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Shabbat Parashat Bamidbar 5775P'ninat Mishpat: Responsibility for a Sefer Torah Burnt Along with a Yeshiva(based on Chelkat Yaakov, Choshen Mishpat 26)Case: A neighborhood [in Ruling: While hekdesh (the infrastructure of the Beit Hamikdash) was exempt from the obligations of shomrim, this does not apply to yeshivot (see Shulchan Aruch, Choshen Mishpat 95:1). However, in this case, where the sefer Torah was destroyed by arson, it is considered oness (an extenuating circumstance), and the yeshiva is exempt for a few reasons. A shomer is obligated to pay only if he accepts upon himself, at least implicitly, the obligations of a shomer. If he simply allows one to keep his object in his possession, he is exempt (ibid. 291:1). Often one gives his sefer Torah to a shul or yeshiva because he lacks a good place to keep it, not because he expects their involvement in its safe-keeping. Even if, due to a sefer Torah’s sanctity/importance, one usually accepts responsibility to watch it, we must determine what type of shomer the shul is. One could claim that, assuming the shul (or, in this case, the yeshiva) uses the sefer, they become like a sho’el (borrower), who is obligated to pay even when it is destroyed through oness. However, not everyone who uses the object he is watching is a sho’el. It is only when the borrower receives all the benefit from the arrangement. The Shach (72:29) says that when one lends a sefer to his friend, since the fact that the lender does a mitzva provides him with certain benefits, it makes the friend considered, according to some opinions, only a shomer sachar, who is exempt from oness. While the Netivot Hamishpat (ad loc.) argues, he will agree in a case like this where the owner’s benefit is strong, that the yeshiva is a shomer sachar. Does the yeshiva owe the sefer Torah’s owner because they asked for donations to replace it? The gemara (Sanhedrin 48a) discusses what to do with money that was solicited for the needs of a specific dead person but exceeds the basic needs – does it go to the deceased’s minor needs or to his inheritors? We see that money that is raised for the needs of a specific poor person stays with the recipient (including his inheritors) even when it exceeds the needs for which it was raised. One might think to apply the idea of “how can one make profit from his friend’s cow?” (see Bava Metzia 36b). In other words, in our case, how can the yeshiva be allowed to receive compensation from the community for the loss of someone else’s sefer Torah. However, the context there is different (we will not go into the details), as there the one who is paying has a level of obligation to pay, and therefore he pays the real owner, not the middleman. Here, in contrast, people decided to make donations to the yeshiva because of their losses, only one of which was the sefer Torah in question. There is nothing that naturally links those donations to the owner of the sefer Torah. Therefore, the yeshiva does not have to return a sefer Torah. Top of page
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Hemdat Yamim is dedicated to the memory of: those who fell in the war for our homeland.
Rosh Yeshivat Har Etzion
bat R’ Moshe Zev a”h. who passed away on 10 Tamuz, 5774 Leiser Presser ben R' Aharon Yitzhak and Bracha on the occasion of his yahrzeit ,24 Iyar, and members of his family who perished in the shoah Al Kiddush Hashem. R' Meir Yechezkel Shraga Brachfeld o.b.m Rabbi Yosef Mordechai Simcha ben Bina Stern o.b.m who passed away 21 Adar I, 5774 R ' Yaakov ben Abraham & Aisha and Chana bat Yaish & Simcha Sebbag, z"l R' Shmuel Shemesh z"l Board Member who passed away 17 Sivan, 5774 Hemdat Yamim is endowed by Les & Ethel Sutker of Louis and Lillian Klein, z”l |