The Mishna in Bikkurim says that a thief cannot bring bikkurim because he does not own the land upon which the bikkurim grew. The Yerushalmi (Bikkurim daf 2 - coming up in a few days in yerushalmi yomi) raises a safeik whether a thief who steals a plant and replants it in his own soil would then be obligated to bring bikkurim. Unlike land, which is not portable and cannot really be stolen from its owner's possession, a thief can be koneh a plant and would be obligated to simply make monetary restitution to the original owner. Since the thief is koneh the plant, why might he not be obligated to bring bikkurim? The gemara explains the safeik is whether we compare bikkurim to korbanos (bikkurim, like korbanos, must be brough to the mikdash), which are invalid even if the thief is koneh the animal. The Ridba"z notes that this gemara serves as a incontrovertable proof to one side in in a major machlokes Rishonim.
The gemara in Bava Kamma 67 quotes Ula as holding that yeiush, the abandonment of hope of recovery by the original owner of stolen goods, is not koneh - a thief who steals a korban may not bring it as an offering even after its owner abandons hope of recovery. Yet, in Bava Kamma 114, Ula himself seems to hold that once yeiush occurs a thief is considered the owner of stolen goods (he must, however, compensate the original owner). Is yeiush koneh or is it not koneh? Tosfos quotes a machlokes: R"I held that yeiush is not koneh, and in the kinyan of the latter case is due to other factors being present (yeiush+shinuy hashem). Rabeinu Tam, however, held that yeiush really is koneh. Nonetheless, even if a thief has a valid kinyan in an animal, Ula in BK 67 is mechadesh that the animal is still disqualified from being offered as a korban because of the principle of mitzvah haba'ah b'aveira, i.e. a mitzvah (like offering a korban) may not be done via improper means (theft).
In our case in Bikkurim, it is clear from the gemara that if bikkurim is treated as a korban, even if the thief has a kinyan in the object, it is disqualified from being used for mitzvah performance, supporting the opinion of Rabeinu Tam.
What exactly is the point of dispute between the R"I and Rabeinu Tam? Stay tuned... (bl"n)
What exactly is the point of dispute between the R"I and Rabeinu Tam?The way I understood it, according to Rabbeinu Tam, it would come out that all I have to do is steal something, wait for you to do yeeoosh, and then it's mine legally, so the RI argues and says that you need a shinui (rishus, shem, etc...) also to make it slighlty harder for a ganev to legally steal something and make it his. That way, the ganev is not really owning the same chayfetz that he stole, or the new owner (to whom the ganev gave it) is not getting a stolen chayfetz, he's like a lokayach. The whole point is when does the ganev no longer have a chiyuv to return the exact object, obviously he still has to pay, but optimally he must return the object, not just pay, but at a certain point he can keep the object (or the sheini can keep it), and just pay. Ad Kan Da'ati.
ReplyDeleteI do not follow - it sounds like you are turning this into a dinei mamomos machokes, but according to Rabeinu Tam, in dinei mamonos you already have ba'alus after yeiush, but still there is a psul of mitzvah haba'ah b'aveira.
ReplyDeleteIn the case of a replanted branch why isn't there yiush AND shinuy?Also why wouldn't there be a chiyuv bikurim here-stealing a branch is at most a hecsher mitzvoh.Would the bringing of the bikkurim in itself be a mitzvah h'bo b'aveira?
ReplyDeleteBava Basra 26b has a machlokes between rashi and tosfos why stolen fruits aren't obligated in bikkurim.
ReplyDeletePerhaps the Yerushalmi holds even yeiush + shinuy reshus is insufficient. Also, with respect to hechsher mitzvah, this is true in every case - the mitzvah is bringing the korban and picking up the lulav, yet we say mh'b b'aveira even if the psul happens in the kinyan stage of obtaining the cheftza.
ReplyDelete