Sechirut – Chapter 10
Halacha 1 – Lender Holding Collateral
- A lender who takes security for a loan (money or produce, taken at the time of the loan or later) is a paid watchman.
- If the collateral is lost or stolen, he must pay its value.
- If loss was due to uncontrollable events (e.g., armed robbery), he swears to that effect and the borrower must still repay the debt in full.
Halacha 2 – Mutual Watching or Lending
- If two people watch each other’s items at the same time, it’s like each is working for the other — not paid watchmen.
- If the arrangement is at different times (e.g., “today for me, tomorrow for you” or “lend today, I’ll lend tomorrow”), each is considered a paid watchman.
Halacha 3 – Craftsmen as Watchmen
- All craftsmen are paid watchmen while working on an item.
- If a craftsman says, “Take your item, I’ve finished,” and the owner delays, he becomes an unpaid watchman from that point.
- If he says, “Bring payment and take your item,” he remains a paid watchman until payment.
Halacha 4 – Craftsman Damaging or Altering Work
- If a craftsman damages an item he was repairing or making, he must pay for the loss.
- Examples: carpenter breaking furniture, dyer ruining wool, making the wrong color, or producing a lower‑quality product.
- Payment depends on whether the cost or the increase in value is greater — the owner pays only the lesser amount.
- Neither party can insist on a full replacement value or raw material value; the craftsman never acquires a share in the item’s increased value.
Halacha 5 – Professionals Ruining Materials
- Professionals (miller, baker, slaughterer, etc.) who ruin materials are liable like paid watchmen.
- An expert slaughterer or expert money changer working for free is exempt if damage occurs; a non‑expert is liable even if unpaid.
- Liability depends on whether the client explicitly relied on their judgment.
- If damage occurs, the professional must prove expertise to avoid payment.
Halacha 6 – Planter’s Profits and Losses
- Where local custom is to split increased value 50/50 between landowner and planter:
- If the planter profits in one area but causes loss in another, deduct the full loss from his share of the profit.
- Even if he agreed to forfeit all profit for any loss, only the actual loss is deducted (such a clause is an asmachta and not binding).
- If the planter leaves before harvest, the owner can hire a sharecropper without losing his own share; the planter gets only what remains after the sharecropper’s portion.
Halacha 7 – Firing Publicly Appointed Professionals
- Publicly appointed workers (e.g., city planter, village slaughterer, blood‑letter, scribe, teacher) who cause irreparable loss can be removed without warning.
- They are expected to work with utmost care because they were entrusted by the community.
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