See Ramah Choshen Mishpat 26:1:
"Likewise we ban one who strengthens the hand of the one who goes
before a heathen court." See also Y'chaveh Daat Vol.4 No.65 note
**; Sh'alot Ut'shuvot T'shuvot V'hanhagot No.795. An exception
from the need to obtain advance permission of Beit Din may apply in a
case involving non-religious Jews who undoubtedly will not obey a
subpoena ("harmana") issued by a Beit Din. See Sh'alot Ut'shuvot
T'shuvot V'hanhagot No.795.
See. e.g.. the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C.
§§ 1-15, and the Uniform Arbitration Act ("UAA"), which has
been adopted in whole or in part by 32 states and the District of
Columbia.
See. e.g.. 9. U.S.C. § 10; UAA § 12.
Sanhedrin 6a.
Id.
Shulchan Aruch, Choshen Mishpat 12:7.
Id. 3:1.
Id. 12:7.
Sanhedrin 6a.
Rashi Sanhedrin 6a "V'hilch'tah p'sharah tz'richah kinyan."
Shulchan Aruch, Choshen Mishpat 12:7.
Tosafot Sanhedrin 6a "V'hilch'tah p'sharan tz'richah kinyan."
Shiltei Giborim, Rif on Sanhedrin 1b note 1.
Sanhedrin 6b.
Shiltei Giborim. note 23 supra.
Even the opinion of R. Eliezer, who prohibits bitzuah. see Sanhedrin 6b.
is limited to the time after the litigants arrive at the doors of Beit
Din. See Rashi Sanhedrin 6b "Asur livtzoah." See also Peirush HaRif on
Ein Yaacov. Sanhedrin 6b "R. Eliezer omer asur livtzoah."
Shulchan Aruch. Choshen Mishpat 12:2
Aruch Hashulchan 12:2, See also N'tivot Hamishpat, Choshen Mishpat
12 note 3: Igrot Moshe, Choshen Mishpat Vol.1 No.17.
See, e.g., Igrot Moshe Choshen Mishpat Vol.2 No.8: Sh'alot
Ut'shuvot T'shuvot V 'hanbagot No. 793.
The concept of p'sharah karov l' din is intended not only to encourage a
spirit of compromise, but also is designed to help protect the judges
themselves from the consequences of (even inadvertently) not rendering
an indisputably correct and foolproof decision. See Arbitration at 107.
See generally Arbitration, supra.
See Aruch HaShuichan 22:8 citing Shach, Choshen Mishpat 26 nOte 15.
See Rashi, D'varim 6:18 Hayashar v hatov: "Zu p'sharan, lifnim
mishurat hadin."
Whereas the agreement of disputants to litigate in secular courts (including
the State of Israel's court system) is prohibited even in instances where
the secular court would apply Torah law (see Shulchan Atuch, Choshen
Mishpat 26:2; Litigation at 49-53), agreement to arbitrate before a
Jewish arbitration panel which would not necessarily apply strict
Torah law should nonetheless be permissible. See notes 34,35 and 36,
infra. The distinction may lie in the permanence of the secular court
system, its usually compulsory nature and its rigid adherence to
precedent, versus the temporal status of the arbitral panel, its non-compulsory
nature and its ability to exert flexibility and discretion in the
decision-making process. These latter characteristics would not
render atbitration an affront to, or rejection of, Belt Din or halachic
authority, or create the spectre of Chilul Hashem on those occasions
when it (arbitration) is used. Cf Litigation at 51-52.
Tzitz Eliezer Vol.11 No.93.
Chidushei R. Akivah Elger, Shulchan Aruch. Choshen Mishpat 3:1 "V'ham danim."
Tzitz Eliezer Vol.11 No.93.
Sanhedrin 6b.
Tosafot. Sanhedrin 6b "Aval Aharon."
Bach, Tur, Choshen Mishpat 12 note 7 "Af al pi."
Kitzur Shulchan Aruch 181:8.
Aruch HaShulchan, Choshen Mishpat. 9:6.