Quoting%20commentary for Chullin 159:4
שה ולא מקצת שה אמר רב פפא
said R'Papa, with regard to the law of covering up the blood and also with regard to the [priests'] dues [the koy spoken of] can only be [the offspring of such interbreeding] as where a hart covered a she-goat.<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' Accordingly the aforementioned Baraitha which teaches that a koy may not be slaughtered on a festival agrees with the view of the Rabbis. For the obligation to cover up the blood of this koy, the offspring of a hart and a she-goat, arises only by reason of the male element in it, and since this is a matter of doubt one may not slaughter it on a festival. It is indeed possible to explain that the koy spoken of in that Baraitha is the offspring of a he-goat and a hind, so that the view expressed therein would agree with that of R. Eliezer, since he is of the opinion that what is only part deer is not subject to the law of covering up the blood. It is preferable, however, to establish the Baraitha in accordance with the view of the majority. And so, too, the koy that is the subject of dispute between R. Eliezer and the Rabbis with regard to the priests' dues is also the offspring of a hart and a he-goat; the Rabbis holding that this koy is subject to half the dues by virtue of the female element in it, but as to the other half, the priest can make no claim to it, for it may be that we should take into consideration the seed of the male parent in which case the priest is not entitled at all to that half. R. Eliezer, on the other hand, holds that this koy is entirely exempt from dues, for it may be that we ought to take into consideration the seed of the male parent, in which 'case it is only a sheep in part by virtue of the female element in it, and according to R. Eliezer a part sheep is not included in the term 'sheep'. Their dispute cannot be explained satisfactorily in any other manner, for if the koy were the offspring of a he-goat and a hind, in that case even the Rabbis would declare it wholly exempt from dues, since it has a 'sheep' element in it only on account of the male parent, and it may be that we do not take into consideration the seed of the male.');"><sup>2</sup></span>
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