Rabbi
Jachter's Halacha Files
(and
other Halachic compositions)
A Student Publication of the Isaac and Mara Benmergui Torah Academy of Bergen
County
![]()
Parshat
Beshalach 15 Shevat 5763
January 18, 2003 Vol.12
No.15
![]()
Kol Torah Responds to Queries Regarding Wills and Shtar
Chatzi Zachar
by Rabbi Chaim Jachter
A number of years ago, Kol Torah published a long series of essays on wills and Shtar Chatzi Zachar that I wrote jointly with attorney Martin M. Shenkman. This series prompted a number of individuals to pose quite a few questions regarding this area of Halacha. I posed these questions to Rav Feivel Cohen of Brooklyn, New York who is considered a leading authority in this area. In this essay, I will present a number of the rulings that he issued to this author.
Introduction- Wills
and Shtar Chatzi Zachar
Many wills today include bequests to individuals who
are not defined as Halachic heirs. For example, parents want daughters to
receive a full share in the will and husbands (especially from first marriages)
usually want their wives to inherit all of their estate. There is a relatively
simple way to make such a will conform to the Halacha - the Shtar Chatzi Zachar
that Jews have been utilizing for centuries to present daughters with a share
of the estate as recorded by the Rama (Even Haezer 90:1 and Choshen
Mishpat 281:7 ).
In the modern context, this is executed as follows. One draws a will that is
valid according to the laws of the land. Then he writes a Shtar Chatzi Zachar
as a supplement to the will. The Shtar Chatzi Zachar states that the testator
assumes an obligation of an extraordinarily large amount of money (that exceeds
the expected size of the estate) to his wife or daughter that will take effect a
moment before death. A condition is made that the obligation will be waived if
the Halachic heirs honor the dictates of the will.
Thus, the Halachic
heirs inherit what they are Halachically due, but they also inherit a debt that
exceeds the amount of money they are Halachically entitled to. Thus, Halachic
heirs are motivated to honor the dictates of the will to gift the money to the
beneficiaries of the will who are not Halachic inheritors. The Halachic heirs
would prefer to honor the will than be saddled with a huge debt. The Halacha is
honored because the Halachic inheritors receive their due. The will is also
followed, because the Halachic heirs gift the money to those named in the will.
This is merely a basic sketch of the issue and one may consult the back issues
of Kol Torah (1999-2000) for a detailed discussion.
The
Obligation to Make a Will
A reader posed the
following question. Why should I write a will? I have only sons and I trust
that they will split the estate in accordance with the Halacha. An answer is
that, first, he wants his wife to inherit his estate should he predecease her
and the wife is not a Halachic heir. Second, is that if one dies without a
will, the state distributes the money according to its laws, which do not
conform to Halacha. One must assume that the children will subsequently
distribute the estate in accordance with the Halacha. However, tax consequences
will strongly discourage the children from doing so. One places a great
temptation before his children to violate the Halacha in such a circumstance, as
conforming to the Halacha in such a case might cost a large sum of money. Such
a scenario can be avoided by writing a will and supplementing it with a Shtar
Chatzi Zachar. Indeed, Rav Feivel Cohen wrote to me that it is an obligation to
write a will and a Shtar Chatzi Zachar supplement to insure that money that he
wants distributed to Tzedaka will be given as he intends. In addition, one who
fails to write a will, violates Lifnei Iveir Lo Titein Michshol (the prohibition
to cause others to sin, Vayikra 19:14) as he places a great temptation upon his
family to violate the Halachot regarding the distribution of the estate.
Indeed, Rav Yitzchak Elchanan Spektor (in a responsum published in Teshuvot
Mate Levi no. 13) rules that one must write a will to insure that his heirs
abide by the Halacha regarding the division of one’s estate, in a situation of
concern that the children will not abide by the Halacha. Rav Yitzchak Elchanan
bases this assertion on a Tosafot (Bava Metzia 30b s.v. Afkira) that teaches
that one must take proactive steps to insure that others do not violate the
prohibition of theft.
The Age to
Write a Will
Another reader asked at what age is one required to
write a will. The Chayim Ubracha Limishmeret Shalom (entry Tzavaa)
writes that the proper age to write a will is the age of fifty. He bases this
on the Pasuk (Vayikra 25:13) that states that in the fiftieth year one returns
to his ancestral land. He homiletically interprets this verse as teaching that
when one reaches the age of fifty, he should begin contemplating his soul’s
return to its ancestral home and begin to prepare for the end of life. This
includes writing a will. He records that Rav Shlomo Kluger (a major Halachic
authority of the mid nineteenth century) wrote a will when he reached the age of
fifty. He adds, to dispel concern that writing a will is somehow a bad omen,
that Rav Shlomo Kluger lived until the age of eighty six. Indeed, Rav Ezra
Basri (a contemporary Dayan who sits on the Bait Din of Jerusalem) writes (Sefer
Hatzavaot p.5) that writing a will with the intent to preserve peace and
harmony in the family is an omen for long life.
Rav Feivel Cohen,
though, in his Kuntress Midor Lidor (p.6), writes that it is especially
important for parents of young children to write a will that directs who should
raise the children in case of death or incapacity on the part of the parents.
Without such a provision in a will, the state will decide who will raise the
child (which is obviously undesirable from a Jewish perspective). Moreover, Rav
Cohen wrote to that he believes that one should write a will even earlier than
age fifty. He bases this on the Gemara (Shabbat 153a) that one should always
consider the possibility that one might die tomorrow and plan accordingly.
May One Assume that
a Shtar Chatzi Zachar was Executed?
Even if a relative did not draft a Halachically
proper will, it is proper and ethical to honor the dictates of the will (see
Teshuvot Maharsham 2:224 and Rav Yaakov Kaminetzsky, cited in Emet
Liyaakov p.455). The Halachic heirs should formally give the non-Halachic
heirs named in the will the money as a gift. This procedure is relatively
simple and may be accomplished by Kinyan Suddar. A Rav should supervise the
transaction to insure that it is executed properly.
The question arises whether it is necessary to make this transfer if the
individual who drafted the will was a Talmid Chacham. The question is whether
one may assume that the Talmid Chacham executed a Shtar Chatzi Zachar, even if
no such document was found among his papers. A basis for such an assumption
might be the Gemara (Pesachim 4b) that writes that if a Talmid Chacham dies and
leaves fruit in his container that one may assume that he removed the Trumot and
Maasarot in accordance with Halacha, even if the fruit appears to have been
picked on that day. The Gemara explains that we may presume that a Chaver (a
Talmid Chacham who is scrupulous about Halacha) would not permit something
improper to leave his hands.
I asked Rav Feivel
Cohen whether one is permitted to make such an assumption that a contemporary
Chaver would not have executed a will without a Shtar Chatzi Zachar supplement.
Rav Cohen replied that although each case must be judged on its own merits, one
may not assume as a general policy today that a Chaver executed a Shtar Chatzi
Zachar. Rav Cohen explained that, regrettably, even many Talmidei Chachamim are
not aware of the need to execute a Shtar Chatzi Zachar. I hope that the word
will spread of the need for a Shtar Chatzi Zachar by publications such as Kol
Torah and Shiurim delivered by Rabbanim and hopefully this unfortunate situation
will change.
Chametz and
Avoda Zara in an Estate
An executor of a will posed the following question.
This observant individual was named as the executor of an estate of a
non-observant relative. The executor was also a Halachic heir of the testator.
The executor found Chametz before Pesach as well as what appeared to be Buddhist
artifacts among the items in the estate. The executor wished to know whether he
is required to dispose of the Chametz before Pesach and destroy the Avoda Zara
(Rav Aharon Lichtenstein told this author that Buddhism constitutes Avoda Zara).
A possible leniency
is that the civil law does not consider the Halachic heirs to own the content of
the estate until the civil courts formally probate the will. Civil Law
recognizes the Estate as a legal entity. As such, the estate owned the Chametz
and Avoda Zara according to civil law. Rav Feivel Cohen, however, ruled that
the Halachic heirs are required to dispose of the Chametz and Avoda Zara. This
is because Halacha does not recognize civil law in regards to the disposition of
an estate as codified by the Bait Yosef (Choshen Mishpat 26 s.v. Katav
Harashba) and the Rama (C.M. 369:11) citing a responsum of the Rashba (6:254).
Rav Mordechai Willig told me that he agrees with this ruling.
A Lawyer Drafting a
Halachically Invalid Will
A reader who practices as an attorney who specializes
in trusts and estates asked whether he violates Halacha when he prepares a will
for Jewish people who will not execute a Shtar Chatzi Zachar supplement. The
attorney wanted to know if he violates the Torah’s (Vayikra 19:14) prohibition
to cause others to sin (Lifnei Iveir Lo Titein Michshol). Some opinions are
lenient if there are many others ready and available to assist in the violation
of the Torah (Chad Ivra Dinahara, see Rama Yoreh Deah 151:1). If the
observant lawyer will not draft the Halachically invalid will, a myriad of
lawyers will be happy to do so. However, the Rama writes that one should try to
avoid relying on this lenient approach.
I have heard suggested that one does not violate Lifnei Iveir in this case since
Rav Moshe Feinstein (Teshuvot Igrot Moshe Even Haezer 1:104) rules that a
secular will alone is sufficient and a Shtar Chatzi Zachar supplement is not
necessary. Even if one does not personally follow the opinion of Rav Moshe,
nevertheless one might not violate Lifnei Iveir if the person has a reliable
opinion upon which to follow. Indeed, Halachic authorities commonly cite
Teshuvot Ketav Sofer (Y.D. 77) that one does not violate Lifnei Iveir in
such a circumstance.
However, Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach (Teshuvot Minchat Shlomo 2:35:17)
rules that the lenient ruling of the Teshuvot Ketav Sofer does not apply
in a situation where an individual or his Rav is convinced that the lenient
opinion is in error. In our situation, the overwhelming majority of Poskim
reject Rav Moshe’s ruling (Rav Ovadia Yosef, Teshuvot Yechave Daat 4:65;
Rav Yaakov Kaminetzsky, cited in Emet Liykov p.455; Dayan Grossnass,
Teshuvot Lev Aryeh 2:57; Dayan Weisz,Teshuvot Minchat Yitzchak 2:95;
and Rav Zalman Nechemia Goldberg, Techumin 4:342-344). Moreover, they
feel (as articulated by Dayan Grossnass) that the Gemara (Temura 25b) explicitly
rejects this opinion of Rav Moshe. Accordingly, the leniency of the Ketav
Sofer might not appear to be relevant in this situation.
A possible leniency
might be based on a ruling of Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach. Rav Yehuda Amital and
others report that Rav Shlomo Zalman instructed shuls that offer beginners
services for Shabbat and Yom Tov and are concerned that participants will drive
to the event, to offer home hospitality as an option for participants. It is
then the choice of the participant to decline the offer and those who advertise
the service are not considered to have caused a Jew to drive on Shabbat.
Perhaps one might say the same applies by drafting a will. Perhaps the lawyer’s
offering and informing the client of the relatively simple option to execute a
Shtar Chatzi Zachar to supplement the will, eliminates the lawyer’s
responsibility for having assisted the execution of a Halachically invalid
will. It is the client’s choice not to supplement the will with a Shtar Chatzi
Zachar.
Rav Feivel Cohen wrote to me that a lawyer may assist in the drafting of a will
that will not have a Halachic supplement, if the lawyer urged his client to
execute a Shtar Chatzi Zachar. He bases his ruling on a ruling of the Netziv (Teshuvot
Meishiv Davar 2:31) that Lifnei Iver is not violated if it is Chad Ivra
Diahara and the sin is not committed at the time of the assistance. We should
note that this ruling of the Netziv is agreed to by many other Acharonim such as
Teshuvot Maharsham (2:97), Teshuvot Binyan Tzion 15, and
Teshuvot Igrot Moshe (Y.D. 1:72).
Conclusion
The history of
Halacha is not only created by the great Halachic authorities who issue
rulings. It is also created by alert lay individuals who pose the questions to
Poskim. The Halacha continues to be enriched by people who earnestly seek to
abide by Halacha in all circumstances and Poskim who grapple with the
challenging issues that continually arise. Wills and estates are a particularly
sensitive area that people should be alert to notice problems and bring them to
the attention of Halachic authorities for adjudication.
Back to Rabbi Jachter's Article List
Back Home