What happens if the buyer, who subsequently becomes bankrupt, had possessory rights over visible fruit or pollinated flower buds and consumed or disposed of them, or if the fruit was lost due to unforeseen calamity?
General Chapter
Al-Mughni
Book of the Insolvent (Bankruptcy)
Primary text
This situation is treated like the loss of one of two items purchased; there are two established narrations regarding whether the seller can revert the sale on the principal asset and claim a share from the general creditors corresponding to the lost fruit's value. If part of the asset is destroyed, the ruling is the same as the total destruction of the asset. If the asset increased in value or the fruit showed signs of ripeness, this constitutes an attached increase in one of the assets, the ruling of which has been previously explained.