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Kesuvos, 51
1) THE "TENAI BEIS DIN" OF A KESUVAH
QUESTION: The Mishnah states that if a person writes a 100-Zuz field for his
wife's Kesuvah instead of the 200 Zuz to which she is entitled, or if he
does not write in the Kesuvah that all of his property is bound to the
Kesuvah, he still must pay the full 200 Zuz, and she may collect from
Nechasim Meshubadim (from property which buyers bought from him after the
Kesuvah was written), because those elements of the Kesuvah are included in
the Tenai Beis Din of a Kesuvah.
The Gemara asserts that the Tana of this Mishnah is Rebbi Yehudah, who
maintains that "Achrayus Ta'us Sofer," that any Shtar that does not contain
mention of Achrayus may still be used to collect from Nechasim Meshubadim,
because it is assumed that every Shtar is meant to be used to collect from
Meshubadim. If the Achrayus is not written in the Shtar, the scribe who
wrote the Shtar simply left out mention of Achrayus by accident.
How can the Gemara assert that our Mishnah follows the opinion of Rebbi
Yehudah? According to Rebbi Yehudah, *every* Shtar may be used to collect
from Meshubadim even if no mention of Achrayus is written in it. Yet our
Mishnah says that a Kesuvah may be used to collect from Meshubadim, "because
it is a Tenai Beis Din," implying that other Shtaros (for which there is no
Tenai Beis Din) may *not* collect from Meshubadim unless they include
mention of Meshubadim! (RISHONIM)
ANSWERS:
(a) The RAMBAN answers that when the Mishnah says the words "because it is a
Tenai Beis Din," it is only explaining the Halachah mentioned at the
beginning of the Mishnah: that the woman may collect 200 Zuz even if her
husband designated only a 100-Zuz field for the Kesuvah. Those words are
*not* explaining why she may collect from Meshubadim. The Beraisa says (51b)
that collection from Meshubadim is *not* part of the Tenai Beis Din, and
that the woman may indeed forego the right to collect from Meshubadim.
Rather, the reason our Mishnah says that she may collect her Kesuvah from
Meshubadim is for the same reason one may use any Shtar to collect from
Meshubadim -- because "Achrayus Ta'us Sofer," like Rebbi Yehudah holds.
(b) The RITVA suggests that when the Mishnah says "because it is a Tenai
Beis Din," it is not explaining why one may collect from Meshubadim. Rather
it is explaining why a Kesuvah should be no different than other Shtaros. We
might have thought that a Kesuvah differs from other Shtaros: In other
Shtaros, we assume that the omission of Achrayus is simply an error and it
is as if Achrayus is indeed written in the Shtar, but in a Kesuvah, perhaps
Achrayus must be mentioned explicitly, since we find (see Gitin 49b) that
the Rabanan were more lenient on the husband's estate when it comes to
collecting the Kesuvah. Therefore, perhaps if there is no explicit mention
of Achrayus, she may *not* collect from the Nechasim Meshubadim of his
estate with her Kesuvah.
To counter that argument, the Mishnah says that a Kesuvah also has a quality
that gives the woman *more* power to collect than a regular Shtar -- it is a
Tenai Beis Din. This proves that we should not be more lenient with the
collection of the Kesuvah, and thus we remain with the Halachah that
"Achrayus Ta'us Sofer" even with regards to a Kesuvah.
51b
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