DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 678 KB)
The Minimum Age Requirement for a Judge

At what age does a young Torah scholar become qualified to sit on a Bet Din (Rabbinical court) to adjudicate cases of monetary disputes? Does Halacha allow a competent scholar of any age to serve as a Rabbinical judge, or must a judge meet a certain age requirement before he can determine ownership over disputed property?

The Gemara in Masechet Shabbat (Shabbat 56) tells of King Yoshiyahu, who became king over Yehuda (the southern kingdom) at the age of eight. Upon reaching the age of eighteen (according to one view in the Gemara), Yoshiyahu reevaluated all the cases over which he had presided during the previous ten years. In some instances, he reversed his initial ruling and ordered that the money be returned. Yoshiyahu did this because he realized that one becomes qualified to serve as a judge only upon reaching the age of eighteen. As such, all the cases he had adjudicated before his eighteenth birthday had to be retried once he reached the suitable age. (It should be noted that the Maharsha – Rabbi Shemuel Eliezer Eidels, Poland, 1555-1631 – explains this passage differently, claiming that Yoshiyahu retried the cases he had heard between the eighth and eighteenth years of his reign, and not between the ages of eight and eighteen.)

On the basis of this Gemara, the Shulhan Aruch (Hoshen Mishpat 7:3) rules that a scholar may not serve as a judge until he reaches the age of eighteen. Although according to Torah law any proficient, competent scholar can serve as judge already from the age of thirteen, the Sages enacted that one should not serve before he reaches the age of eighteen.

Incidentally, this Halacha may underlie the famous story told in Masechet Berachot (27b-28a) about Rabbi Elazar Ben Azarya, who was appointed head of the Sanhedrin at a young age. In relating this incident, the Gemara makes a point of emphasizing that Rabbi Elazar had just turned eighteen years old. The reason for this emphasis, perhaps, is to clarify that Rabbi Elazar had reached the minimum age for serving as judge, and was thus indeed qualified for the position to which he was appointed.

The later authorities note that this Halacha applies only to a judge who sits on a Bet Din together with other judges. When it comes to the issue of judging monetary cases independently, without other judges, then Halacha imposes a minimum age requirement of forty. Even a proficient scholar may not judge monetary cases alone before he has reached the age of forty.

Summary: A young scholar may not serve as a judge in a Rabbinical court presiding over monetary cases before the age of eighteen, and he may not preside over cases independently before the age of forty.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Using an Outdoor Sink on Shabbat
Adjusting a Highchair, Assembling a Playpen, and Extending a Table on Shabbat
The Reward for Observing and Enjoying Shabbat; Spending Money for the Honor of Shabbat
One Who Speaks Before Drinking From the Kiddush Wine
May One Allow a Non-Jewish Contractor to Build on Shabbat?
Allowing Construction on Shabbat by Non-Jews in Cases of a Jewish-Owned Condominium and a Synagogue
Allowing a Doorman to Open an Electric Door When One Enters a Building on Shabbat
Housekeepers on Shabbat: Allowing Her to Leave With Her Suitcase, to Clear the Table After Se'uda Shelishit, and to Wring Water Out of a Mop
Boat Travel on Shabbat
Are Sunglasses Permitted On Shabbat, and Are Color Changing Sunglasses Prohibited From The Law of Sovea
Wearing or Winding a Wristwatch on Shabbat
May a Woman Eat or Drink on Shabbat Morning Before Hearing or Reciting Kiddush?
Crushing Ice on Shabbat; Walking on Ice or Snow on Shabbat
Defining the Term “Karmelit” With Regard to the Laws of Shabbat
Is it Permissible to Move Candlesticks on Shabbat After the Candles Have Burned Out?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found