DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 520 KB)
Seizing a Debtor's Property in Lieu of Payment

If a person is indisputably owed money and the debtor has not paid him, is he entitled to enter the debtor's store or home, and take merchandise equal to the value of the owed sum in lieu of payment?

The Shulhan Aruch (Hoshen Mishpat 97) forbids seizing a debtor's property in lieu of payment, for two reasons. Firstly, Halacha forbids trespassing on somebody else's property, and this prohibition applies even to the property of somebody who owes the trespasser money. Secondly, when objects – as opposed to cash – are given as payment for a debt, they must first be assessed by evaluators assigned by the Bet Din (Rabbinical Court) (siman 101:9). A person may therefore not seize a debtor's possessions independently, as the precise value of those possessions must first be formally established before they can be used to repay the debt. He must make a claim in a Bet Din, rather than take the law into his own hands.

This Halacha applies only to cases of owed money. If a person is owed a particular object, such as in a case of a thief who stole an item, then Halacha indeed allows the victim to seize the object in question, provided that he is certain beyond a doubt that the object he seizes belongs to him. Since no evaluation is necessary in such a case, it is within the individual's right to independently seize the object he is owed, without first appealing to a Bet Din.

Summary: A person who is owed money may not seize the debtor's possessions in lieu of payment; he must make a claim in Bet Din. If a person is owed a particular object, then he may seize the object on his own, without consulting with a Bet Din, provided that he is certain beyond doubt that the item he seizes is owed to him.

See the book- "Pure Money" by Dayan Cohen, pages 209-210.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Objects Left Behind In The Synagogue
Trying Cases in Secular Courts
Purchases Of Stolen Goods- Knowingly and Unknowingly
Must a Butcher Refund His Customers if He Inadvertently Sold Non-Kosher Meat?
The Carrying and Display Of The Sefer Torah Upon Removing From The Hechal
Damaging Property With the Owner’s Permission
Liability For a Bench That Breaks Because Too Many People Sat On It
If a Person’s Belonging’s Were Damaged When He Entered Somebody Else’s Property Without Permission
Pidyon Peter Hamor – Redeeming a Firstborn Donkey
Reciting the Pasuk “Ve’shahat Oto After the Akeda”; Wearing a Kippa
The Month of Iyar
Eulogies During Hol Ha’mo’ed and During the Month Before Yom Tob
The Yom Kippur Katan Fast When Rosh Hodesh Falls on Sunday
Bringing Girls Above the Age of Nine Into the Men’s Section of the Synagogue
Should the Torah Scroll be Carried on the Right Side or Left Side?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found