Beit Midrash
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- Chemdat Yamim
- P'ninat Mishpat
The Maharam Shick (CM 18-19) says that the public and its representatives have no say as to the internal running of independent organizations of Torah and chesed. Based on this, we have ruled that beit din cannot force a yeshiva to accept a specific student. It seems that the determining factor in borderline cases is whether the person can be removed from his post without any specific wrongdoing. This may be supported by the following set of sources. The gemara (Bava Batra 46b) says that a sharecropper can testify about the ownership of the field he works on because its ownership does not directly affect him. The Nimukei Yosef (ad loc.) says that this is not so in regard to the type of sharecropper who cannot be removed from the field. In other words, not being able to be removed creates a special relationship that makes him unable to testify.
There is another concept that impacts on the director’s status. The gemara (Megilla 26a) says that although shuls that are attended by an open-ended segment of the population cannot be sold, the shul in Mata Machsaya, where people donated toward it with the intention that matters were at Rav Ashi’s discretion, could be sold by him. Similarly, when an individual founded and runs an NPO as its clear leader, he has a halachic status as its leader.
There is yet another reason that the director is required to adjudicate as a party. The Torah, in describing the litigants (Devarim 19:17), talks of "the people who have the dispute." Thus, even if they would not be considered like actual owners, such as in relation to monetary ownership, if their regular involvement in the operations makes them the de facto disputants, that is the way they will be halachically viewed.
Regarding whether the laws of following the local practice apply, although the status of tzedaka organizations is somewhat different than standard, this does not apply to the organization involved in this case. Since most of its budget comes from funds from government agencies, the same norms of behavior that apply to other such institutions, including universities, apply to them.

P'ninat Mishpat (802)
Various Rabbis
165 - Allowing Yibum for Sephardim in Israel
166 - The Status of the Director of an Organization
167 - Divorce With Problems About the Ketuba
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P'ninat Mishpat:Amounts and Conditions of Payment to an Architect – part I
based on ruling 83061 of the Eretz Hemdah-Gazit Rabbinical Courts
Beit Din Eretz Hemda - Gazit | Iyar 5784

P'ninat Mishpat: Amounts and Conditions of Payment to an Architect – part IV
based on appeal of ruling 83061 of the Eretz Hemdah-Gazit Rabbinical Courts
Beit Din Eretz Hemda - Gazit | Sivan 5785

P'ninat Mishpat: Multiple Agreements and Parties – part II
based on ruling 80082 of the Eretz Hemdah-Gazit Rabbinical Courts
Beit Din Eretz Hemda - Gazit | Kislev 5786

P'ninat Mishpat: Smoking Rights in a Rental? – part II
based on ruling 85076 of the Eretz Hemdah-Gazit Rabbinical Courts
Beit Din Eretz Hemda - Gazit | Tishrei 5786

Various Rabbis
Various Rabbis including those of of Yeshivat Bet El, such as Rabbi Chaim Katz, Rabbi Binyamin Bamberger and Rabbi Yitzchak Greenblat and others.

Four Prototypes of Service of Hashem
5774

Moreshet Shaul: A Crown and its Scepter – part II
Based on Siach Shaul, Pirkei Machshava V’Hadracha p. 294-5
Av 5785

Responsibilities Based on Different Modes of Influence
Sivan 26 5777






















