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How much is a written commitment of six million pounds from 1979? - Walla! Business and Consumerism

2019-12-25T14:23:11.216Z


The Grand Rabbinical Court ruled that a written commitment of £ 6 million from 1979 will not be indexed and ruled that the groom will pay the woman who divorced NIS 360,000


How much is a written commitment of six million pounds from 1979?

The Grand Rabbinical Court ruled that a written commitment of £ 6 million from 1979 will not be indexed and ruled that the groom will pay the woman who divorced NIS 360,000

The Grand Rabbinical Court ruled that a written commitment of six million pounds from 1979 will not be indexed and ruled that the groom will pay the woman who divorced NIS 360,000.

The couple married in 1979. Under the canopy was the groom's six million pounds, which at that time was a huge fortune. Forty years later, the couple divorced and the husband was charged in writing.

The regional rabbinical court is required to decide the written amount. The husband and his lawyers claimed that a translation of six million pounds to a new shekel is 600 shekels and that it is not written in linkage to any index or gate. The woman and her lawyers have submitted that six million pounds in translation into new shekels and full linkage to the price index amount to six million shekels.

Rabbi Yitzhak Oshinski's regional court, specializing in inscription values, advocates a compromise between full linkage and non-linkage, punctuated by a stipulated ruling, in the amount of NIS 150,000. The woman appealed to the Grand Rabbinical Court.

The women's force claimed that they accepted the principle of compromise between the arbiters' methods for linkage or non-linking, which is why a compromise between NIS 600 and NIS 6 million should be NIS 3 million and not NIS 150,000.

Members of the Grand Rabbinical Court Rabbi Aharon Katz, Rabbi Shlomo Shapira and Rabbi Zion Luz-Illouz, who sat in the composition of the appeal ordered the upgrade of the compromise between the regional rabbinical court. Not NIS 600 as the husband's demand, not NIS 6 million as the wife's demand, nor NIS 150,000. The ruling reads: "The appeal is partially accepted. The husband will pay NIS 360,000 to the woman."

In the background of the story, it is stated that a written undertaking at the wedding has legal implications, though not necessarily directly, and often this undertaking is used by women in divorce proceedings in demanding compensation from the divorced husbands. The written realization process is more prevalent in the ultra-Orthodox and religious communities, and rabbinical courts are trying to weigh them into logical economic terms.

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Source: walla

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