and obligations, with personal affairs, and
with sumptuary rules and judicial procedure. This law is
administered by an ecclesiastical court, consisting of mullás,
i.e. lay priests and mujtahids, i.e. learned doctors of the
law, assisted sometimes by qádís or judges, and under the
presidency of an official, known as the
Shay
khu’l-Islám, one
of whom is, as a rule, appointed to every large city by the
sovereign. In olden days, the chief of this ecclesiastical
hierarchy was the Sadru’s-Sudur, or Pontifex Maximus, a
dignitary who was chosen by the king and placed over the
entire priesthood and judicial bench of the kingdom. But
this office was abolished in his anti-clerical campaign by
Nadir
Sháh, and has never been renewed. In smaller centres
of population and villages, the place of this court is taken
by the local mullá or mullás, who, for a consideration, are
always ready with a text from the Qur’án. In the case of
the higher courts, the decision is invariably written out,
along with the citation from the Scriptures, or the commentators,
upon which it is based. Cases of extreme importance
are referred to the more eminent mujtahids, of whom there
is never a large number, who gain their position solely by
eminent learning or abilities, ratified by the popular approval,
and whose decisions are seldom impugned…. In works
lvi
upon the theory of the law in Persia, it is commonly written
that criminal cases are decided by the ecclesiastical, and civil
cases by the secular, courts. In practice, however, there is
no such clear distinction; the functions and the prerogative
of the co-ordinate benches vary at different epochs, and
appear to be a matter of accident or choice rather than of
neCessity; and at the present time, though criminal cases of
difficulty may be submitted to the ecclesiastical court, yet it
is with civil matters that they are chiefly concerned. Questions
of heresy or sacrilege are naturally referred to them;
they also take cognisance of adultery and divorce; and intoxication
as an offence, not against the common law (indeed,
if it were a matter of precedent, insobriety could present the
highest credentials in Persia), but against the Qur’án, falls
within the scope of their judgment….