cellio: (talmud)
[personal profile] cellio
The mishna teaches: if a husband instructs another man to take a get (bill of divorce) to [the first man's] wife or to receive a get on her behalf, and the husband wishes to retract it before his wife receives it, he may do so. However, if a woman instructs a man to receive a get on her behalf, then once he does so the husband may not retract. The issue is not when the wife receives it but, rather, when she or her appointed agent does so. (Receipt by the husband's agent is not relevant regardless of how the husband instructs him.) The mishna grants the husband an out, however: when the wife's agent collects the get the husband may say he does not agree to his agency; in that case the man carries the get to the wife but she is not divorced until she receives it. (62b)

This does raise the question of why the husbnad would go to all that trouble, particularly in the last case. Under what circumstances would he want to initiate a get but delay or prevent completion of the divorce? Remember, no cell phones -- intercepting the agent once he's on his way isn't necessarily easy.

(no subject)

Date: 2008-09-11 01:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] talvinamarich.livejournal.com
As I read these things, they often sound like modern "case law". "The rules say A, but B happened, and we don't think A was intended to cover that. Hence, here you have C."

The problem is, they don't tell us what "B" was very clearly, so we lack context.

"So: we just cut the baby in half...." "Wait! No! I think you really missed the point on that one! Let's clarify. First, hand over that baby!"

(no subject)

Date: 2008-09-12 12:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zevabe.livejournal.com
Finally, you got to the chapter I am learning. I think the possibility of inception is the most likely reason. Also if there were some reason he wanted her to be divorced in say Tishrei as opposed to Elul (a father in law who promised him a present every yom tov (and yes the chutzpa of a person doing so & then demanding the agreed upon gifts is laughable)).

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