Related for Bava Kamma 76:9
ר"מ אומר שור של ישראל שנגח שור של כותי פטור ושל כותי שנגח שור של ישראל בין תם בין מועד משלם נזק שלם
All kinds of stains [found on women's underwear] brought from Rekem<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' A place mainly inhabited by heathens who are not subject to the laws of purity and menstruation. [Rekem is identified by Targum Onkelos Gen. XVI, 14, with Kadesh; by Josephus (Ant. IV, 7, 1), with Petra.] ');"><sup>14</sup></span> are [levitically] clean.<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' As the underwear might naturally be supposed to have been worn by a heathen woman. ');"><sup>15</sup></span>
Tractate Kutim
The Samaritan is on the same footing as an Israelite in regard to all damages mentioned in the Torah. Whether an Israelite kills a Samaritan or a Samaritan kills an Israelite, if he did it by inadvertence he goes into exile [to a City of Refuge], if wilfully he is put to death. If the ox of an Israelite gored the ox of a Samaritan he is exempt from damages;2i.e. if it was not known to have a tendency to be a gorer. but should the ox of a Samaritan have gored the ox of an Israelite, if the ox is tam he pays half the damage and if it is mu‘ad3תם (innocuous) denotes an ox which had not previously gored, mu‘ad (warned) one which had done so and the owner had been warned. he pays the whole damage. R. Meir said: If an ox of a Samaritan gores the ox of an Israelite, whether it is tam or mu‘ad the owner pays the whole damage and pays from his best possessions.4[Cf. B.Ḳ. 38b (Sonc. ed., p. 217).]
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