Daily Rambam 1 Chapter Thursday 15th Mar Cheshvan: Laws of Inheritance – Chapter 4: Acknowledgment of Heirs and Presumptions

Chapter 4: Acknowledgment of Heirs and Presumptions

Overview

This chapter addresses how a person’s statements about family relationships affect inheritance, including acknowledgment of heirs, denial of relationships, customs-related declarations, and presumptions based on reputation. It also covers complex cases involving maidservants, Torah scholars, and disputes among siblings.

Numbered Halachot with Summaries

Halacha 1 – Acknowledging Heirs

If a person says: “This is my son,” “This is my brother,” “This is my uncle,” or identifies any heir, his word is accepted—even if the person was not previously recognized as a relative. This applies whether he was healthy or on his deathbed, and even if he wrote it after losing speech, provided his understanding is verified (as in divorce cases).

Halacha 2 – Denying Relationships

If someone is recognized as a brother or cousin and the person says: “He is not my brother,” his word is not accepted.
Exception: If he denies someone as his son, the son does not inherit. Even if the son has children, the father’s statement affects inheritance (but not lineage status).

Halacha 3 – Contradictory Statements

If he first says: “This is my son,” then later: “He is my servant,” the second statement is ignored.
If reversed, the second statement (“He is my son”) is accepted—even if the son serves him like a servant.
Exception: If people commonly call him “a slave worth 100 zuz,” the retraction is not accepted.

Halacha 4 – Customs Declarations

If he identified someone as his son at customs and later as a servant, the latter is accepted (to avoid duty).
If reversed, the second statement is not accepted.

Halacha 5 – Avoiding Confusion

One should not call a servant “Papa” or a maidservant “Mama” to prevent lineage confusion—unless the servants are publicly known (e.g., of the Nasi’s household).

Halacha 6 – Son of a Maidservant

If a man fathers a son with a maidservant and says: “He is my son and his mother was freed,” then:

  • If he is a Torah scholar or honorable person, the son may inherit.
  • The son may not marry a Jewish woman until proving the mother was freed before birth.
  • If the father is ordinary or lax, the son is presumed a servant; brothers may sell him, and yibbum applies if no other sons exist.
    Other opinions exist, but the stricter view is followed.

Halacha 7 – Presumption of Relationship

Heirs may inherit based on prevailing presumption (e.g., witnesses testify that someone is generally regarded as the deceased’s son or brother), even without full lineage proof.

Halacha 8 – Effect of Acknowledgment on Shares

A person’s acknowledgment affects his own share, not his brothers’.
Example: Jacob dies leaving Reuven and Shimon. Reuven says: “Levi is also our brother,” Shimon says: “I don’t know.”

  • Shimon gets ½, Reuven gets , Levi gets .
    If Levi dies, his sixth returns to Reuven.
    If Levi acquired property, it is divided between Reuven and Shimon.
    If Shimon explicitly denies Levi, Reuven inherits Levi’s estate alone.

Summary Table

TopicKey Rule
Acknowledging heirsStatement accepted; heir inherits.
Denying relationshipsDenial of son accepted; denial of brother not accepted.
Contradictory statementsLater claim of son accepted; servant claim ignored unless public status.
Customs declarationsLater servant claim accepted; later son claim rejected.
Avoiding confusionDo not call servants “Papa/Mama” unless publicly known.
Son of maidservantTorah scholar’s word accepted; strict proof needed for marriage.
Presumption of relationshipHeirs inherit based on public presumption.
Acknowledgment affects sharesAffects declarant’s share only; detailed rules for disputes.

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