לא תעשו עול במשפט; לא תשא פני דל; ולא תהדר
פני גדול; בצדק תשפט עמיתך: – ויקרא י"ט, ט"ו
Do not do a travesty of justice; do not favor a poor litigant; do not venerate a prominent litigant; with righteousness judge your comrade.
In
this single pasuk, there are four cautionary commands. Who is on the receiving
end of these commands?
Since
all four are grouped in this pasuk, it is a fair assumption that all four cautions
are being told to the same subject – one who sits in judgement. After all, a
judge is in the best place to perform a travesty of justice and to play
favorites and distort the law. Most readers would take this for granted.
Sure
enough, Rashi certainly takes this route. He explains the first segment as a
declaration that a judge who corrupts the judgement is called all kinds of
unsavory names. He explains the other three segments along those lines and tells
us why even a straightforward judge may rationalize bending the law.
But,
do we notice something that makes the opening segment stand out from the ensuing
ones? Hint – it is only evident in the original Hebrew.
Yes,
that’s right. The first segment is addressed to multiple people in the plural,
whereas the following segments are only mentioned in the singular.
Rashi
doesn’t seem to be bothered by this. Indeed, we can all easily dismiss it by
saying that since standard litigation involves a panel of three judges, this is
to be expected. Of course, this then begs the question as to why are all the
ensuing segments in this pasuk addressed to a single person?
The
Ohr HaChaim Hakadosh is indeed very bothered by this discrepancy. He presents
several approaches. Firstly, he wants to say that the first segment of the
pasuk is not being addressed to the judges but rather to the baalei din –
the litigants. The pasuk is cautioning the litigants not to twist their
stories. That is, not to bend or spin their stories with deceptive terminology
to present an inaccurate picture. Just tell it like it is.
Once
we say this, we can say that the following three parts of the pasuk are not
really commands at all but rather cause and effect results. The pasuk is
telling the baalei din, “Do not falsify or misrepresent your claims. As a
result of being accurate, none of the individual judges will unjustly favor a
poor man or unjustly flatter a prominent man. Each judge will be able to judge
your comrade (the other litigant) fairly.”
The
Ohr HaChaim suggests some other explanations including one that says the
subject of the opening segment is indeed the judge. The pasuk is telling a
judge not to do a travesty of judgement to mean as follows. There are times
when one can perceive that applying the precise letter of the law is not leading
to a just outcome. Due to some quirk in circumstances, following the precise
law may turn out to be a travesty of justice. In this case, the judge must use
his perception to give a proper and just ruling even against the letter of the
law.
Ohr
HaChaim does not go on to explain the subsequent segments. Actually, they seem
to contradict the first one. In the first segment, the pasuk is giving license
to the judge to go against the letter of the law for the sake of
justice. But in the next segments, we are telling the judge not to distort the
case in favor of the poor or powerful in the face of the letter of the law.
I
suppose he may understand that the first segment is giving a judge a license to
be “creative”, but this license can easily be abused. Hence, in the following clauses,
the pasuk is saying that, although for the sake of true justice one can circumvent
the written law, nevertheless, subjective rationalizations based on any
litigant’s personal circumstances are not acceptable for this license.
If
this is what he means, I have two issues. One is simply that I see it as a big “dochek”
(stretch) to say the pasuk is allowing bending the law at all and then calling
it back. Hard to know where to draw the line. The other issue is that in no way
does this explain why the opening segment is plural and the following ones are
singular.
I
would like to suggest my own approach that, indeed, the entire pasuk is
addressing the judge[s] and not the litigants.
Many
of us know that for monetary claims, there is a Talmudic procedure for
arranging a Beis Din. This is in Sanhedrin 23a and Choshen Mishpat 13:1. This
is what is called a Zabl”a Beis Din. Zabl”a (זבל"א), is an acronym for זה בורר לו אחד – this one chooses one [judge].
It
means that for a monetary case, each litigant chooses one judge and then the
two judges jointly select the third. The Gemara succinctly states the reason
for this system:
אמרי במערבא משמיה דרבי זירא, מתוך שזה בורר לו דיין אחד וזה בורר לו דיין אחד ושניהן בוררין להן עוד אחד, יצא הדין לאמיתו:
Here is what they say in the West (Israel) in the name of Rabi Zera – Out of one litigant choosing one judge and the other choosing a second and the two judges choosing a third, the resulting judgement is reliably exact.
Rema
in Shulchan Aruch elaborates in the name of the Tur:
Each selected judge will do his utmost to present winning points in favor of the one who selected him to the extent that the law allows. The third [neutral] dayan listens to the arguments of the two “biased” judges and is able to rule with precision.
In
the ancient Talmudic system, each litigant can choose a judge which we expect
to be somewhat biased in his favor and will know all of the Halachos that can
win his own case. Of course, this is offset by the capabilities of the opposing
chosen dayan. This is what makes this system fair.
In
this system, each of the two biased judges functions like a toen Rabbani for
the one who chose him. These judges are well versed in Halacha so they know
what to argue and should leave no legitimate claim unspoken. The third judge,
who was jointly chosen by the other two, will be the tie-breaker and can
determine which Halachic arguments are more relevant to this case. The
resulting ruling should be fair and just and neither litigant will be able to
claim that the court was totally biased against him and the deciding judge did
not hear all of his arguments.
Despite
this expected bias from the first two judges, Rema stresses that they are
limited to the boundaries of the Halacha. They are not empowered to present
spurious Halachic arguments or to push for a false ruling when they know the Halacha
is not on their side. This is what he means when he writes, “to the extent that
the law allows”.
Accordingly,
I want to suggest that this is the intent of the pasuk. The pasuk is referring
to a Zabl”a Beis Din where one litigant may be a poor person and another may be
a prominent person. Each one chose a dayan that favors him.
The
pasuk is telling these dayanim not to go overboard. Even if they have a vested interest,
they still must function like judges and not like lawyers. So, first it talks
to all three dayanim at once and says to them that as a cohesive panel of
judges, the three of you must be sure not to corrupt the judgement. Hence,
לא תעשו עול במשפט
Then
it speaks to each of the three judges individually.
If
one was chosen by a needy man, he can make whatever Halachic arguments that are
applicable, but he cannot invoke non-related circumstances such as the neediness
of the baal din. Nor can he rule in his favor for that reason alone.
לא תשא פני דל
Then,
the pasuk speaks to the second dayan and tells him the same thing. You can make
whatever Halachic arguments that are applicable, but you cannot invoke
non-related circumstances such as the prominence of the baal din. Nor
can you rule in his favor for that reason alone.
ולא תהדר פני גדול
Lastly,
it speaks to the tie-breaker dayan. The pasuk is telling him that just in case any
of the other dayanim overstep their bounds and transgress on their restrictions,
he is not to swayed and must rule based on nothing but the merits of the case.
בצדק תשפט עמיתך
Although
the Zabl"a procedure
is still available today, it is very rarely used. A Zabl"a court is not so practical to set up since it involves a
lot of time and bickering between the two sides. It can only work when both
sides agree to go to Beis Din and this doesn’t usually happen until after the nitva
receives a summons from an established Beis Din. Secondly, a makeshift Beis Din
is usually not equipped with a mazkir or safra d’dayana or any staff
or equipment or even a place to hold court. Thirdly, Zabl”a dayanim generally
charge good money for their time and effort and they become prohibitively
expensive.
Today
we usually rely on established prearranged Batei Din which have a fixed panel
and are selected by one side or the other. Rarely by consensus. This is just one
of many shortcomings of today’s Batei Din which I plan to write about in the
near future, IYH. Sadly, the institution of Beis Din is not what it used to be
or what it needs to be.
השיבה שופטנו כבראשונה ויועצנו כבתחילה
והסר ממנו יגון ואנחה
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Yasher koach
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