Beit Midrash
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- Chemdat Yamim
- P'ninat Mishpat
Ruling: We saw last time that def was not justified in firing pl, and pl deserves to be paid for what he did.

P'ninat Mishpat (803)
Beit Din Eretz Hemda - Gazit
749 - Fee for a Fired Toein Rabbani – part I
750 - Fee for a Fired Toein Rabbani – part II
751 - Various Issues Regarding a Printing Press – part I
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Does pl get paid for what he did not do because he was improperly fired? The gemara (Bava Metzia 76b) says that when an employer fires someone who started working, he gets paid until the end of the job he was supposed to do. The Perisha (Choshen Mishpat 333:2) says it depends if he is able to replace the job after being fired. The Netivot Hamishpat (333:7) says that since a kablan (paid by the job, not by time) can do the job whenever he wants, he always gets paid for what he did not do. In this case, the Perisha should agree that pl deserves pay, since the work that was left to do was not time intensive.
However, the pay is adjusted down because of the advantage of not having to work (po’el batel). There is a machloket how much to take off for this. In this case, because the work was open-ended, we will take off on the higher end, 50% of the amount due. After all the calculations, pl deserves 26,625 NIS in addition to the 4,000 NIS he already received.
Pl’s demand to add VAT is rejected. More frequently a quote includes VAT, and pl, who wants to extract money, needs to prove he deserves it.
Regarding def’s claim that pl was mochel when receiving the 4,000 NIS, if the disagreement were factual, we would believe def based on a migo she could have denied promising 35,000 NIS. However, def agrees that pl planned to receive more than 4,000 NIS but tricked them into giving that amount. She thinks that, halachically, this means he cannot receive more. It turns out that the money pl received was a form of tefisa (grabbing, here with trickery rather than force), which is sometimes permitted, especially when the grabber can prove he deserves what he took (Shulchan Aruch, CM 4:1, and here, pl did enough publicly to deserve 4,000 NIS. Taking the money without an actual mechila did not preclude receiving the rest.

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

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

P'ninat Mishpat: Upper Property’s Responsibility for Flooding
based on ruling 82008 of the Eretz Hemdah-Gazit Rabbinical Courts
Beit Din Eretz Hemda - Gazit | Adar 5784

P'ninat Mishpat: Return of Down Payment Due to War – part II
based on ruling 84044 of the Eretz Hemdah-Gazit Rabbinical Courts
Beit Din Eretz Hemda - Gazit | Elul 5785

Beit Din Eretz Hemda - Gazit

Departure of an Uncle to Eretz Yisrael
Igrot Hare’aya – Letters of Rav Kook: Vol. I, #1 , p. 1-2 – part II
Tevet 21 5781

Payments after a Gradual End of Employment
(Based on ruling 82024 of the Eretz Hemdah-Gazit Rabbinical Courts
Nissan 5783

Profits from Formerly Joint Swimming Pool – part
(based on ruling 81110 of the Eretz Hemdah-Gazit Rabbinical Courts)
19 Sivan 5784























