cellio: (talmud)
Monica ([personal profile] cellio) wrote2008-07-31 09:47 am
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daf bit: Gittin 20

The mishna teaches that a get (bill of divorce) can be written on almost anything, including an olive leaf, the horn of an ox, or the hand of a slave. (Rabbi Yosi says not on living creatures or foodstuffs, which the rabbis confirm in the g'mara.) The man must give his wife the item on which the get is written; the rabbis teach that if he says "here is your get, but the sheet belongs to me" she is not divorced. However, he still has an out: if he says "here is your get on the condition that you return the sheet to me" then she is divorced; this was a conditional gift, which is still a gift. (19a (mishna), 20b (g'mara))

[identity profile] browngirl.livejournal.com 2008-07-31 04:05 pm (UTC)(link)
However, he still has an out: if he says "here is your get on the condition that you return the sheet to me" then she is divorced; this was a conditional gift, which is still a gift. (19a (mishna), 20b (g'mara))

That seems kind of unfair. What stops him from doing that, destroying the sheet, and claiming she's lying about the get?
Edited 2008-07-31 16:05 (UTC)