Talmud Bavli
Talmud Bavli

Responsa for Gittin 25:3

ולרבי מאיר תינח עבד כהן עבד ישראל מאי איכא למימר אמר רבי שמואל בר רב יצחק מפני שמפסידו משפחה כנענית

<b><i>GEMARA</i></b>. R. Isaac b. Samuel b. Martha said in the name of Rab: [This money is] only [to be given] if it has actually been put aside in a special place.<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' Lit., 'heaped up in a corner'. ');"><sup>1</sup></span>

Teshuvot Maharam

Q. A vowed to quit gambling and promised to give one mark for a holy cause should he break his vow. He subsequently gave money to a friend to gamble for him. Must he pay the promised mark?
A. Vows are interpreted according to common parlance. If the phrase "I will not gamble again" includes, in common parlance, gambling by proxy, he must pay the fine. If, however, the implications of the phrase in common speech can not be determined, we must follow Biblical use of terms. In Biblical law a person is responsible for the acts of his agent unless the agent himself commits a sin by carrying out his mission. Although A's vow was made in the form of Asmakta, it is binding since all promises to a holy cause, even when made in the form of Asmakta, are binding.
SOURCES: Cr. 299, 300; Pr. 493, 494; L. 211, 212; Mordecai Hagadol p. 337b. Cf. Asher, Responsa 13, 2; Agudah B.K. 51.
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