Praise be to Allah.
If someone appoints someone else to buy something on his behalf, and the proxy buys what he was appointed to buy, the transaction is valid, whether he declared that he was buying on behalf of the one who appointed him as his proxy, or he did not declare that and he made the deal in his own name, and acted as the one who appointed him as his proxy would act.
What appears to be the case is that the proxy wanted to make the deal straightforward, so he put it in your name and signed on your behalf, so that you would be responsible for the conditions attached to the contract, such as returning the goods if they turned out to be defective, maintenance, and so on, because the alternative would be one of two scenarios:
1.. He would put the transaction in his name, and this is valid according to Islamic teachings, but he would then be responsible for the conditions attached to the contract, as appears to be the case, and you will not be able to deal with the seller regarding what we have mentioned of returning the goods in the event of any defect, or maintenance, except through the proxy, and perhaps that would be difficult for you and for him.
2.. He would state clearly that he was purchasing on your behalf, in which case his signature would not be accepted and he would have to show the document of his being appointed as your proxy in every business dealing, and shops may not accept this document. In fact, what usually happens is that the proxy would be told to do the deal in his own name and sign on behalf of the one who appointed him.
Whatever the case, so long as this person was your proxy, the deal is valid, even though we think that he was wrong to use his own signature on your behalf, and that the right thing to do would have been to state clearly that he was buying for you and that he was a proxy acting on your behalf, and to present his proof of identity and the document which confirms that he was acting as a proxy.
The majority of jurists are of the view that the proxy may conduct business as if acting on his own behalf, and he does not have to disclose the fact that he is acting as a proxy, and the purchase will in fact be for the one who appointed him, but he is liable, except in the case of some contracts, such as marriage, in which case he must mention the name of the one who appointed him to act as his proxy.
It says in al-Furu`, 7/52: Our shaykh [Ibn Taymiyah] said: Regarding one who is appointed as a proxy to sell, buy or rent: if he does not state the name of the one who appointed him, then he is liable, otherwise there are two views, and the apparent view of the madhhab is that he is liable.
And Allah knows best.
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