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GEMARA BAVA KAMA 5771
SHIUR #3: The Prohibition to Cause Nizkei Mammon
(2a-2b)
Based on shiurim by Rav Moshe Taragin
Our masekhet delineates the payment tables for various forms of nizkei
mammon. As detailed in previous
shiurim, these tables are highly structured to reflect the successive sections
in parashat Mishpatim. This week's
shiur will address a different background issue to our masekhet – an issue which
incidentally emerges from an interesting question raised by the Rashba on 2b. Is one forbidden to allow his
property to damage other people with full intent to compensate the loss? In other words, is the actual act of
damage itself forbidden, or does it merely incur an obligation to compensate the
victim? Citing other parallel
examples from the end of Bava Kama we recognize that certain civil laws do not
merely obligate payment, but are also forbidden.
The Torah prohibits theft and bodily assault quite apart from the
payments which they obligate. In
fact, there might occur situations in which the issur is violated, although
payments are not obligated. For
example, if someone steals less than a peruta's worth of money (the smallest
recognized monetary value in the gemara), he violates the issur of lo tignov
("Do not steal"), but does not have to make reparations. We see then, that in the case of
theft and bodily assault, the Torah specified two independent laws: payments and
issurim. What about nizkei mammon? Is a person permitted to allow nizkei
mammon? This question will be
addressed in this week's shiur.
I.
References in the Gemara
There is
little explicit mention of an issur in the gemara itself. However, there might be two parallel
allusions to an issur in Bava Kama 51a and Kiddushin 42b. The first gemara addresses the issue
of bor (digging a pit in reshut ha-rabim).
The gemara probes the possibility of one who appoints a shaliach (proxy)
to dig the pit. This option is
rejected since "Ein shlichut li-devar aveira" – halakhic shelichut
(representation) fails when the requested mission is forbidden (and the shaliach
himself is held accountable - see Kiddushin 42b).
This implies that it is forbidden to dig a bor – hence a shaliach cannot
be appointed for that task.
Therefore, one might conclude from this gemara that nizkei mammon are forbidden. Rashi (BK 53a), however, provides a
different reading of this gemara. He
asserts that the issur involved in digging a bor, which undermines shelichut,
has nothing to do with nizkei mammon.
Instead, the gemara was referring to an issur of damaging public
property. The damage inflicted to
the public property is a direct result of a human act and is classified as ‘adam
hamazik’. Nizkei mamon, on the other hand, refers to damages caused by property,
such as an animal falling into my pit. (The relationship between adam hamazik
and nizkei mamon will be explored in a future shiur.) Thus, according to Rashi's
reading of Bava Kama 51 we still cannot conclude that it is forbidden to cause
general nizkei mammon.
A parallel gemara in Kiddushin might, however, provide the proof we are
searching for. The gemara – again
discussing the concept of creating shelichut for forbidden tasks - addresses the
case of requisitioning an agent to torch someone's property. The gemara cancels shelichut in this
case too, because the assigned task is forbidden.
This gemara more conclusively indicates an issur of causing damage to
someone else's property. Bava Kama
51 could have been referring to the prohibition of damaging public property, but
Kiddushin (42b) can refer only to a prohibition of "torching," which is
presumably nizkei mamon, since the damage does not flow directly from human
action. The person lights a fire, which later spreads due to wind and other
factors. This would depend on a famous debate between Rav Yochanan and Reish
Lakish, whether aish is considered adam hamazik or nizkei mamon (see 22a).
A
secondary allusion to an issur of causing nizkei mammon might be gleaned from an
oft-recurring statement the gemara makes about the concept of 'gerama.' Gerama refers to someone who damages
indirectly. For example, if one
destroys another's contract he might have caused a considerable loss of money,
consequently rendering a debt uncollectable.
The only DIRECT damage, however, was the actual burning of paper –
essentially valueless. The
perpetrator must pay for the direct damages, but according to most opinions not
for the indirect damage caused. The
gemara rules "gerama be-nizakin patur aval assur" – indirectly causing damage
does not obligate one to pay, but is still forbidden. Can we consider nizkei
mamon as grama be-nezikin. After all, even though the person’s actions did not
cause the damage directly, he can be considered an indirect cause, since the
damage occurred due to his negligence.
What is still unclear from these gemarot is the degree of the prohibition
which might apply. Is the
prohibition biblical and if so, what is the source? Or do these gemarot refer to a
prohibition which was rabbinically instituted to deter nizkei mammon? None of these gemarot directly
addresses this question.
II. References in the Rishonim
The Rambam (Nizkei Mammon 5:1) writes: "It is forbidden for one to damage
another's property and even 'causing damage is forbidden.'" The Rambam is referring to a person
who was negligent in guarding his ox, which is a classic case of nizkei mamon.
However, the Rambam does not specify the degree of the prohibition nor its
source. The Maggid Mishna (Hil.
Rotzeach 2:2) is explicit that the prohibition to damage is only rabbinic. (See
Minchat Chinukh 53 who argues on the Maggid Mishna
A second reference within the Rishonim to a prohibition, can be found in
the Rashba to Bava Kama 2b. The
gemara considered defining "keren" as damages of keren telusha – performed with
detached horns. According to this
view, mechuberet (damages performed with regular, attached horns) would not have
been standard keren and would not have enjoyed the chatzi nezek clause for tam
(see Glossary below). In other
words, keren mechuberet, according to the gemara's original considerations,
would have paid full damages. The
Rashba asks: If we are uncertain about mechuberet's status, why do we
automatically assume a more stringent payment table? If, indeed, it were not to follow
standard keren (according to our first assumption), we should excuse it from
full payment, even when it develops into a mu'ad.
The Rashba responds by claiming that we would naturally tend to be
stricter, "just like issurim." The
simple reading of this statement suggests that, aside from compensatory
payments, nizkei mammon are prohibited.
Not only does a prohibition exist, but somehow it can influence the
payment table as well. When deciding
how much mechuberet should pay (half or full damages), we recognize the latent
issur and therefore (possibly to deter the violation of this prohibition) impose
a stiffer payment.
In truth,
one might have read the Rashba in a non-literal manner asserting that no issur
exists but rather that we are more stringent with keren payments JUST AS we tend
to be more stringent in the world of issurim.
Indeed, nizkei mammon payments do not constitute an issur but we are
strict, similar to our stringent disposition regarding issurim. Though this second reading is
defensible in the Rashba, it certainly is not the immediate choice. Had the Rashba intended this meaning
he probably should have elaborated the aforementioned relationship between
nizkei mammon and issur: they are not identical but rather structurally parallel
in this particular aspect. His stark
pairing of the two certainly suggests a more literal reading.
III. The Source and Nature of the
Prohibition:
Having
traced the issur component through the gemarot and Rishonim, we might now
inquire as to the source of this prohibition.
If the issur is rabbinic in origin, we are excused from locating a
source. If, however, the issur is
de-oraita (biblical), we must locate some source for this prohibition. The Yad Rama in his commentary to
Bava Batra (chapter 2, siman 107) claims that damaging another is forbidden
because of Ve-ahavta le-rei'akha kamokha ("Love your neighbor as yourself"). This mitzva of damages – whether
nizkei mammon in the strict sense or broadly speaking, protecting your
neighbor's interests as your own - forbids all forms of unethical and
insensitive neighborly conduct in the general sense (the subject of the first
two chapters of Bava Batra). To be
sure, the scope of this mitzva extends well beyond the boundaries of Choshen
Mishpat (see Glossary). For example,
visiting the sick is also a fulfillment of this mitzva, as is burying the dead
(see Rambam Avel 14:1). Essentially,
the Yad Rama subsumes nizkei mammon under a very general prohibition pertaining
to interpersonal relationships.
In a
similar vein, the Chatam Sofer (YD 241) asserts that causing damages violates
the mitzva of ve-nishmartem me'od le-nafshoteikhem (acting cautiously while not
excessively endangering your life).
This too, is a general prohibition which applies in non-monetary contexts and
just happens to include nizkei mammon.
What is not clear from the Chatam Sofer is whether causing non-life
threatening nizkei mammon would also be forbidden. Many forms of nizkei mammon do not
necessarily endanger human life. Similarly, the Minchat Chinukh (53) prohibits
digging a pit based on the law of ma’aka (the requirement to build a fence
around one’s roof). This suggestion may also be limited to life threatening
obstacles.
Several
opinions attempt to locate a more indigenous source for the prohibition of
causing damage. The Rabbenu Yona in
his commentary to Avot (1:1) claims that nizkei mammon would be forbidden based
upon lo tigzol – the prohibition of stealing.
Though mazik and gazlan (robber) do not share many halakhot and payments,
they are each part of a common issur.
Of course, this view greatly impacts upon our definition of halakhic
theft. Clearly, the owner of the
guilty animal is not performing any act himself, nor is he benefiting from the
damage (with the exclusion of nizkei shein).
Had we viewed these elements as being essential to defining a gazlan, we
might not have classified nizkei mammon within the category of gezeila.
The Yad
Rama, mentioned above, prior to his suggestion of Ve-ahavta le-rei'akha kamokha,
offers a different option as the prohibition of nizkei mamon. He suggests that
the prohibition is included in the pasuk (Vayikra 19,14) “lifnei eever lo titen
michshol” (don’t place a stumbling block before the blind). This prohibition,
which is normally understood figuratively, forbidding one to cause another to
violate halakha, according to the Rama, should also be understood literally.
Rav Elchanan links the prohibition of nizkei mammon to another mitzva:
hashev teshiveim - the mitzva to return lost property. Part of the responsibility of
returning items, is protecting them from possible damages. It follows that if one has to protect
property which is not his (but found on the street) from potential external
damage, then obviously he has to "protect" an item from damage which he will
cause to it. Here too, the logic is
not necessarily compelling. One
might envision a responsibility to retrieve and care for lost items without
necessarily being obliged to prevent negligence which MIGHT POSSIBLY lead to
property damage. In a general sense,
though, Rabbenu Yona, Rama and Rav Elchanan suggested more localized models for
the issur of nizkei mammon. They
expanded related categories to account for this prohibition.
A third opinion was expressed by Rav Chayim (as he is quoted by the
Birkhat Shmuel in his commentary to Bava Kama – siman 2). The gemara in Bava Kama (45b) quotes
the phrase "Ve-lo yishmerenu" (literally, IF the owner does not guard, he is
liable to pay) as a source to help determine the level of guarding necessary to
avoid liability. Rav Chayim,
however, saw in this verse a concealed reference to the fact that not watching
(literally ve-lo yishmerenu) is actually forbidden. As such, there exists a unique and
particular source for the prohibition of damaging. This prohibition is not a function of
a general issur, nor is it a particular subcategory of a related mitzva in the
realm of monetary matters. Instead,
the Torah encrypts a specific prohibition which applies to all forms of nizkei
mammon.
One very interesting difference between Rav Chayim's view and the
alternate positions springs to mind (and is cited by the Birkhat Shmuel). Each av nezek carries unique
exemptions. Would these situations –
where clearly no payment is made – also be exempt from any issur? For example, would shein damages
performed in reshut ha-rabim (in which case no payments are due) be forbidden? Or might we claim that just as the
payments do not pertain, the issur itself does not apply? If the issur in question is of a
general nature (interpersonal sensitivity, not creating threatening situations,
or protecting the property of others), we might still see the issur as relevant. Payments are excluded, but the above
categories are in no way affected by a local shein exemption. Even if we do not classify the
situation as shein, these principles still apply.
If, however, the issur is a specific nizkei mammon prohibition, we might
ponder its relevancy in situations which do not meet these same internal nizkei
mammon criteria. If shein in public
property is not considered halakhic shein, we might not recognize an issur, just
as we do not impose payments.
Glossary:
1)
CHATZI NEZEK – keren
damages pay only 50% for the first three occurrences.
2)
TAM - the first
three occurrences of keren damages; payment equals 50% of damages.
3)
MU'AD - After
damaging by keren three times, the animal is defined as a "mu'ad" (expected to
damage) and henceforth pays 100% of damages.
4)
CHOSHEN MISHPAT -
one of the four volumes of Shulkhan Arukh, dealing with monetary matters.
For next week:
1) See Gemara
2b "Tanu Rabanan ... (3a) Ve-hachamor."
What are the various ways to define the relationship between the three
shor prototypes? What classification
within the three can be inferred from the gemara's discussion? (For further study of this question
see the machloket between Rav and Shmuel regarding mav'eh (3b) and the gemara's
ensuing discussion regarding how the mishna is read according to both. See also Otzrei Ha-ge'onim teshuva
2.)
2) See Gemara
3a "Ta'ama ... ke-shein." What does
the suggested limitation of mechalya karna imply about the nature of shein (See
Rachi "Idi" and Rashba "Shein" who justify the suggestion's linkage to shein in
particular.) See Yerushalmi "Toldot
ha-shein ... gufa." How does the
conclusion of the Yerushalmi regarding shein's scope differ from that of the
Bavli? How might the difference
reflect variant understandings of the nature of shein?
3) See
Rabbeinu Chananel "Ilulei ... she-neheneit," Rashi 18b "De-dachik," and Shita
Mekubetzet 3a Aval. What is the
disagreement regarding the case of "tinfa peirot?" How might it reflect different
understandings of shein? (See also
Rashba 2b "U-parik" and Maggid Mishneh Nizkei Mammon 1:10.)
4) See Gemara
3b "Amar Rav Yehuda ... (4a) kol she-kein," Tosafot "Lo." How do Tosafot explain the suggestion
that shein be less stringent than keren?
Can you think of an alternative suggestion? (See also Tosafot 6b "Shor" and
Maharsha.)
5) See Rashi
3a "Ha-galal" and Tosafot 2b Ka'asher.
How could this argument regarding the derivation of shein be the basis of
different understandings of its nature?
How can Rashi and Rabbeinu Chananel be explained le-shitatam?
6) See Meiri
3a "Ha-shein." What is the
conceptual difference between the basis of culpability in the two tracks he
describes?
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