DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 566 KB)
May a Third Party Pay Somebody to Lend Money to His Fellow?

The Torah prohibition of Ri’bitt forbids lending on interest. The Shulhan Aruch (Yoreh Dei’a 160:13) restricts this prohibition to cases where the borrower himself pays the lender compensation for allowing him to retain his money for a period of time. A lender may, however, receive payment for the loan from a third party. Thus, as Rabbi Moshe Halevi writes in his work Milveh Hashem (p. 138), it is permissible to pay somebody to give a loan to one’s friend, and this does not violate the prohibition of Ri’bitt. In such a case, however, the third party may not then approach the borrower and demand that he be compensated for the money he expended on the borrower’s behalf. Since the borrower will then be indirectly paying the lender for granting him a loan, this would constitute Ri’bitt.

Rabbi Moshe Ha’levi notes that according to some authorities, it is forbidden for the borrower to initiate this arrangement, by approaching the third party and asking him to offer money to a lender so that he would agree to give a loan. The Shulhan Aruch, however, does not follow this view, and thus it is permissible for a person in need of a loan to ask his friend to approach a potential lender and offer money for the loan.

Summary: A third party may pay a person to lend to his friend, and the borrower may even initiate this arrangement by asking a friend to approach a potential lender and offer money for the loan. However, the third party may not then demand that the borrower compensate him for this expenditure.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Yichud- Is It Permissible For A Man To Be In A Classroom Full of Women
Yichud- Does The Leniency of Ba’Ala Ba’Ir For Women Also Apply For Man
Yichud- A Close Bond Negates The Leniency Of Ba'Ala Ba'Ir
Yichud- Does the Leniency of Ba’Ala BaIr Even Apply When The Husband Is At Work
Yichud- Can A Married Woman Be Secluded With A Man Outside of The Home
Yichud- Can One Woman Be Secluded With More Than One Man Such As House Workers (Plumber)
Yichud- Does The Prohibition of Seclusion Apply To Married Couples When The When The Wife is Needah
The Concept of Yichud- The Prohibition Of Being Alone With Others
The Prohibition Against Lending and Borrowing on Interest; Collecting a Debt if the Loan Was Given on Interest
To Whom Should One Lend Money To When Many Seek A Loan
The Misva to Lend Money
Must One Understand the Words of Kiddush to Fulfill His Obligation?
Waking One’s Parents; Relaying Distressing News to One’s Parents
The Value of Arising Early in the Morning and Staying Up Late at Night
Committing a Transgression in Order to Prevent Another Person From Sinning
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found