Praise be to Allaah.
We have already stated in the answer to question no.
40156 that zakaah is not due on
an’aam animals [i.e., camels, cattle, sheep or goats] unless they graze for
all or most of the year. But if they are fed for half of the year or more,
then no zakaah is due on them.
Ibn Qudaamah said in al-Mughni:
The view of our imam
(i.e., Imam Ahmad) and the view of Abu Haneefah is that if they graze for
most of the year, then zakaah is due on them. Al-Shaafa’i said: If they do
not graze for the entire year then no zakaah is due on them, because grazing
is a condition of zakaah being due, so it should be year-round. We have the
general meaning of the texts which indicate that zakaah is due on livestock.
The definition of grazing is not cancelled out if a little fodder is given
to the animals, and does not mean that they are not included in this report,
because giving a little fodder sometimes cannot avoided, and feeding
year-round will waive the zakaah altogether; because owners of grazing
animals cannot avoid giving their livestock fodder sometimes, such as on
cold days and when it snows.
From al-Mawsoo’ah al-Fiqhiyyah, 23/250.
Shaykh al-Islam Ibn Taymiyah was asked about a man who had
camels and rented pasture for them during the grazing season – is zakaah due
on it?
He replied:
If they graze for most of the year, and he rents pasture for
them for three or four months, he has to pay zakaah on them. This is the
more clear of the two scholarly opinions. Majmoo’ al-Fataawa, 25/48.
Shaykh Ibn Baaz (may Allaah have mercy on him) was asked:
A man has one hundred
camels but for most of the year he feeds them. Is zakaah due on them?
He replied:
If the flock of camels, cattle or sheep does not graze for
the whole year or most of the year, then no zakaah is due on them, because
the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) stipulated that
for zakaah to be due, the animals should be grazing. If their owner feeds
them for most of the year or half of the year, no zakaah is due on them,
unless they are for trading, in which case zakaah is due on them as trade
goods, as in the case of land, cars, etc that are prepared for sale, if
their value reaches the nisaab of gold or silver.
Shaykh Ibn ‘Uthaymeen said in Fataawa al-Zakaah (49):
Flocks which are fed for half the year are not subject to
zakaah, because the zakaah on livestock is only due on animals that graze on
plants that Allaah causes to grow on the ground for the whole year or for
most of the year. But if they are fed for part of the year or half the year,
then no zakaah is due on them. But if they are prepared for sale, then they
come under the ruling on zakaah on trade goods. If that is the case, then
they are subject to zakaah when their value is estimated each year, then one
quarter of one-tenth of their value should be paid, i.e., 2.5% of their
value.
It says in al-Sharh al-Mumti’ (6/32):
If a person has camels
that graze for five months and are fed for seven months, then no zakaah is
due on them. If they graze for six months and are fed for six months, then
no zakaah is due on them. If they graze year-round, then zakaah is due on
them. If they graze for seven months and are fed for five months, then
zakaah is due on them.
It says in Fataawa al-Lajnah al-Daa’imah (9/214):
Zakaah is due on grazing
sheep, if they graze for the whole year or most of it.