Illustration by Abro
Nazir Ali didn’t return to the human world as a spirit, he reappeared as a big, fat debt.
An accountant at a multi-national firm in his prime, Ali was living a blissful life of retirement before his demise in August, 2013. He had enjoyed a happy marriage and seen all three of his daughters get married and have children. His wife had passed away after the wedding of their second daughter, in 2001. By 2006, all daughters were wedded — two of them moved abroad later on.
Naheed’s (the daughter who remained in Pakistan) husband, Shahid, took the lead in funeral arrangements. Shahid also played host to the men who came to offer their condolences.
“We knew he was a benevolent man, who had been helping people out without us knowing,” says Shahid. “We expected them to show up, and so we placed an announcement in the papers about his Soyem.”
A week later, two men showed up at Ali’s residence, where the two daughters who lived abroad, were lodged. Presenting themselves as employees of a jeweller, they showed the daughters a receipt for three identical gold sets — a sum totalling just over Rs500,000. According to the receipt, Rs100,000 had already been paid and the rest was outstanding and overdue by two weeks.
“We never expected people to show up and claim our father owed them any money. He wasn’t the sort of man who owed people anything,” says Naheed.
The sisters swept the house for any jewellery sets that their father might have bought and hidden. “My sister who had come from Birmingham actually wanted to find the set, because she though it’d be like a parting gift from our father. If we found the sets, she said she’d buy them for us,” says Salma. But they never found them.
Repeated harassment from the two men meant that the family coughed up Rs10,000 — only to buy time for the two sisters from abroad to pack up and leave, a week before the Chehlum. Naheed and Shahid later enlisted the help of local political workers to stave off any returning claimants.
But perhaps, Naheed and Shahid should have turned to law enforcement instead, or at least, have informed them. Scant reporting of such incidents means that police cannot keep track of the number and frequency of operations, or even the modus operandi of such tricksters.
“I cannot deny that such incidents happen, but they remain mere gossip because people don’t report them,” says Mehdi Raza, the head controller at the Citizens Police Liaison Committee (CPLC).
“Placing an advertisement about deaths is bad practice. It is practically inviting people to make false claims,” Raza strongly argues.
Rafiq Khan also made the mistake of putting up an advertisement about his father’s demise. His hustlers had their eyes on a different prize: a recently-bought imported sedan, maintained in mint condition.
“They came on the day of the Soyem, two respectable-looking men, and stayed till the end,” Khan narrated.
“As I was saying goodbye to my guests, these two men offered their condolences and told me that they wanted to pick the car up in a day or two. I obviously looked baffled, to which they asked if my father had left any instructions about his car. They produced car ownership documents, which showed that the car no longer belonged to my father.”
Refusing to believe that his father would keep such a financial transaction private, Khan had someone check records at the motor vehicle department. He also asked for his father’s recent bank transactions.
“After some hassle and greasing some palms, I discovered that the car was still owned by my father, and that no cheques had been deposited in his account,” Khan said. “I knew then that those two men were trying to defraud us.”
The next time the two men showed up, Khan met them at his gate and told them never to return again, or else, his security guards would open fire on them.
“Most post-death disputes are about land — plot ownership, missed rents, etc. But there is usually a paper trail involved when it comes to land,” explains CPLC’s Raza. “Business accounts are generally maintained and settled at offices. They have no place in personal matters,” he adds.
“It is only private transactions that can be contested, but usually, these are carried out on a basis of trust. That means the two parties would know each other well and can sort it among themselves,” he says.
“If you look at Muslim practices, family members of the deceased have to announce at the time of burial that those owed money need to speak up. The deceased’s family then enters a verbal contract with the creditor at the time, and negotiate terms for repayment later. How can you trust a man who won’t come to your funeral?” argues Raza.
Names changed to protect privacy
Sibtain Naqvi
A Succession Certificate is required to transfer the property of a deceased person to his legal heirs. This property includes bank accounts, insurance amount, real estate, stocks, bonds, shares, etc. The Succession Act of 1925 or Law of Succession 1925 is the administrative tool that takes care of all the procedures related to the Succession Certificate.
The application for the certificate is filed in the court in two ways. In the first case one legal heir files the application on behalf of all others with the understanding that upon receiving the property he or she will distribute the assets among the other legal heirs. The other legal heirs record their statement that they back the designated heir to take the matter forward and that they have no objection to the succession certificate being issued to that one legal heir.
In the second method all the legal heirs file in their own applications for the succession certificate and the court grants one to all keeping in mind their share of the property. They can thus get their share depending on what was allocated to them by the deceased.
The application is filed in the civil court of the area in which the deceased was residing. In case of the permanent place of residence not being confirmed or if he was residing in different places at different times then the application should be filed in the court which is in the vicinity of where the property of the deceased is located.
Once the application is filed, the court issues orders to publish notices in papers asking any other claimants of the property to come forward and contest the case if they wish to. If no one comes forth after a reasonable amount of time the court awards the succession certificate to the applicant or applicants. If there is a contestant who presents his case as a legal heir after the posting of the notice the court adjudicates on the matter based on the evidence and passes its judgment to give succession to whom it seems fit.
In case of a widow, she can file the application in the requisite court and obtain the certificate. If the deceased’s children are minors she can even file the application on their behalf as their natural guardian. While succession laws are critical they are largely misunderstood and the awareness level of this aspect is generally low.